Excel Fortress Limited v. Wilhelm et al, No. 2:2017cv04297 - Document 191 (D. Ariz. 2020)

Court Description: ORDER granting 157 Wilhelm's Motion for Summary Judgment. Wilhelm's Motion for Sanctions (Doc. 171 ) is denied. The Clerk of Court shall enter judgment accordingly and terminate this action. Signed by Judge Dominic W Lanza on 3/20/20. (EJA)

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1 WO 2 3 4 5 6 IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 7 FOR THE DISTRICT OF ARIZONA 8 9 Excel Fortress Limited, et al., Plaintiffs, 10 11 v. 12 Vaughn La Verl Wilhelm, et al., 13 No. CV-17-04297-PHX-DWL ORDER Defendants. 14 15 The operative complaint in this case, filed by Plaintiffs EFG America LLC (“EFG”) 16 and Excel Fortress Limited (“Excel Fortress”) (collectively, “Plaintiffs”), asserted seven 17 claims against five defendants. (Doc. 62.) However, in January 2019, Plaintiffs agreed to 18 dismiss all defendants except Vaughn Wilhelm (“Wilhelm”) and to dismiss two of their 19 claims against Wilhelm. (Doc. 130.) Later, Plaintiffs agreed to dismiss four more of their 20 claims against Wilhelm. (Doc. 159 at 13; Docs. 165, 173.) As a result, there is only claim 21 remaining in the case: EFG’s claim against Wilhelm for negligence. 22 Now pending before the Court is Wilhelm’s motion for summary judgment on the 23 negligence claim (Doc. 157) and motion for sanctions pursuant to Rule 11 (Doc. 171). For 24 the following reasons, the Court will grant the motion for summary judgment, deny the 25 motion for sanctions, and terminate this action. 26 … 27 … 28 … 1 2 BACKGROUND I. Factual Background 3 Excel Fortress is a Hong Kong company that specializes in “the business of 4 researching and developing proprietary devulcanization technology for rubber recovery 5 and recycling to produce new rubber products.”1 (Doc. 62 ¶¶ 2, 11.) To further that 6 business, Excel Fortress engaged Dr. Li Xing Ru, a resident of China, to develop “new 7 technology for reclaiming rubber from tires and butryonitrile.” (Id. ¶¶ 12-13.) Excel 8 Fortress and Dr. Li entered into a series of employment agreements under which Dr. Li 9 would develop “the formulae and technologies for manufacturing and applying various 10 special reclaiming agents . . . and the technology for re-vulcanizing scrap tires and 11 butryonitrile.” (Id. ¶¶ 13-18.) Dr. Li successfully completed that work. (Id ¶ 16.) Excel 12 Fortress paid Dr. Li for “its use and patent rights in the two new technologies.” (Id.) 13 According to Excel Fortress, these “new technologies are unique and could potentially 14 revolutionize the recycled rubber market.” (Id. ¶ 20.) 15 Excel Fortress began to license the technologies. (Id. ¶ 21.) It entered into a global 16 license agreement with Gate Corporation, which in turn sub-licensed the technologies to 17 EFG for EFG’s use in North America. (Id.) In September 2014, to facilitate its use of the 18 licenses, EFG hired, among others, Wilhelm.2 (Id. ¶ 23.) EFG alleges that Wilhelm 19 thereafter “became acquainted with Dr. Li” and “became very familiar with the two new 20 technologies.” (Id. ¶¶ 25, 27.) This included “gaining direct access to various product 21 information, technology design and specifications, proprietary formulae, and technical 22 scientific relationships belonging to Excel Fortress.” (Id. ¶ 27.) In an effort to protect its 23 assets, Excel Fortress required EFG to have those with access to the technologies sign non- 24 disclosure agreements. (Id. ¶ 28.) EFG alleges that Wilhelm was required to and did sign 25 such an agreement. (Id. ¶¶ 29-30.) 26 Devulcanization converts hardened rubber products, such as tires, into a more “raw” form for use in other applications. 2 The precise nature of Wilhelm’s relationship with EFG is in dispute. (Doc. 182 at 4 ¶¶ 3-6.) 1 27 28 -2- 1 EFG alleges that its relationship with Wilhelm quickly deteriorated. Beginning in 2 2016, Wilhelm began communicating with Dr. Li. (Id. ¶ 32.) According to EFG, Wilhelm 3 was feeding Dr. Li lies about how Plaintiffs were utilizing the technologies and cheating 4 Dr. Li out of profits realized from the technologies. (Id.) Capitalizing on Dr. Li’s anger, 5 Wilhelm introduced Dr. Li to another potential employer, Eversource Capital LP 6 (“Eversource”). To facilitate Dr. Li’s employment with Eversource, Wilhelm, Ryan 7 McHugh, and Dr. Li’s daughter allegedly “obtained a false legal opinion that Dr. Li’s 8 Employment Agreement [with Excel Fortress] was invalid and that he was not restricted 9 from agreeing to work for [Eversource].” (Id. ¶ 37.) They used that false opinion to 10 convince Dr. Li that he could work for Eversource. (Id.) Dr. Li accepted employment with 11 Eversource and allegedly began divulging sensitive information about the new 12 devulcanization technologies so Eversource could directly compete with EFG. (Id ¶ 38.) 13 EFG alleges that Wilhelm took several other actions that caused it to sustain 14 damages. (Id. ¶¶ 39-47.) Among these actions is what EFG has dubbed “corporate 15 sabotage.” (Id. at 12.) The complaint alleges that, as part of his engagement with EFG, 16 Wilhelm “was given responsibility for the acquisition and preparation of certain critical 17 specialty chemical compounds required in the creation of . . . EFG’s products, including 18 receiving information about the molecular structure and suppliers of each chemical.” (Id. 19 ¶ 48.) 