Laptop Litigation:
The impact of technology on litigation
Unless litigators insist upon and courts develop a systematic and
effective set of rules to deal with the realities of litigation in the information
age, developments in electronic litigation may warp our justice system.
By Michael K. McChrystal, William C. Gleisner
III & Michael J. Kuborn
ike any powerful tool electronic
litigation can be used wisely or harmfully. We lawyers should be careful
to assure that litigating with electronic tools does not compromise our
justice system. Electronic litigation techniques can cloud and even distort
the litigation process. For example, electronic evidence may be published
to a jury while opposing counsel overlooks obvious objections or the court
fails to consider the unfair impact of that evidence upon a jury. The authors
believe crucial evidentiary and procedural issues currently go unaddressed
both before and at trial.
This is the first in a series of articles dealing with the impact of
technology on litigation. Future articles will discuss more discrete issues
related to the broad topic of litigation technology. Meanwhile, this article
surveys the various ways in which technology is being used to prepare for
and litigate a case, and includes an overview of various hardware and software
systems.
Technological changes are affecting the legal profession far more than
the changes that brought about notice pleading and the amendments to the
codes of state and federal civil procedure in the 1960s and 1970s. However,
to date, no effort has been made to address in any comprehensive manner
the dramatic technological changes that are occurring in the world of litigation,
and this is cause for real concern. Rules have been developed to respond
to the videotaped deposition, and there are a patchwork of new rules that
address fax transmissions, electronic filings, and the like. Nevertheless,
there is no comprehensive effort underway to assess the overall impact of
electronic litigation techniques on civil procedure and the rules of evidence.
The time has come for bar associations and court systems to begin a serious
and comprehensive assessment of electronic litigation leading to the adoption
of appropriate rule changes.
A Sea Change is at Hand
There are many reasons why electronic litigation will be a force with
which to reckon. For example, the standards by which competent advocacy
is measured in the information age already are evolving to reflect the impact
of information technology. Ethics opinions and court decisions suggest the
broad outlines of the new standards. As noted in a leading publication on
legal ethics:
"[A]dvances in technology are relevant to what constitutes [lawyer]
negligence and [a] defendant's failure to use available technology to reduce
a known risk could be considered negligence."1
There is a proliferation of superior online legal resources.2 It will not be long before the failure
to research the law online or check the Internet for relevant information
could be deemed professionally substandard conduct.3
A number of court systems already are experimenting with the electronic
filing of pleadings, documents, and briefs.4
Computers and the Internet will have an impact on issues as diverse as jurisdiction,5lawyer confidentiality,6Fourth
Amendment searches and seizures,7
and the ethical responsibilities of practicing law.8
Undoubtedly email will become as accepted as faxes or "snail mail"
for routine confirming letters or service of pleadings, briefs, and so on
between opposing counsel.
Features of Electronic Litigation
Some aspects of electronic litigation already have received substantial
attention. For instance, it is becoming easy to find guidance as to the
framing of interrogatories so as to ensure that proper requests have been
made for electronically stored data.9
Moreover, courts themselves are rapidly discovering the advantages of electronic
document database and transcript management, electronic filings, and electronic
evidence. Litigators who choose not to use technology in their practice
may find that both they and their clients pay an increasingly unacceptable
price. As one commentator recently remarked:
"That an adversary is unable to produce its own briefs in counterpart
electronic format [that is, on a CD-ROM] is no different a condition of
litigation than any other disparity in access to legal resources. After
all, not every law firm uses online legal research services, or has state-of-the-art
desktop publishing capabilities, or employs a stable of bright and eager
young associates. Litigation in an adversary system is not a matter of
maintaining the lowest common denominator between adversaries, but rather
it is a competitive striving to marshal winning combinations of resources
of all types and to package them in attractive ways for the relevant tribunal."10
While some judges still resist electronic solutions, the trend is unmistakable.11 Increasingly, counsel can check a court's
Web page for court filings and scheduling information, much as the courts
have been doing for some time in multi-district litigation (MDL), such as
the MDL 926 breast implant litigation.12
In fact, Web sites covering MDL actions have become very sophisticated,
