Client Social Media Discovery for Plaintiff Attorneys

Case Law

Social Media Used as Evidence in Court Cases

Case Name: Loaiza v. City of Buena Park

Citation: 2022 Cal. Super. LEXIS 29737 (Cal. Super. Ct. Apr. 27, 2022)

Judge: Honorable David A. Hoffer

County: Orange County, California

Facts

In a California personal injury claim filed against the City of Buena Park, the defendant submitted a request for production of social media posts. The plaintiff objected, arguing the request might invade attorney-client privilege.

Ruling

The court rejected the plaintiff’s objections and ruled that social media evidence is reasonably calculated to lead to admissible information. It emphasized that even if privileged communications existed within the plaintiff’s posts, all other non-privileged content still had to be produced. The decision reflected a pragmatic judicial approach: courts are more willing to view social media production requests as valid, particularly when they may shed light on the plaintiff’s post-incident condition or activities.

Key Takeaways

  • In California, courts are making it clear that social media evidence is fair game, even when privilege is cited.
  • A claim of attorney-client privilege does not exempt unrelated or public social media content from discovery.
  • Personal injury defendants are successfully obtaining social media materials that may influence case outcomes.

Final Thoughts

This California decision reinforces the necessity for plaintiff attorneys to stay ahead of the digital discovery curve. Courts are not deterred by vague claims of privilege when evaluating social media production requests. Legal teams must understand that producing responsive, non-privileged content is now a baseline requirement. By using services like Private Footprint, attorneys can efficiently screen content for relevance and privilege- maintaining both compliance and case integrity.

Private Footprint Keeps You in the Know

Your clients’ social media activity may be a goldmine or a minefield, but accessing this content, organizing it chronologically, and producing it in a usable format is exceptionally burdensome on legal team. Private Footprint was developed by Personal Injury attorneys to help plaintiff-only law firms avoid the Discovery/Deposition Surprise and gain clear visibility into their clients’ social media activity to protect and increase the value of their files. We’re also enabling paralegals and legal assistants to produce client social media reports in minutes, not hours. All this for only $100 per client (plus taxes), invoiced as individual receipts itemized for ease of tracking disbursements. No hidden fees, no subscriptions, no surprises.

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