Liberty Corporate Capital Ltd. v. Security Safe Outlet, Inc.

577 F. App'x 399
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 15, 2014
Docket13-5539
StatusUnpublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 577 F. App'x 399 (Liberty Corporate Capital Ltd. v. Security Safe Outlet, 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
Liberty Corporate Capital Ltd. v. Security Safe Outlet, Inc., 577 F. App'x 399 (6th Cir. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION

HELENE N. WHITE, Circuit Judge.

In 2010, BudsGunShop.com, LLC (BGS), brought an action against Security Safe Outlet, Inc. (SSO), and its employee Matthew Denninghoff, asserting the improper use of BGS’s customer database and name. SSO notified its insurer, Liberty Corpo *401 rate Capital Limited (Liberty), and sought a defense and indemnity under its commercial general liability policy. Liberty filed the instant action, seeking a declaratory judgment that it has no duty to defend or indemnify SSO and Denninghoff under the terms of the policy. The district court granted Liberty’s motion for summary judgment, and SSO and Denninghoff appeal. Because the allegations in BGS’s complaint in the underlying action do not bring the action within the scope of the coverage provided by SSO’s policy, we AFFIRM.

BACKGROUND

BGS’s claims against SSO have their roots in the two companies’ business relationship. The following assertions of fact are taken from BGS’s second amended complaint.

Marion E. “Bud” Wells formed SSO in June 2000, with Wells as SSO’s sole shareholder. SSO operated a retail firearm and security safety store in Paris, Kentucky, under the name “Bud’s Gun Shop.” In 2003, SSO expanded its business to include online sales through a website at the internet domain name “budsgunshop.com,” and hired Rex McClanahan to assist with the expansion. The online portion of the business was successful and, in 2006, “Wells and McClanahan began the process of spinning out the online business operations of SSO as a separate business entity” that became BGS. In August 2006, Wells and McClanahan executed a document called “BudsGunShop.com LLC Operating Agreement.” In February 2007, BGS distributed a non-compete agreement that its employees, including Denninghoff, signed. On May 17, 2007, BGS filed its Articles of Organization as a Kentucky Limited Liability Company with the Kentucky Secretary of State, listing Wells and McClana-han as its sole members.

Meanwhile, Wells began to liquidate his interest in SSO. On January 1, 2007, Wells and Earley M. Johnson II executed a Stock Purchase Agreement in which Johnson agreed to purchase a one-half interest in SSO over a two-year period. In April 2009, Wells and SSO entered a Stock Redemption Agreement in which SSO redeemed all shares owned by Wells. As part of that transaction, SSO assigned its “federal and state trademark rights in the tradename ‘Bud’s Gun Shop,’ as well as permutations of that name,” to Wells. Wells licensed the rights back to SSO in a “Tradename License Agreement.” The licensing agreement granted SSO the right to use the name in connection with its retail firearms store in Paris, Kentucky and a shooting or firing range business, but specified that SSO must discontinue using the name, and that the license would immediately terminate, “if, over any one calendar month period during the term of this License, Licensee’s over-the-counter sales of Firearms from the retail store comprise less than 85% of Licensee’s total sales of Firearms for that month.”

Even after the spin-off of BGS, SSO and BGS continued to operate out of the same building until January 2009, when BGS relocated to Lexington, Kentucky, and opened its own retail store. Meanwhile, however, from January 2007 to April 2010, SSO acted as one of BGS’s product suppliers and drop-ship order fulfillment agents. For this purpose, BGS provided SSO access to certain areas of BGS’s password-protected computer system. BGS contends that, although SSO’s access allowed SSO to “theoretically ... view individual customer data records one at a time,” SSO did not have access to BGS’s customer database, which had its own password and contained hundreds of thousands of customer records.

*402 Denninghoff worked as a BGS employee from January 2007 through January 2010, doing IT work. BGS contends that while still a BGS employee, Denninghoff conspired with his sister, who was SSO’s Vice President, to further SSO’s plans to open a competing internet firearms sales operation; that in January 2010, Dennin-ghoff quit without notice, via email, and within days. started working for SSO; that Denninghoff “deliberately erased both the contents of his work email account and the contents of his work computer,” but “secretly kept” a number of backup copies of BGS’s customer database from various backup dates; and that as soon as BGS learned that SSO planned to open a competing internet sales operation, it terminated SSO’s access to its computer network system, but SSO then asked for and obtained from Denninghoff a copy of a backup customer database and used customer information from the database to send mass promotional emails to BGS’s Kentucky customers. Although BGS directed SSO to desist in its use of the customer information, SSO continued to send mass promotional emails using the information. BGS filed the underlying action against SSO in November 2010, asserting eleven claims, all grounded in allegations that SSO and Denninghoff misappropriated and used BGS’s customer database, and continued to use BGS’s name, and permutations of its name, after its license to do so had terminated.

SSO had a series of commercial general liability policies with Liberty that together provided coverage from September 2008 through September 2012 (the Policies). 1 As relevant here, the Policies afford coverage for “bodily injury and property damage liability” and for “personal and advertising injury liability.” SSO argues that BGS’s allegations in Counts I, II, and III of its second amended complaint — for violation of K.R.S. § 365.880, et seq., (misappropriation of trade secrets); violation of 15 U.S.C. § 1125 (Lanham Act); and breach of the TradeName License Agreement — fall within the Policies’ coverage for “property damage” and “advertising injury” liability, and that no exclusions apply. 2

The following policy terms are relevant:
Coverage A Bodily injury and property damage liability
1. Insuring Agreement
a. We will pay those sums the insured becomes legally obligated to pay as damages because of “bodily injury” or “property damage” to which this insurance applies. We will have the right and duty to defend the insured against any “suit” seeking those damages.

See R. 29-2, Policy No. L200805866 at 1. The Policies define “property damage”:

28. “Property Damage” means:
a. Physical injury to tangible property, including all resulting loss of use of that property. All such loss of use shall be deemed to occur at the time of the physical injury that caused it; or
*403 b. Loss of use of tangible property that is not physically injured. All such loss of use shall be deemed to occur at the time of the “occurrence” that caused it.
For the purposes of this insurance, electronic data is not tangible property.

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577 F. App'x 399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/liberty-corporate-capital-ltd-v-security-safe-outlet-inc-ca6-2014.