20 ingredients and formulation of the chemical compounds,” Wilhelm botched the ordering 21 of those compounds, even failing to obtain the “key ingredient, called butyl stearate.” (Id. 22 ¶ 49.) Instead, he bought “an entirely different and completely unrelated chemical, zinc 23 naphthenate.” (Id.) There were other component chemicals completely missing, and some 24 other chemicals that EFG had no use for. (Id. ¶ 50.) Then, “[d]espite receiving specific documented information regarding the 25 These allegations provide the foundation for Count Six of the operative complaint, 26 which is EFG’s claim against Wilhelm for negligence. (Id. ¶¶ 87-91.) The complaint 27 alleges that “[t]he standard of care is that which any reasonable consultant in the same or 28 similar circumstances would exercise to protect EFG from an unreasonable risk of harm.” -3- 1 (Id. ¶ 89.) In its mandatory disclosures, provided during the discovery process in this case, 2 EFG provided additional clarification and details concerning the nature of its negligence 3 claim. (Doc. 157-3 at 6-7 [EFG’s July 1, 2019 supplemental disclosure]. See also 4 Analysis, Part I.C infra.) 5 II. 6 7 Procedural Background On April 13, 2017, Plaintiffs initiated this action in the District Court for the Southern District of Texas. (Doc. 1.) 8 On June 5, 2017, Plaintiffs filed an amended complaint. (Doc. 6.) 9 On July 10, 2017, Wilhelm and his then co-defendants (collectively, “Defendants”) 10 moved to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction, or, in the alternative, to transfer the case 11 to this District or the District of Idaho. (Doc. 18.) Plaintiffs opposed the motion. (Doc. 12 34.) The presiding judge granted the motion to transfer and ordered the case transferred to 13 Arizona.3 (Doc. 39.) 14 On April 30, 2018, Plaintiffs filed their second amended complaint. (Doc. 62.) 15 A. 16 On October 15, 2018, Plaintiffs moved to transfer and consolidate two related cases 17 “for discovery purposes only.” (Doc. 79 at 1.) The other case, in a role-reversal from this 18 case, involved EFG being sued for its alleged failure to repay loans. (Id. at 1-3.) Plaintiffs 19 argued the cases were related and involved substantially the same parties. (Id.) Defendants 20 disagreed, characterizing the motion as “nothing but an attempt to secure an extension of 21 discovery after Plaintiffs have failed to pursue discovery for over seven months.” (Doc. 22 81 at 2.) The November 20, 2018 Order 23 Around the same time, the parties notified the Court of a discovery dispute. (Doc. 24 83.) Plaintiffs believed they were entitled to information about Defendants’ “past and 25 current devulcanization business efforts and development of devulcanized rubber, related 26 communications, (including communications relating to Dr. Li and his daughter . . .), 27 3 28 The case was received in this District on November 22, 2017 and assigned to Judge Tuchi. (Doc. 41.) It was reassigned to the undersigned judge on October 31, 2018. (Doc. 82.) -4- 1 related business expenses (bank records), and business contact, travel, and communication 2 efforts (phone records).” (Id. at 1.) On November 5, 2018, Plaintiffs moved to extend the 3 deadline for them to produce an expert report on rubber devulcanization. (Doc. 88.) Under 4 the scheduling order, their expert disclosures had been due three days earlier. (Doc. 55 at 5 2.) 6 “Defendants refused and have failed to meaningfully respond to Plaintiffs’ discovery 7 requests regarding Defendants’ rubber devulcanization efforts,” those experts had been 8 unable to complete their analysis and generate a report. (Id. at 2.) Defendants opposed the 9 request, arguing there was no good cause to extend the disclosure deadline—the 10 supposedly “deficient” discovery had been produced eight months earlier, Defendants 11 argued, so there was no reason to reward Plaintiffs for failing to act since then. (Doc. 91.) 12 On November 20, 2018, the Court issued an order that denied in significant part 13 Plaintiffs’ discovery requests, denied the motion to extend the expert-disclosure deadline, 14 and denied the motion to transfer. (Doc. 100 at 1.) First, as for Plaintiffs’ discovery 15 requests, the Court concluded that most were overbroad but ordered Defendants to produce 16 information about their meetings with Dr. Li and his daughter. (Id. at 4-9.) Second, as for 17 the extension request, the Court concluded that Plaintiffs’ actions were “the antithesis of 18 diligence.” (Id. at 10.) “Plaintiffs were not diligent in pursuing discovery,” waiting more 19 than eight months to raise their grievances with Defendants’ initial responses. (Id.) Third, 20 as for the transfer request, the Court saw “very little factual overlap.” (Id. at 11.) More 21 important, “there [was] little reason to believe consolidation [would] promote judicial 22 economy.” (Id.) Consolidating the cases would work to the hardship of Defendants 23 because it would “increase their litigation costs and significantly delay their case’s 24 resolution.” (Id. at 12.) “Moreover, the effect of ordering consolidation would be to give 25 Plaintiffs a second bite at the discovery apple after displaying a marked lack of diligence 26 over the past eight months.” (Id.) Plaintiffs argued they had timely identified their expert witnesses, but because 27 B. 28 On November 16, 2018, Defendants moved to strike Plaintiffs’ expert disclosures The January 9, 2019 Order -5- 1 because (1) Dr. Jinzhu Yang, a Chinese lawyer, provided legal opinions that “are within 2 the province of the Court, not an expert,” (2) Plaintiffs failed to provide a report for Dr. 3 Jacques Noordermeer, their rubber devulcanization expert, and (3) there was no summary 4 of facts or opinions to which Michael Kumbalek, EFG’s President, would testify. (Doc. 5 92.) Plaintiffs opposed the motion, arguing that Dr. Yang’s report was proper under Rule 6 44.1 and that Defendants “failed to fulfill the factors required for striking expert 7 disclosures” in regard to Dr. Noordermeer and Kumbalek. (Id. at 2.) On this latter point, 8 Plaintiffs again argued that Defendants’ failure to provide requested discovery had 9 hampered the development of their case, including securing expert reports. (Id. at 5.) 