Vehicle Market Research, Inc. v. Mitchell International, Inc.

767 F.3d 987, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 17844, 2014 WL 4627852
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 17, 2014
Docket12-3333
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 767 F.3d 987 (Vehicle Market Research, Inc. v. Mitchell International, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vehicle Market Research, Inc. v. Mitchell International, Inc., 767 F.3d 987, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 17844, 2014 WL 4627852 (10th Cir. 2014).

Opinion

EBEL, Circuit Judge.

This is a judicial estoppel case, which is controlled by two principles: our reluctance to impose the harsh remedy of judicial estoppel, and the failure by the party asserting judicial estoppel to bear its burden to point to clearly inconsistent statements in support of its arguments.

The case involves statements made by plaintiff Vehicle Market Research, Inc. (VMR) in a breach of contract case that were allegedly inconsistent with earlier statements by the sole owner and alter-ego of that company, John Tagliapietra, in his Chapter 7 bankruptcy proceeding. 1 Specifically, VMR developed and owned certain intellectual property (referred to in the contract as “Materials and Intellectual Property”) — including a software system to calculate the value of a total loss of an automobile for the purposes of the automobile insurance industry (the “TLSS Product”) and certain “pre-existing software tools, utilities, concepts, techniques, text, research or development” used in the development of TLSS (the “Pre-Existing Materials”). (R. Vol. I at 261, ¶8.1.) When Mr. Tagliapietra filed for personal bankruptcy, he asserted that his shares in VMR were worth nothing. A few years later, as the bankruptcy was winding down, VMR sued Mitchell International, Inc. (Mitchell), the company to which it had exclusively licensed the Materials and Intellectual Property, seeking up to $4.5 million in damages for the alleged misappropriation of the Materials and Intellectual Property. The question before us is whether the statements by VMR and Mr. Tagliapietra in the litigation against Mitchell were so clearly contrary to the statements made by Mr. Tagliapietra in his bankruptcy proceeding that VMR should be judicially estopped from proceeding with its suit against Mitchell.

*989 There is no doubt that when Mr. Taglia-pietra filed his bankruptcy, he listed the value of VMR’s stock as 0.00. He did not amend that statement, except to approve the bankruptcy Trustee’s valuation of the shares at a value of “unknown” at some point in 2009, around the time that he was preparing to file his lawsuit (in the shoes of VMR) against Mitchell. As a result of Mr. Tagliapietra’s representations in the bankruptcy court, the Trustee and the bankruptcy court awarded Mr. Tagliapie-tra a discharge of his debts based in part on the assumption that his company was worthless.

Turning to the VMR litigation at hand against Mitchell, VMR alleged in the unverified complaint that it was entitled to up to $4.5 million on its contract with Mitchell authorizing Mitchell to use the Materials and Intellectual Property. In Mr. Taglia-pietra’s 2011 deposition in the instant litigation, he acknowledged that the Pre-Ex-isting Materials, the existence of which preceded the filing of his bankruptcy, were worth $4 million in 2009.

We review the doctrine of judicial estop-pel with guidance telling us we should apply it sparingly and require a clearly inconsistent statement before invoking it. We conclude that neither VMR’s litigation claim for payments until they reach a cap of $4.5 million nor Mr. Tagliapietra’s deposition testimony in that lawsuit — that VMR was entitled to “up to” $4 million in royalties and that, in 2009, the Pre-Existing Materials were worth $4 million — is clearly inconsistent with his valuation of 0.00 for his VMR stock at the time of his bankruptcy petition in 2005, the date when the initial bankruptcy representations were made.

If there were grounds for judicial estop-pel, it would have to be based on a duty by Mr. Tagliapietra to amend his bankruptcy pleadings to report a possible increased value for his VMR stock at least as of the time that VMR filed its suit against Mitchell in 2009. However, our precedent is not clear on whether a debtor has a continuing duty to amend his bankruptcy schedules when the estate’s assets change in value. Given our reluctance to invoke judicial es-toppel, and keeping in mind that judicial estoppel is an affirmative defense that its proponent must prove, we conclude that in this case Mitchell has not met its burden of showing any clearly inconsistent statements that would warrant that relief. We therefore REVERSE the district court’s opinion as an abuse of discretion.

