COACH IP HOLDINGS, LLC et al., Plaintiffs, -against- ACS GROUP ACQUISITION LLC et al., Defendants.
23 Civ. 10612 (LGS)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK
July 10, 2025
LORNA G. SCHOFIELD, District Judge
OPINION & ORDER
LORNA G. SCHOFIELD, District Judge:
Plaintiffs and Counterclaim Defendants Coach IP Holdings, LLC, Coach Services, Inc. and Tapestry, Inc. (collectively, “Coach“) move to dismiss counterclaims asserted by Defendant and Counterclaim Plaintiff Vinci Brands LLC (“Vinci“) against Coach. In its Amended Answer, as relevant here, Vinci asserted against Coach two breach of contract claims and a declaratory judgment claim. With the parties’ agreement, the Court construes Coach‘s previously filed motion to dismiss to apply to these counterclaims. Coach‘s motion to dismiss is denied as to the breach of contract claims and granted as to the declaratory judgment claim.
I. BACKGROUND
The following summary is based on the Amended Answer and the license agreement described below, which is integral to the Amended Answer. The allegations in the Amended Answer are assumed to be true for the purpose of this motion. See Emilee Carpenter, LLC v. James, 107 F.4th 92, 97 (2d Cir. 2024).
In January 2019, Coach and Incipio Technologies, Inc. (“Incipio“) entered into a license agreement, under which Coach licensed Incipio to manufacture and sell certain technology-related products using Coach‘s licensed marks (the “Agreement“). In exchange, Incipio agreed to make various payments to Coach, including Guaranteed Minimum Royalties (“GMR“) and
In late 2022, a COVID-19 outbreak caused significant disruptions in iPhone production, causing unexpected losses to Vinci. Vinci sought to renegotiate its GMR obligation with Coach but was unsuccessful. On June 15, 2023, Coach sent Vinci a notice of non-payment, stating that Vinci owed $597,849.46 in GMR and IFP. Vinci did not pay Coach within the ten days to cure.
In March 2023, Coach and Third-Party Defendants Case-Mate, Inc. (“Case-Mate“) and Case-Mate‘s parent company CM Brands LLC (“CM Brands“) began to discuss a potential license agreement whereby, in substance, Case-Mate and CM Brands would step into the shoes of Vinci as licensee. Coach communicated with Vinci‘s suppliers, customers and distributors that, as of June 2023, Vinci no longer had the right to sell or complete manufacturing of Coach merchandise. Case-Mate and CM Brands similarly communicated to Vinci‘s suppliers and customers that Case-Mate was Coach‘s exclusive licensee and threatened legal action if they continue to work with Vinci. As a result, some suppliers refused to deliver contracted-for merchandise, and some customers refused to take delivery of, and pay for, ordered goods.
II. STANDARD
To survive a motion to dismiss under
For issues of state law, New York law governs because the Agreement includes a New York choice of law provision, and the parties’ submissions assume that New York law applies. See In re Snyder, 939 F.3d 92, 100 n.2 (2d Cir. 2019) (“[I]mplied consent is . . . sufficient to establish the applicable choice of law.“).
III. DISCUSSION
A. Breach of Contract Claims
1. Whether Vinci Performed in Accordance with the Agreement
As a threshold matter, Coach argues that Vinci cannot maintain a claim for breach of the Agreement because Vinci did not perform its own obligations under the Agreement, specifically, Vinci did not pay Coach the GMR and IFP required under the Agreement. This argument is unavailing on this motion, which challenges the sufficiency of the pleading.
Under New York law, the elements of a breach of contract claim include that the claimant “performed in accordance with the contract.” 34-06 73, LLC v. Seneca Ins. Co., 198 N.E.3d 1282, 1287 (N.Y. 2022). As to this requirement, a claimant need not continue to perform under a contract if the opposing party committed a material breach. See Awards.com, LLC v. Kinko‘s, Inc., 925 N.E.2d 926, 926 (N.Y. 2010) (noting the nonbreaching party could terminate the
Construed most favorably to Vinci as the non-moving party, the Amended Answer alleges that Coach breached its duty under Schedule 8 of the Agreement (“Schedule 8“), excusing Vinci from future performance under the Agreement. Schedule 8 states that the parties “agree to renegotiate in good faith” the GMR if “[t]here is an unexpected variance . . . in launch years or product introduction, or there are material device shortages or recalls outside [Vinci‘s] control.” Vinci informed Coach of such unexpected variance “[b]eginning in December 2022” by communicating to it “the tremendous negative effect” the COVID-19 outbreak had on Vinci‘s sales, revenues and “ability to pay royalties and license fees to Coach.” Coach did not renegotiate with Vinci and insisted that Vinci pay the full GMR. On June 15, 2023, Coach sent Vinci a notice of non-payment claiming that Vinci owed Coach $597,849.46 in GMR and IFP.
The Amended Answer could support the inference that the renegotiation clause serves as a crucial safety valve for Vinci when specified adverse circumstances outside of Vinci‘s control interfere with Vinci‘s ability to sell the licensed products, and that Coach‘s breach of this clause “defeat[s]” Vinci‘s “essential purpose” underlying the Agreement. Helgar Corp., 119 N.E. at 114. The Amended Answer thus adequately pleads facts showing that Coach‘s material breach excused Vinci from future performance, including the payment of GMR and IFP, and that Vinci therefore is entitled to sue for breach of contract, despite Vinci‘s non-performance.