10 While that motion was pending, the parties submitted two further notices of 11 discovery disputes. First, Plaintiffs asserted they were “entitled to review the rubber 12 devulcanization technology Defendants are using to determine whether or not it compares 13 to Plaintiffs’ trade secrets.” (Doc. 113.) Second, Plaintiffs wanted to depose Dr. Li “as a 14 managing agent of Defendant Group to testify about the misappropriation of Plaintiffs’ 15 trade secrets.” (Doc. 114 at 1.) Plaintiffs believed judicial intervention was required 16 because “Chinese law prevents his voluntary deposition in China for a U.S. legal action.” 17 (Id.) Defendants argued that Plaintiffs misinterpreted Chinese law and that Dr. Li could 18 be deposed in China, and, more important, Dr. Li was unavailable as a witness due to age 19 and health issues. (Id. at 2.) Defendants proposed that each side submit questions that Dr. 20 Li could answer in a sworn affidavit. (Id.) 21 On January 9, 2019, the Court entered an order resolving the outstanding motions 22 and disputes. (Doc. 122.) The Court denied the motion to strike the expert disclosures, 23 denied Plaintiffs’ request to compel Defendants to provide additional discovery material, 24 and denied Plaintiffs’ request to depose Dr. Li. (Id.) As for Defendants’ motion to strike, 25 the Court first found that Dr. Yang’s conclusions were appropriate under Rule 44.1. (Id. 26 at 5.) As for Dr. Noordermeer, the Court concluded that “Plaintiffs have not come close to 27 meeting their burden of showing they were ‘substantially justified’ in failing to comply” 28 with the disclosure deadline and produce his report. (Id. at 7.) Thus, the only issue was -6- 1 whether Plaintiffs had demonstrated that late disclosure would be harmless. (Id.) Because 2 Plaintiffs had still not produced a report, the Court had an insufficient record to determine 3 whether their late disclosure would be harmless, so the Court ultimately settled on denying 4 Defendants’ motion to strike without prejudice. (Id. at 7-8.) Similarly, as for Kumbalek, 5 the Court focused on “what consequence should flow from Plaintiffs’ failure” to provide a 6 summary of the opinions and conclusions to which he would testify. (Id. at 9.) Because 7 Plaintiffs’ failures regarding Kumbalek were “nearly identical” to those regarding Dr. 8 Noordermeer, the Court took the same approach and denied the motion to strike without 9 prejudice. (Id. at 9-10.) 10 The Court also elaborated upon its reasons for denying Plaintiffs’ request for further 11 discovery, which it had previously denied during a telephonic hearing. (Id. at 10-11. See 12 also Doc. 116.) Ultimately, Plaintiffs were asking the Court to order Defendants to answer 13 a question “different from, and broader than, the question actually posed in the written 14 discovery requests.” (Doc. 122 at 11.) As for Plaintiffs’ request to depose Dr. Li, the Court 15 concluded that Dr. Li was not a managing agent of the corporate defendants. (Id. at 12.) 16 Thus, Plaintiffs were required to comply with the Hague Convention procedures that 17 govern depositions of foreign citizens outside of the U.S. (Id. at 11-12.) Accordingly, the 18 Court denied Plaintiffs’ request to compel defendants to make Dr. Li available. (Id. at 13.) 19 C. 20 On January 10, 2019, Plaintiffs filed a motion to dismiss, without prejudice, all 21 claims against Wilhelm’s co-defendants and Counts One and Two of the second amended 22 complaint as they pertained to Wilhelm. (Doc. 123 at 1-2.) Defendants didn’t oppose this 23 request and only asked that, if Plaintiffs sought to re-file the dismissed claims, they be 24 required to do so in this Court. (Doc. 127 at 1.) Plaintiffs accepted that condition (Doc. 25 129), so the Court granted the motion (Doc. 130). Voluntary Dismissal Against All Defendants Except Wilhelm Wilhelm’s Motion For Discovery Sanctions 26 D. 27 On March 8, 2019, Wilhelm, now the only remaining defendant, moved for 28 discovery sanctions pursuant to Rule 37. (Doc. 134.) Specifically, Wilhelm objected to -7- 1 Plaintiffs’ late-disclosed damages calculation of over $52 million and sought to “preclude 2 Plaintiffs from introducing any evidence in support of” those calculations. (Id. at 2.) 3 Wilhelm also alleged that Plaintiffs had made repeated misrepresentations to him and the 4 Court about the extent to which Plaintiffs sought to recoup lost profits or payments to Dr. 5 Li. (Id. at 2-3.) Plaintiffs opposed the motion. (Doc. 136.) 6 On June 17, 2019, the Court issued an order granting the motion in part and denying 7 it in part. (Doc. 151.) The Court agreed that Plaintiffs’ disclosures were inadequate, but 8 this “should have prompted Wilhelm to seek clarification.” (Id. at 6-7.) Instead, Wilhelm 9 waited 13 months to do anything, and rewarding that strategy “would create perverse 10 incentives.” (Id. at 7.) Accordingly, the Court declined to impose sanctions for Plaintiffs’ 11 late disclosure. (Id. at 3-7.) Nor did the Court impose sanctions for the misrepresentations 12 related to Plaintiffs’ lost profits—the Court didn’t view Plaintiffs’ communications on the 13 matter “as some sort of intentional attempt to mislead” and whatever problems the 14 miscommunications had created could be fixed through additional discovery. (Id. at 9.) 15 On the other hand, the Court found “[t]he facts concerning the Dr. Li payments . . . 16 troubling.” (Id. at 11.) On this issue, “Plaintiffs’ counsel made repeated misstatements 17 that were, at best, the product of sloppiness and negligence.” (Id.) Additionally, Plaintiffs 18 had originally produced incomplete financial records and only produced a complete set 19 after Wilhelm repeatedly objected. (Id.) That said, it wasn’t “entirely clear whether (or to 20 what extent) Wilhelm was prejudiced by this episode.” (Id.) Thus, the Court declined to 21 impose Wilhelm’s requested sanction. (Id. at 11-12.) 