BACKGROUND

I. Development of VMR’s product and licensing to Mitchell

Mitchell is a company providing various products and solutions for insurance companies and collision repair facilities. John Tagliapietra was Mitchell’s employee at the time he conceived of the TLSS Product, which is “a product that assists automobile insurers in providing a fair market value for a vehicle that has been declared a total loss.... ” (R. Vol. II at 540.). As Mitchell was Mr. Tagliapietra’s employer, Mitchell had the option to develop the system further within its company, but instead gave Mr. Tagliapietra permission to develop it on his own and retained a right of first refusal to license the resulting software product. Mr. Tagliapietra incorporated VMR in 1997 to develop the TLSS product. Mr. Tagliapietra is VMR’s sole shareholder and decisionmaker.

Mitchell became VMR’s exclusive licensee, marketing the TLSS product VMR developed as iNTOTAL. To facilitate that arrangement, in 1998 VMR and Mitchell executed a Computer Programming and System Integration Services Agreement (the “Agreement”) for the licensing of the *990 Materials and Intellectual Property, which provided:

8.1 Ownership of Materials and Intellectual Property: During the term of this Agreement and upon completion of all payments due, termination, cancellation, or expiration of this Agreement, but subject to the provisions of Paragraph 28 hereof, VMR shall immediately turn over all items (including the TLSS Product, Work Product or work in process) in its possession which were prepared pursuant to this Agreement or made available to VMR, ... used in developing the TLSS Product and Work Product and all rights, title, and interest or other materials furnished to VMR by MITCHELL during the course of VMR performing Professional Services, and all copies thereof....
Notwithstanding the foregoing, VMR retains all right, title and interest in, and to, any pre-existing software tools, utilities, concepts, techniques, text, research or development methods that VMR used in or applied to the development of the TLSS Product (the “Pre-Existing Materials”).
VMR hereby grants MITCHELL an exclusive right and license to modify, adapt, reproduce, use and distribute the Pre-existing Materials as part of the TLSS Product and as part of any adaptations, updates, enhancements or other derivative works based thereon.

(R. Vol. I at 261, ¶ 8.1.) Thus, the Agreement encompassing the Materials and Intellectual Property provided for Mitchell to license, use, and distribute, as part of the TLSS Product, “any pre-existing software tools, utilities, concepts, techniques, text, research or development methods that VMR used in or applied to the development of the TLSS Product,” a.k.a the PreExisting Materials, but VMR retained title to those Pre-Existing Materials. 2

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Occidental Petroleum v. Wells Fargo
117 F.4th 628 (Fifth Circuit, 2024)
Johnson v. Creason
D. Kansas, 2023
Billingsley v. Avaya Inc
W.D. Oklahoma, 2020
Lucero v. Citelum US, Inc.
D. New Mexico, 2019
Toepper v. Medicredit, Inc.
N.D. Illinois, 2019
Cejka v. Vectrus Sys. Corp.
350 F. Supp. 3d 967 (D. Colorado, 2018)
Indus. Fabricators, Inc. v. At-Net Servs. - Charlotte, Inc.
2018 NCBC 45 (North Carolina Business Court, 2018)
Hermann v. Hartford Casualty Insurance Co.
675 F. App'x 856 (Tenth Circuit, 2017)
Asarco, LLC v. Noranda Mining, Inc.
844 F.3d 1201 (Tenth Circuit, 2017)
Cruse v. Sun Products Corp.
221 F. Supp. 3d 990 (W.D. Tennessee, 2016)
Hardin v. Dadlani
221 F. Supp. 3d 87 (District of Columbia, 2016)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
767 F.3d 987, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 17844, 2014 WL 4627852, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vehicle-market-research-inc-v-mitchell-international-inc-ca10-2014.