Bobrick Washroom Equipment Inc v. Scranton Products Inc

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedSeptember 26, 2025
Docket23-2577
StatusPublished

This text of Bobrick Washroom Equipment Inc v. Scranton Products Inc (Bobrick Washroom Equipment Inc v. Scranton Products Inc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bobrick Washroom Equipment Inc v. Scranton Products Inc, (3d Cir. 2025).

Opinion

PRECEDENTIAL

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT ____________

No. 23-2577 ____________

BOBRICK WASHROOM EQUIPMENT, INC., Appellant

v.

SCRANTON PRODUCTS, INC. ____________

On Appeal from the United States District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania (D.C. Civil No. 3:14-cv-00853) District Judge: Honorable Robert D. Mariani ____________

Submitted Under Third Circuit L.A.R.34.1(a) on July 1, 2025

Before: SHWARTZ, FREEMAN, and SMITH, Circuit Judges

(Opinion filed: September 26, 2025)

Carl W. Hittinger Tyson Y. Herrold Baker & Hostetler LLP 1735 Market Street, Suite 3300 Philadelphia, PA 19103

Counsel for Appellant Steven Grimes Michael A. Meneghini Winston & Strawn LLP 35 W. Wacker Drive Chicago, IL 60601

Counsel for Appellee

_______________

OPINION OF THE COURT _______________

FREEMAN, Circuit Judge.

Several years ago, Scranton Products and Bobrick Washroom Equipment executed a settlement agreement (“Agreement”) to resolve the claims in a false-advertising dispute. The District Court approved the Agreement and dismissed the case, retaining jurisdiction to enforce the Agreement. In the Agreement, Scranton and Bobrick explicitly waived their rights to appeal the District Court’s orders arising out of the Agreement or any motion to enforce it.

During subsequent proceedings on enforcement motions, the District Court entered an order prophylactically sealing thousands of pages of documents and all future filings pending its ruling on the enforcement motions. Eighteen months later, when the District Court ruled on the enforcement motions, it issued a second order that sealed the court filings indefinitely. Bobrick appeals both orders.

The first order (the one sealing documents during the pendency of the enforcement motions) is no longer in effect, so we lack jurisdiction to review it. We will dismiss Bobrick’s appeal as to that order.

Although we have jurisdiction to review the second order (the one sealing documents in perpetuity), Bobrick

2 waived its rights to appeal it. Bobrick contends that the District Court’s second sealing order is patently overbroad and inconsistent with the public’s common law right of access to judicial documents and our precedents. However, Bobrick does not seek to enforce the public’s right to judicial documents; it seeks to enforce only its private rights—rights that it waived in the Agreement. For an appellate waiver to have any force, it must govern appeals of erroneous orders. Accordingly, we will not exercise our jurisdiction to review the second sealing order. Pursuant to our practice when enforcing an appellate waiver, we will affirm the order. We also will deny Bobrick’s alternative request for a writ of mandamus.

I

In 2014, Scranton sued Bobrick for false advertising. Scranton alleged that its high-density polyethylene toilet partitions complied with relevant fire standards and that Bobrick’s advertising to the contrary was false and misleading, violating federal and state law. In 2016, Bobrick filed counterclaims against Scranton, alleging that the partitions were not in compliance and that Scranton’s advertising to the contrary was false and misleading. Later, Scranton voluntarily dismissed its claims with prejudice, and the parties drafted the Agreement to settle Bobrick’s claims. The Agreement contains the following appellate waiver: “All decisions and orders of the Court . . . arising out of this Settlement Agreement or any Enforcement Motion . . . shall be non-appealable, and the Parties hereby waive any and all rights to appeal any such decision or order.” App. 76. In 2018, the District Court entered an order approving the Agreement, dismissing the case, and retaining jurisdiction for purposes of enforcing the Agreement.

Under the Agreement, a party claiming breach must file a motion with the District Court for liquidated damages, injunctive relief, or both. Bobrick filed two such motions— one in 2019 and another in February 2021. It argued that Scranton failed to comply with the Agreement’s requirements about notices to customers who purchased non-compliant partitions. Scranton filed its own enforcement motion in March 2021, asserting that Bobrick’s February 2021

3 enforcement motion was premature under the Agreement, which creates a cure period for any alleged breach.

The District Court held a six-day evidentiary hearing on the three enforcement motions in November and December 2021. As specified in the Agreement, the evidentiary hearing was open to the public. According to Bobrick’s appellate brief, members of the public and the press attended portions of the hearing.

During the hearing, Scranton introduced a document (Scranton’s “Exhibit 28”) containing a list of its customers and information about their orders. Although Exhibit 28 is labeled “Attorneys’ Eyes Only – Subject to Protective Order,” neither party requested that it or any other portion of the evidentiary hearing record be sealed.

On February 1, 2022, Bobrick filed its proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law along with an appendix containing 157 exhibits. That public filing was thousands of pages long. Two days later, Scranton filed a motion to strike the appendix from the docket, or alternatively to place it under seal. Scranton noted that most of the exhibits in the appendix were not introduced or admitted during the hearing, and it clarified that it sought relief only as to the portions of the appendix that were not admitted into evidence, plus Exhibit 28. Four days later, on February 7, 2022, Scranton filed another motion, this time seeking to redact the portions of the hearing transcripts that included content from Exhibit 28. Acknowledging the public’s right of access to judicial records, Scranton emphasized that it sought to redact only seven pages from over 1,400 pages of hearing transcripts.

On February 9, 2022, the District Court (without waiting for a response from Bobrick) ordered the Clerk of Court to seal the hearing transcripts and all post-hearing filings in their entirety, “subject to review after the Court renders its decision on the pending enforcement motions.” App. 3–4. The District Court further specified that “[a]ny future filings by the parties shall be filed under seal.” Id. On February 17, 2022, Bobrick moved to unseal all documents not subject to Scranton’s motion—that is, those that Scranton agreed could

4 be filed publicly. The District Court did not rule on that motion.

Eighteen months later, the District Court denied the three enforcement motions. Bobrick Washroom Equip., Inc. v. Scranton Prods., Inc., No. 14-853, 2023 WL 5054671, at *18 (M.D. Pa. Aug. 8, 2023). The same day, it issued an order directing the parties to meet and confer regarding sealing and to file a joint proposed order within thirty days. The order stated, “To the extent the parties are unable to agree . . . , the Court will order that the status quo (i.e., the Court’s February 9, 2022, [Sealing] Order . . . ) shall remain in effect pending [any] further agreement of the parties.” App. 6.

On August 21, 2023, Bobrick sent Scranton a letter stating its position that none of the hearing transcripts or post- hearing briefing could be sealed. On August 25, Scranton responded, stating that it disagreed with Bobrick’s position and therefore, under the August 8 order, the status quo would remain in effect. Scranton nonetheless stated that it would be open to further discussions with Bobrick to work toward a joint proposed order.

On August 25, 2023, Bobrick filed a notice of appeal of the February 2022 and August 2023 sealing orders.

II1

We must assure ourselves of our jurisdiction “before we can proceed to the question of whether [an appellate] waiver is enforceable.” United States v.

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Bobrick Washroom Equipment Inc v. Scranton Products Inc, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bobrick-washroom-equipment-inc-v-scranton-products-inc-ca3-2025.