Thе Policy also contains a number of exclusionary provisions, including one that is relevant here, entitled "Intellectual Property Laws or Rights." (This exclusionary provision is referred to hereinafter as the "IP Rights Exclusion"). The IP Rights Exclusion provides, in relevant part:
A. This insurance does not apply to any damages, loss, cost or expense arising out of, giving rise to or in any way related to any actual, alleged or threated:
a. Assertion; or
b. Infringement or violation
by any person or organization (including any insured ) of any intellectual property law or right .
B. Further, this insurance does not apply to the entirety of all allegations in any claim or suit , if such claim or suit includes an allegation of or a reference to аn infringement or violation of an intellectual property law or right , even if the insurance would otherwise apply to any part of the allegations in the claim or suit.
The Policy defines "intellectual property law or right" as, in relevant part, "any ... right to, or judicial or statutory law recognizing an interest in, any trade secret or confidential or proprietary non-personal information." (Policy, Doc. No. 1-3 at 96, Doc. No. 1-4 at 18.)
C. The Declaratory Judgment Action
In late January 2016-approximately ten months after the LifeCell Suit was filed in New Jersey state court-TELA Bio notified Federal Insurance of the LifeCell Suit, requesting a defense under the Policy. Believing that Federal Insurance would refuse to defend it, TELA Bio shortly thereafter brought this declaratory judgment action in the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey, seeking a declaration that the LifeCell Suit is covered by the Policy's Libel and Slander Provision.
In its Motion to Dismiss, Federal Insurance contends that TELA Bio has failed to state a claim for two reasons. First, Federal Insurance maintains that it had no duty to defend the LifeCell Suit because none of the factual allegations in the LifeCell Suit Complaint triggered coverage under the Policy's Libel and Slander Provision. Second, Federal Insurance contends that, even if the allegations in the LifeCell Suit Complaint triggered coverage under the Policy's Libel and Slander Provision, the Policy's IP Rights Exclusion precludes coverage for the entire suit such that Federal Insurance had no duty to defend.
For the reasons that follow, I conclude that Federal Insurance is correct on both points, and will therefore dismiss this action with prejudice for failure to state a claim.
II. LEGAL STANDARD
To survive a motion to dismiss pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6), a complaint must "contain sufficient factual matter, accepted as true, to 'state a claim for relief that is plausible on its face.' " Ashcroft v. Iqbal,
To determine the sufficiency of a complaint under Twombly and Iqbal, a court must take the following three steps: (1) the court must "tak[e] note of the elements a plaintiff must plead to state a claim;" (2) the court should identify the allegations that, "because they are no more than conclusions, are not entitled to the assumption of truth;" and (3) "where there are well-pleaded factual allegations, a court should assume their veracity and then determine whether they plausibly give rise to an еntitlement for relief." Burtch v. Milberg Factors, Inc.,
In evaluating a motion to dismiss, courts generally consider only the allegations contained in the complaint, the exhibits attached thereto, and matters of public record. Schmidt v. Skolas,
III. ANALYSIS
A. Choice of Law
The parties first dispute which state's law applies-Pennsylvania's or New Jersey's. TELA Bio maintains that New Jersey law applies, noting that both Federal Insurance and LifeCell have their principal
A federal court in Pennsylvania exercising diversity jurisdiction generally must apply Pennsylvania choice of law rules to decide which state's law applies. See Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Electric Mfg. Co.,
New Jersey choice of law rules set out a two-step process for determining which state's law applies. "[T]he first steр is to determine whether an actual conflict exists," which "is done by examining the substance of the potentially applicable laws to determine whether there is a distinction between them." P.V. ex rel. T.V. v. Camp Jaycee,
Pennsylvania and New Jersey law do not conflict as to the general scope of an insurer's duty to defend. Compare Kvaerner Metals Div. of Kvaerner U.S., Inc. v. Commеrcial Union Ins. Co. ("Kvaerner"),
However, New Jersey and Pennsylvania law diverge as to whether a court may, in determining whether there is a duty to defend, look beyond the facts alleged in the underlying complaint. Pennsylvania law precludes a court from considering facts outside of the underlying complaint. See Kvaerner,
The conflict between Pennsylvania and New Jersey law matters in this case: TELA Bio, urging me to apply New Jersey law, contends that I may look beyond the allegations contained in the LifeCell Suit Complaint, to facts revealed in discovery in the LifeCell Suit; Federal Insurance, contending that Pennsylvania law applies, responds that I may not do so.
