RESOURCES > CASE SUMMARIES > PORTIS V. CITY OF CHICAGO
Portis v. City of Chicago
Plaintiffs' Electronic Database Held Discoverable As A "Fact Work Product"
2004 WL 1535854 (N.D. Ill. 2004)
The plaintiffs filed a class action suit against the City of Chicago for
detaining people for hours after the completion of administrative processes
associated with non-custodial ordinance violations. The plaintiffs had
created a database that organized the names, and certain pertinent
information for individuals who would be considered as part of the class for
purposes of the suit. The defendant filed a motion to compel access to this
database, stating that it had a real need for the information, and that it
could not obtain the information in the database without undue hardship.
Since the plaintiffs created the database in anticipation of litigation, the
issue before the court was whether the database was "fact work product", or
"opinion work product".
The court reasoned that since the information in the database was so
extensive, it did not contain any specific insight into the plaintiffs'
legal strategy. Based on this, the court held that the database was "fact
work product" and that sharing the database with the defendant would not
seriously prejudice the plaintiffs; the court granted the defendant's motion
to compel. In addition, the court held that the defendants would have to
split the costs of the creation of the database with the plaintiff.
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