Route App, Inc. v. Heuberger, 2023 WL 5334192, No. 2:22-cv-00291-TS-JCB (D. Utah Aug. 18, 2023) (magistrate)
Route is a package tracking company that provides shipping
insurance to e-commerce merchants. Heuberger was a Route customer who then
launched a competitor, Navidium. Route sued for breach of contract, commercial
disparagement and defamation per se, intentional tortious interference with
contractual relations, false advertising, and contributory trademark
infringement.
The breach of contract claim survived.
Commercial disparagement/trade libel/injurious
falsehood/defamation per se: The challenged statements were opinion. Even
potentially verifiable facts—such as whether claims are “more often than not
denied,” whether Route requires a police report to be filed for a lost package,
or whether Route commits a “serious breach of customer data”—“when read in the
statement’s full context, would be understood as hyperbolic or figurative and
clearly representing an opinion.”
Route also alleged that Heuberger tortiously interfered with
valid contracts between Route and third-party merchant partners by: using
confidential information to develop Navidium; engaging in commercial
disparagement; making fraudulent misrepresentations about Route and Navidium;
inducing Route’s merchant partners to use Navidium; and engaging in unlawful
activity, including collecting a fee without proper insurance licenses or
permits. Route alleged that Heuberger stated in online posts and messages that
he “created Navidium to ‘screw with’ and ‘tak[e] down’ Route, because he
‘hate[s] Route.’ ” Route argued that Heuberger misled Route’s then-clients by
portraying Navidium as a “technology that facilitates the lawful sale [of]
shipping insurance” despite such services being “illegal.” The court wasn’t
sure whether Route could show causation, though Route alleged that an
increasing number of merchants who discontinue Route’s services appear to cite
“the false statements made in Heuberger and Navidium’s solicitations.” Whether
these acts were justified was fact-intensive and couldn’t yet be resolved.
False advertising:
The comments about Route were opinion and not actionable under the
Lanham Act. But Route’s allegations that Navidium misrepresented or implied
that merchants can lawfully offer shipping insurance or shipping protection
without obtaining insurance licenses or permits and that Navidium is a shipping
insurance company or technology “are straightforwardly factual assertions the
veracity of which may be determined” by a review of the applicable law and an
investigation of Heuberger’s marketing of Navidium. Other cases say that legality claims are usually opinion unless offered by someone with legal expertise, but the court doesn't discuss the issue.
Contributory trademark infringement: Defendants allegedly knowingly
facilitated infringement of Route’s trademarks by installing versions of the
Navidium widget under the names “Route Plus” and “Route Pro,” infringing its
registered “Route” mark for shipping protection/e-commerce tracking. Defendants
responded that Navidium is fully merchant-run after installation, and that
Heuberger did not know and had no reason to know that merchants were replacing
the Navidium name. Route counters that “[b]ecause Navidium has no product
offerings that do not include expert installation, Heuberger or another
Navidium representative modifies the Navidium widget code to include the name
and/or text chosen by the merchant every time the white-labeled Navidium widget
is installed.” This was sufficiently pled. Not clear to me: does anyone but the merchant internally see the widget? If not, what confusion could there be?
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