Because there is an actual conflict between New Jersey and Pennsylvania law as to the duty to defend, I proceed to the second step of the conflict of laws analysis in order to determine which state's law governs. This step requires a court to "assess the interests each state has in applying its own law and determine which state has the most significant relationship to the parties and the event." Lebegern,
Here, the principal location of the risk insurеd by the Policy appears to be Pennsylvania. The Policy is a general commercial liability policy insuring TELA Bio-a business with its principal place of business located in Pennsylvania. (Compl. ¶ 1.) And TELA Bio does not point to anything in its Complaint, in the LifeCell Suit Complaint, or in the Policy itself that suggests that a larger portion of the risk insured by the Policy was situated in New Jersey or any other state. TELA Bio does not contend, for example, that it maintained offices in any other state or disclosed to Federal Insurance that substantial risks were located in any other state. See, e.g., Borden-Pelman Ins. Agency, Inc. v. Utica Mut. Ins. Co., No. A-1313-14T3,
Moreover, New Jersey does not have a more significant relationship to the transaction and the parties than the primary place of the insured risk, Pennsylvania. In determining which state bears the most significant relationship, New Jersey choice of law rules require courts to consider four factors: (1) "the competing interests of the relevant states," which "require courts to consider whether application of a competing state's law ... will advance the policies that the law was intended to promote;" (2) "the national interests of commerce among the several states," which "require courts to consider whether application of a competing state's law would frustrate the policies of other states," (3) "the interests of the parties," which "require courts to focus on [the parties'] justified expectations," and (4) "the interests of judicial administration," which "require a court to consider whether the fair, just, and timely disposition of controversies ... will be fostered by the competing law chosen."
These factors support the application of Pennsylvania law. Regarding the first factor, New Jersey does not have a significant interest in having its law applied to this case, as the insureds-whose interests insurance law is generally intended to protect-are not New Jersey residents.
In sum, because Pennsylvania appears to be the principal location of the risk insured by the Policy, and because New Jersey does not bear a more significant relationship to the parties or this matter, I will apply Pennsylvania law in assessing whether Federal Insurance had a duty to defend TELA Bio in the LifeCell Suit.
B. The Duty to Defend Under Pennsylvania Law
Under Pennsylvania law, an insurer has a duty to defend a lawsuit against its insured where the complaint in that underlying lawsuit "avers facts that would support a recovery covered by the policy." Gen. Acc. Ins. Co. of Am. v. Allen,
As noted in the choice of law discussion above, Pennsylvania law adheres to its "lоng-standing rule that an insurer's duty to defend is triggered, if at all, by the factual averments contained in the complaint [in the underlying lawsuit] itself." Kvaerner,
C. Coverage Under the Libel and Slander Provision
With these principles in mind, I turn to whether any of the allegations in the LifeCell Suit Complaint trigger coverage under the Policy's Libel and Slander Provision. As noted above, this provision provides coverage for damages caused by the insured's "electronic, oral, written or other publication of material that ... libels or slanders a person or organization (which does not include disparagement of goods, products, property, or services)."
Because the Policy does not define "libel" or "slander," I will interpret these terms in accordancе with their natural, plain, and ordinary meaning. See Ramara, Inc. v. Westfield Ins. Co.,
Federal Insurance contends that there is no coverage for the LifeCell Suit under the Libel and Slander Provision because the LifeCell Suit Complaint does not allege that TELA Bio made any statements that libeled or slandered LifeCell. TELA Bio responds that it can be inferred from certain allegations in the LifeCell Suit Complaint that TELA Bio made defamatory statements about LifeCell to LifeCell's employees and potential customers.
These allegations are of generally three varieties: (1) allеgations that TELA Bio described its own product as the "next generation" of one of LifeCell's products; (2) allegations that TELA Bio "exploited" or "used" LifeCell's "reputation" and "goodwill" to LifeCell's detriment; and (3) allegations that TELA Bio induced LifeCell's employees to leave LifeCell and join TELA Bio by telling them that it had a "strategy" to avoid violating their non-competition covenants. As discussed in greater detail below, even reading these allegations liberally, as I must, none of them support an inference that TELA Bio made defamatory statements about LifeCell, such that coverage was triggered under the Policy's Libel and Slander Provision.
First, TELA Bio points to an allegation in the LifeCell Suit Complaint that a TELA Bio representative described its own product as the "next generation" of one of LifeCell's hernia repair products, "Strattice." (See LifeCell Suit Compl. ¶ 256 ("[A] T[ELA] Bio representative has described T[ELA] Bio's product as 'next generation Strattice.' ") ) This statement, TELA Bio contends, "is a defamatory publication," because it "impugn[s] LifeCell's purported status as a state of the art participant in the hernia repair marketplace in whiсh both companies compete"
Second, TELA Bio points to several allegations in the LifeCell Suit Complaint that TELA Bio "exploited" or "used" LifeCell's reputation to its own benefit and to LifeCell's detriment. Specifically, TELA Bio references the following allegations in the LifeCell Suit Complaint:
• "T[ELA] Bio's scheme allows T[ELA] Bio to compete unfairly with LifeCell for hernia repair business because ... [m]ost, if not all, of T[ELA] Bio's sales force consists of former LifeCell representatives that can use their former affiliation with LifeCell-аnd the reputation and goodwill associated with LifeCell's name and brand-to LifeCell's detriment." (LifeCell Suit Compl. ¶ 253.)
