Are you looking to the cloud to save costs on data storage? Great idea. But look carefully at the cloud offerings out there. Companies that are going to the cloud should consider whether they can timely retrieve data for legal, regulatory or other business purposes.
This is not a theoretical consideration. Courts have traditionally rejected what I euphemistically call the “messy garage” defense. That defense usually involves a litigant informing the court that its disorganized record keeping makes production of requested documents unduly burdensome. The Brooks v. Macy’s (S.D.N.Y. May 6, 2011) decision from last month is just the latest example of a court rejecting that defense.
In Brooks, an employer was ordered to produce paper healthcare records to the plaintiff in an ERISA lawsuit. The employer had argued that the records were too burdensome to produce because:
The court sympathized with but ultimately rejected the employer’s burden argument. “[D]isorganized record-keeping does not excuse a party from producing relevant documents.” (Emphasis added). Objection overruled. The employer would now be forced to spend significant resources to find the requested documents.
The rationale from the Brooks case is equally applicable to cloud storage. It is not enough that documents in theory can be retrieved from a cloud provider. Instead, Brooks teaches that cloud-based data must be organized such that companies can timely respond to discovery requests and other legal demands.
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