Mikkilineni v. PayPal, Inc.

CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedJuly 1, 2021
DocketN19C-05-123 PRW CCLD
StatusPublished

This text of Mikkilineni v. PayPal, Inc. (Mikkilineni v. PayPal, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mikkilineni v. PayPal, Inc., (Del. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

MAHESWAR MIKKILINENI, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) C.A. No. N19C-05-123 ) PRW CCLD ) PAYPAL, INC., GODADDY.COM, LLC, ) SHIJIL TS, CEO, HARVARD ) COLLEGE OBSERVATORY & ) HARVARD UNIVERSITY, AND ) UPWORK INC. ) ) Defendants. )

Submitted: May 24, 2021 Decided: July 1, 2021

Upon Defendant PayPal, Inc.’s Motion to Dismiss, GRANTED.

Upon Defendant GoDaddy.com, LLC’s Motion to Dismiss, GRANTED.

Upon Defendant Upwork Inc.’s Motion to Dismiss, GRANTED.

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

Maheswar Mikkilineni, Newark, Delaware, Pro se.

Kristen S. Swift, Esquire, WEBER GALLAGHER SIMPSON STAPLETON FIRES & NEWBY LLP, New Castle, Delaware, Attorney for Defendant PayPal, Inc.

Gregory Fischer, Esquire, COZEN O’CONNOR, Wilmington, Delaware; Harper S. Seldin, Esquire, COZEN O’CONNOR, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Attorneys for Defendant GoDaddy.com, LLC. Nicholas T. Verna, Esquire, WOMBLE BOND DICKINSON (US) LLP, Wilmington, Delaware, Attorney for Defendant Upwork Inc.

WALLACE, J. Plaintiff Maheswar Mikkilineni has wielded litigation in three Delaware

courts to resolve loosely-connected allegations against an assortment of business

entities and quasi-governmental institutions stemming from his attempts to host,

encode, and grow a website designed to commercialize his scientific and religious

views about the atomic underpinnings of the universe. No doubt his zeal and caring

are genuine. And, while doggedly persistent, Mr. Mikkilineni has been nothing but

civil and gentlemanly in his pursuit of entities he believes have wrongfully

obstructed these goals of enlightenment. But unfortunately, that pursuit of certain

entities via the particular claims brought here has travelled a blind path and must

come to an end.

Central to this decision are the claims Mr. Mikkilineni has leveled at

defendants PayPal, Inc., GoDaddy.com, LLC, and Upwork Inc. He accuses PayPal

of negligently handling his payment dispute with a third-party website developer

whom he, in turn, has accused of stealing his money and infringing his intellectual

property. He insists that GoDaddy’s faulty servers have caused his website to glitch

and leak proprietary data. And he urges that Upwork wrongly refused to squash a

problem he had with a freelance animation artist Upwork recruited. PayPal and

GoDaddy have moved to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6), contending that Mr.

Mikkilineni has failed to state any reasonably conceivable or procedurally-proper

-1- claims. Upwork has moved to dismiss on jurisdictional grounds, arguing that Mr.

Mikkilineni must arbitrate his claims.

Mr. Mikkilineni is a retired physicist and engineer, not a lawyer. So, the Court

has construed his four, pro se complaints with as much liberality as Delaware law

permits. Nevertheless, even given the generous and forgiving read the Court has

afforded them, nothing explicit or implicit in Mr. Mikkilineni’s filings reveals a

remediable injury. One could laud Mr. Mikkilineni’s near Quixotean efforts to

represent himself here and elsewhere. But the defendants’ motions must be

GRANTED. Accordingly, and for the reasons discussed below, the various claims

against them are DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE.

