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Full Opinion
OPINION AND ORDER
The world was a far different place in 1849, when Henry David Thoreau opined (in an admittedly broader context) that â[t]he process of discovery is very simple.â
I. INTRODUCTION
The Supreme Court recently reiterated that our âsimplified notice pleading standard relies on liberal discovery rules and summary judgment motions to define disputed facts and issues and to dispose of unmeritorious claims.â
In one context, however, the reliance on broad discovery has hit a roadblock. As individuals and corporations increasingly do business electronically
This case provides a textbook example of the difficulty of balancing the competing needs of broad discovery and manageable costs. Laura Zubulake is suing UBS War-burg LLC, UBS Warburg, and UBS AG (collectively, âUBSâ or the âFirmâ) under Federal, State and City law for gender discrimination and illegal retaliation. Zubu-lakeâs ease is certainly not frivolous
II. BACKGROUND
A. Zubulakeâs Lawsuit
UBS hired Zubulake on August 23, 1999, as a director and senior salesperson on its U.S. Asian Equities Sales Desk (the âDeskâ), where she reported to Dominic Vail, the Deskâs manager. At the time she was hired, Zubulake was told that she would be considered for Vailâs position if and when it became vacant.
In December 2000, Vail indeed left his position to move to the Firmâs London office. But Zubulake was not considered for his position, and the Firm instead hired Matthew Chapin as director of the Desk. Zubulake alleges that from the outset Chapin treated her differently than the other members of the Desk, all of whom were male. In particular, Chapin âundermined Ms. Zubulakeâs ability to perform her job by, inter alia: (a) ridiculing and belittling her in front of coworkers; (b) excluding her from work-related outings with male co-workers and clients; (c) making sexist remarks in her presence; and (d) isolating her from the other senior salespersons on the Desk by seating her apart from them.â
Zubulake ultimately responded by filing a Charge of (gender) Discrimination with the EEOC on August 16, 2001. On October 9, 2001, Zubulake was fired with two weeksâ notice. On February 15, 2002, Zubulake filed the instant action, suing for sex discrimination and retaliation under Title VII, the New York State Human Rights Law, and the Administrative Code of the City of New York. UBS timely answered on March 12, 2002, denying the allegations. UBSâs argument is, in essence, that Chapinâs conduct was not unlawfully discriminatory because he treated everyone equally badly. On the one hand, UBS points to evidence that Chapinâs anti-social behavior was not limited to women: a former employee made allegations of national origin discrimination against Chapin, and a number of male employees on the Desk also complained about him. On the other hand, Chapin was responsible for hiring three new females employees to the Desk.
B. The Discovery Dispute
Discovery in this action commenced on or about June 3, 2002, when Zubulake served UBS with her first document request. At issue here is request number twenty-eight, for â[a]ll documents concerning any communication by or between UBS employees concerning Plaintiff.â
On September 12, 2002âafter an exchange of angry letters
Defendants will [ ] ask UBS about how to retrieve e-mails that are saved in the firmâs computer system and mil produce responsive e-mails if retrieval is possible and Plaintiff names a few individuals.17
Pursuant to the 9/12/02 Agreement, UBS agreed unconditionally to produce responsive e-mails from the accounts of five individuals named by Zubulake: Matthew Chapin, Rose Tong (a human relations representation who was assigned to handle issues concerning Zubulake), Vinay Datta (a co-worker on the Desk), Andrew Clarke (another co-worker on the Desk), and Jeremy Hardisty (Chapinâs supervisor and the individual to whom Zubu-lake originally complained about Chapin). UBS was to produce such e-mails sent between August 1999 (when Zubulake was hired) and December 2001 (one month after her termination), to the extent possible.
UBS, however, produced no additional emails and insisted that its initial production (the 100 pages of e-mails) was complete. As UBSâs opposition to the instant motion makes clear*âalthough it remains unsaidâ UBS never searched for responsive e-mails on any of its backup tapes. To the contrary, UBS informed Zubulake that the cost of producing e-mails on backup tapes would be prohibitive (estimated at the time at approximately $300,000.00).
