ORDER DENYING DEFENDANTS’ MOTIONS TO DISMISS
THIS CAUSE is before the Court upon Defendant Kedner Fils-Aime’s Motion to Dismiss Plaintiffs’ Amended Complaint [DE 23] and Defendant Paul Fils-Aime, Jr.’s Motion to Dismiss Plaintiffs’ Amended Complaint [DE 32]. The Court has reviewed the Motions, Defendants’ Responses, and the record in this case, and is otherwise advised in the premises. For
I. BACKGROUND
In this case, Plaintiffs Sprint Solutions, Inc. and Sprint Communications Company, L.P. (collectively “Sprint”) allege that Defendants Kedner Fils-Aime (“Kedner”) and Paul Fils-Aime, Jr. (“Paul”) carried out a scheme of unlawfully obtaining, modifying, and reselling wireless telephones sold by Sprint (“Sprint Phonеs”). Sprint contends that Defendants’ scheme has caused it reputational and business harms, and violates numerous federal laws, including the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § Í051 et seq., and various criminal statutes. See generally DE 14 (“Amended Complaint”) ¶¶ 55-177. On this basis, Sprint has asserted 14 causes of action against Defendants seeking both damages and injunctive relief. Defendants have responded with two substantially identical motions seeking dismissal of the Amended Complaint under Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. See DE 23 & 32.
II. LEGAL STANDARD
Under Rule 12(b)(6), a court shall grant a motion to dismiss where the factual allegations of the complaint cannot support the asserted cause of action. Glover v. Liggett Group, Inc.,
A complaint must be liberally construed, assuming the facts alleged therein аs true and drawing all reasonable inferences from those facts in the plaintiffs favor. Twombly,
III. ANALYSIS
Defendants’ Motions hint that the Amended Complaint is fatally flawed in countless ways. Defendants do not develop the bulk of their criticisms, and rather focus on one core argument: that the Amended Complaint does not givе each Defendant notice of the allegations against him because it refers to Kedner and Paul together as “Defendants.” However, Splint’s use of the term “Defendants” is an acceptable method of pleading that Kedner and Paul each еngaged in the alleged misconduct, and does not offend the applicable pleading standard. The Court also rejects Defendants’ less-developed arguments that Sprint proceeds on flawed legal theories and has failed to plead facts or produce evidence to support its claims. Therefore, the Court will deny the Motions.
A. Sprint’s Reference to Defendants as “Defendants” Does Not Require Dismissal of the Amended Complaint
In the Amended Complaint, Sprint alleges that Kedner and Paul, individually
Defendants argue that Sprint’s use of the term “Defendants” turns the Amended Complaint’s allegations into “group allegations” that cannot satisfy the pleading standard set forth in Twombly,
However, a plaintiff may plead claims against multiple defendants by referring to them collectively, for example by referring to a group of defendants as “defendants.” See Crowe v. Coleman,
Collective references to defendants most often create problems when broad allegations are directed at a large and diverse group of defendants, leaving unclear just who is alleged to have committed which acts. See Pierson v. Orlando Reg’l Healthcare Sys., Inc.,
B. Dеfendants’ Miscellaneous Legal Arguments in the “Facts” Sections of the Motions Do Not Warrant Dismissal
After a brief introduction, the body of each Motion begins with a section entitled “Facts.” DE 23 at 2; DE 32 at 1. The “Facts” section, however, is not the usual recitation of the fаcts of a case that often precedes a briefs argument section. Instead, within the space of a single para
For example, Defendants argue that “Sprint is attempting to gain unjust enrichment by selling their device to customers getting the purchase price for the device itself then maintain a possessory interest over the device because the phone is branded as a ‘Sprint’ device.” DE 23 at 3; DE 32 at 2-3. Defendants appear to contend that Sprint should not have any say in the post-sale use or resale of its products. However, Defendants cite to no legal authority regarding why this argument requires dismissal.
