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Year Archive
View Article  Let the acquisitions begin...
Santa has delivered an early Christmas present to the management of KM specialists Solcara who earlier this afternoon (Friday 21st) announced they had become part of the AIM-listed ArgentVive plc group. The announcement reads...

"Solcara is delighted to announce that we are becoming part of the ArgentVive plc group which is listed on the London AIM market. ArgentVive recognised the excellence of Solcara’s software, the quality of its customer base and the mature company infrastructure. The investment will accelerate the development of Solcara’s market leading applications, Crisis Control Centre, Communications Centre, SolSearch and Know How.
 
"In becoming part of the ArgentVive group, Solcara will be able to enter international markets much more quickly and we expect to grow rapidly employing more staff throughout our organisation and further strengthening our excellent customer support function."
 
Ray Jackson, Managing Director of Solcara, who is becoming CEO of the ArgentVive plc group, commented, "We liked the people, the ambition and the honest business ethos. In Solcara's view, joining ArgentVive provides the best possible home for Solcara and will allow our company, staff and customers to prosper."

ArgentVive plc describes itself as "an e-commerce group with market leading technology and the development capability, infrastructure and sales models to rapidly expand in B2B and B2C markets. The aim of the company is to develop online businesses in order to become a major provider of internet based solutions to enterprises across a wide range of industries.
 
"ArgentVive plc intends to become a primary resource for information and knowledge management services, new digital platforms, and bespoke e-commerce trading solutions. The company will leverage this position to help its clients achieve significant performance and profit improvements through the creative and innovative use of online technology."
View Article  Situations Vacant - probably
We've just had a meeting with a firm of headhunters, who wantde to pick our brains as they are looking to recruit a business development director for a large legal IT supplier. While they were settling the bill, we took the opportunity to take a close look at the job spec. This is what it said (probably)...

Qualifications required:

1.    Ability to see in the dark.
2.    Good communicator, but with an uncanny ability of not actually saying anything of substance.
3.    Team player, or better still a referee-minded personality who is used to keeping at least two opposing sides playing the same game in a confined market space.
4.    At least 5 years successful track record. (Because let’s face it, they’re the last years of success you’ll have!!!)
5.    Good understanding of the legal market. (However, if you really had this you wouldn’t want the job!!!)


View Article  Gossip Alert
We're hearing reports that a major legal publisher (which narrows it down a bit) will buy a UK practice & case management systems supplier (which widens things out again) before the end of this year.
View Article  DLA Piper select Interwoven Universal Search
DLA Piper has selected Interwoven Universal Search – Professional Services Edition to enable staff in Europe, the Middle East, and Asia to search the organisation’s knowledge repositories, and to provide fee-earners with immediate and highly accurate results for ensuring optimal sharing of firm expertise.
 
“Our knowledge management supports lawyers in finding and retrieving the right answers from a wide range of systems and information sources,” said David Halliwell, Head of Knowledge Management for Europe and Asia at DLA Piper. “Our cross-border transactions mean that the most relevant best practices may be from another country.  Interwoven Universal Search will support us in guiding people to the most relevant and current information.”
 
”By using Interwoven Universal Search our staff will have immediate and secure access to what they are looking for, all within a simple Web interface,” said Jon Short, Head of Applications at DLA Piper. 
View Article  HIPs - C-NLIS complains about the accuracy of searches
The Council for the National Land Information Service (C-NLIS) is concerned that the range and accuracy of property search information contained in Home Information Packs (HIPs) may not be enough for the home buyer to make a fully informed choice.

As the property market approaches 100 days since the launch of the 3-bed home information pack and moves towards the full roll out of the packs today (14th December) C-NLIS CEO Alex Fraser said "Our interest is in the property search element of the HIP. Searches contain vital information about a property which may effect the buyer's decision to proceed with purchase. Most home information pack providers choose their searches on price grounds, this can affect the quality and depth of the information provided, which cannot be in the best interests of the home buyer."

In a recent poll C-NLIS asked industry experts for their views on the accuracy and quality of search data, Peter Rodd, conveyancing partner at Boys & Maughan commented "We have concerns as to the accuracy of some of the information contained in personal searches. Some personal search providers limit planning history to 10 years whereas official searches direct from Local Authority go back much further."

Paul Marsh, the Law Society's vice-president also raised concerns "I have seen a personal search where the question regarding building control approval was answered until such time as the Council allow us to access the records we are not able to answer the enquiry, therefore enquiry covered by insurance. That was not true, because the council in question did make the information available, but the personal searcher had to pay for access to the information. The search company avoided making a payment by exploiting the transitional regulations. The seller was left with a HIP that did not comply with the regulations and the buyer, with a useless search."

