1. How Arbitration Discovery Rules Differ from Court Litigation
Arbitration agreements typically authorize the arbitrator to set discovery parameters, and many agreements incorporate rules such as those from the American Arbitration Association or JAMS. These rules allow arbitrators to tailor discovery to the parties' needs and the dispute's complexity, often resulting in narrower scope than federal litigation. From a practitioner's perspective, corporations frequently underestimate how much more restrictive arbitration discovery can be, leading to inadequate preservation and production timelines.
In practice, arbitrators often impose strict deadlines for document production and limit the number of interrogatories and requests for admission. When electronic discovery is involved, parties must identify custodians, search terms, and data sources early in the process, sometimes before the full scope of the dispute is clear. Courts in New York have recognized that arbitration discovery disputes may arise when one party claims the other has failed to produce relevant materials, and arbitrators may impose cost-shifting or preclusion sanctions if preservation obligations were breached.
Arbitrator Discretion in Setting Scope
The arbitrator has broad discretion to define what discovery is necessary and proportional to the dispute. Many arbitration rules require parties to meet and confer before formal discovery requests, narrowing the universe of potentially discoverable material. Corporations should document their good-faith efforts to cooperate and narrow discovery requests, as arbitrators often penalize parties who resist reasonable discovery or fail to engage in pre-discovery conferences.
Cost and Burden Allocation
Unlike civil litigation, where cost-shifting for electronic discovery is discretionary, arbitration rules often place the burden of producing electronically stored information on the producing party. Arbitrators may order cost-shifting if discovery is disproportionately burdensome, but corporations cannot assume the arbitrator will split costs. Early estimation of preservation and production costs is critical to managing arbitration expenses.
2. Electronic Data Preservation and Production in Arbitration
Once an arbitration demand is filed or anticipated, corporations must implement a litigation hold to preserve all potentially relevant electronic data. This obligation includes emails, instant messages, databases, backup systems, and metadata. Failure to preserve data can result in adverse inference instructions, where the arbitrator instructs the opposing party to assume that lost or destroyed data would have been unfavorable to the non-preserving party.
The scope of preservation depends on the arbitration agreement and the nature of the dispute. Corporations should identify key custodians, document repositories, and search strategies before disputes escalate. In arbitration, the parties' initial document exchange often occurs in a single production rather than through phased requests, making comprehensive preservation planning essential from the outset.
Metadata and Native Format Issues
Arbitration rules may require production in native format with metadata intact, or may permit production in PDF or other image formats. The choice affects cost, accessibility, and the opponent's ability to search and analyze documents. Corporations should clarify format requirements in writing before production and document any limitations on searchability or metadata availability. Disputes over format and metadata completeness can delay proceedings and create grounds for challenges to document authenticity.
3. Managing Ediscovery Costs and Proportionality
Arbitration rules increasingly incorporate proportionality principles similar to those in federal civil litigation. Corporations may challenge overly broad discovery requests by demonstrating that the burden and cost outweigh the likely benefit. However, proportionality arguments require detailed cost estimates and a clear articulation of why the requested data is not necessary to resolve the dispute.
Parties often dispute the scope of keyword searches, the number of custodians to be searched, and the depth of data collection. A corporation facing a broad electronic discovery demand should prepare a detailed response explaining the scope of its data holdings, the estimated costs of collection and review, and a proposed alternative that addresses the opponent's legitimate needs. Arbitrators generally respect proportionality objections backed by concrete cost analysis and a good-faith alternative proposal.
Budgeting and Cost Control
Many arbitration clauses allow parties to agree on discovery budgets or cost caps. If the arbitration agreement does not address cost allocation, corporations should propose a budget early in the process. Documenting all preservation, collection, and review costs creates a record that supports later arguments for cost-shifting or proportionality relief. Courts reviewing arbitration awards in New York have noted that inadequate cost management during discovery can lead to unfavorable arbitrator findings about party cooperation and reasonableness.
4. Connecting Arbitration to Administrative and Regulatory Proceedings
Corporations involved in arbitration disputes may also face parallel administrative investigations or regulatory enforcement actions. Electronic discovery obligations in administrative cases often mirror or exceed those in arbitration, creating cumulative preservation and production burdens. Understanding how administrative discovery intersects with administrative cases helps corporations coordinate their information management and avoid inconsistencies in document production across forums.
When a corporation produces documents in one forum, opposing parties in other forums often seek access to those same materials. Corporations should establish protocols for designating sensitive information as confidential and requesting protective orders in arbitration and administrative proceedings. Inconsistent production or delayed disclosure in one forum can undermine credibility in another.
Coordinating Preservation Across Multiple Forums
A single preservation obligation that covers all forums simplifies compliance and reduces the risk of selective destruction or inadvertent loss. Corporations should implement a unified litigation hold that addresses all known disputes and anticipated claims, then tailor the scope of production to each forum's rules. This approach demonstrates good faith and reduces exposure to adverse inference sanctions.
5. Strategic Considerations for Arbitration Ediscovery
Corporations should evaluate several concrete steps before arbitration discovery disputes arise. First, document the scope and location of all potentially relevant data sources, including legacy systems, cloud storage, and third-party custodians. Second, establish a clear chain of custody for electronic materials and retain qualified personnel or vendors to manage collection and review. Third, negotiate discovery parameters in the arbitration agreement or in an early procedural conference with the arbitrator, proposing reasonable limits on custodians, search terms, and timeframes. Fourth, prepare detailed cost estimates and proportionality objections if the opponent requests discovery that appears disproportionately burdensome. Finally, ensure that all preservation holds, production schedules, and disputes over format or scope are documented in writing and confirmed with the arbitrator, creating a record that protects against later claims of bad faith or inadequate cooperation.
22 Apr, 2026

