1. Core Legal Burden in Due Diligence Claims
A party asserting a due diligence failure must typically establish two foundational elements: first, that a duty to investigate existed under the contract, statute, or applicable legal standard, and, second, that the investigating party fell short of that duty in a way that caused demonstrable harm. The defendant in a due diligence case often argues either that no such duty was owed, that the investigation met the agreed-upon standard, or that any shortfall did not proximately cause the loss claimed.
Evidence in these disputes centers on what was known or should have been known at the time of the transaction, what resources were available to investigate, and what industry custom dictated. Courts may review email chains, investigation reports, expert opinions on industry standards, and testimony about the scope of work performed. The timing of when red flags emerged versus when disclosure occurred becomes critical to establishing whether a reasonable investigation would have uncovered material facts.
Our firm's corporate due diligence practice helps corporations understand how courts weigh investigation scope, reasonable reliance, and contractual allocation of risk in these disputes.
2. Procedural Posture and Timing Risks
In many jurisdictions, including New York, due diligence disputes often arise as counterclaims in breach of contract or fraud cases, or as standalone claims for breach of the duty to investigate. The plaintiff bears the initial burden to plead with sufficient specificity what investigation was required, what was not performed, and how the omission harmed the party. Courts may dismiss claims that fail to allege concrete facts showing the investigating party knew or should have known of the material deficiency.
Timing becomes a dispositive factor when the investigating party claims it relied on third-party representations or information available only after the transaction closed. A common defense is that the plaintiff had equal or superior access to information and failed to conduct its own investigation. Discovery often focuses on what documents existed pre-closing, whether they were requested, and whether the investigating party asked follow-up questions when initial responses were incomplete or evasive.
New York Court Standards for Reasonable Investigation
New York courts apply a reasonableness standard that considers the sophistication of the parties, the complexity of the transaction, and industry norms. In a high-value acquisition, courts expect more rigorous due diligence than in a routine commercial contract. A corporation that fails to request standard corporate records, conduct reference checks, or hire specialists when the transaction warranted it faces heightened liability exposure. Courts may infer negligence from the absence of a documented investigation process, particularly when the investigating party is a sophisticated entity that routinely conducts similar transactions.
3. Evidentiary Requirements and Document Preservation
Winning or defending a due diligence case depends heavily on the documentary record. Corporations must preserve emails, investigation checklists, requests for information, responses received, expert reports, and internal communications about what was discovered or questioned. Spoliation or destruction of these materials can result in adverse inference instructions to a jury or finder of fact, effectively shifting the burden against the party responsible for the loss.
The following table outlines key categories of evidence typically examined in due diligence disputes:
| Evidence Category | Relevance to Due Diligence Claim |
|---|---|
| Investigation plans and checklists | Demonstrates scope of intended inquiry and alignment with industry standards |
| Information requests and responses | Shows what was asked for and what was disclosed or withheld |
| Expert reports and specialist findings | Establishes whether professional standards were met |
| Internal communications and meeting notes | Reveals whether red flags were raised or ignored before closing |
| Post-closing discovery of material facts | Determines whether facts were knowable pre-closing and caused quantifiable loss |
Corporations should implement a document retention protocol immediately upon learning of a potential dispute. Failure to preserve electronically stored information can expose the company to sanctions and adverse inferences. Our due diligence regulatory affairs team assists corporations in structuring investigation workflows that create defensible records.
4. Defenses and Procedural Challenges
Corporations defending against due diligence claims typically raise one or more of the following defenses. First, the defendant may argue that the plaintiff had equal access to information and bore responsibility for its own investigation. Second, the defendant may show that the contract explicitly allocated investigation risk to the plaintiff or disclaimed representations about facts outside the defendant's knowledge. Third, the defendant may establish that industry custom did not require the specific investigation the plaintiff claims was omitted.
A procedural defense worth evaluating early is whether the plaintiff adequately pleaded reliance on the defendant's investigation or disclosure. If the contract stated that the plaintiff was conducting an independent investigation and would not rely on the defendant's work, a due diligence claim may fail at the pleading stage. Additionally, statutes of limitations and repose periods vary by jurisdiction; a delayed discovery of the alleged omission may bar the claim if the plaintiff knew or should have known of the facts within the prescribed period.
Practitioners often negotiate carve-outs and baskets in acquisition agreements to cap liability for breaches of representation and warranty provisions. These contractual limits are enforceable and can eliminate or substantially reduce exposure even if the plaintiff proves inadequate investigation. Early case assessment should include a detailed review of the operative contract's indemnification, materiality threshold, and survival period language.
5. Strategic Considerations for Corporate Parties
Corporations involved in due diligence disputes should prioritize three immediate actions. First, secure and organize all documents related to the investigation within days of learning of the dispute, as delay invites spoliation findings and adverse inferences. Second, identify and interview the personnel who conducted or supervised the investigation, as their contemporaneous knowledge strengthens the defense or supports the claim. Third, obtain preliminary expert opinions on what industry standards required and whether the investigation met those standards; this analysis informs settlement positioning and motion strategy.
A corporation asserting a due diligence claim must evaluate whether post-closing discovery of material facts could have been prevented by a pre-closing investigation. Courts scrutinize claims where the plaintiff had warning signs but failed to follow up. Building a factual record showing that the defendant affirmatively concealed information, refused reasonable requests, or misrepresented the scope of its investigation strengthens the plaintiff's case. Conversely, a defendant should document every response to information requests and preserve evidence that the plaintiff's own representatives participated in diligence calls or had access to source materials.
Before pursuing litigation, both parties should assess whether the contract provides for alternative dispute resolution, such as expert determination or arbitration. Many acquisition agreements include expert determination clauses for disputes about representation and warranty breaches, which can resolve due diligence questions more efficiently than court proceedings. Evaluating these contractual pathways early preserves resources and may yield a faster resolution aligned with the transaction's commercial intent.
22 May, 2026