Amanda Renshaw, chair of the Local Land Charges Institute commented that because the HIP is cost-driven and not information-driven, local authorities now spend a far greater amount of time answering enquiries from purchasers‚ solicitors who have received a HIP with a personal search in it and need to have the personal search information checked and clarified. "We are seeing an ever-increasing number of personal searches which contain wholly inaccurate information," says Amanda Renshaw.
View Article  Ignore electronic data policy and go to jail
CEOs are most likely to bear personal and professional risk from their organisations’ lack of action on how electronic evidence is managed - despite the fact that they are rarely involved in developing or enforcing that policy.  That’s the major finding of a new independent study commissioned by Kroll Ontrack  that was released this morning (12th December).

The report finds that less than half of organisations (48% in the UK, 43% US) have a strategy or policy in place on how to deal with electronically stored information (ESI).  In the UK, a quarter of organisations (25%) said that their legal department has primary responsibility for developing policy, yet 39% said that their CEOs would face the consequences resulting from a breach of that policy. In the US, 41% of respondents said that their organisations give responsibility for developing that policy to the in-house legal department.  However a fifth of organisations (19%) said that the CEO would be held accountable if that policy resulted in government fines, court-imposed sanctions or damage to reputation. 

“These statistics are frightening yet not surprising. The explosion of electronic information and the onslaught of new rules, regulations and laws have made it incredibly difficult for companies and counsel to stay on top of everything,” said Kristin Nimsger, president, Kroll Ontrack. “The fact that there is no clear definition of who should be developing or enforcing the policies shows there is a lack of ownership. With the size of fines and severity of sanctions that can be imposed, this has moved from being a concern for IT or the legal team to a core business issue in which today’s executives and Boards of Directors must now be involved.”

Statistics show that UK business alone lose £72 billion per year due to corporate fraud, which equates to approximately 6% of companies’ annual turnover, and yet only half of the UK’s 350 largest companies have put any additional measures in place to protect themselves.  European Commission fines can reach as high as 10% of the company’s turnover in their recent business year for cartel and fraud practices, much of which is executed and uncovered in electronic communications.

Incorrect handling of ESI has already led to a number of serious consequences for organisations, with several falling foul of the US Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and the UK Civil Procedures.   Since 2001, there have been 50,000 changes to the UK FSA rule book, including 4,000 pages of amendments in legal instruments between Oct 2006 and Jan 2007.  The NASD, the US provider of financial regulatory services, had 135 rule filings in 2006, 1,099 changes to the Manual since 2004 and the AMEX Rule 903 has changed six times since 2005.

Martin Carey, Managing Director of Kroll Ontrack in London said, “Clearly in the UK, in-house counsel and their external counsel are lacking significantly in their training and understanding of rules and regulations regarding their electronic information. They do not yet seem to be grasping the fact that all this data is no longer just information; rather it can now all be considered as evidence. This fact alone shows a severe lack of ownership and understanding.”

Despite the growing pressure to comply with regulation, only 17% of UK in-house legal counsels believe that they are fully up to speed with all case law, developments and regulations relating to ESI.  Less than half (42%) think they have a good understanding but could benefit from more knowledge.  More than a quarter (26%) say that they have a low level of understanding, while 14% say that they know little, if anything about ESI or have never heard of it.

US counsel outshines their UK counterparts yet still only 25% say that they are fully up to speed with all case law, developments and regulations relating to ESI.  Less than half (43%) believe that they have a fairly good understanding but could benefit from more knowledge. Almost a quarter (24%) have a low level of understanding while a further 9% either know little or have never heard of it. 

US legal teams are far more concerned than UK counterparts about the reality of growing volumes of ESI.  The biggest challenge faced by legal departments in the US will be unmanageable volumes of ESI (cited by 21% of respondents in the US compared to 11% in the UK).  By contrast, the UK’s primary concern was lack of training in legal trends (16%).

• You can find the full text of the 16 page report (as a Word document) by clicking on the attachment accompanying this story.

• Orange Rag comment: It's nice to hear about all these regulations but a little ironic that the biggest culprits are the government departments and agencies whose internal data protection procedures are so lax that they'd get sacked from even the most sloppily run private sector business. In the UK we are hearing about new lapses every couple of days (what is it about government departments and unencrypted CDs) however here's a story from the US you may not have heard before...

A US official overseeing a probe of former Bush aide Karl Rove - Special Counsel Scott J. Bloch - bypassed his own agency's computer technicians and hired an outside firm to perform a seven-level wipe of his computer hard drive, all but guaranteeing the files could never be restored. Although the official said he contracted the work after suspecting his computer was infected by a virus, a manager with the private firm said a wipe that thorough is an unusual way to treat a malware infection. The receipt for the work performed makes no mention of a virus.

