Thomas House v. Player's Dugout, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 8, 2024
Docket22-5843
StatusUnpublished

This text of Thomas House v. Player's Dugout, Inc. (Thomas House v. Player's Dugout, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas House v. Player's Dugout, Inc., (6th Cir. 2024).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 24a0059n.06

Case No. 22-5843

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FILED FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT Feb 08, 2024 KELLY L. STEPHENS, Clerk THOMAS HOUSE, PhD.; NATIONAL ) ) PITCHING ASSOCIATION, INC., ) Plaintiffs-Appellees, ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED v. ) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE ) WESTERN DISTRICT OF PLAYER’S DUGOUT, INC.; JOSEPH JOHN ) KENTUCKY NEWTON; JOSEPH ARTHUR NEWTON, ) JR., ) ) OPINION Defendants-Appellants. )

Before: MOORE, GIBBONS, and STRANCH, Circuit Judges.

JULIA SMITH GIBBONS, Circuit Judge. This appeal arises from a jury verdict

apportioning liability and awarding damages to both parties. Dr. Thomas House and the National

Pitching Association, Inc. (together, “NPA”) filed a complaint against Player’s Dugout, Inc., its

founder and co-owner Joe Newton, and his son and co-owner Joseph Newton (together, “PDI”)1

asserting federal trademark infringement and unfair competition claims under the Lanham Act, as

well as state law claims for trademark infringement, unfair competition, breach of contract, and

punitive damages. PDI counterclaimed, asserting breach of contract, defamation, federal unfair

competition under the Lanham Act, state law unfair competition, tortious interference with

prospective business advantage, and seeking compensatory and punitive damages. After an eight-

1 For the purposes of this opinion, we refer to all plaintiffs together (Dr. Thomas House and National Pitching Association, Inc.) as “NPA” and all defendants together (Player’s Dugout, Inc., Joe Newton, and Joseph Newton) as “PDI,” except where House or the Newtons are referred to separately in an individual capacity. No. 22-5843, House, et al. v. Player’s Dugout, Inc., et al.

day trial, the jury returned a mixed verdict, finding for NPA on federal and state law trademark

infringement and unfair competition claims, as well as breach of contract and punitive damages,

and finding for PDI on defamation, federal law unfair competition, tortious interference with

prospective business advantage, and punitive damages. PDI moved for renewed judgment as a

matter of law or for a new trial on six grounds, all of which the district court rejected. PDI raises

several arguments on appeal stemming from evidentiary objections at trial and the denied

post-verdict motion. For the following reasons, we affirm the district court on all grounds except

the jury’s award of punitive damages against PDI, which we reverse and remand for consideration

under the correct standard.

I.

Dr. Thomas House,2 through his research on biomechanics and experience as a pitching

coach, developed an arm care program for baseball players called the Personally Adaptive Joint

Threshold Training Program (“PAJTT Program”). The PAJTT Program, as its name suggests, was

personalized to each participant, beginning with exercises to build up joint integrity and then,

based on the athlete’s own velocity in throwing differently weighted balls, writing a personalized

weighted-ball program to help the player maximize his own velocity while avoiding injury.

House founded the NPA in 2002 to train and mentor youth athletes.3 House created and

taught NPA certification clinics for baseball coaches, which allowed these coaches to become NPA

2 We refer to Dr. Thomas House simply as “House.” We refer to his wife, Marie House, by her full name. 3 NPA owns a federally registered trademark, U.S. Reg. No. 3,202,667, which was registered on January 23, 2007. The NPA mark is a silhouette of a pitcher with an “overhead swoosh,” a stylized trajectory of an arm-throwing movement, for use in clothing, specifically baseball jerseys, pants, and hats. -2- No. 22-5843, House, et al. v. Player’s Dugout, Inc., et al.

certified. At these NPA coach certification clinics, House taught a segment of the PAJTT Program,

specifically the weighted-ball holds and throws.

In 2003, Joe Newton attended an NPA clinic, where he met House. Newton also met Jamie

Evans, a part owner of NPA with whom Newton stayed in touch. In 2010, Evans called Newton

about a weighted-ball program that improved throwing velocity while avoiding injury, which

Newton then implemented at PDI. Evans wrote the individualized programs, and Newton trained

the players based on the programs, which yielded the intended results—the players threw the balls

harder and faster. In 2012, Newton used the program to train a minor league pitcher named Stevie

Delabar, rocketing Delabar to success. After Delabar’s success, PDI began to orient its business

toward selling this weighted-ball program, which it called the Velocity Plus Arm Care Program

(“Velocity Plus program”).

House wrote to Evans and Newton in January 2013 expressing concern that he was not

receiving proper consideration or recognition for his “intellectual property,” the body of work and

research that created the PAJTT Program and Stevie Delabar’s success. In February 2014, House

and PDI entered into a license agreement. Three provisions of the License Agreement are relevant

for this appeal: (1) the license; (2) the royalties; and (3) the piracy provision.

First, the License Agreement granted PDI “world-wide license to use [House’s] Know-

how and commercial and technical information to use, sell, lease, rent, create participant programs,

or otherwise commercialize the PAJTT Program under the name of ‘Velocity Plus Arm Care

Program’ throughout the world.” DE 51-1, License Agreement, Page ID 512. Second, PDI was

to pay House monthly royalties, specifically $50 for each first-time participant and $40 for

returning participants. Third, recognizing the fact that independent third parties had previously

sold or marketed the PAJTT Program, House agreed that he would “not knowingly permit any

-3- No. 22-5843, House, et al. v. Player’s Dugout, Inc., et al.

such third parties to sell or market the PAJTT Program who [did] not have a distributor agreement

with” PDI. Id. at 514. House would also promptly report to PDI any “known or suspected attempts

by third parties to sell or market the PAJTT Program who do not have a contractual arrangement

with” PDI and “shall further serve on such third parties that they are not authorized to sell or market

the PAJTT Program.” Id.

Shortly after signing the License Agreement, PDI began advertising its association with

NPA and House on its website. The PDI website’s new front page featured a photo of Stevie

Delabar holding five baseballs, one of which bore the NPA trademark of the pitcher silhouette

with the overhead swoosh. The top of the page displayed the phrase “Powered by Tom House”

followed by the NPA trademark.

The website displayed the photo and accompanying phrase from 2014 to July 2017. The website’s

front page also displayed a photo of Newton and House together, above a statement reading “Learn

more about the people and research behind the Velocity Plus Arm Care Program.” CA6 R. 22,

App., at 37 (Pls.’ Trial Ex. 47).

-4- No. 22-5843, House, et al. v. Player’s Dugout, Inc., et al.

Id. The website’s “About” page contained biographical information about House and a list of the

members of the NPA advisory board. Marie House, who reviewed the first draft of the new

website, testified that PDI made these changes to use House and NPA’s names for promotional

purposes.

For his part, House also began communicating the new association with PDI. Following

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