Global Environmental Restoration Inc v. Shore Corp

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Louisiana
DecidedMarch 8, 2022
Docket6:20-cv-00547
StatusUnknown

This text of Global Environmental Restoration Inc v. Shore Corp (Global Environmental Restoration Inc v. Shore Corp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Global Environmental Restoration Inc v. Shore Corp, (W.D. La. 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

WESTERN DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA LAFAYETTE DIVISION GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CIVIL ACTION NO. 6:20-CV-00547 RESTORATION, INC.

VERSUS JUDGE TERRY A. DOUGHTY

SHORE CORPORATION MAG. JUDGE CAROLWHITEHURST

RULING

Pending here is a Motion to Transfer Under 28 U.S.C. §1404(a) or, Alternatively, Motion to Dismiss Under Forum Non Conveniens filed by Defendant, Shore Corporation (“Shore”) [Doc. No. 50]. On February 2, 2022, the Magistrate Judge issued a Report and Recommendation recommending that Shore’s motion be denied [Doc. No. 70]. On February 17, 2022, Shore filed an objection to the Report and Recommendation [Doc. No. 77]. On March 2, 2022, Plaintiff Global Environmental Restoration, Inc. (“GER”) filed a response to the objection [Doc. No. 83]. Having conducted a de novo review of the record in this matter, the Court DECLINES TO ADOPT the Report and Recommendation. Shore’s Motion to Dismiss Under Forum Non Conveniens [Doc. No. 50] is GRANTED. I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND GER, a Louisiana company, is a wholesaler, retailer, and distributor of specialized disinfectant products. Shore, a Pennsylvania company, is a chemical manufacturer that manufactured GER’s products. GER filed this lawsuit in Louisiana against Shore alleging claims for breach of contract, conversion, and violation of the Louisiana Unfair Trade Practice Act, after Shore allegedly failed to turn over formulas for certain products in accordance with a contract. The genesis of this case goes back to the 1990’s when Shore and another chemical retail and distribution company, Amazing Concepts, began a business relationship. Amazing Concepts was a Michigan-based company.

Sometime in 2013, Shore (the Pennsylvania company) and Amazing Concepts (the Michigan company) began discussions concerning their business relationship moving forward. On October 28, 2013, Shore and Amazing Concepts signed a Mutual Non-Disclosure Agreement (the “NDA”) regarding non-disclosure of the companies’ respective proprietary information, such as product formulas, test data, etc. The NDA contained a forum selection clause identifying a state court forum in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania (“the Commonwealth Court of Allegheny County, PA.”) as the appropriate forum for legal action [Doc. No. 50-3]. On January 13, 2014, Shore and Amazing Concepts entered into a Manufacturing and Hold Harmless Agreement (the “MHHA”) which set forth the parties’ arrangements regarding

the development, purchase, and sale of products (such as permissions to manufacture, label, and ship products and obligations regarding EPA regulation compliance). The choice of law/venue provision states: The provisions of this Agreement shall be governed by Pennsylvania law, without regard to any conflict of law provisions… In the event any court of competent jurisdiction determines that any provision of this agreement is void or unenforceable, such finding shall not affect the applicability or enforceability of the remining provisions.

[Doc. No.50-12, p. 2] On March 13, 2014, Shore and Amazing Concepts entered into a Product and Production Agreement and Purchase of Scheduled Products (the “PPA”) wherein Shore transferred rights, title, and interest in certain Scheduled Products to Amazing Concepts, and Amazing Concepts agreed to purchase them for a set price, payable over the following five years. The PPA explicitly acknowledges the earlier October 2013 NDA and January 2014 MHHA and states that the provisions of those agreements “where relevant, are subject to the provisions of this Agreement and this Agreement to those provisions.” [Doc. No. 50-4, p. 1]. The PPA further

states: “This Agreement will be interpreted under the laws of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.” Significantly, the PPA makes no other specification as to a choice of forum. [Doc. No. 50-4, p. 3]. GER (the Louisiana company) alleges that during this period it was contemplated that GER would acquire Amazing Concepts and step into its shoes under the PPA and that GER subsequently did purchase all of the assets of Amazing Concepts [Doc. No. 1, p. 5]. GER further alleges that Shore knew of this acquisition and approved, as evidenced by Shore continuing to do business with GER in place of Amazing Concepts in the following years [Id.].

Approximately one year later, on December 3, 2015, GER forwarded to Shore its own version of the original MHH which Shore and Amazing had executed. This MHH was executed by GER on December 2, 2015, but was never executed by Shore [Doc. No. 50-8, p.4]. Attached to the email by which the MHH was forwarded to Shore was a Non-Disclosure Agreement (“the proposed NDA”) which GER itself drafted, signed, and delivered to Shore. The proposed NDA was almost identical to the original NDA between Shore and Amazing, including the presence of the exact same Allegheny County, Pennsylvania state court forum choice [Doc. No. 50-7, p.6]. It too was executed by GER on December 2, 2015, but was never executed by Shore [Id., p. 7]. Also relevant to the pending motion is an April 2020 Terms and Conditions of Sale (“TCS”) attached to (or on the back of) a sales invoice for GER’s purchase of certain products from Shore. The venue provision states: “Venue for any and all disputes arising from the sale of goods by Seller [Shore] to Buyer [GER] or from Buyer’s resale use of such goods shall be resolved in a court of competent jurisdiction in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania” ... “PA

law...shall apply to any dispute.” [Doc. No. 50-5]. On September 9, 2021, Shore filed the pending Motion to Transfer Under 28 U.S.C. §1404(a) or, Alternatively, Motion to Dismiss Under Forum Non Conveniens, contending that this Court should transfer the present suit to the United States District Court, Western District of Pennsylvania, Pittsburgh Division, in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania pursuant to 28 U.S.C. 1404(a), or, in the alternative, this Court should dismiss this suit without prejudice, allowing Plaintiff GER to refile its claims in a state or federal court of their choosing in Allegheny County, PA pursuant to the doctrine of forum non conveniens. More specifically, Shore contends that this Court should consider the totality of the

contracts, and that the forum selection clauses within the NDA and/or the TCS should be incorporated into the PPA such that the case should be transferred to Allegheny, Pennsylvania [Doc. No. 50]. On September 30, 2021, GER filed an opposition contending that the March 2014 PPA, which contains a choice of law provision but does not contain a forum selection clause, forms the basis for its claim and that the NDA and/or TCS should not be incorporated into the PPA. Accordingly, GER asserts that this Court should maintain the case in a Louisiana court albeit while applying Pennsylvania law. On February 2, 2022, the Magistrate Judge issued a Report and Recommendation which recommended that Shore’s Motion be denied [Doc. No. 70]. The Magistrate Judge found that, because the choice of law provisions in each of the contracts unequivocally impose application of Pennsylvania law, the Court should interpret the contracts pursuant to Pennsylvania law. After analyzing the relevant Pennsylvania law, the Magistrate Judge further found that the forum

selections clauses of the NDA and TCS should not be incorporated into the PPA, and, therefore, there was no agreement to resolve all disputes in a Pennsylvania forum. On February 16, 2022, Shore timely filed an objection to the Magistrate Judge’s Report and Recommendation [Doc. No. 77].

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