Bloch's office is investigating whether Rove and other White House officials improperly used government agencies to help re-elect Republicans running from Congressional seats. In turn, Bloch has been the subject of a White House-ordered probe into whether he improperly retaliated against whistle-blowers in his own staff and dismissed cases brought to his agency. Following the revelation of the computer wipes, federal investigators have requested Bloch turn over copies of personal files that he saved to his America Online account before his hard disk was scrubbed. Bloch has refused, saying the data, which included medical information, messages to his personal attorney and pictures from his son's tours of duty in Iraq, don't involve his official work.

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View Article  Mass translation from Trilantic
Trilantic has announced the launch of Trilantic Translation Services (TTS), a mass translation tool, specific to the needs of the legal market. Trilantic has partnered with Translution, a leader in translation technology to provide a system that meets the requirements of law firms and corporations with multinational and/or, multilingual document translation needs.

TTS is claimed to be far more accurate than any of the web based
tools currently available, combining cutting edge technology with practice and case specific dictionaries. Law firms can analyse vast amounts of multi-lingual documents, quickly and efficiently, reducing the need for local translators. Human error and misunderstanding are minimised as is the need for short term resource when specific cases arise, giving the legal team access to the documents in days rather than weeks. Speed to review, compliance and risk management is therefore improved as relevant data can be identified quickly. Firms can take on multinational cases/projects more effectively and ultimately pass this benefit onto their clients.

In comparison to human translation the cost and time savings are significant. Typically human
translation will cost around 12p a word. This automated process will cost around 22p per 250 words, a huge cost saving. With regards to time, the average translator works at a speed of around 2500 words per day. TTS can translate up to 100,000 foreign language documents within 3-5 working days.
View Article  Seagate to acquire Metalincs
Seagate Technology has announced that it has signed an agreement to acquire MetaLINCS, a technology leader in the fast-growing US E-Discovery market. MetaLINCS's patent-pending software helps companies respond to litigation and regulatory issues that require them to search large volumes of electronic data for relevant information. MetaLINCS will become part of the Seagate Services Group and support its mission to help business customers protect and manage valuable company information. Financial terms were not disclosed.

According to Gartner analysts Debra Logan and John Bace in the report The Emerging E-Discovery Market, published on July 2007, "Changes to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, along with the ever-increasing reliance on electronic documentation in business, will have wide-ranging effects on the IT profession and IT vendors in 2007 and 2008. IT will be called on to account for elements of their infrastructure and the location of live and backup data as never before."

"Today's announcement represents another strategic step for the Seagate Services Group and further reinforces our commitment to providing customers with innovative technology-based services and solutions that advance their businesses," said Mark Grace, senior vice president and general manager, Seagate Services Group. "The addition of MetaLINCS's solutions will provide our customers with the tools to respond to litigation and compliance requests and help to reduce enterprise E-Discovery costs."
 
• MetaLINCS's enterprise-class E-Discovery software automatically analyzes emails, documents and associated metadata, and presents visual analysis of people, conversations, concepts and communication patterns. Founded in 2003, MetaLINCS is a privately held company with more than 50 employees. Ramon Nunez, CEO of MetaLINCS, will join the Seagate Services senior management team and will lead the Seagate Services Group's E-Discovery business unit.

MetaLINCS is the most recent acquisition for the Seagate Services Group. In 2007, Seagate purchased EVault, an award winning provider of online backup and archive solutions for small and mid sized enterprises, and in 2005, Seagate purchased Action Front (now Seagate Recovery Services), a leading provider of data recovery and data migration services. These acquisitions provide Seagate with growing opportunities in the data protection and management solutions market and are highly scalable with Seagate's technology portfolio and market expertise. Following the MetaLINCS acquisition, the Seagate Services Group will provide the following primary solutions:
•    E-Discovery solutions targeted at addressing a growing market need to retrieve and analyze large volumes of data in support of litigation and compliance requirements
•    Complete business continuity, compliance and disaster recovery services with high availability, secure backup and recovery of business-critical data
•    A wide range of data recovery, data migration and data accessibility solutions to meet the needs of enterprise, small/medium businesses and consumers
View Article  The IRIS roadmap - here is the full unexpurgated announcement
LONDON - 6 December 2007 – IRIS Legal today announced its direction for the future of the Legal IT sector outlining how they intend to protect customer investment in existing products while delivering new products and innovation as part of a 5 year plan.

The new plan, outlined today by Arlene Adams (MD of the IRIS Legal business) at a press and consulting conference held at Microsoft, builds on IRIS’ market leading position and proven track record of delivering long term commitment and investment in its chosen markets.

