Steer Machine Tool & Die Corp v. SS Niles Bottlestoppers, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 6, 2024
Docket3:18-cv-00204
StatusUnknown

This text of Steer Machine Tool & Die Corp v. SS Niles Bottlestoppers, LLC (Steer Machine Tool & Die Corp v. SS Niles Bottlestoppers, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steer Machine Tool & Die Corp v. SS Niles Bottlestoppers, LLC, (M.D. Pa. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT MIDDLE DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

STEER MACHINE TOOL & DIE CORPORATION,

Plaintiff, CIVIL ACTION NO. 3:18-cv-00204

v. (SAPORITO, C.M.J.)

SS NILES BOTTLE STOPPERS, LLC, et al.,

Defendants.

Plaintiff, CIVIL ACTION NO. 3:20-cv-01234

MEMORANDUM This is a pair of companion cases, representing the latest chapter in a long-running business dispute involving the same parties. , 331 F. Supp. 3d 429, 430–32 (M.D. Pa. 2018), Doc. 17. In the first case, No. 18-cv-00204, the plaintiff, Steer Machine Tool & Die Corp. (“Steer”), asserted various trademark infringement, unfair competition, and

breach of contract claims against the original defendants, SS Niles Bottle Stoppers, LLC, and its principal owner, Ruth Niles (collectively, “SS Niles”). In the second case, No. 20-cv-01234, Steer asserted patent

infringement claims against SS Niles. The two cases were consolidated for settlement discussions, which resulted in a June 2021 settlement agreement resolving the claims

asserted in both actions.1 The settlement agreement prohibited SS Niles from continuing to sell or offer to sell certain stainless steel bottle stopper designs that were patented and trademarked by Steer.2 An addendum to

the settlement agreement provided a limited exception to this prohibition, permitting SS Niles to continue to display pictures of two specified bottle stopper designs in the “gallery pages” of their website—

1 The settlement agreement was executed by the parties on June 23, 2021. The parties filed a joint motion to approve the settlement agreement in the patent case, No. 20-cv-01234, on June 25, 2021. The clerk docketed a copy of the same motion in the trademark case, No. 18- cv-00204, on June 28, 2021. We entered an order approving the settlement agreement and retaining jurisdiction for enforcement purposes on June 28, 2021. 2 In their previous business relationship, SS Niles had made, sold, and used these bottle stopper designs under an intellectual property license from Steer. the “301” and “701” bottle stoppers—provided the pictures included a

disclaimer stating: “The original stoppers with three o-rings are no longer available.” In April 2022, the original defendants, SS Niles, sold the assets of

their business to Carl and Robin Jacobson, who thereafter did business as “Niles Bottle Stoppers” as well.3 In June 2022, an employee of Steer found pictures of the 301 and 701 bottle stoppers on Pinterest, a social

media website.4 In July 2022, counsel for Steer sent a cease-and-desist email message to the Jacobsons and to counsel for SS Niles, demanding that the pictures be taken down.

On September 16, 2022, the plaintiff filed substantively identical motions to enforce the settlement agreement in both actions. The parties briefed the motions, and we held an evidentiary hearing on the motion

3 It is our understanding that the Jacobsons operated their business as a general partnership under this same trade name. 4 , 140 F. Supp. 3d 997, 1012 (N.D. Cal. 2015) (“Pinterest is a social media website where users can share photos, articles, and other information about their interests on personalized web-based Pinboards which are, by default, viewable by all of Pinterest’s 80 million monthly users.”). on August 10, 2023.5 The matter is now ripe for disposition.6

I. DISCUSSION The basis of the plaintiff’s motions to enforce against SS Niles is a Pinterest account that included pictures of Steer’s 301 and 701 bottle stopper designs, which was located by a Steer employee, Daniel Seeuwen,

in June 2022, about a year after the parties executed a settlement agreement to resolve these cases. The Pinterest page was labeled as belonging to “SS Niles Bottle Stoppers” and included a link to a website

previously maintained by SS Niles.7 The timestamps affixed to the 301

5 Although the parties have submitted proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law, the court is not required to state findings or conclusions when ruling on a motion. Fed. R. Civ. P. 52(a)(3). In light of the entirely undisputed nature of the facts adduced by the parties at the hearing, we find disposition of the motions without separate findings and conclusions to be appropriate in this case. 6 Initially, the plaintiff sought to join the Jacobsons as additional party-defendants in this action. The issue of their participation was resolved by a stipulation of the parties on March 6, 2023, in which the Jacobsons and the parties agreed that the Jacobsons were bound by the terms of the settlement agreement as successors by transfer of the assets of SS Niles, such that formal joinder and additional service of process was unnecessary. On April 24, 2023, however, the plaintiff withdrew its enforcement claims as against the Jacobsons, with prejudice, leaving its claims against the original defendants only. 7 The website address, nilesbottlestoppers.com, appears to have been among the assets conveyed in the April 2022 asset sale. It is currently maintained by the Jacobsons, doing business as Niles Bottle Stoppers. and 701 bottle stopper pictures and all other posts on the account

indicated that they were posted several years earlier.8 The plaintiff, Steer, contends that the unauthorized display of these pictures on the internet constitutes an infringement of its patent and

trademark rights with respect to the 301 and 701 bottle stopper designs, and that this infringement, in turn, constitutes a breach of the terms of the settlement agreement with the defendants, entitling Steer to

injunctive relief and an award of liquidated damages against SS Niles.9 At the evidentiary hearing, Steer employee Daniel Seeuwen testified about the Pinterest page and how he found it, and he provided

background information about Steer’s business, the intellectual property at issue, and the prior litigation between Steer and SS Niles, including the terms of the settlement agreement. Steer co-owner Steven Seeuwen

testified that his son, Daniel, brought the Pinterest account to his attention in late June 2022, and that Steer did not maintain a Pinterest

8 An undated printout of select pages of the Pinterest account was submitted as an exhibit at the evidentiary hearing. The printout indicated that all pictures were posted about six years earlier. 9 The settlement agreement provided for an award of $15,000 in liquidated damages for breaches of certain, specified provisions of the settlement agreement. account of its own. He testified that the Pinterest page remained active

in August 2022, just prior to bringing the instant motions to enforce. Both Daniel and Steven Seeuween admitted on cross-examination that they did not know if Ruth Niles created or controlled the Pinterest account at

issue. SS Niles contends that, until it was notified by Steer in July 2022, it was not aware of the ongoing existence of the Pinterest account or the

pictures posted there. Ms. Niles, the retired 82-year-old owner of the defunct SS Niles Bottle Stopper, LLC, testified at the evidentiary hearing that, when it was brought to her attention in July 2022, she did not

recognize the Pinterest page, nor had she created it or derived any sales from it. Niles testified that she recalled meeting a college student at a library several years earlier, and they discussed setting up a Pinterest

page for the SS Niles business. But the student later backed out, explaining that she did not feel comfortable creating or managing the Pinterest account for SS Niles.

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Related

Pinterest, Inc. v. Pintrips, Inc.
140 F. Supp. 3d 997 (N.D. California, 2015)
Steer Mach. Tool & Die Corp. v. SS Niles Bottle Stoppers, LLC
331 F. Supp. 3d 429 (M.D. Pennsylvania, 2018)

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Steer Machine Tool & Die Corp v. SS Niles Bottlestoppers, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steer-machine-tool-die-corp-v-ss-niles-bottlestoppers-llc-pamd-2024.