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Practical Aspects of Litigation Management Elizabeth Ganiere Simon Keshishian © CLM Litigation...
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Transcript of Practical Aspects of Litigation Management Elizabeth Ganiere Simon Keshishian © CLM Litigation...
Practical Aspects ofLitigation Management
Elizabeth Ganiere Simon Keshishian
© CLM Litigation Management Institute 2013. All rights reserved. The course material presented herein does not represent the views or opinions of any of the individual faculty members or instructors or of any of the companies or entities with which they may be employed or affiliated. Nothing in the course materials presented should be construed as legal or professional advice or the rendering of a legal or professional opinion on any specific factual situation. Always seek appropriate legal and professional business advice in the context of specific cases.
What is litigation management? The practices and polices put into place by a
company or entity to avoid the risk and potential of a lawsuit and after a suit is filed
Part of a comprehensive risk management strategy
Definition can vary greatly depending on who’s perspective (e.g., insured, insurer, TPA, defense counsel, or indemnitor)
Effective Litigation Management
Necessary upon receipt of a claim, but should be addressed long before suit is filed, including:
Pre-claim processes and procedures Should be front-loaded considered in
conjunction with effective risk transfer devices Litigation isn’t always a bad thing
Goals of Litigation Management
Resolution of Matter Provide quality defense Maximize the efficiency/effectiveness
of legal spend
Components of a Litigation Management Program
Case Managers/Claims Professionals Assess and evaluate case Assign case to local counsel Establish settlement value (reserves / budgets) Develop litigation strategy Negotiate early settlement Thoroughly review and pay legal bills
Components of a Litigation Management Program
Litigation Management/Billing Guidelines Define roles of counsel, insured and insurer Establish reporting requirements Create budgeting requirements Alert counsel to billing requirements and
expectations
Components of a Litigation Management Program
Management Goal: develop and maintain a panel of quality,
approved counsel Vet potential new counsel Review performance of member counsel Negotiate and set billing rates/fee arrangements Report on performance issues
Components of a Litigation Management Program
Electronic Billing System Software platform for submitting and analyzing
budgets and legal bills Verifies billing rates and math Compliance with billing rules Collects billing data for analysis Compares bills to budgets
Components of a Litigation Management Program
Case Management Systems Software platform for managing legal matters Functions
Assignment to counsel Tracking case progress Litigation planning and strategizing Reporting and Notes Budgeting Billing
Components of a Litigation Management Program
Data Analysis Establishes litigation management metrics Develops software and databases for
tracking metrics Analyzes and reports on metrics
Strategic Implementation:Developing a Litigation Plan
Without a Plan… Litigation chugs along without checks that
may lead to: Increased duration Increased legal costs Increased indemnity costsPoor results
Strategic Implementation:Developing a Litigation Plan
Identification of Critical Issues To Be Resolved Issues that need to be resolved to evaluate case
Derived from facts, elements, causes of action and defenses
Liability issues Damages issues
Focus on issues that lead to early resolution
Strategic Implementation:Developing a Litigation Plan
Identification of Preferred Method of Resolution Tender to responsible parties? Early settlement? Settlement at some key, later point? Dispositive motion? Third party action? ADR? Trial?
Strategic Implementation:Developing a Litigation Plan
Create a Discovery Plan for resolution of Case View discovery as a tool to achieve desired disposition What discovery and investigation is needed to resolve critical
issues? What discovery activities will other parties initiate? What discovery and investigation is needed to prepare case for
dispositive motion or trial? What are risks of not conducting certain discovery?
Determining when discovery may and may not be limited Are there less expensive alternatives to discovery available?
Strategic Implementation:Developing a Litigation Plan
Discovery Plan: Client-specific constraints and opportunities:
Philosophy, reputation and other issues concerning the case
Work within plan guidelines and report when key items may alter the case outlook
FRCP 26 and State equivalent Depositions, Documents, eDiscovery Subpoenas and 3rd Party Subpoenas
Strategic Implementation:Developing a Litigation Plan
Discovery Plan (continued) Lay witness considerations
What party and non-party witnesses do we need to interview and/or depose?
If party witnesses, do they still work for the client? If not, will they be hostile or non-cooperative?
Where are they located?
Strategic Implementation:Developing a Litigation Plan
Discovery Plan (continued) Expert witness considerations
What experts do we need? How do you find quality experts? How many expert witnesses need to be
interviewed and/or deposed?
Strategic Implementation:Developing a Litigation Plan
Motion Plan: Motion Practice Similar past cases to repurpose the Motions
What substantive motions do we plan to make? What substantive motions do we anticipate
others will make? Evidentiary Motions? Motions in Limine?
Strategic Implementation:Developing a Litigation Plan
Budget Plan: Phases of the Plan Possible issues for budget adjustments:
Extended life of case New or additional Phases, i.e., Appeal Added parties
Strategic Implementation:Developing a Litigation Plan
Budget Plan (continued): Other Budget group
Entire case Phase level Task level
Obtain budgets from experts and vendors Ramifications of over and under budgeting
Strategic Implementation:Developing a Litigation Plan
Budget Plan (continued): If available, use the budget format required by
client Uniform Task-Based Management System (UTBMS
Codes) Allows client to collect legal spend data and analyze at
phase and task level Allows easier comparison of budgets to invoices Ramifications of not properly using the UTBMS codes
Strategic Implementation:Developing a Litigation Plan
Analyze the Case and Plan from a macro and micro level
Does plan make sense on a macro level? Cost/benefit analysis
Compare litigation cost to settlement value Business purpose to settle or litigate? Possibility of repeat case Business reputation considerations
Strategic Implementation:Developing a Litigation Plan
Analyze the Case and Plan from a macro and micro level
Does plan make sense on a micro level? Review individual tasks Are they necessary?
Do they resolve a critical issues or further the resolution strategy?