Zubulake, believing that the 9/12/02 Agreement included production of e-mails from backup tapes, objected to UBSâs nonproduction. In fact, Zubulake knew that there were additional responsive e-mails that UBS had failed to produce because she herself had produced approximately 450 pages of e-mail correspondence. Clearly, numerous responsive e-mails had been created and deleted
On December 2, 2002, the parties again appeared before Judge Gorenstein, who ordered UBS to produce for deposition a person with knowledge of UBSâs e-mail retention policies in an effort to determine whether the backup tapes contained the deleted e-mails and the burden of producing them. In response, UBS produced Christopher Behny, Manager of Global Messaging, who was deposed on January 14, 2003. Mr. Behny testified to UBSâs e-mail backup protocol, and also to the cost of restoring the relevant data.
C. UBSâs E-Mail Backup System
In the first instance, the parties agree that e-mail was an important means of communication at UBS during the relevant time period. Each salesperson, including the salespeople on the Desk, received approximately
1. Backup Tape Storage
UBS employees used a program called HP OpenMail, manufactured by Hewlett-Packard,
UBS used the same backup protocol during the entire relevant time period, from 1999 through 2001. Using NetBackup, UBS backed up its e-mails at three intervals: (1) daily, at the end of each day, (2) weekly, on Friday nights, and (3) monthly, on the last business day of the month. Nightly backup tapes were kept for twenty working days, weekly tapes for one year, and monthly tapes for three years. After the relevant time period elapsed, the tapes were recycled.
Once e-mails have been stored onto backup tapes, the restoration process is lengthy. Each backup tape routinely takes approximately five days to restore, although resort to an outside vendor would speed up the process (at greatly enhanced costs, of course). Because each tape represents a snapshot of one serverâs hard drive in a given month, each server/month must be restored separately onto a hard drive. Then, a program called Double Mail is used to extract a particular individualâs e-mail file. That mail file is then exported into a Microsoft Outlook data file, which in turn can be opened in Microsoft Outlook, a common e-mail application. A user could then browse through the mail file and sort the mail by recipient, date or subject, or search for key words in the body of the e-mail.
Fortunately, NetBackup also created indexes of each backup tape. Thus, Behny was able to search through the tapes from the relevant time period and determine that the e-mail files responsive to Zubulakeâs requests are contained on a total of ninety-four backup tapes.
2. Optical Disk Storage
In addition to the e-mail backup tapes, UBS also stored certain e-mails on optical
UBS has retained each optical disk used since the system was put into place in mid-1998. Moreover, the optical disks are neither erasable nor rewritable. Thus, UBS has every e-mail sent or received by registered traders (except internal e-mails) during the period of Zubulakeâs employment, even if the e-mail was deleted instantaneously on that traderâs system.
The optical disks are easily searchable using a program called Tumbleweed.
III. LEGAL STANDARD
Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 26 through 37 govern discovery in all civil actions. As the Supreme Court long ago explained,
The pre-trial deposition-discovery mechanism established by Rules 26 to 37 is one of the most significant innovations of the
Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Under the prior federal practice, the pre-trial functions of notice-giving issue-formulation and fact-revelation were performed primarily and inadequately by the pleadings. Inquiry into the issues and the facts before trial was narrowly confined and was often cumbersome in method. The new rules, however, restrict the pleadings to the task of general notice-giving and invest the deposition-discovery process with a vital role in the preparation for trial. The various instruments of discovery now serve (1) as a device, along with the pre-trial hearing under Rule 16, to narrow and clarify the basic issues between the parties, and (2) as a device for ascertaining the facts, or information as to the existence or whereabouts of facts, relative to those issues. Thus civil trials in the federal courts no longer need to be carried on in the dark. The way is now clear, consistent with recognized privileges, for the parties to obtain the fullest possible knowledge of the issues and facts before trial.29
Consistent with this approach, Rule 26(b)(1) specifies that,
Parties may obtain discovery regarding any matter, not privileged, that is relevant to the claim or defense of any party, including the existence, description, nature, custody, condition, and location of any books, documents, or other tangible things and the identity and location of persons having knowledge of any discoverable matter. For good cause, the court may order discovery of any matter relevant to the subject matter involved in the action. Relevant information need not be admissible*316 at the trial if the discovery appears reasonably calculated to lead to the discovery of admissible evidence. All discovery is subject to the limitations imposed by Rule 26(b)(2)(i), (ii), and (iii).30
In turn, Rule 26(b)(2) imposes general limitations on the scope of discovery in the form of a âproportionality testâ:
The frequency or extent of use of the discovery methods otherwise permitted under these rules and by any local rule shall be limited by the court if it determines that: (i) the discovery sought is unreasonably cumulative or duplicative, or is obtainable from some other source that is more convenient, less burdensome, or less expensive; (ii) the party seeking discovery has had ample opportunity by discovery in the action to obtain the information sought; or (iii) the burden or expense of the proposed discovery outweighs its likely benefit, taking into account the needs of the case, the amount in controversy, the partiesâ resources, the importance of the issues at stake in the litigation, and the importance of the proposed discovery in resolving the issues.31
Finally, â[u]nder [the discovery] rules, the presumption is that the responding party must bear the expense of complying with discovery requests, but [it] may invoke the district courtâs discretion under Rule 26(c) to grant orders protecting [it] from âundue burden or expenseâ in doing so, including orders conditioning discovery on the requesting partyâs payment of the costs of discovery.â
The application of these various discovery rules is particularly complicated where electronic data is sought because otherwise discoverable evidence is often only available from expensive-to-restore backup media. That being so, courts have devised creative solutions for balancing the broad scope of discovery prescribed in Rule 26(b)(1) with the cost-consciousness of Rule 26(b)(2). By and large, the solution has been to consider cost-shifting: forcing the requesting party, rather than the answering party, to bear the cost of discovery.
