THE FABRICSHIELD, LLC v. RENE SCHLEICHER CO.

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 9, 2024
Docket2:23-cv-02630
StatusUnknown

This text of THE FABRICSHIELD, LLC v. RENE SCHLEICHER CO. (THE FABRICSHIELD, LLC v. RENE SCHLEICHER CO.) 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
THE FABRICSHIELD, LLC v. RENE SCHLEICHER CO., (E.D. Pa. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA THE FABRICSHIELD, LLC, : Plaintiff : CIVIL ACTION v : RENE SCHLEICHER CO., RENE’S FABRIC ARMOR; RENE T. : SCHLEICHER, and MATTHEW D. : SCHLEICHER, : Defendants : No. 23-2630

MEMORANDUM PRATTER, J. FEBRUARY 9, 2024

Renowned American author Ernest Hemingway used a writing technique known as the iceberg theory, or the theory of omission. “[T]he iceberg theory is a minimalistic style of writing in which the writer focuses on the surface elements of the story—the tip of the iceberg—without going into detail about the underlying themes, the rest of the iceberg submerged in the ocean.” Gerald Lebovits, Thoughts on Legal Writing from the Greatest of Them All: Ernest Hemingway, 93 N.Y. St. Bar J. 70, 71 (2021). On the surface of this matter is a corporate dispute between two furniture cleaning and protection services companies regarding trade secrets, Lanham Act violations, and a host of state law business and contract violations. The FabricShield alleges that Rene’s Fabric Armor and the individual defendants previously employed at The FabricShield misappropriated The FabricShield’s trade secrets and marks to start their own company. The FabricShield alleges that these actions have depleted The FabricShield of its business.

However, a closer look shows a much larger iceberg than what initially appears. Rene Schleicher and her husband Scott Schleicher had founded The FabricShield together in 2018. The business grew, but in December 2022, the couple separated, and Ms. Schleicher subsequently filed for divorce in the Court of Common Pleas in Chester County. She left The FabricShield approximately six months later. Before this litigation began, the Schleichers were engaged in bitter divorce proceedings, which have now migrated into this Court. The FabricShield seems to be a key asset to be distributed in that divorce, □

This Court is not family court, and it will not usurp that vital role from the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. Looking below the surface of a commercial dispute, the Court sees a massive iceberg known as the Schleicher Divorce. The Court will not deliberately steer the ship into that iceberg and instead abstains under the Younger abstention doctrine. BACKGROUND I. Surface-Level Corporate Dispute Rene and Scott Schleicher started The FabricShield in March 2018 as equal business members; in May 2020, Mr. and Ms. Schleicher’s son Matthew joined the business as a full-time employee and service technician. The FabricShield “is a domestic services company that utilizes a private label formula to clean and protect fine home furnishings, textiles, area rugs, carpets, runners[,] and draperies.” The FabricShield serves the Pennsylvania market, as well as markets in New Jersey; New York City; Delaware; Maryland; Washington, D.C.; Virginia; North Carolina; and South Carolina, The FabricShield argues that it has devoted substantial time and money to develop confidential information about its vendors and suppliers, which includes unique pricing agreements, profits and loss models, implementation of customer-specific projects, and follow-up services to repeat customers. The FabricShield also argues that it has devoted significant time and

resources to cultivating long-term relationships with designers and architects, to obtaining customers, and to learning “specialized needs and preferences” of its customers. The FabricShield avers that it has kept such information private and confidential through “HouseCall Pro,” which is “The FabricShield’s confidential Customer Relationship Management System (“CRM System’).” On June 21, 2023, Ms, Schleicher resigned from The FabricShield, effective June 30, 2023, The FabricShield avers that Ms, Schleicher “took the company laptop, cell phone, and the login credentials to the company’s website and her company email” and also “intentionally and deliberately wiped and/or deleted the entire email history, including five years’ worth of The FabricShield’s contact information and history of correspondence with its vendors, suppliers, partners, referring interior decorators and architects, and former, current, and prospective customers,” After Ms, Schleicher announced her resignation, all of The FabricShield’s partners and employees resigned, On June 30, 2023, Ms. Schleicher announced formation of her new company: Rene’s Fabric Armor. That company also offers textile protection and upholstery service. The FabricShield alleges that Ms. Schleicher used company funds from The FabricShield to purchase supplies and/or equipment that she is now using for Rene’s Fabric Armor, Prior to Ms. Schleicher leaving the company in June 2023, in 2022, The FabricShield completed 810 jobs and earned over $780,000 in annual revenue. From June 21, 2023 until June 30, 2023, according to The FabricShield, it completed just 10 jobs and earned $4,857 in revenue, but had earned $33,103 and completed 26 jobs in the same period the year before. In December 2023, The FabricShield was no longer generating any revenue, and the business account was depleted.

In light of these circumstances, The FabricShield sued Ms. Schleicher, Matthew Schleicher, and Rene’s Fabric Armor! for misappropriation of trade secrets, Lanham Act violations, and a host of state claims, including tortious interference with a business relationship, unjust enrichment, and breach of the duty of loyalty. The defendants filed a motion to dismiss the federal trade secret and Lanham Act claims and also argued that the Court should abstain from hearing the action and decline supplemental jurisdiction over the state court claims, Approximately two months after filing its initial complaint, The FabricShield filed a motion for a preliminary injunction. After a number of discovery disputes, the Court heard oral argument on the pending motion to dismiss on October 12, 2023. The Court then ordered the parties to submit briefing solely on the issue of the suitability of abstention under Younger v. Harris, 401 U.S. 37 (1971), and/or Colorado River Water Conservation District v. United States, 424 U.S. 800 (1976). II. Below-the-Surface Divorce Proceedings On December 9, 2022, Mr. and Ms. Schleicher separated, and Ms. Schleicher subsequently filed for divorce in the Court of Common Pleas in Chester County, Pennsylvania, About a month later, an equitable distribution hearing officer was appointed in the divorce proceedings. That day, Mr. Schleicher filed an “Emergency Petition for Special Injunctive Relief,” alleging that the couple acquired assets that included “business enterprises.” Mr, Schleicher’s Emergency Petition alleged that Ms. Schleicher was “dissipating the marital estate” when she withdrew funds from The FabricShield’s operating accounts for personal use. On February 6, 2023, Ms. Schleicher filed a petition for injunctive relief, arguing that Mr. Schleicher was in fact the culprit of misdeeds at The FabricShield. She alleged that Mr. Schleicher

: The FabricShield also named Rene Schleicher Co. as a defendant because Ms. Schleicher had registered that entity with the Pennsylvania Secretary of State. Because the Complaint and operative motions make little reference to Rene Schleicher Co. and instead only focus on the individual defendants and Rene’s Fabric Armor, Rene’s Fabric Armor is the corporate entity most at issue here.

harassed customers for payment, berated business partners, and used The FabricShield funds for personal use. During a hearing on these petitions, Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
THE FABRICSHIELD, LLC v. RENE SCHLEICHER CO., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-fabricshield-llc-v-rene-schleicher-co-paed-2024.