By comparison the IRIS Accounting Practice Solutions business, which is not dissimilar to IRIS Legal in size (£30m annual revenues and the leading provider of integrated practice management software), has already set out a long term roadmap for customers supported by a multi-million pound investment in next generation products.  Over the past 6 years the IRIS Accounting Practice Solutions business has grown their customer base from 2,500 to over 15,000 practices and only last month was awarded Accountancy Age Practice Management Software Product of the Year. Much of the growth, which has delivered IRIS 40% market share, is organic thus demonstrating that customers want to partner with software vendors who have a clear long term roadmap backed by the right level of investment and skills.  

Martin Leuw CEO of IRIS Group commented: "Our customers choose to partner with IRIS because we have demonstrated time and time again our commitment to the market sectors in which we operate, in particular the professions. It is our strategy to be number 1 in our chosen markets and to deliver on this we recognise the need for a long term plan supported by continuous investment. It is our clear ambition to grow our market share in the legal sector through offering great products and customer service just as we have to the Accountancy profession and elsewhere within the IRIS Group, where our customer retention rates in the high 90%’s are amongst the best in the industry."

Having already restructured the business in early October, to position it for growth, Adams today set out the 5 year product strategy that is built on the premise of protecting customer investment while delivering new applications and innovation to customers. The product strategy is based on research that indicates law firm's immediate technology needs are growing beyond the hard and fast back office processing towards flexible front end applications tailored to how users work in their daily environments. The strategy is being driven by the need for legal firms to be more flexible, creative and cost effective in how they do business in order to compete in a market which is increasingly facing tightening commercial pressures and rising client expectations.

Introducing IRIS Legal Link.
IRIS Legal is developing a technology framework called Legal Link to deliver on their vision of an integrated legal desktop over a 5 to 6 year period for the solicitor, barrister and coroner market. This framework integrates the existing IRIS legal applications with new legal applications and relevant IRIS group products. During this period IRIS Legal also plans to introduce new practice and case management (PCM) modules through the merging of best practice and technology from the existing PCM systems. The framework is based on a modular approach with a view to delivering a world class integrated legal desktop in 5 years.

Legal Link is based on the Microsoft .Net technology and will be available as a software solution and over time as a managed service. This is the same technology currently being used to develop the latest generation of IRIS Accounting Practice software. While careful consideration was given to the underpinning technology it was clear that Microsoft .Net offered both customers and IRIS the best protection of investment long term. In this market Microsoft is widely accepted and therefore it would have been limiting for customers if IRIS Legal were to base the strategy on any other technology. This decision also has the added benefit of providing the best opportunity for customers to maintain open links to other market products as well as IRIS being able to leverage much of the hard work already conducted by the IRIS Accounting Practice.  IRIS is a Microsoft Gold and Hosted Services Partner.

New Applications
The framework has been designed to protect the investment customers have made in their existing IRIS systems while allowing for the deployment of new applications and function that can further advance the efficiency and competitive advantage of a legal firm.

IRIS market research and customer feedback indicates that the priority for new development rests in "front office" applications, ie Lawyer and Client facing, such as email and diary management, task and document management, CRM, workflow and knowledge management. Innovation in front office applications in the legal market have been limited to date. This is an area where IRIS can leverage its significant R&D resources and the technology available in the wider IRIS Group to excel in delivering new innovations to the legal community. Legal Link also takes advantage of the wider IRIS group technology and "know how", including solutions in Human Resources (HR), Payroll, Workflow, Client Relationship Management (CRM) and Company Secretarial. The framework will also embrace the need to see more integration between solicitors and barristers at a technology level. Given IRIS is a leading player in both markets it recognises the opportunity to innovate and make it easier for solicitors and barristers to do business in a secure environment.



Protecting Customer Investments
IRIS Legal recognises the long term investment that customers are making and therefore the need for stability and clear road maps. "Our product strategy is built on a pre-requisite to protect the investment of existing customers by not discontinuing any existing products, but simultaneously investing in the next generation technology platforms which both existing and new customers can migrate to over time to improve their operational efficiency, customer  service and  business performance" stated Arlene Adams, Managing Director, "Only a supplier of the size, stature and resources of IRIS has the capability to make this a reality for users".  

Adams reinforces IRIS's public commitment from earlier this year to provide support on all existing IRIS Legal products for at least 4 years. Adams comments that "a public commitment to maintaining support on existing product is important in under pinning the new product strategy.  Our strategy is not a big bang approach but rather a step by step approach to ease the migration for customers. We see this more as an upgrade path for our existing product set as opposed to a replacement strategy. This is important so that customers can take time to plan for any changes and can align any changes to direct business benefit."  

A commercial roadmap is also being developed to align to the technology roadmap. This will be based on the premise that IRIS protects customers existing investment. New applications and function will be charged for as they always have been.  Existing software function will be part of the customer support agreement and for this there will be no additional software charge. Customers will only have to pay for the new function that they don't have today. The decision to invest therefore should be at a customer's choice based on the value and return.

