New Directions Program v. Sierra Health & Wellness
Centers LLC, 2023 WL 7284797, No. 2:22-cv-01090-DAD-JDP (E.D. Cal. Nov. 1,
2023)
Plaintiff Gust is the “principal and owner” of plaintiff New
Directions and “has been an expert in the field of treatment of addiction and
intoxication for decades.” Gust allegedly “developed an outpatient treatment
model based on the principle of addiction as a pathological relationship to
intoxication rather than as a preference [for] a specific drug.”
One of Gust’s students was Daily, the founder of defendant
RHCS (now owned by Sierra); when he passed away, his wife—also a defendant—took
over. Plaintiffs allege that defendants falsely claimed credit for the “Gust
method,” and infringed the copyright in Gust’s book Effective Outpatient
Treatment for Adolescents by using copies with clients, copying two appendices
for a recorded presentation, and copying the book in a brochure listing six
stages of recovery that are identical to those described in the book.
The court first found that the Lanham Act claim was grounded
in fraud and had to satisfy Rule 9(b).
Challenged statement: “Jon Daily’s legacy will continue as
[Sierra Health and Wellness] will keep all of their intensive outpatient
program with the name Recovery Happens and his model of care.” This was
allegedly false because “Jon Daily had no model of care” and used the Gust
model. (Those two statements are arguably in some tension.) The “when” was
insufficiently alleged, so the court didn’t inquire further.
Challenged statement: “Sierra Health and Wellness and New
Start Recovery Solutions are proud ... to offer the compassionate, insightful
and whole person outpatient addiction treatment philosophy founded by Jon
Daily.” The court found plaintiffs plausibly alleged that the addiction
treatment philosophy at issue was not, in fact, founded by Daily, and that
consumers would have no reason to doubt this claim. Materiality was also
sufficiently pled; the court credited plaintiffs’ argument that being connected
to “the legacy of an innovator in the field” makes it more likely that a
product will be chosen by consumers and makes defendants seem “more
substantial, credible and credentialed.” Plus, plaintiff Gust “practices in the
same building as [the moving defendants],” so “even minor perceived differences
between the two practices could plausibly influence consumers’ decisions.”
You may be wondering: what about Dastar and Sybersound’s
extension of that reasoning, which is binding on this court? So is the court!
It wasn’t going to evaluate the issue sua sponte, but it suggested that
plaintiffs be prepared to address the Dastar issues if they amended the
complaint. (Presumably it should feature in the answer as well.)
Challenged statement: in a section titled “the relevance of
Jon Daily,” defendants’ websites state: “ ‘ADDICTION is a PATHOLOGICAL
RELATIONSHIP to INTOXICATION.’ ” But Gust allegedly “developed the concept of
‘addiction to intoxication’ years before Jon Daily even entered the field.” Plaintiffs
plausibly alleged misleadingness in giving Daily credit for that idea, and
materiality for the reasons noted above.
Challenged statement:
Daily “believed that individuals become addicted to INTOXICATION as a way of
dealing with life issues. If you remove the drug—the individual who is still
addicted to intoxication will find another way to get high. For example, by
using another substance or activity such as sex or gambling.” Plaintiffs alleged that these “are all words
that David Gust taught for many years” and that “[a]ttribution to Jon Daily is
false and misleading ....” This wasn’t sufficiently alleged to constitute
deceptive attribution to Daily as innovator.
Challenged material: a video in which Daily “uses the Gust
phrase ‘Addiction to Intoxication’ ”; Gust’s book “can be seen on the video”;
Daily “makes a statement that ... is clearly just [Chapter 1 from plaintiff
Gust’s book, “How to Help Your Child Become Drug Free”], repurposed”; and Daily
had “taken verbatim” plaintiff Gust’s “old series of projector slides” to use
as his own PowerPoint slide headers without attribution. Again, plaintiffs
didn’t sufficiently allege deception/that Daily claimed to have created the
ideas.
Other statements dismissed as puffery: “ ‘Exceed the
expectations of our clients’, ‘World Class’ and ‘Unlike any other in Northern
California.’ ” as well as statements that defendants use “evidence based
methods.”
Copyright: For the book, plaintiffs didn’t allege facts
indicating that defendants engaged in direct copying or unlawful
appropriation. It was not enough to
allege conclusorily that “defendants have copied portions of this Book and have
used and published copies of portions of this book including copying and using
treatment documents with clients ....”
DVD: The question was whether plaintiffs sufficiently
alleged probative similarity between defendant’s DVD and two appendices to the
book, “the core of the intervention phase of the Gust model.” Plaintiffs alleged
that Gust’s book “describes the main topics explored in [the Gust] process as,
‘School, Family Relationship, Motivation, Legal Issues, Friendship and Social
life, Employment, Finances, Physical health, self image/self respect/emotions,
Additional examples’ ” And the DVD allegedly uses a slide that reads “ ‘self
inventory: where to explore in the process’ ” and lists the following
categories: “ ‘Family, Money, School, Sports, Legal Issue, Health, Mental
Health, Friends, Self, Spirituality, Sexuality, Additional Examples.’ ” This
allowed a reasonable inference that there wasn’t independent creation. “These
similarities and unusual features are not de minimis and permit the court to
draw the reasonable inference that the two lists are substantially similar
under the extrinsic test. The court need not engage in the application of the
intrinsic test in considering a motion to dismiss.”
A similar result on the brochure, where the overlap was in
describing the six stages of recovery: Recognition, Admission, Petition,
Acceptance, Volition, Conversion. I really can’t believe that should be
sufficient, but I recognize that in the Ninth Circuit there is essentially no
minimum boundary for actionable copying before, at least, summary judgment if a
factfinder could actually see the similarity.
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