22 Instead, the Court ordered the parties to meet and confer about additional steps 23 needed to cure any prejudice Wilhelm suffered due to Plaintiffs’ misstatements. (Id. at 9, 24 12.) The Court warned that Wilhelm might be entitled to costs and expenses if further 25 discovery proved necessary and noted that Plaintiffs could avoid such expenses by agreeing 26 to dismiss the problematic claims. (Id.) 27 During the ensuing meet-and-confer process, Plaintiffs agreed to dismiss Counts 28 Three, Four, Five, and Seven against Wilhelm. (Doc. 159 at 13. See also Doc. 165 [formal -8- 1 motion to dismiss]; Doc. 173 [dismissal order].) This meant the only remaining claim was 2 Count Six, EFG’s claim against Wilhelm for negligence. On July 2, 2019, Wilhelm filed 3 a motion for summary judgment on that claim. (Doc. 157.) 4 Wilhelm was not mollified by Plaintiffs’ agreement to dismiss Counts Three, Four, 5 Five, and Seven. (Doc. 157.) In the parties’ joint memorandum filed in response to the 6 Court’s June 17, 2019 order, Wilhelm requested fees related to the discovery dispute 7 (including the drafting of the joint submission), the fees incurred because of “Plaintiffs’ 8 misleading statements,” fees related to preparing a motion for summary judgment on 9 claims Plaintiffs had subsequently withdrawn, and fees related to pursuing discovery on 10 claims Plaintiffs had subsequently withdrawn. (Doc. 159 at 3.) Plaintiffs opposed this 11 request. (Id. at 13-15.) 12 On July 25, 2019, upon reviewing the joint submission, the Court authorized 13 Wilhelm to file a motion for attorneys’ fees related to the discovery dispute but declined to 14 award fees on any other basis. (Doc. 164 at 3-4.) 15 On August 8, 2019, Wilhelm filed his motion for fees. (Doc. 167). Plaintiffs 16 objected to the fee request, arguing that it was arbitrary, unreasonable, and beyond the 17 scope of what the Court had authorized. (Doc. 174.) The Court concluded “most of 18 Plaintiffs’ objections are baseless” but agreed that Wilhelm had involved more lawyers 19 than necessary, so the Court struck the fees requested for the work of one attorney. (Doc. 20 188 at 7-11.) Accordingly, the Court awarded Wilhelm $23,275 in fees and $1,417.76 in 21 costs. (Id at 11.) 22 E. 23 As noted, Wilhelm filed a summary judgment motion on July 2, 2019. (Doc. 157.) 24 On July 12, 2019, EFG moved under Rule 56(d) to defer consideration of Wilhelm’s 25 motion until it had the chance to depose Wilhelm. (Doc. 160.) EFG characterized the 26 summary judgment motion as “sudden and premature” and argued it “must be permitted to 27 seek the discovery it needs from Defendant’s deposition to provide a fair and complete 28 opposition” to the summary judgment motion. (Id at 2.) EFG’s Motion To Defer Consideration -9- 1 On August 13, 2019, after inviting and receiving further briefing (Docs. 161-63), 2 the Court denied the Rule 56(d) motion. (Doc. 170.) In the Court’s view, “nothing 3 Wilhelm might say in his deposition would preclude summary judgment—EFG’s failure 4 to obtain an expert means its negligence claim is doomed.” (Id. at 3.) Wilhelm’s Motion For Sanctions 5 F. 6 Before the dust could settle, Wilhelm filed a motion for sanctions under Rule 11. 7 (Doc. 171.) As discussed in more detail below, Wilhelm argues that EFG’s “sole remaining 8 claim does not have evidentiary support and is not warranted by existing law,” so the 9 continued pursuit of that claim is frivolous and warrants sanctions. (Id. at 1-2.) EFG 10 opposes this request. (Doc. 176.) 11 Amid the hectic motion practice, EFG also responded to Wilhelm’s motion for 12 summary judgment. (Doc. 181.) The summary judgment motion (Doc. 157) and the 13 motion for sanctions (Doc. 171) are now fully briefed and nobody has requested oral 14 argument. 15 16 ANALYSIS I. Motion For Summary Judgment 17 Wilhelm seeks summary judgment on EFG’s sole remaining claim, the claim in 18 Count Six for negligence. (Doc. 157.) His primary argument is that the claim fails as a 19 matter of law because EFG cannot establish the standard of care—to do so would require 20 an expert, and EFG does not have an expert. (Id. at 3-4.) Alternatively, Wilhelm argues 21 the negligence claim fails because it is barred by the economic loss rule, EFG cannot 22 establish causation, and EFG has sued the wrong party. (Id. at 4-6.) In its response, EFG 23 argues that no expert is needed, the claim is not barred by the economic loss rule, a causal 24 link exists between Wilhelm’s actions and its alleged injuries, and it has sued the proper 25 party. (Doc. 181.) 26 A. Legal Standard 27 A party moving for summary judgment “bears the initial responsibility of informing 28 the district court of the basis for its motion, and identifying those portions of ‘the pleadings, - 10 - 1 depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, 2 if any,’ which it believes demonstrate the absence of a genuine issue of material fact.” 3 Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 323 (1986). “In order to carry its burden of 4 production, the moving party must either produce evidence negating an essential element 5 of the nonmoving party’s claim or defense or show that the nonmoving party does not have 6 enough evidence of an essential element to carry its ultimate burden of persuasion at trial.” 7 Nissan Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. Fritz Cos., 210 F.3d 1099, 1102 (9th Cir. 2000). “If . . . 8 [the] moving party carries its burden of production, the nonmoving party must produce 9 evidence to support its claim or defense.” Id. at 1103. 10 “Summary judgment is appropriate when ‘there is no genuine dispute as to any 11 material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.’” Rookaird v. BNSF 12 Ry. Co., 908 F.3d 451, 459 (9th Cir. 2018) (quoting Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a)). “A genuine 13 dispute of material fact exists if ‘there is sufficient evidence favoring the nonmoving party 14 for a jury to return a verdict for that party.’” United States v. JP Morgan Chase Bank 15 Account No. Ending 8215 in Name of Ladislao V. Samaniego, VL: $ 446,377.36, 835 F.3d 16 1159, 1162 (9th Cir. 2016) (quoting Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 249- 17 50 (1986)). 