Committed to Finance and R&D Investment
IRIS Legal accounts for approximately 30% of the IRIS Software Group’s £100m+ annual revenues, similar in size to the IRIS Accounting Practice business. IRIS is committed to making the necessary investments in research, development and customer service to enable IRIS Legal to increase market share and drive innovation in the legal sector.

The announcement of today's future roadmap, together with IRIS's proven track record of investment and long term commitment to its chosen markets is a true demonstration of the benefits the enlarged Group with its significant resources of people, experience and financial investment can bring to customers.

(Statement ends)

View Article  IRIS roadmap coming soon
IRIS are unveiling details of their product roadmap later today. Full details will appear on the Orange Rag blog later this afternoon/early evening (Thursday 6th December) – but we think the person who posted the latest comment on Rupert White's article would lose his bet.
View Article  Is Sharepoint just a corporate virus ?
Now here's an interesting report... CMS Watch (a US-based analyst firm that evaluates document and content management technologies) has found that although Microsoft Office SharePoint Server (MOSS) 2007 brings improved collaboration facilities over previous editions, it comes at the cost of a dearth of enterprise management services, leading to rampant viral proliferation and instances of uncontrolled content, as well as major compliancy risks.

According to CMS Watch principal Alan Pelz-Sharpe: "The latest version of SharePoint, MOSS 2007, is running as rampant in large enterprises as the previous version. On the one hand, this is testimony to its well-deserved popularity for simple document collaboration, but it also leads to serious management problems that Microsoft itself can't adequately address today."

As the number of MOSS instances grows, enterprises can in fact reach a point of negative returns where an inability to manage proliferating SharePoint silos becomes a hidden but serious enterprise management risk. Customers then require compliance tools are needed along with industrial strength archiving – costs that most enterprises have not budgeted for. "Larger enterprises are beginning to realize that they need to invest in developing genuine ECM strategies to bring some order to this chaos," says Pelz-Sharpe.

Among many customers CMS Watch finds IT departments enthusiastically promoting SharePoint, since end users and departments can install and run these small repositories themselves. However in time this comes back to haunt IT, as it leaves the firms open to compliance failure and e-discovery exposures, along with servers and networks running hot hosting mountains of redundant data.

So there you have it – your MOSS implementation could turn into a self-inflicted corporate virus. The report is available for purchase at
www.cmswatch.com

View Article  Guest article – Chris Dale on e-disclosure

Some e-disclosure ideas for judges – and for the Courts Service

by Chris Dale*

I spoke in Birmingham last week to a room-full of judges under the title e-Disclosure and the Courts – some ideas for judges. The audience, a mixture of District Judges and Specialist Judges from the Chancery and Mercantile Courts in Bristol, Manchester and Leeds, had been invited by His Honour Judge Simon Brown QC, of the Birmingham Civil Justice Centre. The event was hosted by Mark Surguy of Pinsent Masons.

By coincidence, this theme had been foreshadowed by KPMG Forensic’s recent survey (reported in The Orange Rag) e-Disclosure – The 21st Century Legal Challenge which reported practitioners’ view that the court rules about e-Disclosure are unclear and that judges and masters were ill-equipped to make effective case management decisions. 

The rules, the overriding objective and proportionality
The range of relevant topics is wide. At least one fundamental obligation, the Practice Direction to part 31 of the CPR, is rarely imposed and, in consequence, rarely complied with. The courts’ wide-ranging powers, both those expressly relating to Disclosure and the general powers under the overriding objective and the general management powers are not used as they might be in this context.

The courts cannot decide what is proportionate without some idea of the problems which face lawyers trying to comply with the Practice Direction. Further, a judge will feel uncomfortable making an order for electronic disclosure without knowing what facilities – software and services – exist which would enable the lawyers to comply with such an order.

We looked at the Rules and the Commercial Court Guide in the context of the range of possible sources of documents (itself a widely-defined term) from e-mail servers to spreadsheets to Blackberries, mobile phones and beyond. Relevant factors, I suggested, include not just balancing the time and cost of retrieval against likely value, but considering what sort of case it was – what was over the top for one set of facts might be a neglect of the obvious in another. 

Disclosure Statements and Technology Questionnaires
We talked about disclosure statements and who should sign them – someone who knows about the sources. The form itself is open to criticism for ambiguity and for encouraging a box-ticking, as opposed to a thoughtful, answer. The Commercial Court Guide says in terms that the court may question the giver’s qualifications as well as his statement. That power exists anyway, I suggested, under the CPR’s general discretionary powers and was just one example of how courts might exert more control over disclosure.

