06/07/2011 02:25:00 PM EST
Sutherland Alert: Shredding Before Suing? Think Twice (Update)

by Ann Fort and Jason Chang
Patent owners are now on notice: The Federal Circuit has
confirmed that shredding relevant documents after identifying litigation
targets can lead to spoliation sanctions, even if the destruction occurred
before litigation was "imminent" or "probable without significant
contingencies." The Federal Circuit also approved piercing the attorney-client
privilege to provide key evidence in this inquiry. The privilege was pierced
based on the crime-fraud exception, citing a state penal statute prohibiting
willful destruction of any document knowing that the document "is about to be
produced in evidence," with the intent "to prevent it from being produced."
In a prior Sutherland Legal Alert, we reported
that Rambus Inc. lost the right to assert its patents against Micron
Technology, Inc., after a federal judge concluded that Rambus intentionally
destroyed numerous relevant documents in preparation for enforcing its patent
portfolio. That spoliation finding has been affirmed on appeal, because
litigation was "reasonably foreseeable" when Rambus destroyed relevant
documents. The sanction rendering the Rambus patents unenforceable was
reversed, however, based upon inadequate factual findings of bad faith and
prejudice. This decision may not provide businesses with a bright-line rule-the
Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit emphasized that the standard is
"flexible [and] fact-specific"-but patent owners now are on notice that
document destruction occurring after they identify litigation targets will, at
the very least, raise a strong presumption that spoliation has occurred.1 In a
companion case, the Federal Circuit reversed a California federal court ruling
that sided with Rambus.2 The Federal Circuit remanded both cases for further
proceedings.
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