Beach Mart, Inc. v. L & L Wings, Inc.

302 F.R.D. 396, 2014 WL 4961171
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. North Carolina
DecidedOctober 3, 2014
DocketNo. 2:11-CV-00044-F
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 302 F.R.D. 396 (Beach Mart, Inc. v. L & L Wings, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beach Mart, Inc. v. L & L Wings, Inc., 302 F.R.D. 396, 2014 WL 4961171 (E.D.N.C. 2014).

Opinion

ORDER

JAMES C. FOX, Senior District Judge.

This matter comes before the court on Beach Mart’s motion for sanctions [DE-165]. The matter is fully briefed and is now ripe for disposition. For the reasons stated below, the motion is ALLOWED.

INTRODUCTION

What was once primarily a ease about breach of contract and trademark infringement has, after an Amended Complaint by Beach Mart, transformed into a case about fraudulent inducement to contract and negligent misrepresentation. The primary source of that change — and of this motion for sanctions — is the discovery of a trademark licensing agreement between L & L and Morrow (the “Morrow agreement”). In the agreement, Morrow, as owner of the Wings trademark, grants L & L a license to use the Wings trademark in L & L’s retail stores. See Morrow License [DE-166-5] at 1. Moreover, L & L acknowledges Morrow as the owner of “all right, title and interest” in the Wings trademark. Id. Thus, the Morrow Agreement places in doubt — to a degree yet to be determined — the rightful ownership of the Wings trademark. Ownership of the Wings trademark has been and will continue to be a fundamental issue in this litigation.

Of more importance to the present motion is how Beach Mart came to discover the Morrow Agreement and several other undisclosed licensing agreements between L & L and third parties (jointly, the “undisclosed agreements”). Beach Mart has accused L & L of intentionally withholding the undisclosed agreements throughout discovery and now seeks sanctions for L & L’s discovery violations.

RELEVANT BACKGROUND

When discovery began in this action, Beach Mart east a wide net for all documents relating to the license and use of the term Wings, including “executed licenses or assignments, and/or other agreements.” See Beach Mart’s First Reqs. Produc. [DE-160-3] at 13. Beach Mart also asked for documents relating to any settlement between L [402]*402& L and third parties involving any alleged infringement of L & L’s Wings trademark. Id. at 21. Put simply, Beach Mart wanted, inter alia, every document L & L had relating to Wings trademark licenses. L & L responded to Beach Mart’s requests with boilerplate objections, but otherwise agreed to produce documents in its possession regarding any licenses or permissions “provided by [L & L] to Beach Mart to use ‘Wings’ in any form,” as well as documents showing the “resolution of actions taken by [L & L] to enforce and protect [its Wings trademark].” L & L’s Resp. First Reqs. [DE-166-7] at 28, 45.

As discovery continued, Beach Mart focused its search. Beach Mart’s second set of document requests asked L & L more specifically for every agreement granting anyone a license to use the Wings trademark regardless of whether those agreements were still in force. See Beach Mart’s Second Reqs. Produc. [DE-160-2] at 2.1 L & L responded by simply incorporating its previous responses. L & L’s Resp. Second Reqs. [DE-166-9] at 7.

A. The Rule 30(b)(6) Deposition of Shaul Levy

Beach Mart later noticed a Rule 30(b)(6) deposition of L & L. See Rule 30(b)(6) Dep. Notice [DE-166-15]. As part of that notice, Beach Mart wanted to depose L & L regarding “[r]equests, discussions, or negotiations between L & L ... or any other third party concerning any consent, authorization, license and/or permission to use [L & L’s Wings trademark] or the term ‘Wings.’ ” Id. at 3 (Schedule A). L & L again made boilerplate objections but also asserted a specific limitation: it would designate a representative to testify concerning “any consent, authorization, license and/or permission provided by Wings to Beach Mart to use ‘Wings’ in any form.” L & L’s Objections 30(b)(6) Dep. Notice [DE-166-17] at 5 (emphasis added). L & L designated Shaul Levy, L & L’s founder and president, as its Rule 30(b)(6) witness. See First Levy Dep. [DE-166-10].

During Levy’s May 2, 2012 deposition, Levy was asked “[h]ow many different people or companies have ever had a license to use the Wings trademark?” Id. at 279:9-11. Even though this question probed an area of discussion to which L & L had previously objected, Levy answered and named five parties with whom L & L had entered into agreements to use the Wings trademark: Tim Anglim, Raffi and Effi Benjamin, Eli Tabib, Brian Bates,2 and Zeev Tafel. Id. at 279:9-281:15. Levy later seemed to correct himself, asserting that Anglim never had a license to use the Wings name, but instead had only a license to use Winds. Id. at 284:12-19 (“[H]e never had Wings, he had Winds with the D.”).3 However, as Beach Mart would soon discover, that statement was unequivocally false.

Levy did not disclose any further Wings licensing agreements. Indeed, L & L’s counsel had previously said that L & L had provided all documents responsive to Request Number 1 of Beach Mart’s Second Set of Requests. See Letter from J. Schouten [DE-166-12]. Request Number 1 sought every agreement granting anyone a license to use the Wings trademark, regardless of whether currently in force or otherwise. See Beach Mart’s Second Set Reqs. Produc. [DE-160-2] at 2. Moreover, during the Levy deposition, Mr. Bennett Krasner, one of L & L’s attorneys, affirmed that L & L “endeavored to give [Beach Mart] all of the documents as [shown] by the sheer number of documents.” First Levy Dep. [DE-166-10] at 288:18-20. While this statement was made during a discussion of the Benjamin agreement, the statement indicates a volume of disclosure that surpasses a single agreement. See id. at 287:23-289:12.

Following Levy’s deposition, Beach Mart moved to amend its answer to add a defense of unintentional trademark abandonment [DE-42]. After much consideration, this [403]*403court granted the motion [DE-129]. But by that point discovery had already closed, and Beach Mart had to move to reopen discovery [DE-137]. That motion was also granted [DE-142], Beach Mart anticipated using this new discovery period to find support for its trademark abandonment defense, primarily through depositions of Wings licensees. But Beach Mart soon found a document of potentially greater impact — a Wings licensing agreement where L & L was not the licensor, but the licensee.

B. The Anglim Deposition and the Discovery of Undisclosed Licenses

During When Beach Mart deposed Anglim, he told Beach Mart that he had a Wings agreement in addition to the Winds agreement. See Anglim Dep. [DE-166-14] at 19:22-20:21. Even though Levy had specifically stated that Anglim never had a Wings licensing agreement, Anglim’s copy of the agreement showed that Levy had signed the Anglim Wings agreement on February 1, 1993 — -just two and a half years before he signed the Anglim Winds agreement. 1993 Anglim Sublieense [DE-166-3]. Indeed, the Wings agreement ran up until the time An-glim and Levy signed the Winds agreement; Anglim had wanted to create his own identity separate from the Wings trademark and found it opportune to do so in 1995 with the name Winds. Anglim Dep. [DE-166-14] at 21:20-22:16.

The most interesting aspect of the Anglim Wings agreement was not its existence, but that it was a sub licensing agreement.

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302 F.R.D. 396, 2014 WL 4961171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beach-mart-inc-v-l-l-wings-inc-nced-2014.