SWINGLESS GOLF CLUB CORPORATION v. Taylor

679 F. Supp. 2d 1060, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 120033, 2009 WL 5206423
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedDecember 24, 2009
DocketC 08-05574 WHA
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 679 F. Supp. 2d 1060 (SWINGLESS GOLF CLUB CORPORATION v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
SWINGLESS GOLF CLUB CORPORATION v. Taylor, 679 F. Supp. 2d 1060, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 120033, 2009 WL 5206423 (N.D. Cal. 2009).

Opinion

ORDER GRANTING IN PART AND DENYING IN PART COUNTER-DEFENDANTS’ MOTION TO DISMISS AMENDED COUNTERCLAIMS

WILLIAM ALSUP, District Judge.

INTRODUCTION

In this intellectual property dispute involving a trigger-equipped, gunpowder-loaded golf club that enables a user to launch a golf ball over two hundred yards without swinging, counterdefendant Swingless Golf Club Corporation and third-party defendants James DePorche and Joyce Taylor move to dismiss eight amended counterclaims proffered by counterclaimants Roy H. Taylor, James S. Stowell, Jack Galanti, Mike Stringer, and Steve Fluke. For the reasons stated below, the motion is Granted in part and Denied in Part.

STATEMENT

1. The Complaint

Plaintiff Swingless Golf Club Corporation (“SGCC”), a Wyoming corporation, initiated this lawsuit on December 15, 2008, against a number of business entities and individuals, including counterclaimants Taylor, Stowell, Galanti, Stringer, and Fluke (Dkt. No. 1). As alleged in the complaint, SGCC, a Wyoming corporation, is the direct successor-in-interest to Swingless Golf Corporation (“Swingless Golf’), a dissolved California corporation.

SGCC is in the business of manufacturing and selling — as its name implies — a product called the swingless golf club, which enables a golfer to drive golf balls great distances without swinging through the use a beveled piston and explosives. 1 SGCC is also alleged to own trade secrets, patents, and trademarks involved in the production of this product. Many individual defendants in this action are former Swingless Golf employees who are now allegedly agents, representatives, or employees of a separate company called EZee Golf LLC, which makes its own swingless golf product to compete with SGCC.

Defendant Roy H. Taylor is the former chief executive officer of Swingless Golf, and is the inventor and former owner of four U.S. patents encompassing the swing-less golf club invention: No. 5,522,594, No. 5,816,927, No. 5,924,932, and No. 6,139,440. Additionally, there are processes, methods, and techniques of manufacturing the swingless golf club product developed by Swingless Golf that are alleged to qualify as trade secrets under California law and are protected by disclosure agreements between defendants and Swingless Golf.

*1064 In June 2002, defendant Roy Taylor assigned the '594, '927, and '932 patents to Swingless Golf, making the California corporation the exclusive owner of those patents. Five months later, defendant Taylor transferred related non-patent intellectual property rights, including trade secrets, to Swingless Golf. Defendants Steve Fluke and Mike Stringer entered into identical agreements at around the same time period, where they also acknowledged that Swingless Golf owned the intellectual property in question and promised not to sell or use it. Defendant Taylor was subsequently removed from his position as CEO of Swingless Golf in approximately August 2003.

In September 2003, defendant Taylor executed two patent assignment documents — without authorization from Swing-less Golf — in which he purported to transfer the '594 and '932 patents and the trademark “Swingless” to himself, and then to an alleged sham corporation called “New River Industries Corporation.” Swingless Golf promptly brought suit in Alameda County Superior Court alleging that defendant Taylor lacked the authority to effectuate the September 2003 transfers. Following that lawsuit, the parties entered into a settlement agreement in which defendant Taylor agreed to execute assignments to return the '927 and '932 patents and the trademark “Swingless” back to Swingless Golf. In August 2005, the Alameda County Superior Court ordered the patents reassigned pursuant to the settlement agreement. This judgment was recorded with the USPTO in April 2006.

Swingless Golf dissolved in 2006 and all its interests — including ownership of the intellectual property underlying the swing-less golf club product — were assigned to SGCC, a new Wyoming corporation. In March 2007, without approval from SGCC, defendants again unilaterally purported to transfer the '927 and '932 patents to themselves. As before, SGCC is attempting to void these transfers.

In the action before the undersigned, plaintiff SGCC alleges that defendants did not have the authority for such a transfer, and that since at least April 2009, defendants have been offering for sale a product through EZee Golf that is allegedly similar to the swingless golf club sold by plaintiff. The product sold by defendants is allegedly based on the same functionality, specifications, trade secrets, and patents as those owned by plaintiff. The complaint also alleges that the competing golf club sold by defendants has a sticker on its shaft identifying that it “incorporates the '440, '927, and '932 Patents, which belong to [plaintiff]” (Comply 34). Defendants allegedly told undercover buyers and investors that defendants owned the patents in dispute, even though they knew this statement to be false.

A first amended complaint was filed by SGCC on April 7, 2009, alleging the following causes of action (Dkt. No. 29):

1. Patent infringement;
2. Misappropriation of trade secrets;
3. Intentional interference with contractual relations;
4. Intentional interference with prospective business advantage;
5. Unfair competition;
6. Lanham Act violation; and
7. Breach of contract.

An order dated July 7, 2009, 2009 WL 2031768, dismissed the fourth claim but upheld all remaining claims (Dkt. No. 49). On August 24, 2009, plaintiff filed a second amended complaint that omitted both “intentional interference” claims and added the allegation that defendants were on notice of their alleged patent infringing activities since 2002 (Dkt. No. 59).

*1065 2. Amended Counterclaims

Following the filing of plaintiffs second amended complaint, defendants Roy H. Taylor, James S. Stowell, Jack Galanti, Mike Stringer, and Steve Fluke filed eight counterclaims against plaintiff SGCC and two third-party individuals: (1) James De-Porche, a former Director of Swingless Golf and an alleged Director of SGCC, and (2) Joyce Taylor, the former Secretary of Swingless Golf, an alleged Director of SGCC, and defendant Roy Taylor’s ex-wife (Dkt. No. 69 (“ACC”) ¶¶ 6, 7, 34). For the sake of convenience, the five individual defendants listed above will be referred to collectively as “counterclaimants,” and SGCC, DePorche, and Joyce Taylor will be referred to collectively as “counterdefendants.”

In their amended counterclaims, counterclaimants allege that they were fraudulently induced by counterdefendants to transfer their intellectual property rights, including patent rights and trade secrets, to Swingless Golf and were “systematically removed as business partners, members or employees by the Board of Directors of Swingless Golf Corp.,” which included Swingless Golf director James DePorche and director/seeretary Joyce Taylor (ACC ¶¶26, 28, 62-67).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
679 F. Supp. 2d 1060, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 120033, 2009 WL 5206423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swingless-golf-club-corporation-v-taylor-cand-2009.