18 nonmoving party and draw all reasonable inference in the nonmoving party's favor.” 19 Rookaird, 908 F.3d at 459. Summary judgment is also appropriate against a party who 20 “fails to make a showing sufficient to establish the existence of an element essential to that 21 party’s case, and on which that party will bear the burden of proof at trial.” Celotex, 477 22 U.S. at 322. The court “must view the evidence in the light most favorable to the 23 B. Applicable Law 24 As previously noted, both parties have litigated the negligence claim under Texas 25 law. (Doc. 170 at 5.) Wilhelm again utilizes Texas law in his motion for summary 26 judgment. (Doc. 157.) Although EFG now raises the possibility that Arizona law may 27 govern the negligence claim, it ultimately “believes Texas law applies.” (Doc. 181 at 3- 28 4.) Given that there is no serious dispute that Texas law governs the negligence claim, the - 11 - 1 Court will continue to utilize Texas law. 2 C. Merits 3 Wilhelm’s primary argument is that EFG was required to produce an expert who 4 could opine on the applicable standard of care. (Doc. 157 at 3-4.) EFG has no such expert, 5 so Wilhelm asserts its negligence claim must fail as a matter of law. (Id.) 6 Under Texas law, negligence has three elements: (1) a legal duty of care; (2) a 7 breach of that duty; and (3) damages proximately caused by the breach. Kroger Co. v. 8 Elwood, 197 S.W.3d 793, 794 (Tex. 2006). “If the conduct at issue involves the use of 9 specialized techniques, then expert testimony is necessary to establish the standard of care 10 and a violation of that standard.” VIA Metro. Transit v. Garcia, 397 S.W.3d 702, 708 (Tex. 11 Ct. App. 2012). Likewise, Texas courts generally require expert testimony when “the 12 conduct at issue involves the use of specialized equipment . . . or knowledge of specialized 13 industry practices and procedures.” Rodriguez v. CenterPoint Energy Houston Elec., LLC, 14 2018 WL 5261246, *5 (Tex. Ct. App. 2018). See also Mack Trucks, Inc. v. Tamez, 206 15 S.W.3d 572, 583 (Tex. 2006) (“Expert testimony is required when an issue involves matters 16 beyond jurors’ common understanding.”). Whether expert testimony is necessary is a 17 question of law for the Court to decide. FFE Transp. Servs., Inc. v. Fulgham, 154 S.W.3d 18 84, 89-91 (Tex. 2004). 19 The Texas Supreme Court’s decision in Fulgham provides a helpful illustration of 20 these principles. There, a truck driver sustained injuries after a refrigerated trailer he was 21 hauling, which he had leased from the defendant, broke loose, causing his truck to overturn. 22 Id. at 86. In the ensuing lawsuit, the truck driver argued the accident had been caused by 23 “loose and rusty bolts connecting parts of [the] trailer” and that defendant had acted 24 negligently by “fail[ing] to timely and properly inspect and maintain the trailer” before 25 leasing it to him. Id. at 87. The trial court granted a directed verdict in the defendant’s 26 favor because the truck driver failed to present expert testimony establishing the standard 27 of care for his negligence claim. Id. The Texas Court of Appeals reversed, holding that 28 expert testimony wasn’t required because “the inspection and detection of loose and rusty - 12 - 1 bolts connecting parts of a trailer is not a ‘fact so peculiar to a specialized industry’ and is 2 within the experience of a layperson.” Id. at 91 (citation omitted). However, the Texas 3 Supreme Court reinstated the trial court’s decision. Id. at 85. The court emphasized that 4 “[t]he upper coupler assembly, kingpin, and base rail of a refrigerated trailer are specialized 5 equipment, and the proper inspection and maintenance of those parts involve techniques 6 unfamiliar to the ordinary person,” so “[w]hile the ordinary person may be able to detect 7 whether a visible bolt is loose or rusty, determining when that looseness or rust is sufficient 8 to create a danger requires specialized knowledge.” Id. 9 Similarly, in Simmons v. Briggs Equip. Tr., 221 S.W.3d. 109 (Tex. Ct. App. 2006), 10 the plaintiff was using a rail-car moving device when a fire broke out in the engine 11 compartment, causing the plaintiff to “launch” himself through a window to avoid the fire 12 and sustain a back injury. Id. at 111. After an investigation by a fire inspector revealed 13 that the fire had been caused by a “broken hydraulic hose,” which caused hydraulic fluid 14 to spew into the exhaust manifold and catch on fire, the plaintiff brought a negligence 15 action against the company that was responsible for maintaining and repairing the device. 16 Id. at 111-12. In support of this claim, the plaintiff presented evidence that the company 17 had last inspected and repaired the device’s hydraulic system in May 2002—about 15 18 months before the accident, which occurred in August 2003—and hadn’t checked or 19 repaired the hydraulic system during its last service attempt in June 2003. Id. at 113-14. 20 However, the plaintiff did not present evidence from an expert that the company’s conduct 21 fell below the applicable standard of care. Id. at 114-15. The trial court concluded that 22 expert testimony was required, and thus granted the defendant’s motion for summary 23 judgment, and the Texas Court of Appeals affirmed, holding that because “maintenance 24 and service of a [rail-car mover] involves specialized equipment and techniques unfamiliar 25 to a lay person”—“Few people not involved in the rail-car industry are familiar with rail- 26 car movers, the functioning of their engines and other internal parts, or the frequency and 27 type of inspection and maintenance they require”—the challenged conduct was not a 28 “matter[] within a lay person’s general knowledge.” Id. - 13 - 1 On the other end of the spectrum, the Texas Court of Appeals’ recent decision in 2 AKIB Constr. Inc. v. Shipwash, 582 S.W.3d 791 (Tex. Ct. App. 2019), exemplifies the type 3 of situation in which expert testimony isn’t required. In Shipwash, AKIB was required to 4 “facilitate the purchase, dismantling, transportation, and reassembly of a steel building.” 