There are no standard forms of technology questionnaires and agreements for exchange. The judges were puzzled to learn that the draft Practice Direction written by LiST (the Litigation Support Technology Group) submitted to the DCA (as was) in July 2005 after over a year’s consultation is languishing somewhere in the Ministry of Justice. It includes a draft technology questionnaire. This is a simple and obvious way of flushing out disclosure issues at an early stage, and it seems daft that individual courts (or anyone else) should begin their own version when so much skilled work has gone into the LiST version.

It is obviously right that anything which purports to vary, extend or clarify the rules must go through the formal channels, including the Rule Committee. A technology questionnaire does not, or need not, have this status. I am not sure what is worse – that there should be no technology questionnaires or that each court should invent its own. I say more on this below. 

The technology
We looked at data – what is it and what can you do with it? You can sort it, sift it, de-duplicate it and use key words to try and pick out the most relevant. You can exchange it with others.

I showed the judges some documents data in raw form and in a tidied up version in an Excel spreadsheet which could be used both as a list of documents and for exchange. We went through the difference between native format and .tiff or .pdf images. I showed the same document in both forms and explained the pros and cons of each.

I summarised what software and services are actually available to users who find themselves acting in a case which involves any significant proportion of electronic documents. There are many suppliers, from large international consulting firms down to small providers and consultants.

For those who want to keep the work in house, and have or are willing to learn the skills, there is a low-cost desktop package called OutIndex, which costs £250 per year and which can suck data out of message files and document folders and make a rough draft list. Alternatively, the lawyers can delegate the identification and collection of data. FoxData(the company who sponsored my time on this project) will harvest data from any source, anywhere and deliver it to lawyers' desks quickly and in a form which can be reviewed. 

I showed them CaseMap, which can be downloaded from the web very cheaply. Even if its sophisticated analysis functions are ignored, it makes a very good “spreadsheet with bells on” for reviewing what you have got and looking at the documents. There are other companies, both niche specialists and full-service providers, to whom the whole or any part of the task can be delegated, and a range of software applications to put it in. 

Lastly, I described the rationale and mechanics of exchanging document information, from initial agreements through to court involvement in approving and enforcing them. I showed how five simple columns in an Excel spreadsheet could be joined to make a merged list. The mechanics may be different in a big specialist system but the principles are the same, as LiST’s documents made clear.

All these things need some outlay and probably some outside help at least to begin with. But any other approach involving any quantity of documents also involves outlay - either manual sifting with printing and copying bills - or being ignored. The latter course is pragmatic and cheap, but hardly consistent with the requirements of Part 31. 

Input from the Litigation Support Technology Group – LiST and KPMG

Jonathan Maas of DLA Piper and the LiST Group was on hand to tell the judges about LiST’s work. He described succinctly the intentions behind LiST’s draft Practice Direction on the use of technology and its data exchange protocols, which are already used between the bigger firms and are easily adapted to any situation. One of LiST’s achievements has been to produce documents which can be varied for the circumstances and the size of case, including relatively small ones. It seems a waste of an enormous amount of focused thinking that this work has not been taken up and extended.

Tom Hopkinson of KPMG Forensic spoke about KPMG’s e-Disclosure survey. Whilst the survey’s respondents were from bigger firms who regularly handle Disclosure electronically, the conclusions drawn are applicable in much smaller firms. One of the judges made the point that the cases coming through now are probably the last in which e-mail files are not the dominant document source. Larger firms may be able to absorb the volumes by throwing bodies at the problem. Smaller ones will not have that luxury. 

The discussions afterwards
Even within this relatively narrow group, there is a wide range of knowledge and experience derived from the type of cases they see, and it is correspondingly challenging to know where to pitch and how to pace a talk to them. From the wide-ranging discussion afterwards, it became clear that I should in future take the subjects in reverse order – the technical problems and their practical solutions first and the procedural requirements and remedies last. Then, if we run short of time, it is the rules we can take at the canter not the technology, which judges rarely get to see.

The reality is that the two are interlinked in the context of a decision as to what is proportionate. The point is not so much what the rules say – that is clear on their face, although the critical Practice Direction to Part 31 seems to have hidden its face pretty well – but the practical implications of time and cost which are involved in the assessment of proportionality.

Apart from their wish to see more of the technology and their acceptance that some of their powers were under-used, the main message from the judges was that more could be done from above to help the practitioners focus on the problems raised by electronic documents and to appreciate the benefits of doing so.

The need for this focus  - the express obligation to discuss issues arising from electronic sources - arises before the first CMC, that is, before a individual judge has the opportunity to apply any pressure or encouragement to a particular case. A technology questionnaire is the obvious way to impose an expectation, and a consistent expectation, across all cases, as to the information needed to make case management decisions. The decision which results may be that e-disclosure is not relevant. A technology questionnaire would make that clear or, as the case may be, would enable an informed approach to be agreed or ordered.

