CEATS, Inc. v. TicketNetwork, Inc.

71 F.4th 314
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJune 19, 2023
Docket22-40028
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 71 F.4th 314 (CEATS, Inc. v. TicketNetwork, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
CEATS, Inc. v. TicketNetwork, Inc., 71 F.4th 314 (5th Cir. 2023).

Opinion

Case: 21-40705 Document: 00516791490 Page: 1 Date Filed: 06/19/2023

United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit

FILED June 19, 2023 No. 21-40705 Lyle W. Cayce Clerk

CEATS, Inc., Plaintiff—Appellant, versus

TicketNetwork, Inc.; Ticket Software, LLC, Defendants—Appellees, consolidated with

No. 22-40028

TicketNetwork, Inc.; Ticket Software, LLC, Defendants—Appellees, versus Milford Skane; Brian Billett; Sonja McAuliffe, Appellants.

Appeals from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Texas USDC No. 2:15-CV-1470 Case: 21-40705 Document: 00516791490 Page: 2 Date Filed: 06/19/2023

Before Elrod, Haynes, and Willett, Circuit Judges. Don R. Willett, Circuit Judge: This consolidated appeal concerns the injunctive and monetary sanctions that the district court imposed after a company and three individuals violated the court’s protective order. The company and the individuals challenge the sanctions on several grounds, many of which have merit. We hold that the district court erred by sanctioning the individuals without notice, by imposing litigation-ending sanctions without first finding bad faith, and by failing to adequately explain and failing to consider essential factors in its calculation of attorney fees. We AFFIRM in (small) part, VACATE in (large) part, and REMAND for further proceedings.

I A CEATS, Inc. is a non-practicing intellectual property company that owns patents for technologies used in online ticketing. TicketNetwork, Inc. and Ticket Software LLC (together “Ticket”) maintain an online marketplace for tickets to live events. More than a decade ago, CEATS filed a patent-infringement lawsuit against Ticket and other providers (the “2010 Lawsuit”). Two years later, CEATS and Ticket settled that suit. The settlement agreement gave Ticket a license to use CEATS’s patents in exchange for a lump-sum payment from Ticket and for ongoing royalty payments from Ticket and its affiliates (the “License Agreement”). CEATS continued its litigation against the remaining, non-settling defendants, but the jury in that case found that CEATS’s patents were invalid. The Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit affirmed.1

1 CEATS, Inc. v. Cont’l Airlines, Inc., 526 F. App’x 966 (Fed. Cir. 2013). Case: 21-40705 Document: 00516791490 Page: 3 Date Filed: 06/19/2023

No. 21-40705 c/w No. 22-40028

Ticket then filed this suit seeking declarations that Ticket did not infringe CEATS’s patents, that the CEATS patents at issue in the License Agreement are invalid, and that the License Agreement is unenforceable. CEATS counterclaimed, arguing that Ticket breached the License Agreement. CEATS also sought an accounting of payments due under the License Agreement (because Ticket had stopped paying). After the district court denied summary judgment, Ticket moved to dismiss its claims voluntarily. The district court granted that motion, and it dismissed all three counts from Ticket’s complaint. The parties then moved forward with discovery on CEATS’s counterclaims. At trial, the jury found that Ticket breached the License Agreement by using CEATS’s intellectual property without payment, and it awarded compensatory damages. The district court also awarded fees and costs to CEATS.

B The protective-order violation at the center of this appeal occurred after the jury trial was over and while CEATS’s claim for attorney fees was still pending. Ticket allows its affiliate websites to view and sell Ticket’s own inventory. During this case’s discovery phase, CEATS moved to compel Ticket to produce a list of those affiliates. Following two contentious hearings, the district court ordered Ticket to produce the list. But the court made clear that the parties’ protective order prohibited CEATS from using the list for any purpose other than the present litigation. The protective order also prohibited CEATS’s in-house representatives from accessing “highly confidential” documents, and it required anyone who did access such documents to take reasonable care to ensure confidentiality. Because the list was so sensitive, the district court further required CEATS to certify that the list would not “be viewed by attorneys who are identifying or targeting licensing prospects.”

3 Case: 21-40705 Document: 00516791490 Page: 4 Date Filed: 06/19/2023

Ticket produced the affiliate list in a password-protected, encrypted ZIP file containing an Excel spreadsheet. The file also included an image bearing the Bates number TN002528 and the designation “HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL—OUTSIDE COUNSEL EYES ONLY.” But the native spreadsheet itself—that is, the actual affiliate list—did not include a confidentiality designation in the file name or in the spreadsheet’s text. Milford Skane was CEATS’s CEO. Sonja McAuliffe and Dr. Brian Billett were CEATS’s litigation consultants. Because Skane was CEATS’s CEO, the protective order prohibited him from viewing the affiliate list (or any other of Ticket’s “highly confidential” documents). Nonetheless, Skane asked the litigation consultants for a “non-confidential” list of Ticket’s affiliates to aid in global settlement negotiations with Ticket. McAuliffe and Billett each separately sent Skane a copy of the Ticket affiliate list. Neither copy bore any confidentiality designation. CEATS, Skane, McAuliffe, and Billett argue that this discovery violation was inadvertent. According to them, because the native Excel sheet did not contain the “highly confidential” designation in the document title when Ticket produced it, the consultants did not realize that it had been so designated. CEATS also insists that Skane was relying on the consultants to avoid sending him protected documents and that he was unaware that the list was designated “highly confidential.” Skane then emailed a settlement demand to Ticket’s CEO, attaching the affiliate list as a “starting point” for negotiations. Skane wrote (in part): Don: We both know the sites involved (attached) and what the numbers are. These can certainly be our starting point. As previously indicated, I am willing to discount past claims and future royalties reasonably. For guidance purposes . . . we are

4 Case: 21-40705 Document: 00516791490 Page: 5 Date Filed: 06/19/2023

willing to consider an 8-figure (not $99m, but not $10m either) global settlement for any and all Ticket[] owned affiliates. Ticket responded by filing a “Motion for an Order to Show Cause why CEATS or Others Should Not Be Sanctioned for Violation of Protective Order.” The district court held an initial evidentiary hearing in April 2019. The court ordered further discovery, and it appointed forensic investigators to prepare and submit a report to the court and the parties. The court held additional hearings nearly two years later, after the investigators had completed their report, including an all-day evidentiary hearing in January 2021. The district court issued an opinion and order (the “Sanctions Order”) finding that Skane, McAuliffe, and Billett (together, the “Individuals”) violated the protective order. The court also found that CEATS violated the protective order, because Skane’s violation occurred within the course and scope of his employment as CEO. The Sanctions Order had two parts. First, the district court enjoined CEATS and the Individuals from “contacting, seeking licensing fees, suing, or seeking damages from or related to Ticket[] or any of the companies or websites contained in the . . . affiliate list” for a thirty-month period (the “Licensing Bar”). Second, the district court imposed joint and several liability on CEATS and the Individuals (in their individual capacities), ordering them to pay Ticket’s reasonable attorney fees, costs, and expenses incurred in connection with prosecuting the protective-order violation.

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71 F.4th 314, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ceats-inc-v-ticketnetwork-inc-ca5-2023.