Scherer Design Group, LLC v. Ahead Engineering LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedFebruary 25, 2019
Docket18-2835
StatusUnpublished

This text of Scherer Design Group, LLC v. Ahead Engineering LLC (Scherer Design Group, LLC v. Ahead Engineering LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scherer Design Group, LLC v. Ahead Engineering LLC, (3d Cir. 2019).

Opinion

NOT PRECEDENTIAL

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT ______________

No. 18-2835 ______________

SCHERER DESIGN GROUP, LLC

v.

AHEAD ENGINEERING LLC; FAR FIELD TELECOM LLC; KYLE MCGINLEY; DANIEL HERNANDEZ; RYAN WALDRON; CHAD SCHWARTZ Appellants ______________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey (D.C. No. 3-18-cv-03540) District Judge: Hon. Anne E. Thompson _____________

Argued January 7, 2019 ______________

Before: AMBRO, SHWARTZ, and FUENTES, Circuit Judges.

(Filed: February 25, 2019)

______________

OPINION ______________

Ronald D. Coleman, Esq. [ARGUED] Brian Block, Esq. Mandelbaum Salsburg 3 Becker Farm Road

 This disposition is not an opinion of the full Court and, pursuant to I.O.P. 5.7, does not constitute binding precedent. Suite 105 Roseland, NJ 07068

Counsel for Appellee

David Kistler, Esq. [ARGUED] Blank Rome 300 Carnegie Center Suite 220 Princeton, NJ 08540

Michael A. Iannucci, Esq. Blank Rome 130 North 18th Street One Logan Square Philadelphia, PA 19103

Counsel for Appellants

SHWARTZ, Circuit Judge.

Scherer Design Group, LLC (“SDG”), obtained a preliminary injunction that

stopped its former employees, Defendants Daniel Hernandez, Ryan Waldron, Chad

Schwartz, and Kyle McGinley, from contacting SDG’s clients and destroying information

taken from SDG. Defendants assert that SDG surreptitiously monitored Hernandez’s

Facebook activity after he left SDG, and claim this constitutes unclean hands barring

SDG from obtaining equitable relief. Because the Court acted within its discretion in

declining to apply the unclean hands doctrine, we will affirm.

2 I1

SDG is an engineering firm that provides services to wireless carriers and other

vendors in the telecommunications business. Schwartz alleges that he was promised a

partnership in SDG. During discussions about a potential ownership stake, Schwartz

informed SDG that if he did not reach an agreement with SDG, he would start a

competing engineering firm. SDG asked Schwartz to enter a noncompete agreement, but

he declined, and, in November 2017, Schwartz resigned and started two competing

engineering firms, Defendants Ahead Engineering and Far Field Telecom.

Schwartz thereafter recruited Hernandez, McGinley, and Waldron to join his

firms. While Hernandez, McGinley, and Waldron were still employed by SDG, they

(1) discussed their new venture using, at least in part, Facebook, and (2) transmitted

SDG’s documents and information to Schwartz’s firms.

During the 2017 Christmas vacation period, Schwartz accepted a project from one

of SDG’s largest clients, ExteNet, which SDG had allegedly declined because SDG

would be closed through the New Year. Schwartz asked Waldron, who was on vacation

from SDG at the time, to assist him with the project. ExteNet eventually left SDG and

became Schwartz’s client.

Hernandez, McGinley, and Waldron resigned from SDG in January 2018.

Hernandez testified that while he worked at SDG, he accessed his Facebook account from

1 “In an appeal from the grant or denial of a preliminary injunction, we typically view the facts in the light most favorable to the prevailing party.” Arrowpoint Capital Corp. v. Arrowpoint Asset Mgmt., LLC, 793 F.3d 313, 316 n.1 (3d Cir. 2015).

3 his SDG laptop, and “would log off sometimes and leave it open sometimes,” but that on

the day he resigned from SDG—at the direction of his co-Defendants—he “closed out of

Facebook” by clearing the history on the internet browsers on his SDG laptop, App. 227,

334 (“I cleared the passwords which logs you out.”).

After the mass resignation and loss of ExteNet as a client, SDG’s network

administrator was instructed to examine Defendants’ SDG computers.2 The

administrator (1) reviewed Hernandez’s browser history using software that allowed him

to access deleted activity, (2) asserts that he accessed Hernandez’s Facebook account

without a password because Hernandez had not cleared it from the computer,3 and

(3) installed software that allowed him to monitor Hernandez’s Facebook activity without

detection. From February through mid-March 2018, the administrator accessed

Hernandez’s Facebook account “very often” from Hernandez’s SDG laptop, App. 210,

and saw messages that revealed Defendants’ plans and the actions that they took to secure

SDG’s client information and other intellectual property.

SDG sent Defendants cease and desist letters, and thereafter filed a complaint in

the New Jersey Superior Court alleging, among other things, breach of the duty of

loyalty, tortious interference with prospective business relationships, and

misappropriation of trade secrets. With the complaint, SDG sought a temporary

2 At the time of Defendants’ employment, SDG had no policies informing employees that SDG retained the right to monitor their use of SDG computers, and did not remind departing employees to log out of personal accounts prior to their departure. 3 SDG’s network administrator attempted to review the other Defendants’ browsing histories but was unable to do so “[b]ecause they cleared all of their information and were logged out of all of their accounts.” App. 221.

4 restraining order (“TRO”) and a preliminary injunction. Defendants removed the case to

the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey.

After granting SDG’s request for a TRO, the District Court allowed the parties to

conduct expedited discovery and then it held argument on SDG’s injunction request.

Defendants produced, among other things, testimony from Hernandez, who insisted that

he logged out of his Facebook account before he returned his computer to SDG, and a

report from a computer forensics expert, who opined that (1) “it is highly unlikely” that

Hernandez’s Facebook account “remained logged on the SDG laptop after January 17,

2018” and (2) SDG accessed the Facebook account using Hernandez’s password. App.

245. In response, SDG produced a supplemental declaration from its network

administrator stating that he did not have Hernandez’s password and that Hernandez

“likely . . . misremembered logging out of his Facebook account” or may have “thought”

he logged out but did not do so because of Facebook’s “persistent” picture login

“feature,” which requires additional steps to completely log out. App. 342-46.

The District Court acknowledged that the parties “hotly dispute” how SDG gained

access to Hernandez’s Facebook account but, without resolving this factual dispute,

determined that the unclean hands doctrine did not bar injunctive relief because (1) it

“may be reasonable” for an employer such as SDG to access password-protected content

on a company laptop; (2) SDG’s conduct “is arguably not related to the litigation”

because “[w]hile it goes to Plaintiff’s full knowledge of the underlying facts,”

Defendants’ alleged breaches of loyalty, tortious interference, and/or trade secret

violations predate SDG’s alleged hacking of Hernandez’s account and SDG’s actions did

5 not “affect” the Defendants’ alleged violations; and (3) “[o]n balance,” the Court was not

persuaded that “unclean hands” should bar SDG’s right to pursue injunctive relief. App.

9. The Court then considered the preliminary injunction factors, determining that SDG

“demonstrated a strong likelihood of success on the merits of its breach of the duty of

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