Universal Electric Corp. v. Baldwin, No. 17-cv-00842,
2018 WL 3707423 (W.D. Pa. Aug. 3, 2018)
UEC “designs and manufactures products for the
electrical power distribution industry” and “services the data center, retail,
health care, higher education, and industrial markets across the United States,”
including the Starline Track Busway and the Starline Plug-In Raceway product
lines. The Starline Track Busway includes the T5 Series and plug-in unit
options, such as the Starline Tap-Off Box.
UEC and BTI (of which defendant Baldwin was president) allegedly had an
exclusive sales agreement for BTI’s territory including an agreement to hold
UEC’s confidential business information in confidence and a noncompete. Then the parties ended their distribution
agreement and entered into a settlement prohibiting them from making
“disparaging or negative comments regarding the other party...to any person or
entity.”
Baldwin allegedly campaigned to impugn the safety of
UEC products. For example, PDU Cables announced that it would be the exclusive
distributor of BTI’s Busway Solutions tap-off boxes, a “safer and superior
tap-off box to the standard OEM6 plug-in’s offered for ‘U’ shaped open channel
track busway, like S[TARLINE]’s T5 Series Busway Track System.” The
announcement said that its boxes “are designed for increased safety, superior
performance, and easier installation.” UEC argued that, because Busway was the
only non-UEC manufacturer that made tap-off boxes that were compatible with the
T5 Series, the message was that Busway’s tap-off box was a safer alternative to
the Starline tap-off box. Defendants also
allegedly made other false and disparaging representations about the relative
safety of the parties’ products.
Defendants argued that the challenged statements
were puffery, not fact. The court disagreed, at the motion to dismiss
stage. Specificity is the key to the
fact/puffery line, and many of the statements made explicit references to specific
design features and drew implicit comparisons to/implicitly criticized the sole
competitor, e.g, “[t]ap-off box masts have always been a common culprit in
busway track system failures,” “[i]f the head is misaligned, it isn’t uncommon
to snap off the head during rotation,” and “when older style-tap-off boxes fail
it is typically because of the electrical mast,” coupled with the claim that
“[t]he Busway Solutions product improvement redesign resolved...these
manufacturing weaknesses resulting in a tap-off box that delivers a more
robust, safe and secure fault free load delivery.” These were not only specific,
but also objectively verifiable and comparatively measurable.
UEC also sufficiently pled likely injury given that
it alleged that every sale of a Busway tap-off box would likely have been a UEC
sale in the absence of the false advertising.
False designation of origin: This was based on an ad
stating that Busway offered a “two-year warranty on both the tap-off box and
the section of Starline T5 busbar it is plugged into,” allegedly misrepresenting
that Busway was an approved alternative source of Starline products. The court found this implausible. There was no
allegation of any attempt on defendants’ part to substitute their names for UEC’s
with respect to Starline. “[T]he mere fact that one party offers to warrant,
repair, or replace another’s product[, alone,] is not sufficient as a matter of
law to establish a claim of false designation of origin.”
Trade disparagement: This requires (1) falsity; (2)
the publisher either intends the publication to cause pecuniary loss or
reasonably should recognize that publication will result in pecuniary loss; (3)
pecuniary loss does in fact result; and (4) the publisher either knows that the
statement is false or acts in reckless disregard of its truth or falsity. “The
defining hallmark of a trade disparagement claim is the requirement that a
plaintiff plead pecuniary loss with considerable specificity.” Specifically,
without specific named lost customers, the plaintiff must allege “facts showing
an established business, the amount of sales for a substantial period preceding
publication, and amount of sales subsequent to the publication, facts showing
that such loss in sales were the natural and probable result of such publication,
and facts showing the plaintiff could not allege the names of particular
customers who withdrew or withheld their custom.” The complaint didn’t satisfy those requirements.
Even allegations that two customers initially placed purchase orders for
Busway, believing them to be Starline products, were insufficient in that UEC effectively
conceded that they ultimately bought Starline.
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