-2- I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND1

A. THE ALLEGATIONS INVOLVING PAYPAL, GODADDY AND UPWORK.

Mr. Mikkilineni owns and publishes “Maheswar.org”—a “research” and

“educat[ional]” website created to refute mainstream physics with the teachings of

Indra.2 Mr. Mikkilineni has been inspired by what he believes to be incorrect, but

nevertheless academically-accepted, laws of the universe advanced by theorists like

“Einstein” and “Sagan,” professional astronomers, and former Presidents of the

United States.3 Using Maheswar.org, Mr. Mikkilineni hopes to capitalize on his

1 The Court limits its factual recitations to the circumstances relevant for resolving this piece of Mr. Mikkilineni’s lawsuit. Mr. Mikkilineni’s practice has been to “amend” his complaints by adding arguments against the defendant’s motions without changing his core assertions. But cf. GWO Litig. Tr. v. Sprint Sols., Inc., 2018 WL 5309477, at *17 n.177 (Del. Super. Ct. Oct. 25, 2018) (citing Ct. Ch. R. 15(aaa)) (noting that a party cannot amend a pleading with a responsive filing); In re Ezcorp. Inc. Consulting Agreement Derivative Litig., 130 A.3d 934, 941 (Del. Ch. 2016) (explaining that one purpose of the Court of Chancery’s amendment rules is to curb “seriatim complaints”). As a result, the Court draws the key allegations from Mr. Mikkilineni’s third amended complaint, see Am. Compl., Apr. 30, 2021 (D.I. 97) (hereinafter “Compl.”), which is the operative one under this Court’s Civil Rules, and from the exhibits that are integral to, and incorporated in, that complaint, see generally Windsor I, LLC v. CWCap. Asset Mgmt. LLC, 238 A.3d 863, 873 (Del. 2020) (enumerating the species of external documents and publications that a court may consider on a motion to dismiss); see also Malpiede v. Townson, 780 A.2d 1075, 1083 (Del. 2001) (“[A] claim may be dismissed if allegations in the complaint or in the exhibits incorporated into the complaint effectively negate the claim as a matter of law.”). To be clear, for the sake of completeness, and given his pro se status, the Court also has considered any variations on these allegations that were presented in Mr. Mikkilineni’s other complaints too. See generally Compl., May 17, 2019 (D.I. 1); Am. Compl., July 19, 2019 (D.I. 40); Am. Compl., Mar. 16, 2020 (D.I. 68). 2 Compl. ¶¶ 2.0(a), (e). Indra is a deity worshipped by followers of Hinduism and credited with mastering and generating certain natural forces. See generally Indra, ENCYCLOPEDIA BRITTANICA, https://www.britannica.com/topic/indra (last visited June 16, 2021). 3 Compl. ¶¶ 2.0(b)–(e).

-3- philosophies by selling membership interests to non-profit companies, lay

subscribers, and “investors.”4 To achieve that goal, Mr. Mikkilineni had turned to

the service providers and the public and private organizations he now has sued.

Having secured a server for Masheswear.org from GoDaddy, which hosts

internet domains, Mr. Mikkilineni contracted with defendant SparkSupport Infotech

Pvt. Ltd. (“Spark”), an India-based coder and website developer, to obtain the latter’s

assistance with the “Task 1 and 2” phases of Maheswar.org’s formation (e.g.,

“webRTC” and “video-audio” capabilities).5 Under the terms, Spark purportedly

agreed to complete all its projects by late June 2018 in exchange for two “advance-

fees” of $4,000, “proprietary-data,” passwords, and pre-existing code.6

Mr. Mikkilineni transferred the funds from his personal account through PayPal, a

transactional intermediary that offers banking and e-commerce products to its users.7

Spark allegedly missed its first deadline.8 So, Mr. Mikkilineni availed himself

of PayPal’s internal dispute-resolution procedures to extract a refund.9 Alerted to

4 Id. ¶ 2.0(e). 5 Id. ¶ 2.1. 6 Id. ¶ 2.2. 7 Id. ¶¶ 2.2(a)–(b). 8 Id. ¶¶ 2.3(a)–(b). 9 Id. ¶ 2.3(d).

-4- the payment dispute, Spark reappeared and renegotiated its deadlines with

Mr. Mikkilineni.10 Given Spark’s assurances, Mr. Mikkilineni dropped the

dispute.11

When the revised deadline arrived, however, Spark apparently again failed to

deliver.12 At this point, Mr. Mikkilineni suspected that Spark never had intended to

perform, but rather sought to pocket his fees and misappropriate his proprietary

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