b3b4a47432375a43f515aaf709aa1fa7.ppt
- Количество слайдов: 28
MINIMIZING LITIGATION RISKS Lisa A. Powell, Esq.
Lawyer Joke What do you call 20 lawyers skydiving?
A Skeet Shoot
Electronic Information The New Frontier § 60% of business documents are in electronic form § Employees of large companies send and receive on average 178 e-mails per day
E-mail Management § Think before you send! § Be careful about tone § Profanity looks bad in hindsight. § Check Addresses § Don’t unnecessarily add CC recipients
EXAMPLES § “Let’s just keep this to ourselves” § “No need to investigate, we’ve already got enough problems” § “Get rid of all those damn documents” § “_______ up Folder”
§ Sun employee sends e-mail to 35, 000 employees worldwide complaining about his missing lunch § CBS anchor, Alycia Lane sends seven e -mails of herself in bikini to Rich Eisen of the NFL Network who shared that emai address with his wife, ABC reporter, Suzi Schuster § A magazine devoted to privacy on the internet sends mass e-mail to its subscribers and instead of sending blind copies to recipients displays all addresses in “to” field
E-mails May Last Forever § Emptying Trash does not delete email from hard drive. E-mails remain on hard drive as “Unallocated Space” and are recoverable until overwritten § Even if space is used on hard drive, e-mails still may exist because not completely overwritten (“shadow files”), but are extremely difficult and expensive to extract
Meta Data Usually Stays with the Document § Your name § § § Your initials Your company or organization name The name of your computer The name of the network server or hard disk where you saved the document Other file properties and summary information Non-visible portions of embedded OLE objects The names of previous document authors Document revisions Document versions Template information Hidden text Comments Solution – Buy Software that removes meta data At a minimum convert to PDF
The Duty to Preserve Evidence is Not New A duty to preserve evidence arises when a party knows or reasonably should know that there is a substantial chance that a claim will be filed and that evidence in its possession or control will be material to the claim. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Johnson, 106 SW 2 d 718, 722 (2002).
Sanctions for Spoliating Evidence § A presumption that the evidence would have been harmful to the spoliating party § The striking of pleadings of the spoliating party § Monetary sanctions § Potential criminal liability
What is New? § New cases applying these principals to “Electronically Stored Information” (“ESI”) AND § New Federal Rules of Civil Procedure governing discoverability of ESI
Ways to Preserve E-Mail § 1. Turn off auto delete for Persons identified having Relevant Knowledge § 2. Inform Employees of Litigation Hold for Documents relating to Dispute – DON’T DELETE § 3. Best Practice- Temporarily Suspend Overwriting of Back-Up Tapes for Persons with Knowledge
This is what happens when you forget to turn things off.
Plastering Contractor Specific Issues
Liability to Owners: § No implied warranty by a subcontractor to perform construction like services in a good and workmanship manner to Owner § Only general contractor can sue subcontractor for breach of the warranty of good and workmanlike construction absent special circumstances Example: Contractual provisions in which G. C. requires sub to give a warranty directly to owner.
IMPORTANCE Under the economic loss doctrine, tort claims should theoretically only encompass damage to other property, not aesthetic claims or damage to the product itself. Examples: No tort claims for cracking or color issues. No tort claim for replacement of plaster except if somehow necessitated by damage to other parts of the building.
Liability to G. C. Indemnity Agreements § Indemnity Agreements can shift the risk of one party’s negligence on the other § In order for an indemnity agreement to be enforced under Texas law, the language must be conspicuous and give fair notice that the indemnitor (subcontractor) is indemnifying the G. C. for the G. C. ’s own negligence.
Standard Form of Agreement Between Contractor and Subcontractor (AIA Document A 401 -1997) § Contains a provision in which the subcontractor purports to indemnify the G. C. § It has been found unenforceable Cabo Construction, Inc. v. C. W. Construction, Inc. 01 -05 -00487 -CV (Tex. App. [1 st App. ], April 12, 2007).
Repairs: § Good News: Repairs do not suspend the statute of limitations for the original construction § Bad News: May create new liability
Statute of Repose § 10 Years - Claims against contractor initially repairing or installing improvements to real property § 15 Years - Product liability claims against sellers and manufacturers of products § Does not apply to fraud claims
Inspection After Complaints No liability for failure to identify problems Versus Potential liability for Statements Made During Repairs/Inspection § “Problems Fixed” § “No Problems”
Potential Claims Based on Inspections § Negligent Misrepresentation/Negligent Undertaking Claims § Fraudulent Concealment Claims may Extend Statute Limitations
Strategies to Avoid Liability § Don’t represent that a full inspection performed unless one was in fact done § If an inspection is performed, document the scope and purpose of inspection, i. e. , cosmetic § Exclude concealed items unless proper tests have been performed § Have customers sign an agreement concerning repairs which defines the scope of repairs
Examples: § Don’t Represent: Repaired Leak § Do Define the Scope of Repairs: Repaired Diverter Flashing at the second story on west elevation § Never perform a repair when you know that it is likely that the repair will not be successful due to other construction defects