ESC-Toy Ltd. v. Sony Interactive Entertainment LLC

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedMarch 27, 2024
Docket3:21-cv-00778
StatusUnknown

This text of ESC-Toy Ltd. v. Sony Interactive Entertainment LLC (ESC-Toy Ltd. v. Sony Interactive Entertainment LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ESC-Toy Ltd. v. Sony Interactive Entertainment LLC, (N.D. Cal. 2024).

Opinion

1 2 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 3 NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 4 5 ESC-TOY LTD., Case No. 21-cv-00778-EMC

6 Plaintiffs, ORDER TO DISQUALIFY COUNSEL 7 v. MASCHOFF BRENNAN

8 SONY INTERACTIVE ENTERTAINMENT LLC, Docket No. 316 9 Defendants. 10 11 I. INTRODUCTION 12 Defendant Sony Interactive Entertainment, LLC (“SIE”) moves to disqualify Plaintiff 13 ESC-Toy Ltd.’s (“ESC”) counsel, Maschoff Brennan (“MABR”), for improperly obtaining SIE’s 14 confidential information from SIE’s former counsel, Shelly Gayner. For the reasons provided 15 below, MABR is disqualified. 16 The motion is GRANTED. 17 II. BACKGROUND 18 This motion arose out of MABR’s improper communications with SIE’s former counsel, 19 Shelly Gayner. Mot. to Disqualify, 1. SIE argues that Ms. Gayner improperly worked with SIE’s 20 adversaries in this action, ESC and MABR, providing them with SIE’s privileged information. Id. 21 at 18. MABR claims that they should not be disqualified because Ms. Gayner did not disclose 22 SIE’s confidential information to MABR and she was never litigation counsel in this action. 23 Opp’n, 15, 18. 24 Further, SIE argues that MABR has continuously changed its position on their relationship 25 with Ms. Gayner, which violates the firm’s duty of candor to the Court and to the parties. Mot. to 26 Disqualify, 24. MABR categorically denies these accusations. Opp’n, 22. 27 Finally, MABR contends that the motion to disqualify fails because SIE waived their claim 1 14, 20, 23. SIE denies these contentions. 2 A. The Underlying Dispute 3 In the underlying action, ESC sued SIE for breach of contract and related claims. ESC, 4 founded by Erick Scarecrow aka Erick Chatel, designs, creates, and manufactures collectible 5 merchandise in the gaming and entertainment industries. Compl. ¶ 10. SIE, a subsidiary of Sony 6 Corporation of America, “is responsible for the PlayStation brand and services associated with the 7 video game and digital entertainment industry.” Id. at ¶ 2. 8 Two contracts between the parties are relevant to ESC’s claims: a written 2014 9 Merchandise License Agreement (“MLA”) and a purported oral 2017 Exclusive Vendor 10 Agreement (“EVA”). The MLA gave ESC a license to design, manufacture, and sell merchandise 11 associated with numerous PlayStation videogames. Compl. ¶¶ 42-45. According to ESC, in 2017 12 the parties entered into the EVA, an oral contract establishing that ESC would be the exclusive 13 vendor providing collectible pins to SIE. Id. at ¶¶ 67-74. ESC alleges that SIE breached the 14 exclusivity provision of the EVA. Id. at ¶ 105. SIE disputes the existence and/or enforceability 15 of the EVA. See generally Def.’s Mot. to Dismiss, Docket No. 27. 16 B. Ms. Gayner’s Representation of both SIE and ESC 17 Ms. Gayner’s involvement with SIE and subsequently ESC is central to this motion. Ms. 18 Gayner is a licensed California attorney who worked for SIE for approximately sixteen years. Docket 19 No. 74, ¶ 1. From 1998 to 2007, Ms. Gayer worked as in-house counsel for SIE, as the Director of 20 Legal and Business Affairs. Id. In this role, she acted as lead counsel reviewing and drafting all 21 transactional agreements including content licenses, merchandise, software, end-user licenses, 22 development, prototypes, etc. Gayner Dep. 69:16-19. On January 5, 1998, Ms. Gayner signed a non- 23 disclosure agreement (“NDA”), which stated that she was not permitted “at any time, either during or 24 subsequent to [her] employment, [to] disclose to any other person or company any information, 25 knowledge or data [she] receive[d] or develop[ed] during [her] employment which is considered 26 proprietary to [Sony Computer Entertainment America, Inc.] …” Khachatourian Decl. Ex. 27, p. 8, 27 Docket No. 317. 