5 Id. at 804. Shipwash was unhappy with the result and sued, arguing that the building had 6 been dismantled in such a way that rendered it impossible to reconstruct. Id. AKIB argued 7 that an expert was necessary to prove Shipwash’s case but the Texas Court of Appeals 8 disagreed. Id. Rather than present expert testimony, Shipwash had presented a series of 9 before-and-after pictures of the building. Id. The “before pictures show a steel building 10 with functional doors and sheet metal that appears intact.” Id. The after pictures “show 11 pieces of sheet metal lying crumpled and bent in piles around the jobsite,” as well as “doors 12 and retractable garage-type doors[] lying bent and broken on the ground.” Id. The court 13 concluded that, based on these pictures, a jury could determine that the building could not 14 be reconstructed—no expert was needed. Id. at 804-805. 15 Turning to this case, EFG contends that Wilhelm negligently “took and failed to 16 take certain actions related to his responsibility on behalf of EFG for acquiring ingredients 17 and overseeing or mixing critical specialty chemical compounds.” (Doc. 157-3 at 7.) 18 Specifically, EFG contends: 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 In May and June 2015, Defendant Wilhelm purchased quantities of various ingredients in amounts different than designated and in disproportion to the ratio indicated by the compound formulation EFG provided to him. He also failed to purchase six of the key ingredients, which made up approximately 34% of the chemical compound “modifier” needed for the company’s product operation. One of these ingredients, called butyl stearate, was readily available. Instead, Defendant Wilhelm purchased an entirely different and completely unrelated chemical, zinc naphthenate. Most, if not all, of the other five key ingredients that Defendant Wilhelm failed to purchase for the manufacture of the modifier were readily available in the marketplace. He purchased a significant inventory of seven chemicals that were not listed in the required chemicals information and are not used by EFG at all. They were zinc naphthenate, steric acid, mercaptobenzimidazole, methyl-2 mercaptobenzimidazole, mercaptobenzimidazole zinc salt, Nisopropyl-N-phenyl-1-4-phenylenediamine, and dithiobisbenzanilide. - 14 - 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Defendant Wilhelm also negligently purchased the same chemical, chlorinated paraffin, from two suppliers, unnecessarily paying one of the suppliers $300 more per unit. Additionally, the activator and modifier formula start-up requirements call for approximately 5,700 pounds of chlorinated paraffin and he purchased 26,500 pounds of it. The start-up requirements call for 569 pounds of triethylenetetramine and Defendant Wilhelm ordered 6,000 pounds of it. The start-up requirements call for 1,272 pounds of sulfur and Defendant Wilhelm ordered 8,400 pounds of it. The start-up requirements call for 1,706 pounds of 2-(4-morpholinydithio) benzothiazole and Defendant Wilhelm ordered 24,000 pounds of 4-(2benzothiazolyldithio) morpholine as a substitute. The start-up requirements call for 2,843 pounds of alkylphenol disulfide (Vultac 2) and Defendant Wilhelm ordered 6,000 pounds of phenol, 4-(1,1-dimethylpropyl) as a substitute. The start-up requirements call for 6,737 pounds of coumarone rosin and Defendant Wilhelm ordered 31,400 pounds of it. 11 12 (Id.) In other words, EFG alleges that Wilhelm failed in his “responsibility for acquisition 13 and preparation for certain critical specialty chemical compounds required in the creation 14 of . . . EFG’s products, including receiving information about the molecular structure and 15 suppliers of each chemical.” (Doc. 62 ¶ 48.) 16 Complex negligence claims like this one are exactly the types of claims for which Indeed, EFG’s complaint and disclosures expressly 17 Texas law requires an expert. 18 acknowledge that the negligence claim implicates “specialty chemical compounds.” Texas 19 courts generally require expert testimony in this scenario. Garcia, 397 S.W.3d at 708 20 (“specialized techniques”); Rodriguez, 2018 WL 5261246 at *5 (“specialized equipment 21 . . . or knowledge of specialized industry practices and procedures”). 22 Even looking past such labels, there is little possibility that, without an expert, a jury 23 would be able to tell something went wrong. Cf. Simmons, 221 S.W.3d at 115. A typical 24 juror could probably tell that, for example, 26,500 pounds of chlorinated paraffin is much 25 more than 5,700 pounds. (Doc. 157-3 at 7.) A typical juror may even notice, based on 26 words alone, that “butyl stearate” looks much different from “zinc naphthenate.” (Id.) A 27 typical juror would not, however, likely understand that 2-(4-morpholinydithio) 28 benzothiazole and 4-(2-benzothiazolyldithio) morpholine are different products—the - 15 - 1 names alone require a basic understanding of organic chemistry to differentiate, let alone 2 to glean the structural and chemical differences between the two. Even if a jury did detect 3 a difference, it would not have the same visceral significance as pictures of obviously 4 mangled steel. Cf. Shipwash, 582 S.W.3d at 804-05. 