Kwan Software Engineering, Inc. v. Hennings

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 2, 2020
DocketH042715
StatusPublished

This text of Kwan Software Engineering, Inc. v. Hennings (Kwan Software Engineering, Inc. v. Hennings) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kwan Software Engineering, Inc. v. Hennings, (Cal. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed 12/2/20

CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

KWAN SOFTWARE ENGINEERING, H042715 INC., et al., (Santa Clara County Super. Ct. No. 109CV149780) Plaintiffs and Respondents,

v.

THOMAS HENNINGS et al.,

Defendants and Appellants;

GRELLAS SHAH LLP et al., Objectors and Respondents.

KWAN SOFTWARE ENGINEERING, H043215 INC., et al.,

Plaintiffs and Cross-defendants,

FORAY TECHNOLOGIES, LLC, et al.,

Defendants, Cross-complainants and Appellants; GRELLAS SHAH LLP et al., Objectors and Respondents. Plaintiff Kwan Software Engineering, Inc., doing business as VeriPic, Inc. (VeriPic), and its president and chief executive officer, John Kwan, (collectively, plaintiffs) sued a business competitor, defendant Foray Technologies, LLC (Foray) and certain individuals affiliated with Foray, including Foray’s president, Thomas Hennings (collectively, defendants). Prior to trial, defendants Foray and Hennings moved for sanctions against VeriPic, Kwan, and plaintiffs’ former counsel (the law firm Grellas Shah LLP). Among other sanctions, Foray and Hennings requested monetary sanctions under Code of Civil Procedure section 2023.030, subdivision (a),1 for plaintiffs’ misuse of the discovery process. In the course of litigation on Foray’s and Hennings’s sanctions request, the trial court sua sponte issued an order to show cause ordering plaintiffs and plaintiffs’ former counsel to show why sanctions, including monetary, evidentiary, and terminating sanctions, should not issue for (in the court’s words) plaintiffs’ “egregious and deliberate” “litigation abuse” in their filings with the court. All the defendants subsequently moved for sanctions against plaintiffs and plaintiffs’ former counsel (Grellas Shah LLP and two of the firm’s partners) and renewed the request for monetary sanctions under section 2023.030. The trial court ultimately ordered various sanctions against Kwan and VeriPic, including dismissal with prejudice of VeriPic’s remaining claims, for plaintiffs’ fraud on the court. However, the trial court denied defendants’ motion for monetary sanctions against plaintiffs and plaintiffs’ former counsel for misuse of the discovery process. Defendants argue on appeal that the trial court erred in denying their request for monetary sanctions against VeriPic, Kwan, and plaintiffs’ former counsel. For the reasons explained below, we conclude the trial court abused its discretion in denying defendants’ request for monetary sanctions against VeriPic and Kwan. We therefore

1 Unspecified statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure. 2 reverse the judgment and remand the matter to the trial court with directions that it determine the amount of reasonable expenses, including attorney fees, incurred by defendants as a result of VeriPic’s and Kwan’s misuse of the discovery process (§ 2023.030, subd. (a)) and order VeriPic and Kwan to pay that amount to defendants as monetary sanctions for abuse of the discovery process. However, we decide that defendants have not carried their burden on appeal of showing error by the trial court in declining to impose sanctions on plaintiffs’ former lawyers and affirm that portion of the order. I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND A. Underlying Litigation VeriPic and Foray provide digital asset management software to law enforcement agencies and are business competitors. In August 2009, VeriPic brought a lawsuit in Santa Clara County Superior Court against Foray alleging tort claims based on Foray’s systematic disparagement of VeriPic’s business. Kwan, the president and chief executive officer of VeriPic, later joined the lawsuit as a co-plaintiff. VeriPic’s and Kwan’s operative complaint (the seventh amended complaint) named as defendants Foray and five individuals affiliated with Foray—David Witzke, Michal Temple, Donnie McFall, Thomas Hennings, and Lynn Slaughter.2 The complaint alleged 13 causes of action, including for libel, slander, false advertising, and unfair competition, and sought damages of at least $255 million. Plaintiffs’ claims generally centered on allegations that defendants had disparaged VeriPic’s products and falsely told others that VeriPic engaged in unethical and illegal business practices commonly described as cybersquatting. For example, the complaint alleged certain defendants wrongfully sent a letter that implied plaintiffs had registered

2 Plaintiffs later dismissed McFall from the lawsuit with prejudice, and he is not a party in these appeals.

3 the domain name of “foray.ca” to intentionally and deceptively direct internet user traffic from foray.ca to VeriPic’s website. Approximately one year after the lawsuit began, in August 2010, Foray filed a cross-complaint against VeriPic and Kwan. Foray’s operative cross-complaint, filed in 2012, asserted nine causes of action against VeriPic and Kwan, including claims of cybersquatting, trade libel, trademark infringement, and unfair business practices based in part on their wrongful conduct in operating the domain name of foray.ca and wrongfully diverting Internet users, including actual and potential customers of Foray, to VeriPic’s own website. The parties engaged in pretrial litigation for over five years. By December 2014, the trial court had held 175 hearings in the case. We describe below only the procedural history relevant to this appeal, which centers on the trial court’s July 9, 2015 order that imposed a variety of sanctions against Kwan and VeriPic but denied defendants’ request for monetary sanctions pursuant to section 2023.030, subdivision (a), for misuse of the discovery process. B. Discovery In February 2010, VeriPic responded to special interrogatories propounded by Foray, including an interrogatory that asked whether users who entered the domain name of foray.ca would be “automatically diverted to YOUR website” (bold omitted). In its response, verified by Kwan, VeriPic stated in pertinent part that VeriPic owned the foray.ca domain but that it “did nothing with this web domain,” the domain was “parked,” and its “internet service pointed the domain to Responding Party’s VeriPic.com website as a matter of routine.” In a similar vein, and in supplemental form interrogatory responses that Kwan verified in March 2010, VeriPic denied that it intended to divert users to its own website when it managed or used the domain name foray.ca; it claimed that its Internet service provider “routinely points registered domains to the main website on the account without requests from the client.” 4 In January 2012, Kwan testified as the designated corporate representative of VeriPic. Kwan stated that he was the person who had registered the domain name of foray.ca for VeriPic, along with certain other domain names. Kwan’s understanding was that when a user typed in that foray.ca domain name the user would receive a message along the lines of “ ‘this page is not found.’ ” Kwan registered certain domain names to “poke fun” at VeriPic’s competitors in the computer industry. He denied directing Internet traffic to a VeriPic website; he maintained VeriPic’s Internet service provider had set up that direction of traffic on its own as part of the provider’s standard policy. VeriPic’s Internet service provider during the pertinent time period was BigBiz Internet Services (BigBiz). In February 2012, David Lai, the former president of BigBiz, appeared for his first deposition. We discuss the David Lai depositions in further detail further below in the context of defendants’ claims for sanctions against plaintiffs’ former counsel. In September 2013, Henry Lai, David Lai’s brother and then-president of BigBiz, was deposed.

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Kwan Software Engineering, Inc. v. Hennings, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kwan-software-engineering-inc-v-hennings-calctapp-2020.