complete with search engines, high-tech graphics, and downloadable executables
such as the Adobe Acrobat® Reader.13Other
courts are beginning to follow suit. Electronic court Web pages and filings
may become routine in the next few years due to their benefits.14
As usual, Wisconsin courts are beginning to show the way. The Wisconsin
Supreme Court maintains a robust Web site, which is in fact a Web site for
the entire Wisconsin court system.15
It appears clear from the Report on the Circuit Court Automation Program,
accessible from that site, that it is just a matter of time before Wisconsin
courts begin experimenting with electronic filings. This Web site makes
it possible for users to download several free software enhancements, such
as Adobe's Acrobat Reader.TM
One of the courts in Wisconsin is already a leading pioneer in electronic
litigation. The U.S. District Court for the Western District's Web page
is very instructive in this regard.16
At that court's site you can learn all about "PACER," which permits
public access to a variety of court documents. According to that site, "If
you have a personal computer, a modem and a telephone line you can access
Bankruptcy and District Court docket sheets, party indexes, and judgment
indexes. Just call the P.A.C.E.R. service center at (800) 676-6856 for details."17 Moreover, in that court's courtrooms
250 and 260, counsel can:
- place a piece of evidence in a single location in the courtroom. An
image of that piece of evidence is displayed on monitors for counsel, court,
witness, and the jury to see. All people in the courtroom are looking at
the exhibit from the same perspective.
- selectively display the exhibit to any or all of the people listed
above.
- scan documents, store them on a personal computer (including Macintosh),
and call them up with a few keystrokes.
- ask witnesses to annotate an exhibit, retain the original without annotations,
keep a copy with the annotations, and do all this without managing multiple
photocopies or leaving the courtroom.
- play videotapes without renting VCRs and TVs. The participants can
watch the videotape over the same monitors on which they view exhibits.
- freeze a videotape frame and annotate the video.
- run computer animated accident reenactments right from your computer;
- enhance the jury's understanding of a recorded conversation by using
a computer to link a transcript of the conversation with the audio recording;
and
- use presentation software to enhance your arguments.18
The advantages of briefs filed on CD-ROM (or, in the near future, on
DVD disks) also will make them very popular with many judges. Electronic
briefs can include full-text hyperlinked copies of cited authority or links
to copies of authorities on the World Wide Web, together with hyperlinks
to copies of evidence and even excerpts from videotape depositions.19Such filings hold the potential of significantly
reducing a judge's workload by freeing the judge from doing legal research
or combing through the record. Such briefs also enable the judge to write
opinions with many citations to and quotes from authorities that can be
accessed directly from the CD.
This is powerful evidence indeed of what litigation at the turn of the
millennium will entail in Wisconsin and elsewhere. However, do we have the
rules in place to accommodate both the new technology and the demands of
justice?
The Need for New Regulations
Legal standards have not yet come to terms with electronic litigation.
For example, pretrial scheduling and management orders often fail to address
the serious disruption that can follow from the misuse of technology in
the courtroom. These failures often are surprising considering how often
lawyers now come to trial equipped with a laptop computer and a color projector.
High-tech litigation used to mean that a lawyer might come to court equipped
with monitors, overhead projectors, or Doar projectors.20Now
litigators are relying upon far different and often more sophisticated solutions
for presenting their cases to a jury. A favorite hardware combination includes
Dell laptops, Infocus color projectors, and barcode guns. Software such
as Dataflight's Concordance,®
and its image viewer Opticon,® represent one of the more advanced systems
now available.21 Other equally
fine litigation software solutions include Bowne
JFS Software (formerly J. Feuerstein Litigator's Notebook),®22 Gravity,®23 Isys,®24Inmagic's
DB/Text Works,®25 and Discovery Pro for Windows.®26 Another popular and effective software
solution for many litigators is Summation®27and one of its more popular image viewers
TrialDirector.®28
Just as one example, using Summation,® a litigator can import literally
millions of pages of evidence and hundreds of transcripts into an online
database. The litigator can then search through the evidence and the transcripts
and comprehensively index, cross reference, and retrieve all forms of evidence
almost instantaneously. A litigator can use a laptop with a barcode gun
and a color projector to call up evidence and display it virtually at will
using Indata's TrialDirector.®
The relative cost of doing this is well within the reach of many practitioners.
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