• "T[ELA] Bio's mass poaching and recruitment of LifeCell's former employees is unlawful appropriation of LifeCell's reputation and goodwill...." (LifeCell Suit Compl. ¶ 254.)
• "[A]t least one customer that was approached by T[ELA] Bio had the impression that T[ELA] Bio was simply using the credibility of LifeCell employees to sell its product quickly." (LifeCell Suit Compl. ¶ 255.)
• "LifeCell is reasonably apprehensive that T[ELA] Bio will market its product as 'developed by LifeCell scientists' and 'sold by your trusted LifeCell rеps.' That strategy exploits LifeCell's reputation and goodwill." (LifeCell Suit Compl. ¶ 257.)
TELA Bio contends that these allegations "evidence[ ] defamation" because they suggest that TELA Bio "question[ed] LifeCell's capacity to perform, emphasizing its loss of employees to TELA Bio" and "asserted that it possessed superior intellectual property rights." (TELA Bio's Resp. 3-4.) I disagree that these allegations create a reasonable inference that TELA Bio defamed LifeCell. Quite the opposite of suggesting that TELA Bio defamed LifeCell by saddling it (LifeCell) with a bad reputation, thesе allegations accuse TELA Bio of seeking to trade on LifeCell's good reputation in order to market its own competing product. And again, coverage is only provided for damages caused by publication of material that "libels or slanders a person or organization."
Third, TELA Bio highlights allegations in the LifeCell Complaint that TELA Bio induced LifeCell employees to leave LifeCell and join TELA Bio by telling them that it had a "strategy" to avoid violating their non-competition covenants. Specifically, the LifeCell Suit Complaint contains the following allegations:
• "T[ELA] Bio's scheme violates 'fair play' because ... T[ELA] Bio designed a misleading 'strategy' to induce LifeCell sales representatives to leave LifeCell and breach reasonable non-competition covenants." (LifeCell Suit Compl. ¶ 252)
• "T[ELA] Bio has improperly interfered with ... [LifeCell's] economic relationships [with its stolen employees] because ... T[ELA] Bio induced those employees to leave LifeCell by misleading those employees into believing that T[ELA] Bio had a 'strategy' that allowed them to violate their legal obligations to LifeCell." (LifeCell Suit Comp. ¶ 267)
TELA Bio contends thаt, from these allegations, it may be inferred that TELA Bio made "statements about LifeCell's inability to enforce non-competition agreements" and that such statements are defamatory. (TELA Bio's Resp. 13.) While it may be reasonable to infer that TELA Bio made statements to LifeCell employees about having a "strategy" to employ them without violating those employees' non-competition covenants, such statements are not defamatory, because they do not impugn LifeCell's reputation. In arguing to the contrary, TELA Bio cites a case holding that a false аllegation that a person "commit[ed] illegal patent infringement" was defamatory. (See TELA Bio's Resp. 13 & n.62 (citing OMI Holdings, Inc. v. Chubb Ins. Co. of Can., No. 95-cv-2519,
In sum, read either separately or as a whole, the allegations in the underlying suit relied upon by TELA Bio have nothing to do with harm to another's reputation. Rather, the allegations pertain to a business dispute over stolen employees and confidential trade secrets. Because the LifeCell Complaint does not allege that TELA Bio made any statements that can reasonably be considered defamatory, coverage under the Libel and Slander Provision of the Policy was not triggered, and Federal Insurance did not have a duty to defend the LifeCell Suit.
D. Applicability of the IP Rights Exclusion
The lack of coverage for the LifeCell Suit under the Policy's Libel and Slander Provision suffices to establish that Federal Insurance had no duty to defend and that, therefore, TELA Bio's Complaint fails to state a claim. However, I hold alternatively that, even if the allegations in the LifeCell Suit Complaint triggered coverage under the Libel and Slander Provision, Federal Insurance would still have no duty to defend, because the LifeCell Suit falls within the Policy's IP Rights Exclusion. See Britamco Underwriters, Inc. v. Emerald Abstract Co., Inc.,
Once again, the Policy's IP Rights Exclusion reads, in relevant part, as follows:
A. This insurance does not apply to any damages, loss, cost or expense arising out of, giving rise to or in any way related to any actual, alleged or threated:
a. Assertion; or
b. Infringement or violation
by any person or organization (including any insured ) of any intellectual property law or right .