By far, the most influential response to the problem of cost-shifting relating to the discovery of electronic data was given by United States Magistrate Judge James C. Francis TV of this district in Rowe Entertainment. Judge Francis utilized an eight-factor test to determine whether discovery costs should be shifted. Those eight factors are:
(1) the specificity of the discovery requests; (2) the likelihood of discovering critical information; (3) the availability of such information from other sources; (4) the purposes for which the responding party maintains the requested data; (5) the relative benefits to the parties of obtaining the information; (6) the total cost associated with production; (7) the relative ability of each party to control costs and its incentive to do so; and (8) the resources available to each party.33
Both Zubulake and UBS agree that the eight-factor Rowe test should be used to determine whether cost-shifting is appropriate.
IV. DISCUSSION
A. Should Discovery of UBSâs Electronic Data Be Permitted?
Under Rule 34, a party may request discovery of any document, âincluding writings, drawings, graphs, charts, photographs, phonorecords, and other data compilations ----â
That being so, Zubulake is entitled to discovery of the requested e-mails so long as they are relevant to her claims,
Nonetheless, UBS argues that Zubulake is not entitled to any further discovery because it already produced all responsive documents, to wit, the 100 pages of e-mails. This argument is unpersuasive for two reasons. First, because of the way that UBS backs up its e-mail files, it clearly could not have searched all of its e-mails without restoring the ninety-four backup tapes (which UBS admits that it has not done). UBS therefore cannot represent that it has produced all responsive e-mails. Second, Zubulake herself has produced over 450 pages of relevant e-mails, including e-mails that would have been responsive to her discovery requests but were never produced by UBS. These two facts strongly suggest that there are e-mails that Zubulake has not received that reside on UBSâs backup media.
B. Should Cost-Shifting Be Considered?
Because it apparently recognizes that Zubulake is entitled to the requested discovery, UBS expends most of its efforts urging the court to shift the cost of production to âprotect [it] ... from undue burden or expense.â
The first question, however, is whether cost-shifting must be considered in every ease involving the discovery of electronic data, whichâin todayâs worldâincludes virtually all eases. In light of the accepted principle, stated above, that electronic evidence is no less discoverable than paper evidence, the answer is, âNo.â The Supreme Court has instructed that âthe presumption is that the responding party must bear the expense of complying with discovery re-quests____â
Courts must remember that cost-shifting may effectively end discovery, especially when private parties are engaged in litigation with large corporations. As large companies increasingly move to entirely paper-free envi
Thus, cost-shifting should be considered only when electronic discovery imposes an âundue burden or expenseâ on the responding party.
Many courts have automatically assumed that an undue burden or expense may arise simply because electronic evidence is involved.
In fact, whether production of documents is unduly burdensome or expensive turns primarily on whether it is kept in an accessible or inaccessible format (a distinction that corresponds closely to the expense of production). In the world of paper documents, for example, a document is accessible if it is readily available in a usable format and reasonably indexed. Examples of inaccessible paper documents could include (a) documents in storage in a difficult to reach place; (b) documents converted to microfiche and not easily readable; or (c) documents kept haphazardly, with no indexing system, in quantities that make page-by-page searches impracticable. But in the world of electronic data, thanks to search engines, any data that is retained in a machine readable format is typically accessible.