1 Director of Licensing from 2007 to 2014. Gayner Decl. ¶ 1, Docket No. 76. Ms. Gayner 2 “establish[ed] the merchandise licensing program” as the Director of Licensing and negotiated the 3 merchants licensing agreements in that role. Id.; Gayner Dep. 72:6-9. At Ms. Gayner’s 4 deposition, she testified that she only handled the business side, negotiating the business terms of 5 the licensing agreements. Id. at 72:11-14. Though she did not negotiate the legal terms in that 6 role, she interacted with SIE’s legal department, “[p]robably almost every day.” Id. at 72:11-13, 7 73:7-10, 96:6-12. At her deposition, SIE’s counsel noted that on Ms. Gayner’s LinkedIn profile, it 8 says that she was recruited from the legal department to join the licensing department in 2007. 9 SIE’s counsel asked Ms. Gayner “so does that mean that at one point you no longer were part of 10 the legal department?” Ms. Gayner replied, “I was in both, so I never left the legal department.” 11 Gayner Dep. 85:21-86:11. 12 In 2014, ESC and SIE entered into a Merchants Licensing Agreement (“MLA”). Compl. ¶ 13 42. On behalf of SIE, Ms. Gayner negotiated ESC’s MLA and ultimately signed it, binding SIE to 14 its terms. Ms. Gayner left SIE in 2014 to join GNS Games. Gayner Dep. 18:14. Mr. Scarecrow, 15 the founder of ESC, and Ms. Gayner first met in May 2009 when she was working for SIE. They 16 remained in contact after Ms. Gayner left SIE in 2014. Mr. Scarecrow testified that he considers 17 her “a personal friend.” Erick Decl. ¶¶ 1, 5, 9, Docket No. 240. 18 In 2017, Ms. Gayner started invoicing ESC for her legal services. While her capacity is not 19 explicitly stated, it is evident from ESC’s privilege log that Ms. Gayner was helping ESC 20 specifically regarding ESC’s legal relationship with SIE. Khachatourian Decl., 2:3-9, Docket No. 21 267. In 2017, Ms. Gayner met with ESC and created a documented described as “Attorney notes 22 outlining negotiation strategy for Sony pin program terms.” Annotated Volume II Log at 5. 23 Subsequently, Ms. Gayner met with ESC and created a document described as, “Attorney notes 24 regarding investigation relating to potential dispute with Sony.” Id. These documents were 25 identified in ESC’s privilege log in the present litigation. 26 In July 2019, Ms. Gayner sent a letter on ESC’s behalf to SIE Senior Corporate Counsel 27 Dan Herp to provide her input in the ESC-SIE dispute, on ESC’s behalf. Khachatourian Decl. 1 current dispute between ESC Toy . . . and SIE.” She communicated that “[b]ecause Erick and I are 2 personal friends and because I helped establish the relationship between ESC and SIE, I wanted to 3 send you a note . . . and provide input, from my personal perspective, on the quality of ESC as a 4 licensee, their products, and Erick as an individual.” Ms. Gayner provided a history of the dealings 5 between ESC and SIE and wrote, “I’m helping Erick communicate and tell his side of the story to 6 you . . . [a]s you know, I’m not a litigator.” She closed the letter by offering her assistance in 7 “facilitating” a resolution of the parties’ dispute and helping to schedule a meeting with Mr. 8 Scarecrow. July 17, 2019 Letter. Ms. Gayner later testified at her 2022 deposition that she and Mr. 9 Scarecrow “wrote [the July 2019 letter] together” and that in so doing she was “not acting in an 10 attorney capacity”; rather, she helped him with the letter “[a]s his friend.” Gayner Dep. 52:15- 11 53:2. Yet, on May 21, 2019, Ms. Gayner invoiced ESC for her work writing this letter. 12 Khachatourian Decl. Ex. C, Docket No. 265 (invoicing for “review email & revisions to SEI (sic) 13 letter from Erick and respond.”). 14 Ms. Gayner testified that following the July 2019 letter, at Mr. Scarecrow’s request, she 15 participated in a call that included Mr. Scarecrow, ESC’s attorney Innes Smolansky, and SIE’s 16 Senior Corporate Counsel Dan Herp, and that Mr. Herp told her that she “wasn’t welcome to be on 17 the call because [she] wasn’t an attorney representing” Mr. Scarecrow. Id. at 99:15-17. 18 According to Ms. Gayner, Mr. Scarecrow knew that Ms. Gayner was “attending the call as his 19 friend and not as his attorney.” Id. at 101:4-7.

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Bluebook (online)
ESC-Toy Ltd. v. Sony Interactive Entertainment LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/esc-toy-ltd-v-sony-interactive-entertainment-llc-cand-2024.