The messages for the judges

Judges are an audience which is pivotal to the management of civil litigation. What are the shortest possible messages to them and to the practitioners appearing before them? There are five of them, I think:

  1. The Practice Direction to Part 31 is a requirement not an option, and the use of the word “should” (as in “the parties should… discuss any issues”) does not in reality mean anything less than “must”. In any event, the general powers of management entitle a judge to give whatever weight he or she thinks appropriate to the word.

  2. Some cases clearly warrant electronic Disclosure, many others equally clearly do not. The PD requires no more than that parties do their homework so that they, and the court if necessary, can decide at the outset what is proportionate on an informed basis.

  3. The Practice Direction is primarily intended as, and should be seen as, a protection not a burden. Coupled with the discretionary powers, it is the means by which the court protects the small party against the large one, prevents the passing of the burden from giver to recipient, and restrains those who would use their technical skills to cow an opponent.

  4. Judges are not expected to know it all – no-one else does, so why should they? If a party is not able to explain any e-disclosure issues arising from their side’s electronic documents, that is their failing not the court’s.

  5. There is no shortage of help available. It is not necessarily cheap, but its costs, properly managed, should be pro rata to the problem and its deployment, volume for volume, should cut both time and expense.
     

The message for the Courts Service

What message should we send upwards, to those responsible for policy? One will do, I think. A draft LiST Practice Direction has existed for over two years. Its scope is wider than e-disclosure – it concerns the general use of IT in litigation - but it includes a form of technology questionnaire and data exchange recommendations. LiST may want to review it to take account of the developments of the last three years, not least the Practice Direction to Part 31, but these documents exist and they were highly thought of when they were drafted.

Consideration of the technology questionnaire and exchange recommendations should be hived off from the draft Practice Direction and put to a small group of the judges I met in Birmingham for them to discuss amongst themselves and with representatives of court users. They should then be speedily promoted for use in the courts.

No official or statutory imprimatur is needed for this, just some co-ordination, a few words of encouragement and a mechanism for feedback. The use of such documents fits within a judge’s discretionary powers and all we need to do is ensure that we do not have every court drafting its own version. I can think of at least three members of my audience who would be glad to get stuck into this.

The upshot could be – and in very short order – a form of technology questionnaire which would be sent out electronically by the court and available on court web sites as a compulsory requirement. Formal adoption in the rules might follow, but is not required. I am certain that a small group of judges and practitioners, with LiST’s draft and some input from LiST, could not only produce a workable questionnaire but could be using it almost immediately.
 

The technology Practice Direction and the role of LiST

The draft Practice Direction on the use of IT in civil proceedings necessarily needs a more formal approach. LiST deserves better than to be ignored. One of three courses should be adopted. HMCS should:

  • say that LiST’s approach is right but their mechanism flawed in whatever defined respects;

  • or say in terms that no such formal document is needed and suggest, or invite views on, an alternative;

  • or it should send the PD on its way to the Rule Committee via the normal channels.

LiST's draft Practice Direction should not be left rotting in a packing case in the MoJ basement. The Rule Committee might be encouraged to look at the disclosure statement in Form 265 (the list of documents) as well.
 

The importance for the lawyers

I referred above to cases with ‘a significant proportion of electronic documents’. What does this mean in real terms? One of the judges said he gets a document-heavy case – which he defined as say 800 plus documents on each side - about every 18 months. What skills are worth learning in a firm, and what investment is worth making for that?

At the least a firm needs to know what it would do when such a case comes along. The questions to be asked, though, are these: how much prospective litigation has been abandoned, or settled on disadvantageous terms, because the lawyers could not handle the documents cost-effectively? What document sources have been ignored, knowingly or not? Is it really the case that there are so few cases with many documents or is the reality that no-one is asking? In any event, the point at issue is not how many cases are document-heavy but how to identify and handle the ones which are.

It is not just larger commercial cases which involve electronic documents. Email is replacing both formal and oral contracts at all levels. One of the points made by the judges was that many small claims e.g. for housing, road and pavement incidents and the like are against local authorities and other administrative bodies whose documents are largely electronic. There are claims to be won – and work to be won – by taking on parties like this on electronic terms.
 

What should HMCS, judges and practitioners aim to achieve?

The aim is not, in policy terms, to drive up the number of disputes which are litigated, but to offer businesses and individuals a cost-effective remedy where disputes arise.

In practice management terms the aim is to know what tools and services exist which lower the barriers to doing work cost-effectively - the alternative is doing it not cost-effectively or not doing it at all.