Whether electronic data is accessible or inaccessible turns largely on the media on which it is stored. Five categories of data, listed in order from most accessible to least accessible, are described in the literature on electronic data storage:
1. Active, online data: âOn-line storage is generally provided by magnetic disk. It is used in the very active stages of an electronic records [sic] lifeâwhen it is being created or received and processed, as well as when the access frequency is high and the required speed of access is very fast, i.e., milliseconds.â51 Examples of online data include hard drives.
2. Near-line data: âThis typically consists of a robotic storage device (robotic library) that houses removable media, uses robotic arms to access the media, and uses multiple read/write devices to store and retrieve records. Access speeds can range from as low*319 as milliseconds if the media is already in a read device, up to 10-30 seconds for optical disk technology, and between 20-120 seconds for sequentially searched media, such as magnetic tape.â52 Examples include optical disks.
3. Offline storage/archives: âThis is removable optical disk or magnetic tape media, which can be labeled and stored in a shelf or rack. Off-line storage of electronic records is traditionally used for making disaster copies of records and also for records considered âarchivalâ in that their likelihood of retrieval is minimal. Accessibility to off-line media involves manual intervention and is much slower than on-line or near-line storage. Access speed may be minutes, hours, or even days, depending on the access-effectiveness of the storage facility.â53 The principled difference between nearline data and offline data is that offline data lacks âthe coordinated control of an intelligent disk subsystem,â and is, in the lingo, JBOD (âJust a Bunch Of Disksâ).54
4. Backup tapes: âA device, like a tape recorder, that reads data from and writes it onto a tape. Tape drives have data capacities of anywhere from a few hundred kilobytes to several gigabytes. Their transfer speeds also vary considerably ... The disadvantage of tape drives is that they are sequential-access devices, which means that to read any particular block of data, you need to read all the preceding blocks.â55 As a result, â[t]he data on a backup tape are not organized for retrieval of individual documents or flies [because] ... the organization of the data mirrors the computerâs structure, not the human records management structure.â56 Backup tapes also typically employ some sort of data compression, permitting more data to be stored on each tape, but also making restoration more time-consuming and expensive, especially given the lack of uniform standard governing data compression.57
5. Erased, fragmented or damaged data: âWhen a file is first created and saved, i,t is laid down on the [storage media] in contiguous clusters ... As files are erased, their clusters are made available again as free space. Eventually, some newly created files become larger than the remaining contiguous free space. These files are then broken up and randomly placed throughout the disk.â58 Such broken-up files are said to be âfragmented,â and along with damaged and erased data can only be accessed after significant processing.59
Of these, the first three categories are typically identified as accessible, and the latter
The case at bar is a perfect illustration of the range of accessibility of electronic data. As explained above, UBS maintains email files in three forms: (1) active user email files; (2) archived e-mails on optical disks; and (3) backup data stored on tapes. The active (HP OpenMail) data is obviously the most accessible: it is online data that resides on an active server, and can be accessed immediately. The optical disk (Tumbleweed) data is only slightly less accessible, and falls into either the second or third category. The e-mails are on optical disks that need to be located and read with the correct hardware, but the system is configured to make searching the optical disks simple and automated once they are located. For these sources of e-mailsâactive mail files and emails stored on optical disksâit would be wholly inappropriate to even consider cost-shifting. UBS maintains the data in an accessible and usable format, and can respond to Zubulakeâs request cheaply and quickly. Like most typical discovery requests, therefore, the producing party should bear the cost of production.
E-mails stored on backup tapes (via Net-Backup), however, are an entirely different matter. Although UBS has already identified the ninety-four potentially responsive backup tapes, those tapes are not currently accessible. In order to search the tapes for responsive e-mails, UBS would have to engage in the costly and time-consuming process detailed above. It is therefore appropriate to consider cost shifting.
C. What Is the Proper Cost-Shifting Analysis?
In the year since Rowe was decided, its eight factor test has unquestionably become the gold standard for courts resolving electronic discovery disputes.
In order to maintain the presumption that the responding party pays, the cost-shifting analysis must be neutral; close calls should be resolved in favor of the presumption. The Rowe factors, as applied, undercut that presumption for three reasons. First, the Rowe test is incomplete. Second, courts have given equal weight to all of the factors, when certain factors should predominate. Third, courts applying the Rowe test have not always developed a full factual record.
a. A Modification of Rowe: Additional Factors
Certain factors specifically identified in the Rules are omitted from Roweâs eight factors. In particular, Rule 26 requires consideration of âthe amount in controversy, the partiesâ resources, the importance of the issues at stake in the litigation, and the importance of the proposed discovery in resolving the issues.â
Rowe also contemplates âthe resources available to each party.â But here tooâ although this consideration may be implicit in the Rowe testâthe absolute wealth of the parties is not the relevant factor. More important than comparing the relative ability of a party to pay for discovery, the focus should be on the total cost of production as compared to the resources available to each party. Thus, discovery that would be too expensive for one defendant to bear would be a drop in the bucket for another.
