WHAT FLORIDA LOCAL FEDERAL COURT RULE CHANGES MEAN FOR ATTORNEYS
By Yaniv Adar and Etan Mark
While the first week of December in South Florida is typically associated with the international art fair, Art Basel, litigators in the region eagerly embrace another holiday tradition — annual changes to the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida’s local rules.
Last month, the court’s Ad Hoc Committee on Rules and Procedures published their proposed rule amendments, set to go in effect on Dec. 1.
The most significant amendment involves the invocation of the trade secret privilege, but additional changes concern post-conviction motions, notices of supplemental authority and motions for reconsideration. Below is a summary of those changes, and what this means for South Florida litigants.
Specificity Required for Assertion of Trade Secret Privileges
Perhaps the most significant change in the planned amendments is proposed Local Rule 26.1(e)(2)(B)(ii)(c), governing assertions of trade secret privilege in response to discovery requests. [...]
This proposed rule is already in effect with many of the no-nonsense magistrate judges in this district, but the proposed amendment formalizes and makes uniform this requirement.
Practice Tip
Litigants too often forget that Local Rule 26.1(e)(2)(D) requires them to produce a privilege log within 14 days following the service of a discovery response. This amendment will not only lead to an uptick in disputes over documents withheld on the basis of trade secret privilege, but assertion of privileges generally.
It also abolishes the boilerplate practice of relying on a vague trade secret privilege as a placeholder.
Ensuring compliance with this new rule by timely including a privilege log and otherwise complying with the local rules, as well as holding others accountable for ignoring it, are great ways to earn traction with the magistrate responsible for resolving your disputes.
For 3 more Practice Tips and 2 more Procedural Changes:
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