Defendants also suggest that Sprint misunderstands the importance of a “bad ESN.” DE 23 at 4; DE 32 at 4. An “ESN” is an electronic serial number assigned to a mobile telephone. Am. Compl. ¶ 44. In the Amended Complaint, Sprint alleges that a Sprint Phone identified as conneсted with fraud or theft will be flagged as having a “bad ESN” that precludes it from being legitimately activated on Sprint’s network. Id. Sprint maintains that Defendants’ willingness to purchase Sprint Phones with bad ESNs is evidence of their alleged phone-trafficking scheme, because it indicates that Defendants intended to do something with the Sprint Phones other than activate them on Sprint’s network. Id. Defendants counter that “in fact a ‘bad ESN’ phone has SEVERAL other meaning^] and does not preclude it from being resold. This lack of definition and understanding by Sprint removes several of the claims from consideration because the devices and actions are no longer supported based on the correct definitions.” DE 23 at 4; DE 32 at 4. Again, Defendants provide no authority as to why Sprint’s purported misunderstanding of ESNs requires dismissal of unspecified claims in the Amended Complaint.
On a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss, “[t]he moving party bears the burden to show that the complaint should be dismissed.” Mendez-Arriola v. White Wilson Med. Ctr. PA, No. 09-495,
In the Facts section of each Motion, Defendants have catalogued many reasons they believe Sprint’s lawsuit should fail. Defendants, however, have not directed the Court to any legal authority in support of their oft-confusing arguments for dismissal. Defendants therefore have failed to meet their burden of establishing that the points raised in the Facts section warrant dismissаl.
C. Sprint Has Pled Its Claims with Sufficient Factual Detail and Need Not Produce Evidence at This Time
In the Argument section of each Motion relating to the issue of group pleading, Defendants have also scattered a handful of miscellaneous points relating tо other purported failures of Sprint’s factual allegations. Defendants suggest broadly that Sprint has failed to allege facts supporting the elements of each of its claims.
But Sprint’s Amended Complaint, as a whole, is a relatively clear and unremarkable pleading, containing ample factual allegations of Defendants’ acts and the nature of their alleged scheme to resell Sprint Phones to support each claim. To recite just a few of the Amended Complaint’s factual allegations, Sprint alleges that Defendants: unlawfully purchased Sprint Phones, disаbled them, and resold them for use on other wireless networks (Am. Compl. ¶ 56); trafficked in Sprint’s confidential codes stored on Sprint Phones (id ¶¶ 107-08); unlocked Sprint Phones with assistance from Sprint by making misrepresentations to Sprint (id ¶ 135); and sold altered or counterfeited phonеs as Sprint Phones (id ¶ 155). Defendants’ contentions that all of Sprint’s allegations uniformly fail as conclusory or that Sprint “alleges zero facts” to support allegations of a phone-trafficking conspiracy fall flat.
Defendants also assert that Sprint has fаiled to allege that Defendants’ actions harmed it in any way. DE 23 at 6; DE 32 at 6. But Sprint’s Amended Complaint is replete with allegations of reputational and business injuries it has suffered as a result of Defendants’ practice of obtaining, modifying, and reselling Sprint Phones. See, e.g., Am. Compl. ¶¶ 46-51. Dеfendants’ suggestion that Sprint has failed to allege injury is meritless.
Defendants further deride the probative value of some of Sprint’s factual allegations. For example, Defendants point out that “[Sprint] offers as fact [an] unauthenticated text message еxchange arranging a legal sale of one device.” DE 23 at 8; DE 32 at 7. Presumably, Defendants mean to imply that the text message, which the Amended Complaint attributes to Kedner (Am. Compl. ¶ 41 & Ex. E), was either fabricated or sent by someone other than Kedner. However, аt the pleading stage, the Court must take each of Sprint’s factual allegations as true. See Twombly,
On a related note, Defendants argue throughout their papers thаt this case should be dismissed because the Amended Complaint’s allegations lack evidentiary support. See, e.g., DE 23 at 3; DE 32 at 4. But a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss tests the sufficiency of the pleadings, and whether a plaintiff should later be permitted to offer evidence in support оf its claims. Twombly,
IV. CONCLUSION
In sum, Sprint’s reference to Kedner and Paul collectively as “Defendants” in the Amended Complaint does not require dismissal of this action. Nor does the Court find Defendants’ remaining arguments for dismissal persuasive. It is accordingly
