Sherman Industries, Inc. v. Goldhammer

683 F. Supp. 502, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3101, 1988 WL 29391
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 1, 1988
DocketCiv. A. 86-1441
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 683 F. Supp. 502 (Sherman Industries, Inc. v. Goldhammer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sherman Industries, Inc. v. Goldhammer, 683 F. Supp. 502, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3101, 1988 WL 29391 (E.D. Pa. 1988).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

LOUIS H. POLLAK, District Judge.

This is a legal malpractice case arising out of unsuccessful patent litigation which exposed plaintiff to liability in excess of one million dollars. Plaintiff, Sherman Industries, Inc. (“Sherman”), a manufacturer of carwash equipment, is suing its former lawyer, Joel S. Goldhammer, Esq., and the law firm Seidel, Gonda & Goldhammer, P.C. (jointly referred to herein as “Gold-hammer”). The essence of plaintiff’s case is that defendants undertook to investigate a potential patent infringement and to ad *504 vise plaintiff how to minimize the risks involved in developing its product, but that defendants gave inappropriate and inadequate advice and thereby caused plaintiff to incur substantial losses that should have been avoided. The case is now before me on defendants’ motion for summary judgment. 1 Defendants contend that the claims asserted by plaintiff in its amended complaint are barred by the statute of limitations. For the reasons that follow, the claims are time-barred and the complaint is accordingly dismissed.

I.

The circumstances of defendants’ representation of plaintiff, viewed in the light most favorable to plaintiff, are as follows: In 1980 Sherman retained Goldhammer to advise it on patent validity and infringement. 2 In particular, Goldhammer did a validity study of an existing patent on a piece of carwash equipment, a bag blower called “The Stripper,” which was manufactured by a Sherman competitor, Proto-Vest, Inc., for use in drying cars after they have gone through a carwash. Gold-hammer assured Sherman that Proto-Vest’s patent was invalid. Goldhammer accordingly advised Sherman that it need not modify the design of its own bag blower, the Model 1885. Sherman proceeded to manufacture and sell its Model 1885. Gold-hammer meanwhile represented Sherman in a declaratory judgment action against Proto-Vest claiming patent invalidity and non-infringement. Proto-Vest met Sherman’s declaratory judgment action with a counterclaim against Sherman for patent infringement.

On June 1983, after a trial on liability issues only, the district court found Sherman liable for patent infringement, and enjoined it from manufacturing and selling its bag blower. Notwithstanding the defeat at trial, Goldhammer continued to advise Sherman that Proto-Vest’s patent was invalid, and assured Sherman that the decision of the district court would be overturned on appeal. In reliance on Gold-hammer’s advice, Sherman appealed from the district court decision, and obtained a stay of the injunction so that it could continue to manufacture its bag blower pending disposition of the appeal.

In advising Sherman, Goldhammer repeatedly insisted that Sherman would win the lawsuit against Proto-Vest. The record shows that Goldhammer did explain after the loss at trial that if Proto-Vest ultimately prevailed, Sherman would have to pay royalties and lost profits. 3 Sherman’s officers paid more attention to Gold-hammer’s assurances of victory, however, than to minimizing the risks of loss. Sherman’s officers did not ask Goldhammer to explain alternatives to suit, nor did they urge him to discuss further the downside risks of taking Proto-Vest to court.

On February 29, 1984, the Federal Circuit upheld the decision of the district court, and thereafter denied Sherman’s petition for rehearing. Sherman nonetheless continued to retain Goldhammer, who began to prepare for the damages portion of the bifurcated trial.

Sherman began in the summer of 1984 to manufacture and sell a new version of its bag blower, the Model 1886. Sherman con *505 tends that the new model was similar to the predecessor model in all respects, except that it did not have the rectangular cross-section that the district court had found infringed Proto-Vest's patent. Amended Complaint ¶ 25.

Because Goldhammer himself apparently had been unaware of the appropriate measure of Proto-Vest’s damages, it was not until some months after the appeal was lost that Goldhammer informed Sherman of the magnitude of the damages it might have to pay, and of the extent to which its decision to continue to manufacture the Model 1885 pending appeal might have further increased those damages. Gold-hammer had not researched and investigated the damages question prior to the summer of 1984. See Amended Complaint, Exhibit E (letter from Goldhammer to Thacher, dated March 2, 1984, stating that Gold-hammer had not conducted legal research into the applicable measure of damages). In his initial advice to Sherman that it might have to pay Proto-Vest for lost profits, Goldhammer had not offered any definition of lost profits. Thacher N.T. at 143. Interrogatories to Proto-Vest drafted by Goldhammer and served in July of 1984 sought information about Proto-Vest’s “net profit.” See Amended Complaint, Exhibit B. Sherman learned by the fall of 1984, however, that it was liable for Proto-Vest’s lost gross profits, an amount substantially greater than the net profits that Sherman had known it might have to pay. See Thacher N.T., at 15, 144.

In October, 1985, Sherman terminated its attorney-client relationship with Gold-hammer. Thereafter, Sherman hired new counsel, and Sherman and Proto-Vest determined not to proceed with a trial on the damages portion of the patent dispute. They settled the litigation for $1,375,-000.00.

Sherman initiated this malpractice action on March 12, 1986. Goldhammer moved to dismiss the complaint as time-barred. I granted that motion on April 22, 1987, but gave plaintiff leave to file an amended complaint, which it did on May 11, 1987. Defendants now move for judgment in their favor on the ground that plaintiff has failed to raise a genuine issue with respect to the timeliness of the claims pleaded in its amended complaint.

II.

In both the original and amended complaints, plaintiff has alleged malpractice claims under contract and tort theories. The amended complaint alleges that the parties had “an express contract of employment whereby Defendants agreed to provide certain advice and to represent Sherman Industries with respect to a patent dispute between Plaintiff and Proto-Vest, Inc.,” pursuant to which “Plaintiff directed and instructed Defendants to furnish certain specified legal services and advice.” Complaint ¶ 10, 11. Plaintiffs also rely on defendants’ professional duty to exercise due care: “by accepting employment by plaintiff in connection with the Proto-Vest patent dispute Defendants agreed to and were bound to exercise the necessary, proper and ordinary skill and knowledge required of them in connection therewith.” Id. 1113.

The law of Pennsylvania determines the appropriate statutes of limitations applicable to plaintiff’s claims. The diversity of the parties’ citizenship provides the jurisdictional basis for plaintiff’s claims. Plaintiff is a New Jersey corporation. Defendant Joel Goldhammer is a citizen of Pennsylvania, and Seidel, Gonda & Goldhammer, P.C. is a Pennsylvania business. A federal court sitting in diversity applies the forum state’s choice-of-law rules.

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Bluebook (online)
683 F. Supp. 502, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3101, 1988 WL 29391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sherman-industries-inc-v-goldhammer-paed-1988.