Skip to main content
Home

Main navigation

News & Analysis Policies & Forms Your Library
News & Analysis Policies & Forms Your Library

User account menu

Sign in Get Started
x

You're signed out

Sign in to access subscriber actions.

Text messages destroyed during litigation

March 2024 employment law letter
Authors: 

Mark Schickman, Schickman Law

Lawsuits have become document-crazy, as the merits of a dispute are often buried by discovery (pretrial exchange of evidence) wars. One would expect that to be the case in technical litigation between mega corporations, where the document trails are long and complicated. But as shown below, every case can become a disputed document case, and in some circumstances, failure to take that seriously can result in dismissal—a sanction courts maintain in their litigation management tool box.

Here’s a tip: Don’t destroy documents

Former waitress Alyssa Jones sued her employer, bar owner-operator Ryan Hibbert, and his company Riot Hospitality Group in federal district court in 2017, alleging violations of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and common law tort (wrongful act) claims. During discovery, Riot obtained text messages exchanged among Jones, her friends, and coworkers between December 2015 and October 2018. It identified instances where she appeared to have abruptly stopped communicating with people she had been messaging almost daily. It sought those documents to determine what she was telling her friends and coworkers about her treatment at work.

In response to a subpoena, Jones’ message vendor produced a spreadsheet showing messages between Jones and her coworkers had been deleted from her mobile phone. In subsequent depositions, two coworkers, both of whom Jones had identified as prospective trial witnesses, testified they had exchanged text messages with her about the case since October 2018.

Continue reading your article with a HRLaws membership
  • Sign in
  • Sign up
Upgrade to a subscription now
to get unlimited access to everything on HR Laws.
Start subscription
Any time

Publications

  • Employment Law Letter
  • Employers State Law Alert
  • Federal Employment Law Insider

Your Library Reading List

Reading list 6
Creating List 7
Testing

Let's manage your states

We'll keep you updated on state changes

Manage States
© 2025
BLR®, A DIVISION OF SIMPLIFY COMPLIANCE LLC | ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

Footer - Copyright

  • terms
  • legal
  • privacy