5 This dovetails with a more fundamental problem. Without an expert, the jury would 6 be, at best, limited to seeing that what Wilhelm ordered was different from what EFG 7 expected him to order. The significance of that error, if any, is beyond the average juror’s 8 understanding. EFG’s own formulation of its claim alleges that Wilhelm ordered some of 9 the products as “substitutes.” (Doc. 157-3 at 7.) Discerning whether they were appropriate 10 substitutes, or whether substitutions were allowable at all, would require specialized 11 knowledge. Cf. 3D/I+ Perspectiva v. Castner Palms, Ltd., 310 S.W.3d 27, 31 (Tex. Ct. 12 App. 2010) (expert testimony was needed to establish a negligence claim against a 13 construction management firm, even though the firm was accused of failing to “oversee[] 14 the construction as set out in the approved contractors’ design plans,” because “whether a 15 construction-management firm’s supervisory duties included more than ensuring that the 16 approved plans were built according to the requisite specifications called for in the plans 17 requires specialized knowledge in the construction-management firm industry”). “Few 18 people not involved in the” devulcanization industry could discern the ramifications of 19 Wilhelm’s alleged failures, Fulgham, 154 S.W.3d at 91, and the Court cannot bank on the 20 jury pool containing the entire ASU chemistry department. 21 EFG’s arguments to the contrary are unpersuasive. Its attempt to simplify what the 22 jury would be asked to understand—that Wilhelm was supposed to order Chemical A, but 23 instead ordered Chemical B—is far removed from the sort of obvious mistake that falls 24 outside the expert requirement. Compare AKIB, 582 S.W.3d at 804 (holding that no jury 25 was needed because pictures submitted into evidence made it clear that extensive damage 26 had rendered building materials useless). More important, the jury would be left with no 27 guide as to why ordering Chemical B rather than Chemical A was harmful. Without an 28 expert, jurors would be left to ponder why one chemical couldn’t replace another, or why - 16 - 1 the excess ordering was so deleterious. Thus, EFG’s argument that “a baking expert would 2 not be needed if a person failed to obtain the ingredients on the recipe, bought others, and 3 thereby baked the wrong cake” (Doc. 181 at 6) is unpersuasive—the average juror could 4 grasp that substituting milk for flour in a cake recipe was a big mistake, but the same juror 5 wouldn’t have any basis for evaluating whether the decision to substitute “phenol, 4-(1,1- 6 dimethylpropyl)” for “alkylphenol disulfide (Vultac 2)” was of a similar character. 7 The cases cited by EFG are distinguishable for similar reasons. For example, EFG 8 cites J.D. Abrams, Inc. v. McIver, 966 S.W.2d 87 (Tex. Ct. App. 1998), for the proposition 9 that when specialized techniques are unrelated to the injury at issue, no expert is required. 10 (Doc. 181 at 7.) This is true but irrelevant here. In McIver, the court determined that the 11 “specialized equipment or construction techniques” involved in road construction were 12 unrelated to a driver being injured by a drunk driver. 966 S.W.2d at 90, 93. Thus, the case 13 boiled down to a layperson’s understanding of “[d]riving an automobile in areas of road 14 construction and automobile accidents,” which are “certainly not outside of the 15 understanding of the average layman.” Id. at 93. Here, in contrast, the specialized nature 16 of EFG’s business is directly at issue—Wilhelm stands accused of negligently failing to 17 procure the correct chemicals at the very core of EFG’s specialized devulcanization 18 technology. It almost goes without saying that knowledge of organic chemistry is not as 19 ubiquitous as knowledge of basic driving rules. 20 Similarly, Missouri Pac. R. Co. v. Covarrubias, 400 S.W.2d 599 (Tex. Ct. App. 21 1966), undercuts rather than supports EFG’s argument. In that case, the court determined 22 no expert was necessary because “[t]he law requires anyone handling explosives to use a 23 high degree of care, and under the facts as developed in this case we feel that the jury was 24 competent to determine whether or not appellant had used that high degree of care.” Id. at 25 602. In other words, the standard of care was presumed—it did not need to be established. 26 Here, there is no such presumption. 27 establishment of that standard turns on questions of a specialized nature. Such a standard 28 requires an expert to establish. The standard needs to be established, and - 17 - 1 Finally, Gomez de Hernandez v. New Tex. Auto Auction Servs., L.P., 193 S.W.3d 2 220 (Tex. Ct. App. 2006), also does not support EFG’s position. There, the court concluded 3 that “the applicable standard of care for a used car auctions house as it relates to the element 4 of duty . . . is not so complex to require testimony from an expert to fully explain and 5 develop it.” Id. at 228. That was so because the court couldn’t “conclude that participating 6 in a used car auction is outside the common experience and understanding of the average 7 layman.” Id. EFG fails to explain how Wilhelm’s duties in this case are akin to selling a 8 used car. The average person will understand the car-selling process. The same can’t be 9 said of organic chemistry.4 10 EFG’s authority, at bottom, merely demonstrates that Texas law does not require an 11 expert in every negligence case. But EFG fails to demonstrate why an expert would be 12 unnecessary here. It is not enough to point generically to other cases where an expert was 13 not needed—this case needs to be of the type where an expert is not needed. Here, the 14 details of “molecular structure” and the appropriateness of chemical substitutes are at issue. 15 (Doc. 62 ¶ 48; Doc. 157-3 at 7.) These are technical questions not “within the experience 16 of the layman.” Roark v. Allen, 633 S.W.2d 804, 809 (Tex. 1982). An expert is needed to 17 address the standard of care. EFG has no such expert. Accordingly, summary judgment 18 is appropriate. 