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Case Report – Appeal court restores defence struck as a remedy for spoliation

February 19, 2009 · Leave a Comment

On February 13th the Prince Edward Island Court of Appeal held that a motions judge erred in striking a statement of defence as a sanction for non-production. The Court suggested that such a strong sanction should not be utilized for discovery abuse in the absence of a finding of bad faith or contempt given the difficulties in assessing relative prejudice before trial. It nonetheless sanctioned the defendant by imposing conditions on the use of records subsequently found, by specifying that the trial judge may presume damages and by awarding costs of the motion and appeal to the plaintiff.

Jay v. DHL, 2009 PEICA 2 (CanLII).

Categories: E-discovery · Law of production
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