
MR. BERGIN

MR. BIVONA
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Since its adoption, New York’s
CPLR has been a work in progress. The mission of the Section’s
CPLR Committee is to help ensure that this evolution proceeds in a
direction that enhances the underlying fairness of our judicial system
in resolving commercial disputes and reflects the views of commercial
practitioners in the New York State Courts.
The CPLR Committee serves this mission primarily by
preparing legislative proposals in areas of particular interest to
members of the Section, and commenting on bills and proposals offered by
other parts of the New York State Bar Association and the larger New
York legal community when they address areas of interest or concern to
the Section. For example, the
Committee played a pivotal role in the development and passage of
legislation replacing commencement of actions by service with
commencement by filing in New York State Supreme and County Courts. More recently, the Committee spent several
years working on the simplified procedures for obtaining document
discovery from non-parties and authenticating business records that took
effect on September 1, 2003. The Committee
has developed or contributed to numerous other proposals to amend the
CPLR, including proposals concerning sanctions for frivolous litigation
conduct, standards for deposition civility, expanded expert discovery in
substantial commercial cases, discoverability of surveillance materials,
revised procedures for motions for summary judgment and motions to
dismiss, and revised procedures for filing, challenging and renewing
notices of pendency. In addition to
developing new initiatives on behalf of the Section, the Committee
routinely reviews and advises the Section on proposed amendments to the
CPLR put forward by other bar groups or legislators, and often files
legislative reports on such bills with appropriate committees of the
Senate and Assembly on behalf of the Section. This ongoing review serves a dual function: flagging flawed amendments at an early stage and
identifying potentially valuable proposals that merit the
Section’s support.
The CPLR Committee is co-chaired by James
Bergin of Morrison & Foerster, LLP, New York City jbergin@mofo.com and Thomas C.
Bivona, Managing Attorney, Milbank Tweed, Hadley & McCloy, LLP, New
York City tbivona@milbank.com.
Committee Activities * Report on
suitability for New York of National Conference of
Commissioners on Uniform State Laws Interstate
Depositions
and Discovery of Documents Act (expected
mid-November 2006)
* Report on potential amendments to CPLR re:
e-discovery
(in collaboration with E-Discovery Committee)
* On-going monitoring of proposed amendments to CPLR
Committee Reports Report
on Unsworn Affirmation (2007) Report
on Electronic Filing of Court Documents (2007) Report
Approving Amendments to CPLR 3101(a)(4) (2006) Report Opposing ABA Recommendation that Expert Reports
and Communications not be Discoverable (2006) Memo in Support of CPLR 3212(a) Amendment
(2005) Electronically
Stored Information (2004) Support
of Amendments to CPLR 2104, 3217(d) and 8020(d) (2004) Proposed
Amendments to CPLR 105, 304, 306-1 and 2102 (2004)Technical
Corrections to CPLR 2104, 3217(d) and 8020 (2003) Nonparty
Business Records (1995) Report
on Reform of Summary Judgement Procedures (1993) Service
by Mail Pursuant to CPLR 312-a (1992) Temporary
Restraining Orders (1991)
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