Buc-ee's, Ltd. v. Bucks, Inc.
8:17-cv-00287
D. Neb.Jan 16, 2018Background
- Buc-ee’s and Buck’s are competing convenience-store operators with registered trademarks BUC-EE’S and BUCKY’S; they entered a 2009 Co-existence Agreement allocating forum venues and trademark rights.
- Buc-ee’s sued several defendants in the Southern District of Texas in 2017 alleging Buck’s and others were operating BUCKY’S stores in Texas in violation of the Agreement and federal/state law; Buck’s was severed and transferred to the District of Nebraska per the Agreement’s forum-selection clause.
- Buc-ee’s amended its complaint in Nebraska adding claims for inducement, fraudulent and negligent misrepresentation, trademark infringement/dilution/unfair competition, false designation, unjust enrichment, and breach of the Agreement.
- Buck’s moved for summary judgment contending the Agreement’s plain terms preclude many claims and sought a stay of discovery pending that ruling; Buc-ee’s moved to retransfer venue back to Texas or alternatively to stay Nebraska proceedings pending resolution of the Texas action.
- The Nebraska court denied retransfer, granted defendants’ request to stay discovery pending resolution of Buck’s summary-judgment motion, and denied Buc-ee’s request for a broader stay pending the Texas case.
Issues
| Issue | Plaintiff's Argument | Defendant's Argument | Held |
|---|---|---|---|
| Whether the case should be retransferred to the Southern District of Texas | Retransfer required because Buck’s is now asserted to be indispensable to the Texas action and first-to-file comity favors Texas | Transfer was proper under the Agreement’s valid forum-selection clause; no clear error by the Texas court | Denied — transfer was not clearly erroneous; retransfer would undermine forum-selection clause and judicial comity |
| Whether discovery in Nebraska should be stayed pending resolution of Buck’s summary-judgment motion | Opposed stay; says discovery is needed to oppose summary judgment and to develop facts | Stay needed because interpretation of the Agreement is a threshold legal issue that may dispose of most claims | Granted — good cause: preliminary legal issue (Agreement interpretation) controls most claims |
| Whether a broader stay pending the Texas litigation is warranted | Case should be stayed because the Texas action is more advanced and may simplify issues here | Not warranted because only Buc-ee’s and Buck’s are signatories; Agreement interpretation and breach are proper for this court to decide | Denied — Texas rulings unlikely to simplify issues; this court retains responsibility to interpret the Agreement |
| Whether the Agreement precludes Buc-ee’s infringement and misrepresentation claims | Agreement prohibits confusion and allocates territorial rights but plaintiff reads it to bar Buck’s Texas use | Agreement’s plain language permits Buck’s certain uses nationwide and disclaims extra-contractual inducements, potentially barring claims | Court stayed discovery to resolve this threshold contractual interpretation; outcome may dismiss many claims |
Key Cases Cited
- Atl. Marine Constr. Co. v. U.S. Dist. Court for the W. Dist. of Tex., 134 S. Ct. 568 (2013) (forum-selection clauses are to be given controlling weight absent extraordinary circumstances)
- Christianson v. Colt Indus. Operating Corp., 486 U.S. 800 (1988) (law-of-the-case doctrine and limits on revisiting prior decisions)
- Jenkins Brick Co. v. Bremer, 321 F.3d 1366 (11th Cir. 2003) (clear-error standard for motions to retransfer)
- Steen v. Murray, 770 F.3d 698 (8th Cir. 2014) (deferential review of retransfer decisions and application of law-of-the-case)
- Brennan’s Inc. v. Dickie Brennan & Co. Inc., 376 F.3d 356 (5th Cir. 2004) (consent/settlement agreements can protect a party from trademark infringement claims when use stays within agreed boundaries)
