Cyber Solutions International, LLC v. Pro Marketing Sales, Inc.

634 F. App'x 557
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 11, 2016
Docket15-1359
StatusUnpublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 634 F. App'x 557 (Cyber Solutions International, LLC v. Pro Marketing Sales, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cyber Solutions International, LLC v. Pro Marketing Sales, Inc., 634 F. App'x 557 (6th Cir. 2016).

Opinion

*338 OPINION

RONALD LEE GILMAN, Circuit Judge.

This case involves a dispute between two competing lenders as to which one is entitled to a microchip encryption technology-developed by their mutual borrower Priva Technologies, Inc. (Priva) that is- now in Chapter 7 bankruptcy. The technology in question is known as Tamper. Reactive Secure Storage (TRSS). Pro Marketing Sales, Inc. (Pro Marketing) bases its claim on its 2009 Security Agreement with Priva, whereas Cyber Solutions International, LLC (Cyber) bases its competing claim on its 2012 License Agreement with Priva.

Both lenders eventually filed claims seeking declaratory and/or injunctive relief to clarify ownership of the:TRSS technology. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of Pro Marketing on the basis that Pro Marketing’s Security Agreement gave it a superior claim to the TRSS technology. For the reasons set forth below, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Priva and the secured loan from Pro Marketing

Priva is a Delaware corporation that, until recently, developed products to store and protect digital information. In 2007, Priva began working on a microchip encryption technology known as the Secured Key Storage Integrated Circuit (SKSIC). Priva required capital to finance the development of this and other products, so it turned to Pro Marketing to obtain a secured loan.- The companies executed a document memorializing the loan (the Security Agreement) on April 16, 2009. This agreement grants Pro Marketing a first-position lien on all of Priva’s assets. It defines the “Collateral” for the loan as

all types or items of personal property owned by [Priva], , whether-now owned or hereafter arising or acquired, and wherever located, or in which [Priva] now has or at any time in the future may acquire any right, title or interest, including,, without limitation, all of the following property ... (xv) all Intellectual Property; .... and (xviii) to the .extent not otherwise included, all products and Proceeds of any and all of the foregoing property described above.

The Security Agreement then defines “Intellectual Property” to mean “all rights, priorities and privileges relating to intellectual property ..., including without limitation the Copyrights, the Copyright Licenses ..., and all Goodwill associated with or arising in connection with any of the foregoing.” This agreement also limits Priva’s rights with respect to the Collateral. It specifically provides that Priva cannot

sell, transfer, assign, convey or otherwise dispose of, or extend, amend, terminate, or otherwise modify any term or provision of any license of [Priva’s] Intellectual Property, other than in the ordinary course of. business, or other agreement relating to, any Collateral, any interest therein or any Proceeds thereof, nor waive or release any right with respect thereto, without the prior written consent of [Pro Marketing]; provided, [that Priva] may sell or otherwise dispose of items of Collateral which, individually, do not exceed $50,000 in value.

B, Bankruptcy filing and license agreement with Cyber

Priva’s business proved less successful than its owners had hoped. Its creditors began demanding repayment and, in December 2011, Priva filed a petition in the Bankruptcy Court for the Western District *339 of Michigan for relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code. Priva’s bankruptcy constituted a default under the terms of its Security Agreement, which caused Pro Marketing to begin the process of foreclosing on Priva’s assets in March 2012.

In the meantime, Priva worked to develop a bankruptcy reorganization plan and to acquire additional assets with which to pay its debts. It consequently began negotiating with Cyber, which was interested both in acquiring the SKSIC technology and in hiring Priva to develop additional technology. The companies eventually signed a Design Service and Intellectual Property License Agreement (the License Agreement) on April 19, 2012. Pursuant to the License Agreement, Cyber made two $200,000 payments to Priva. In return for the first payment, Cyber received an exclusive license to the SKSIC technology and, in return for the second payment, it received certain rights in future technologies that Priva developed.

Cyber’s rights to the future technologies are defined in Article 5.2 of the License Agreement, which provides that

[a]ny updates, modifications or improvements to the Licensed Technology [i.e., SKSIC] developed by [Priva] and paid for by [Cyber] shall be the property of [Cyber.] [Priva] agrees to assign and agrees to assign in the future (when any such updates, modifications, or improvements to the Licensed Technology are first reduced to practice or first fixed in a tangible medium, as applicable) to [Cy-ber] all right, title and interest in and to any and all updates, modifications, or improvements to the Licensed Technology (and all proprietary rights with respect thereto) whether or not patentable or registrable under copyright or similar statutes, made or conceived or reduced to practice or learned by [Priva], either alone or jointly with others, during the period of Design Services engagement with [Cyber].

The License Agreement thus establishes that all “updates, modifications, or improvements” to the SKSIC technology that Priva developed with Cyber’s funding would be assigned to and owned by Cyber.

Finally, the License Agreement acknowledges Pro Marketing’s preexisting security interest in Priva’s assets. It states that the “SKSIC is subject to certain liens and security interests” and expressly acknowledges that those interests would “continue notwithstanding [Priva’s] entry” into the License Agreement.

C. Bankruptcy proceedings

On June 20, 2012, the bankruptcy court approved Priva’s First Amended and Restated Combined Joint Plan of Reorganization and Disclosure Statement (the Reorganization Plan). As part of the Reorganization Plan, the court specifically approved the License Agreement that Priva had executed with Cyber.

Pro Marketing objected to the Reorganization Plan’s incorporation of the License Agreement. It argued that the License Agreement was not in the interest of either the bankruptcy estate or of Pro Marketing because the Plan did not secure fair value for the SKSIC technology and because it “usurp[ed]” Pro Marketing’s interest in Priva’s assets.

The bankruptcy court overruled Pro Marketing’s objections. It noted that although “the technology [was] being licensed to [Cyber], that license [was] subordinate to Pro Marketing Sales’ superior lien.” In addition, the court stated that “if Priva were to default under the terms of the plan such that Pro Marketing could exercise its collateral rights, it would be able to recover ... the SKSIC technology in whole notwithstanding the license that *340 is being granted as part of this plan.” The court thus concluded that the License Agreement did not jeopardize Pro Marketing’s security interest, making Pro Marketing’s objections unwarranted.

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Bluebook (online)
634 F. App'x 557, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cyber-solutions-international-llc-v-pro-marketing-sales-inc-ca6-2016.