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October 2002
Vol. 38, No. 10

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News & trends


Discovery subpoena to foreign witness is valid, Second Circuit rules

A witness in foreign litigation may be served with a subpoena by a U.S. court while physically present in the court's jurisdiction, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled. The witness, a French citizen, was in his home country when the discovery order was issued. He was served with the subpoena while visiting New York City.

In a case of first impression among federal appellate courts, the Second Circuit broadly interpreted the federal statute that allows discovery for foreign litigation, holding that "a person who lives and works in a foreign country is not necessarily beyond the reach of [28 U.S.C.] §1782(a) simply because the district judge signed the discovery order at a time when that prospective deponent was not physically present in the district." (In re Application of Asher B. Edelman, 295 F.3d 171 (2d Cir. 2002).)

Mark Cohen of New York—whose firm, Arkin Kaplan & Cohen, represents the party requesting the discovery order—said the ruling is important because it tells foreign litigants, "If you are in foreign litigation, but you have some sort of nexus to New York or another state, then litigants can and should be able to access you to get discovery."

The ruling stems from litigation in France involving Société du Louvre (SDL), a French corporation, and Asher Edelman and five investment funds that he controls. SDL sued Edelman in France, claiming that he wrongfully manipulated the market for the company's securities by making purchase offers for the company that he never intended to complete. Edelman countersued, alleging that a member of SDL's board of directors, Claude Taittinger, mismanaged the company for his own benefit.

SDL filed subpoena requests in U.S. federal court for discovery and subsequently obtained documents from Edelman and his companies. Edelman responded by filing subpoena requests of his own. When the court granted the discovery requests, Taittinger was in France. However, three days later, while visiting New York, he was served with the subpoena for deposition testimony and discovery of documents.

After returning to France, Taittinger moved to quash the subpoena, contending that he was not "found" in the court's jurisdiction. The trial court agreed, but the Second Circuit vacated the ruling, holding that such a strict interpretation of the statute would create cumbersome procedural barriers to parties in foreign litigation.

The circuit court also remanded to the trial court Taittinger's claim that he could not be compelled to travel more than 100 miles from his residence to be deposed.

Cohen said the court was concerned about fairness. SDL had requested and received discovery orders against Edelman in the same court under the same statute.

"When it was advantageous to [SDL], they were aggressive in their reading of the statute," he said, "and when it was disadvantageous, they were trying to keep us from doing essentially the very same thing."

 

Sara Hoffman Jurand

 

Balancing the Scales of Justice
American Association for Justice
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