B. Further, this insurance does not apply to the entirety of all allegations in any claim or suit , if such claim or suit includes an allegation of or areference to an infringement or violation of an intellectual property law or right , even if the insurance would otherwise apply to any part of the allegations in the claim or suit.
And the Policy defines "intellectual property law or right" as, in relevant part, "any ... right to, or judicial or statutory law recognizing an interest in, any trade secret or confidential or proprietary non-personal information."
Pointing to Paragraph B of the IP Rights Exclusion, Federal Insurance contends that all of the allegations in the LifeCell Suit Complaint are excluded from coverage, because the LifeCell Suit Complaint contains allegations that TELA Bio appropriated LifeCell's intellectual property rights in its trade secrets and proprietary information. TELA Bio responds that the IP Rights Exclusion excludes only claims arising out of violations of intellectual property rights, and that the allegations of defamation inferable from the LifеCell Suit Complaint are not excluded. For the reasons set out below, Federal Insurance is correct.
While Paragraph A of the IP Rights Exclusion excludes only losses "related to" a violation or assertion of intellectual property rights, Paragraph B is much broader. Paragraph B excludes from coverage "the entirety of all allegations in any ... suit" in which there is an allegation of a violation of intellectual property rights, "even if the insurance would otherwise apply to any part of the allegations in the ... suit." While perhaps harsh in its application, it cannot be seriously disрuted that Paragraph B of the IP Rights Exclusion clearly and unambiguously excludes from coverage all allegations within a suit, if that suit contains any allegations of intellectual property rights violations. And "courts may not modify the plain meaning of the words [of an insurance policy] under the guise of 'interpreting' [it]." Wall Rose Mut. Ins. Co. v. Manross,
Courts that have considered intellectual property rights exclusions with language similar to Paragraph B of the IP Rights Exclusion have consistently reached the same result. For example, in Vitamin Health, Inc. v. Hartford Casualty Insurance Company,
Likewise, in Ventana Medical Systems, Inc. v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Company, No. 09-cv-102,
Attempting to distinguish these cases, TELA Bio relies on Align Technology, Inc. v. Federal Insurance Company,
This insurance does not apply to any actual or alleged bodily injury, property damage, advertising injury or personal injury arising out of, giving rise to or in any way related to any actual or alleged:
• assertion; or
• infringement or violation;
by any person or organization (including any insured) of any intellectual property law or right, regardless of whether this insurance would otherwise apply to all or part of any such actual or alleged injury or damage in the absence of any such actual or alleged assertion, infringement or violation.
This exclusion contains nearly verbatim the language from Pаragraph A of the Policy's IP Rights Exclusion. But it lacks the critical language found in Paragraph B-excluding "the entirety of all allegations in any claim or suit, if such claim or suit includes an allegation of or a reference to an infringement or violation of an intellectual property law or right." With that critical language, it is clear the IP Rights Exclusion at issue here excludes an entire suit from coverage if that suit contains any allegation that the insured violated another's intellectual property rights.
In sum, because the LifeCell Suit Complaint alleged that TELA Bio appropriаted LifeCell's trade secrets and confidential information-indeed, this was the gravamen of the LifeCell Suit-the IP Rights Exclusion precludes coverage for the suit in its entirety. Accordingly, Federal Insurance had no duty to defend TELA Bio in the LifeCell Suit.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the reasons set out above, Federal Insurance's Motion to Dismiss for Failure to State a Claim will be granted and this action will be dismissed with prejudice.
An appropriate Order follows.
Notes
Within two weeks of the filing of this action, Federal Insurance did, in fact, disclaim coverage for and refuse to defend the LifeCell Suit. (See Decl. of Francis M. Conway in Supp. of TELA Bio's Mot. for Partial Summ. J., Ex. F, Doc. Nо. 21-10.)
Indeed, Judge Wolfson, in ordering venue transferred from the District of New Jersey to this Court, rejected TELA Bio's argument that "New Jersey has a local interest in deciding" this declaratory judgment action, "especially since LifeCell alleges that T[ELA] Bio caused direct harm to a New Jersey corporation and residents." (10/25/2016 Op. 10.) In rejecting this argument, Judge Wolfson noted that this action "is not a lawsuit between T[ELA] Bio and LifeCell," but between TELA Bio and Federal Insurance to establish who must pay the costs of TELA Bio's defense, a controversy in which New Jersey has no interest. (Id. ) While Judge Wolfson's decision regarded venue, not choice of law, her conclusion as to New Jersey's interest in this matter is no less instructive here.