Last, âthe importance of the issues at stake in the litigationâ is a critical consideration, even if it is one that will rarely be invoked. For example, if a case has the potential for broad public impact, then public policy weighs heavily in favor of permitting extensive discovery. Cases of this ilk might include toxic tort class actions, environmental actions, so-called âimpactâ or social reform litigation, cases involving criminal conduct, or cases implicating important legal or constitutional questions.
b. A Modification of Rowe: Eliminating Two Factors
Two of the Rowe factors should be eliminated:
First, the Rowe test includes âthe specificity of the discovery request.â Specificity is surely the touchstone of any good discovery request,
Second, the fourth factor, âthe purposes for which the responding party maintains the requested dataâ is typically unimportant. Whether the data is kept for a business purpose or for disaster recovery does not affect its accessibility, which is the practical basis for calculating the cost of production.
Of course, there will be certain limited instances where the very purpose of maintaining the data will be to produce it to the opposing party. That would be the case, for example, where the SEC requested âcommunications sent by [a] broker or dealer (including inter-office memoranda and communications) relating to his business as such.â Such communications must be maintained pursuant to SEC Rule 17a-4.
c. A New Seven-Factor Test
Set forth below is a new seven-factor test based on the modifications to Rowe discussed in the preceding sections.
1. The extent to which the request is specifically tailored to discover relevant information;
2. The availability of such information from other sources;
3. The total cost of production, compared to the amount in controversy;
4. The total cost of production, compared to the resources available to each party;
5. The relative ability of each party to control costs and its incentive to do so;
6. The importance of the issues at stake in the litigation; and
7. The relative benefits to the parties of obtaining the information.
2. The Seven Factors Should Not Be Weighted Equally
Whenever a court applies a multifactor test, there is a temptation to treat the factors as a check-list, resolving the issue in favor of whichever column has the most checks.
Weighting the factors in descending order of importance may solve the problem and avoid a mechanistic application of the test. The first two factorsâcomprising the marginal utility testâare the most important. These factors include: (1) The extent to which the request is specifically tailored to discover relevant information and (2) the availability of such information from other sources. The substance of the marginal utility test was well described in McPeek v. Ashcroft:
The more likely it is that the backup tape contains information that is relevant to a claim or defense, the fairer it is that the [responding party] search at its own expense. The less likely it is, the more unjust it would be to make the [responding party] search at its own expense. The difference is âat the margin.â74
The second group of factors addresses cost issues: âHow expensive will this production be?â and, âWho can handle that expense?â These factors include: (3) the total cost of production compared to the amount in controversy, (4) the total cost of production compared to the resources available to each party and (5) the relative ability of each party to control costs and its incentive to do so. The third âgroupââ(6) the importance of the litigation itselfâstands alone, and as noted earlier will only rarely come into play. But where it does, this factor has the potential to predominate over the others. Collectively, the first three groups correspond to the three explicit considerations of Rule 26(b)(2)(iii). Finally, the last factorâ(7) the relative benefits of production as between the requesting and producing partiesâis the least important because it is fair to presume that the response to a discovery request generally benefits the requesting party. But in the unusual case where production will also provide a tangible or strategic benefit to the responding party, that fact may weigh against shifting costs.