19 II. Motion For Sanctions 20 Wilhelm also moves for sanctions pursuant to Rule 11. (Doc. 171.) He argues that 21 “Plaintiffs” violated Rule 11 because they “insist[ed] on pursuing a factually and legally 22 frivolous negligence claim.” (Id. at 1.) EFG opposes the request, arguing its negligence 23 claim had merit. (Doc. 176.) “An attorney is subject to Rule 11 sanctions . . . when he presents to the court 24 25 26 27 28 4 Moreover, Gomez de Hernandez was reversed. In New Tex. Auto Auction Servs., L.P. v. Gomez de Hernandez, 249 S.W.3d 400 (Tex. 2008), the Texas Supreme Court determined that the auction house owed no duty at all. Id. at 406-07. Although this outcome did not directly refute the Court of Appeals’ holding on whether an expert was required, it does call it into doubt—discussion of the standard of care is moot if there is no duty in the first place. - 18 - 1 ‘claims, defenses, and other legal contentions . . . [not] warranted by existing law or by a 2 nonfrivolous argument for the extension, modification, or reversal of existing law[.]’” 3 Holgate v. Baldwin, 425 F.3d 671, 675-76 (9th Cir. 2005) (citing Fed. R. Civ. Proc. 4 11(b)(2)) (alterations in original). Even if a claim is nonfrivolous when filed, a party has 5 a continuing obligation to avoid later advocating a position that has become frivolous. 6 Buster v. Greisen, 104 F.3d 1186, 1190 n.4 (9th Cir. 1997). A claim is frivolous if it “is 7 legally or factually baseless from an objective perspective” and the attorney failed to 8 conduct a reasonable and competent inquiry before pursuing it. Holgate, 425 F.3d at 676. 9 “A legal argument violates Rule 11(b)(2) if it has ‘no chance’ of success under existing 10 precedent.” S. Gensler, 1 Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, Rules and Commentary, Rule 11 11, at 237 (2018). 12 In his motion for sanctions, Wilhelm reproduces the arguments presented in his 13 summary judgment motion. In essence, his argument is that EFG’s reading of the law is 14 so erroneous that it is completely unjustified. (Doc. 171.) Although the Court previously 15 expressed doubt that the negligence claim could survive summary judgment, the Court 16 noted that “it’s always possible that EFG will develop some additional lines of argument” 17 that would get over the summary judgment hurdle. (Doc. 170 at 4 n.3.) And it was 18 possible—in its summary judgment response, EFG attempted to further analogize its 19 negligence claim to cases where no expert was needed to establish the standard of care. 20 The fact that EFG and Wilhelm disagreed on the merits does not mean that EFG’s 21 arguments were completely meritless. Nor does “[t]he fact that the court ultimately rejects 22 a legal argument” mean that the argument was frivolous. Gensler, Rule 11, at 237.5 23 5 24 25 26 27 28 In his summary judgment motion, Wilhelm raised arguments beyond the requirement of a standard-of-care expert. (Doc. 157 at 4-6.) As discussed, the Court concludes that EFG’s lack of an expert is fatal to its negligence claim, and as a result the Court does not reach the merits of Wilhelm’s other arguments. Wilhelm raises these same additional arguments in his motion for sanctions, but it would be incongruous for the Court to avoid those issues on summary judgment only to address their frivolousness (and thus, indirectly, consider their merits) when reviewing Wilhelm’s sanctions motion. CQ Intern. Co. v. Rochem Intern., Inc., USA, 659 F.3d 53, 61-62 (1st Cir. 2011) (“[N]or will we require district courts to spend valuable judicial resources in punctiliously analyzing the reasonableness of each and every legal and factual contention made by a party where, as here, such analysis is not necessary to resolve the merits of the central claim in dispute.”). Besides, the Court has “wide discretion in determining whether Rule 11 sanctions are - 19 - 1 Additionally, it is not clear what specific conduct Wilhelm seeks to sanction. His 2 motion addresses the insistence of “Plaintiffs” on “pursuing a factually and legally 3 frivolous negligence claim,” but that claim was only asserted by one of the two Plaintiffs 4 (Excel Fortress did not assert a negligence claim against Wilhelm) and, at the time the 5 motion for sanctions was filed, EFG had yet to respond to the motion for summary 6 judgment. (Doc. 171 at 1 [filed on August 14, 2019); Doc. 181 [EFG’s response to 7 summary judgment motion, filed on September 12, 2019].) 8 summary judgment was, in fact, filed before Plaintiffs officially withdraw their other 9 claims. (Doc. 157 [motion for summary judgment, filed on July 2, 2019]; Doc. 165 [motion 10 to withdraw claims, filed on August 2, 2019].) The sanctions motion doesn’t clarify what 11 aspects of Plaintiffs’ conduct are sanctionable. A generic invocation of Rule 11 falls short 12 of the notice required by that Rule. Gensler, Rule 11, at 251. Conduct that is not 13 specifically identified “cannot serve as the basis of sanctions imposed by the district court.” 14 Storey v . Cello Holdings, L.L.C., 347 F.3d 370, 389 (2d Cir. 2003). Wilhelm’s motion for 15 EFG’s continued pursuit of the negligence claim was not frivolous, and, at any rate, 16 Wilhelm has not identified the specific conduct he wants sanctioned. Thus, the Court 17 declines to impose Rule 11 sanctions in this case. 18 Accordingly, IT IS ORDERED that: 19 (1) Wilhelm’s motion for summary judgment (Doc. 157) is granted; 20 (2) Wilhelm’s motion for sanctions (Doc. 171) is denied; and 21 (3) The Clerk of Court shall enter judgment accordingly and terminate this 22 23 action. Dated this 20th day of March, 2020. 24 25 26 27 28 appropriate” and is satisfied they are not warranted here. Gotro v. R & B Realty Grp., 69 F.3d 1485, 1488 (9th Cir. 1995) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). - 20 -

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