In practice development terms there is work to be won away from other firms whose approach to electronic documents does not match the clients’ use of them – and if that has not yet fed through into the disputes being litigated it must do so from now, five or six years after e-mail became the dominant means of business communication.

In the courts’ terms, the aim is not rigid compliance with the formal rules about documents, but proportionate use of the discretionary powers to compel open discussion about what exists, and informed input into how to handle it. One of the problems identified at our Birmingham session was that courts cannot leap from ignoring a rule or Practice Direction to enforcing it severely. We need a means is of reminding parties of the PD obligations before they reach the first CMC.

A technology questionnaire is an obvious immediate starting point for proper use of the Practice Direction to Part 31. That Practice Direction, the invisible one which has been in the Rules for over two years, is the key to reducing the time and expense of litigation.
 

E-filing and other technological advances

There are rumours in the air that the wider question of electronic filing may be getting back onto the agenda. Pretty well every other public body now handles its business and its dealings with the public electronically, and it seems odd that the practical side of the administration of civil justice is still run much as it was when I qualified as a solicitor in 1980.

However enthusiastic I am for e-filing – and I am – it is essential that consideration of such technology is decoupled from lawyers’ use of technology to run their cases. Both will have a profound effect on the way cases are run, but e-disclosure is a matter for solicitors and their clients (perhaps with a nudge from the court) to decide on today and be using tomorrow. E-filing requires budgets, decisions, new technology, project planning and years of development.

The needs do not stop at e-filing. The word is that at least one new court centre is well into its planning stage with no mention of the wiring and other components needed for electronic displays of documents and other evidence. If this is right, it will be no more fit for 21st Century hearings than is the RCJ.
 

Conclusion

Let’s play God, or at least his representative in the higher levels of the Courts Service. Litigation has declined to the extent that London risks losing work to other jurisdictions, and all but the richest businesses and individuals have no realistic remedy for their legitimate disputes. There is a recession coming, or at least an economic downturn, and disputes breed in recession. The Master of the Rolls has publicly referred to the ‘evils of delay, inefficiency and excess costs’ in the civil courts.

A group of judges working in the front-line of case management is deeply committed to tackling these “evils”. A large and respected business consulting firm has produced a survey showing dissatisfaction amongst court users. A body of litigation support experts has given much time, skill and thought to the procedures and documents needed to improve case management, but their work has lain neglected in a Ministry basement.

The Law Society, who last showed interest in civil litigation on 24 March 2004 (when it hosted a packed meeting on The Impact of IT on the Civil Courts), is raising its head on the subject on behalf of its members. A Law Society-sponsored talk on e-disclosure in the Midlands is so over-subscribed that a second one must be arranged.

What are the quick kills here? What steps have the biggest leverage in the shortest time with the least expense which meet the criticisms and make use of the available talents and the current level of interest?

We should first separate out the things which require formality and/or which cost money from those which can start tomorrow. I don’t mean ditch the former, but send them down parallel tracks at their own speeds.

  • Track 3 will be those things like e-filing which require long-term planning and investment.

  • On Track 2 are matters which require consultation and the involvement of the Rule Committee. All that is needed for now is a formal indication that submissions would be welcome and would be considered – even that much cannot be taken for granted having regard to the fate of LiST’s work. It seems unlikely that LiST’s members – the best realistic source of applied thought on this subject - will spontaneously offer fresh thinking whilst their last efforts have been entirely ignored.

  • Track 1 could start tomorrow. Consideration of a draft technology questionnaire needs no input from above or, rather, needs no further input because support for the spread of best practice has already been given and is implied anyway. LiST’s draft exists. Our Birmingham session showed that there is plenty of judicial enthusiasm. All they need (and I do not under-estimate this as a problem) is the time to devote to the task and the input of some of those who practice before them.

If we can get a room-full of judges to turn out for an e-disclosure training session and can raise 160 expressions of interest from West Midlands lawyers and their clients in a talk on e-disclosure, I am sure we can easily find enough solicitors willing to get involved.

So the immediate steps amount to no more than this: we need public signs from above that the Master of the Rolls’ lament about the ‘evils of delay, inefficiency and excess costs’ in the civil courts was no mere hand-wringing but the opening shots in a campaign to tackle them. The key word here is “public” – the Courts Service is in fact taking this very seriously but I suspect that you read it here first.

A directive might go out in some form – a Practice Note, a speech, a podcast, a YouTube video - anything which encourages judges and parties to focus early and which encourages LiST, the Law Society and others to re-commit to the debate.

In the short term, we need no new rules nor any great expense. With a little public encouragement, we could just get on with it.

Chris Dale qualified as a solicitor in 1980 and has been a legal IT consultant specialising in litigation support since 1993. For details visit www.chrisdalelawyersupport.co.uk

   

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