Vinci asserts two breach of contract claims against Coach. One of those claims, which asserts a breach of Section 11 of the Agreement (“Section 11“), can proceed regardless of any finding that Vinci‘s non-performance was excused. Section 11, by its terms, survives termination of the Agreement and continues to bind the parties. It begins, “Upon the expiration or termination of this Agreement (whether by reason of the expiration of the term of this Agreement, by earlier termination of this Agreement pursuant to Article 3 thereof [regarding default or breach] or otherwise) . . . .” Section 11 survives the termination of the Agreement regardless of whether Vinci‘s breach caused the termination and continues to bind Coach. Under New York law, a contract provision may “survive[] and remain[] enforceable . . . subsequent to the termination” of the contract, “irrespective of whether the termination . . . resulted from the
2. Breach of Section 11 of the Agreement (First Claim for Relief)
The Amended Answer‘s First Claim for Relief alleges that Coach breached Section 11 by interfering with and preventing Vinci, after termination as Coach‘s licensee, from completing the production of licensed merchandise that was in process or for which written orders had been received from customers. Coach moves to dismiss on the ground that the Amended Answer does not plead any Section 11 obligation that Coach failed to perform. The motion is denied.
Section 11 provides that, upon the Agreement‘s expiration or termination, all of Vinci‘s rights revert to Coach, but (1) as to merchandise in process as of the termination date, Vinci may complete production and sell the merchandise, subject to Coach‘s option to purchase the inventory (the “Option“) and (2) as to merchandise for which written purchase orders have been received from customers as of the termination date, Vinci may sell the merchandise to those customers outright, and not subject to Coach‘s purchase option.
The Amended Answer sufficiently alleges facts showing a violation of these provisions. The Amended Answer alleges that Coach violated Section 11 by sending Vinci a notice of rights that prohibited Vinci from selling Coach merchandise to any third parties and notified Vinci of Coach‘s intention to exercise its purchase option, even as to merchandise subject to written orders from customers contrary to Section 11.1. The Amended Answer further alleges that Coach communicated with Vinci‘s suppliers, customers and distributors that, after termination, Vinci no longer had the right to complete or sell Coach merchandise, thus preventing Vinci from exercising its post-termination rights. After receiving the communications, suppliers refused to
In addition to alleging a breach of Section 11, the Amended Answer pleads facts sufficient to state a claim for breach of the “covenant of good faith and fair dealing” which is implicit in every contract. Cordero v. Transamerica Annuity Servs. Corp., 211 N.E.3d 663, 670 (N.Y. 2023). If necessary, the pleading could be amended to add such a claim. This duty prevents Coach from “do[ing] anything which will have the effect of destroying or injuring the right of [Vinci] to receive the fruits of the contract.” Id. Coach breached this implied obligation by communicating with Vinci‘s suppliers and customers and injuring Vinci‘s post-termination rights to complete in-process inventory and sell completed merchandise under Section 11, causing damages to Vinci.
3. Breach of Section 4.4 of the Agreement (Second Claim for Relief)
Coach moves to dismiss the Second Claim for Relief which alleges that Coach breached the Agreement by cancelling certain non-cancellable orders placed pursuant to Section 4.4 of the Agreement (“Section 4.4“). Coach moves to dismiss on the grounds that (1) Coach had no obligation to place such orders and (2) the Amended Answer fails to allege details of the orders, referencing only “non-cancelable purchase orders.” These arguments are unavailing.
The Amended Answer alleges that in Section 4.4 the parties agreed that Vinci will sell Coach licensed merchandise “as evidenced by timely placed, non-cancelable purchase orders“; “from March 2023 through June 2023 Coach . . . submitted written orders to Vinci for Coach-branded photo accessories, which Coach itself called ‘non-cancelable‘“; on July 3, 2023, Coach sent Vinci a Notice of Coach‘s Rights, stating among other things that Vinci was required to
First, while the Agreement did not require Coach to place any orders, Coach did place orders and Section 4.4 describes Coach‘s orders as non-cancelable. The Amended Answer also alleges that Coach itself described its orders as non-cancelable. This is sufficient to reflect the parties’ agreement that Coach‘s orders were non-cancelable.
Second, the Amended Answer describes the orders in much greater detail than Coach asserts, and sufficiently provides Coach “with a short, plain notice of the claims against it” pursuant to
B. Declaratory Judgment Claim (Third Claim for Relief)
The Amended Answer seeks a declaratory judgment that Coach must renegotiate the GMR with Vinci under Schedule 8 of the Agreement. Declaratory judgment is a remedy, “not a cause of action.” Sunvestment Energy Grp. NY 64 LLC v. Nat‘l Grid USA Servs. Co., 116 F.4th 106, 114 (2d Cir. 2024). Construed as an effort to plead an independent cause of action, i.e., a claim for injunctive relief to remedy the breach of Section 8 discussed above, the claim is dismissed.
Coach‘s breach of Section 8 does not sustain a claim for specific performance. Under New York law, “specific performance” is unavailable “where money damages would be
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, Coach‘s motion to dismiss is DENIED on the breach of contract claims and GRANTED on the declaratory judgment claim. The surviving counterclaims by Vinci against Coach are: (1) the breach of contract claim for breach of Section 11 and (2) the breach of contract claim for canceling non-cancellable orders.
The Clerk of Court is respectfully directed to close the motion at Dkt. No. 113.
Dated: July 10, 2025
New York, New York
LORNA G. SCHOFIELD
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
