Devona v. Zeitels

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedMarch 18, 2019
Docket18-1210
StatusUnpublished

This text of Devona v. Zeitels (Devona v. Zeitels) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Devona v. Zeitels, (Fed. Cir. 2019).

Opinion

NOTE: This disposition is nonprecedential.

United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit ______________________

DENNIS R. DEVONA, Plaintiff/Counterclaim Defendant-Appellant

v.

STEVEN M. ZEITELS, Defendant/Counterclaimant-Appellee

ENDOCRAFT LLC, Counterclaimant-Appellee ______________________

2018-1210 ______________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts in No. 1:13-cv-10952-IT, Judge Indira Talwani. ______________________

Decided: March 18, 2019 ______________________

DAVID ALAN WOLLIN, Hinckley, Allen & Snyder LLP, Providence, RI, argued for plaintiff/counterclaim defend- ant-appellant. Also represented by RYAN M. GAINOR, CRAIG M. SCOTT.

KEVIN PAUL MARTIN, Goodwin Procter LLP, Boston, MA, argued for defendant/counterclaimant-appellee and 2 DEVONA v. ZEITELS

counterclaimant-appellee. Also represented by JOSHUA JAMES BONE, ANDREA SCRIPA. _____________________

Before PROST, Chief Judge, CLEVENGER and MOORE, Circuit Judges. Opinion for the court filed by Chief Judge PROST. Dissenting opinion filed by Circuit Judge CLEVENGER. PROST, Chief Judge. Plaintiff-appellant Mr. Dennis DeVona sued Defend- ant-appellee Dr. Steven Zeitels for breach of an alleged partnership agreement and breach of fiduciary duty. At trial, the jury returned a verdict in Mr. DeVona’s favor. Af- ter reviewing the evidence presented at trial, however, the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts granted Dr. Zeitels’s motion for judgment as a matter of law (“JMOL”). The district court determined that no rea- sonable jury could have found that a continuing partner- ship existed after May 1999. Mr. DeVona appeals. We affirm. BACKGROUND I Mr. DeVona is a craftsman and art appraiser. Dr. Zeitels is a throat surgeon who specializes in treating throat cancers. In 1994, Dr. Zeitels informed Mr. DeVona that he was designing a new glottiscope, which is a medical instrument for laryngeal surgery. He offered to let Mr. DeVona “quar- terback” the project since Dr. Zeitels did not have the time or experience to get involved with manufacturing the in- strument. J.A. 236–37. Mr. DeVona was not interested. In 1997, however, Mr. DeVona and Dr. Zeitels resumed their discussions. The two met at Dr. Zeitels’s house in DEVONA v. ZEITELS 3

Boston, where Dr. Zeitels showed Mr. DeVona various medical instruments and demonstrated the progress he had made in the glottiscope design. At a second meeting, the parties agreed to work with one another. The nature of their small-scale undertaking was clear. After the design was finalized, they would de- velop a prototype. Subsequently, they would have the product manufactured, prove its marketability, and sell the company and/or the intellectual property to a larger-scale producer as soon as possible. J.A. 413–14; J.A. 245. Ac- cording to Mr. DeVona, the purpose of this joint business endeavor was “to develop a surgical instrument or surgical instruments” and “sell the intellectual property to the high- est bidder as soon as [they] could.” J.A. 245. Dr. Zeitels “would put up the money,” Mr. DeVona “would put up the energy and work it would take,” and they would “try and knock it out in 12 months.” Id. Dr. Zeitels and Mr. DeVona agreed to split the profits 60%–40% respectively. Id. In 1998, Dr. Zeitels and Mr. DeVona moved forward with their new undertaking. They opened a joint bank ac- count, which Dr. Zeitels funded. By early 1999, Dr. Zeitels and Mr. DeVona had developed a prototype to offer to a medical device manufacturer for production. In April 1999, Dr. Zeitels and Mr. DeVona met with a manufacturing company, ACT Medical, in Boston. At the meeting, the parties evaluated whether it was feasible to hire ACT Medical as a subcontractor to manufacture the glottiscope. After ACT Medical quoted a price of $600,000 to make the first hundred devices, Dr. Zeitels and Mr. DeVona concluded that a subcontractor “was too expensive to go with.” J.A. 331. II At that point, Dr. Zeitels and Mr. DeVona decided to “switch gears.” J.A. 414 (DeVona Testimony). According to Mr. DeVona, “We thought we could sell the company 4 DEVONA v. ZEITELS

