Say goodbye to boilerplate objections and responses to discovery requests
By George S. Bellas & Misty J. Cygan
Civil Practice and Procedure,
May 2017
For many attorneys and law firms it is standard practice to object to most, if not all, discovery requests with the boilerplate language that a request is overly broad or unduly burdensome. This practice necessitates more meet and confer conferences and motions to compel resulting additional costs to litigate. The 2015 amendments to Rule 34 were intended to curtail this type of practice. However, up until recently judges have been dillydallying in enforcing the new rule.
Social media as evidence?
By George S. Bellas & Michael Rizo
Civil Practice and Procedure,
February 2017
Although the information on individual posts on social media may be used as evidence, applying evidentiary rules to social media information can be daunting. The social media information – now known as electronically stored information (ESI) – must pass the same evidentiary hurdles as any tangible document, with some additional obstacles.
So you want to subpoena a party’s e-mails?
By George S. Bellas & Steve Ford
Civil Practice and Procedure,
November 2014
Many courts across the United States have quashed subpoenas on the basis that an Internet service provider cannot be compelled to disclose a party’s e-mails pursuant to a civil subpoena.
Developments in piercing the corporate veil
By George S. Bellas & Misty J. Cygan
Civil Practice and Procedure,
June 2014
In Buckley v. Abuzir, 2014 IL App (1st) 130469, the appellate court clarified a somewhat confusing area of law—veil-piercing—in its reversal of the trial court’s dismissal of plaintiff’s amended complaint.
The Illinois duty to preserve ESI: A bridge over troubled waters
By George S. Bellas & Rebecca Pucinski Keithley
Civil Practice and Procedure,
March 2013
Due to the dramatic increase in the use of digital technology in business today, the time is ripe for the judiciary and practitioners to take note of how electronically stored information is gathered and used at trial.
Common-Law Doctrine trumps Fraudulent Transfer Act in holding decedent self-settlor to irrevocable pledge
By George S. Bellas & A. Patrick Andes
Civil Practice and Procedure,
February 2013
In Rush University Medical Center v. Sessions, the Illinois Supreme Court overturned the first district appellate court’s ruling in favor of a self-settled trust denying plaintiff Rush University Medical Center’s claim to a $1.5 million irrevocable pledge made by the settlor before he died, holding the trust was void as to existing and future creditors and Rush was entitled to the funds.
Jurisdiction of Illinois courts based on Internet content without Zippo
By George S. Bellas & A. Patrick Andes
Civil Practice and Procedure,
July 2012
In recent years, courts have returned to a more traditional analysis to determine whether personal jurisdiction exists in Internet-related cases. The United States Supreme Court Calder v. Jones case in 1984 crafted the “effects” test, which would become the blueprint for contemporary Internet jurisdiction analysis in much of the United States and in Illinois, specifically.
E-Discovery issues in litigation
By George S. Bellas
Legal Technology, Standing Committee on,
April 2011
A look at the case of Pension Committee of the University of Montreal Pension Plan v. Bank of America Securities, LLC, which highlights the problems with electronically stored information.
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