In re Soclean, Inc., Marketing, Sales Practices & Prods. Liab. Litig., No. 22-mc-152, MDL No. 3021, 2024 WL 4444819 (W.D. Pa. Oct. 8, 2024)
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discussion of MDL. As previously noted, SoClean is a dominant player in the
market for medical devices that sanitize continuous positive airway pressure
machines (CPAPs), which treat sleep apnea and respiratory conditions. It
alleged that the Philips defendants, who make such devices, engaged in false
advertising about one of SoClean’s devices in order to deflect blame for the
Philips devices’ design defects. Philips counterclaimed for false advertising,
trademark dilution, and state-law deceptive trade practices. This opinion
adopts in part and rejects in part a special master recommendation that
SoClean’s motion to dismiss the counterclaims be denied.
False advertising: SoClean argued that Philips failed to
allege adequately causation because there are multiple intervening steps
between the alleged consumer deception and Philips’ alleged injury. Philips’
theory was that SoClean’s claim that its device was compatible with the Philips
devices was false, which influenced consumers to use SoClean’s device with
Philips devices -- thereby damaging Philips’ products by causing the foam to
degrade, as well as harming the reputation of Philips’ products, and causing a
decline in Philips’ sales.
This satisfied Lexmark and created a factual issue on
proximate cause because the alleged harm flowed from SoClean’s own
pronouncement that its device was compatible with Philips’ devices. Intervening
causes such as the FDA alert about cleaning CPAP machines and Philips’
voluntary recall could affect damages but weren’t enough to warrant dismissal.
Trademark dilution: This requires an association arising
from similarities between two marks that causes damage. There is no
dilution claim for associating one marked product with a differently marked
product. Thus, SoClean’s compatibility chart, which stated that SoClean’s
products were “compatible with free adapter” with Philips’ products, could not “lessen
the capacity of Philips’ mark to identify and distinguish Philips’ mark from
SoClean’s mark.”
New Hampshire Consumer Protection Act: The relevant theories
were that (1) SoClean made representations about characteristics its product
did not have (i.e., full compatibility); and (2) SoClean made representations
about its sponsorship, approval, affiliation or connection with Philips.
As for the first, it was
certainly reasonable to infer that
a consumer would understand the references to 'compatibility” to mean that the
SoClean device can actually be used with the Philips device without causing
harm to the Philips device or to consumers who use both devices together. As
Philips analogized, a consumer seeing a claim that a charging cable was
compatible with a certain phone would conclude that the cable not only
physically fit, but also would “charge their phone without frying the
motherboard.”
This was enough at the motion to dismiss stage, as was
pleading consumer confusion about affiliation or approval.
SoClean argued that the counterclaims were untimely even
under the discovery rule.
Under New Hampshire law, “Once a defendant has established
that the statute of limitations would bar an action, the plaintiff has the
burden of raising and proving that the discovery rule is applicable to an
action that would otherwise be barred by the statute of limitations.” On the
face of the counterclaims, the action wasn’t brought within three years (the
state consumer protection period). Thus, the burden shifted to Philips to plead
sufficient facts to plausibly support the application of the discovery rule,
and it didn’t explain why it reasonably took so long to reach the conclusion
that SoClean’s product increased the risk that Philips foam would degrade. So
the state claims were dismissed with leave to amend.
As for the Lanham Act, laches generally can’t be determined
on the basis of the pleadings, despite laches being apparent on the face of the
counterclaims because of the relevant dates. The Third Circuit is more
plaintiff-friendly: the discovery rule has a “fundamentally plaintiff-friendly
purpose” and “is grounded in the notion that it is unfair to deny relief to
someone who has suffered an injury but who has not learned of it and cannot
reasonably be expected to have done so.” And “a plaintiff is not required to
plead, in a complaint, facts sufficient to overcome an affirmative defense.” We
don’t yet know when Philips knew or reasonably should have known about its
counterclaims; at this stage, that helps Philips.
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