early. And when we went to ACT Medical a month earlier, we realized it was a no-go just to have it made and just sell the company.” Id. As a result, the parties completely restructured their relationship in the spring of 1999. About a week after the ACT Medical meeting, the company Endocraft was formed. Dr. Zeitels created the company and put up the money to fund it. Dr. Zeitels owned Endocraft. J.A. 1187 (Endocraft Action Form). The parties closed their old joint bank ac- count and opened a new Endocraft account. In an applica- tion for a $20,000 credit card for the new company, Dr. Zeitels was listed as the 100% owner of Endocraft. Mr. DeVona’s ownership stake was listed as 0%. Dr. Zeitels also presented Mr. DeVona with an “Inde- pendent Sales Representative Agreement” (“ISRA”). J.A. 338 (DeVona Testimony); J.A. 1192–98 (ISRA). Per that agreement, Mr. DeVona was to become a “Sales Rep- resentative to sell the products of [Endocraft],” employed on an “at will” basis. J.A. 1192 (¶¶ 1, 5). For his work, Mr. DeVona was to receive a commission of 40% of net sales after deductions for research and development costs. J.A. 1193 (¶ 6(a)). The fully-integrated agreement stated: “Nothing contained in this Agreement shall be construed to constitute the Sales Representative as a partner, em- ployee, or agent of [Endocraft].” J.A. 1196 (¶ 12). Mr. DeVona expressed some concerns about the agreement but ultimately signed it. J.A. 1197. As of May 1999, Endocraft was the “vehicle for [their] relationship.” J.A. 494 (DeVona Testimony). Similarly, Mr. DeVona testified that the ISRA was “a vehicle for our overall vision and plan as partners.” J.A. 553. The ISRA explicitly disclaimed that Mr. DeVona had any stake in En- docraft. Eventually, the relationship between the parties be- came strained. J.A. 536; J.A. 356. In 2011, Dr. Zeitels ended Mr. DeVona’s employment and sold Endocraft. DEVONA v. ZEITELS 5

III On April 17, 2013, Mr. DeVona filed a complaint in the District of Massachusetts. The complaint raised a correc- tion of inventorship claim under 35 U.S.C. § 256, as well as an unjust enrichment claim based on Dr. Zeitels’s alleged misuse of intellectual property belonging to Mr. DeVona. In addition, the complaint pled three partnership-related claims: (1) violation of the Rhode Island Uniform Partner- ship Act; (2) breach of fiduciary duty; and (3) breach of a partnership agreement. For each partnership claim, Mr. DeVona’s allegations assumed that the parties had been in a continuous partnership from 1997 through 2011. Mr. DeVona alleged that he was not an Endocraft employee but instead Dr. Zeitels’s partner. Thus, regardless of his com- mission of 40% of Endocraft’s net sales, Mr. DeVona averred that he was entitled to a partnership share of 40% of the profits from selling Endocraft. The parties went to trial on the patent inventorship claim and partnership claims. The jury found against Mr. DeVona on patent inventorship, rejecting his theory that he meaningfully contributed to the glottiscope design em- bodied by U.S. Patent No. 6,955,645. Thus, Dr. Zeitels re- mains the only inventor listed on the patent. However, the jury found in Mr. DeVona’s favor on the partnership claims. For breach of fiduciary duty, the jury awarded $395,907. For breach of the partnership agreement, the jury awarded Mr. DeVona $352,007. Both parties filed post-trial motions. Reviewing the record evidence, the district court granted Dr. Zeitels’s mo- tion for JMOL.

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