D. A Factual Basis Is Required to Support the Analysis
Courts applying Rowe have uniformly favored cost-shifting largely because of assumptions made concerning the likelihood that relevant information will be found. This is illustrated in Rowe itself:
Here, there is a high enough probability that a broad search of the defendantsâ emails will elicit some relevant information that the search should not be precluded altogether. However, there has certainly been no showing that the e-mails are likely to be a gold mine. No witness has testified, for example, about any e-mail communications that allegedly reflect discriminatory or anti-competitive practices. Thus, the marginal value of searching the e-mails is modest at best, and this factor, too, militates in favor of imposing the costs of discovery on the plaintiffs.75
But such proof will rarely exist in advance of obtaining the requested discovery. The suggestion that a plaintiff must not only demonstrate that probative evidence exists, but also prove that electronic discovery will yield a âgold mine,â is contrary to the plain language of Rule 26(b)(1), which permits discovery of âany matterâ that is ârelevant to [a] claim or defense.â
The best solution to this problem is found in McPeek:
Given the complicated questions presented [and] the clash of policies ... I have decided to take small steps and perform, as it were, a test run. Accordingly, I will order DOJ to perform a backup restoration of the e-mails attributable to Diegelmanâs computer during the period of July 1, 1998 to July 1, 1999____ The DOJ will have to carefully document the time and money*324 spent in doing the search. It will then have to search in the restored e-mails for any document responsive to any of the plaintiffs requests for production of documents. Upon the completion of this search, the DOJ will then file a comprehensive, sworn certification of the time and money spent and the results of the search. Once it does, I will permit the parties an opportunity to argue why the results and the expense do or do not justify any further search.76
Requiring the responding party to restore and produce responsive documents from a small sample of backup tapes will inform the cost-shifting analysis- laid out above. When based on an actual sample, the marginal utility test will not be an exercise in speculationâthere will be tangible evidence of what the backup tapes may have to offer. There will also be tangible evidence of the time and cost required to restore the backup tapes, which in turn will inform the second group of cost-shifting factors. Thus, by requiring a sample restoration of backup tapes, the entire cost-shifting analysis can be grounded in fact rather than guesswork.
IV. CONCLUSION AND ORDER
In summary, deciding disputes regarding the scope and cost of discovery of electronic data requires a three-step analysis:
First, it is necessary to thoroughly understand the responding partyâs computer system, both with respect to active and stored data. For data that is kept in an accessible format, the usual rules of discovery apply: the responding party should pay the costs of producing responsive data. A court should consider cost-shifting only when electronic data is relatively inaccessible, such as in backup tapes.
Second, because the cost-shifting analysis is so fact-intensive, it is necessary to determine what data may be found on the inaccessible media. Requiring the responding party to restore and produce responsive documents from a small sample of the requested backup tapes is a sensible approach in most cases.
Third, and finally, in conducting the cost-shifting analysis, the following factors should be considered, weighted more-or-less in the following order:
1. The extent to which the request is specifically tailored to discover relevant information;
2. The availability of such information from other sources;
3. The total cost of production, compared to the amount in controversy;
4. The total cost of production, compared to the resources available to each party;
5. The relative ability of each party to control costs and its incentive to do so;
6. The importance of the issues at stake in the litigation; and
7. The relative benefits to the parties of obtaining the information.
Accordingly, UBS is ordered to produce all responsive e-mails that exist on its optical disks or on its active servers (ie., in HP OpenMail files) at its own expense. UBS is also ordered to produce, at its expense, responsive e-mails from any jive backups tapes selected by Zubulake. UBS should then prepare an affidavit detailing the results of its search, as well as the time and money spent. After reviewing the contents of the backup tapes and UBSâs certification, the Court will conduct the appropriate cost-shifting analysis.
A conference is scheduled in Courtroom 12C at 4:30 p.m. on June 17, 2003.
. Henry David Thoreau, A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers (1849).
. Swierkiewicz v. Sorema, N.A., 534 U.S. 506, 512, 122 S.Ct. 992, 152 L.Ed.2d 1 (2002).
. Jones v. Goord, No. 95 Civ. 8026, 2002 WL 1007614, at *1 (S.D.N.Y. May 16, 2002).
. See Hickman v. Taylor, 329 U.S. 495, 500-01, 67 S.Ct. 385, 91 L.Ed. 451 (1947).
. See Wendy R. Liebowitz, Digital Discovery Starts to Work, Natâl L.J., Nov. 4, 2002, at 4 (reporting that in 1999, ninety-three percent of all information generated was in digital form).
. Rowe Entm't, Inc. v. William Morris Agency, Inc., 205 F.R.D. 421, 429 (S.D.N.Y.2002) (explaining that electronic data is so voluminous because, unlike paper documents, âthe costs of storage are virtually nil. Information is retained not because it is expected to be used, but because there is no compelling reason to discard itâ), aff'd, 2002 WL 975713 (S.D.N.Y. May 9, 2002).
. Rowe, 205 F.R.D. at 423.
. Indeed, Zubulake has already produced a sort of "smoking gunâ: an e-mail suggesting that she be fired "ASAPâ after her EEOC charge was filed, in part so that she would not be eligible for year-end bonuses. See 8/21/01 e-mail from Mike Davie