Press v. United States of America et al
Filing
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MEMORANDUM. Signed by Chief Judge James K. Bredar on 5/15/2018. (krs, Deputy Clerk)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF MARYLAND
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RODERICK PRESS,
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Plaintiff
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v.
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UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, et al.,
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Defendants.
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CIVIL NO. JKB-17-1667
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MEMORANDUM
Plaintiff brought this lawsuit against the United States of America (“the Government”),
and Knight Sky LLC (“Knight Sky”) and George Knizewski (together with Knight Sky “the
Knight Sky Defendants”) on June 19, 2017. (Compl., ECF No. 1.) In an order dated March 8,
2018, the Court granted in part and denied in part the Government’s motion to dismiss, and
granted the Knight Sky Defendants’ motion to dismiss. (See March 8 Order, ECF No. 27.)
Plaintiff has moved to amend his complaint in response. (Mot. Amend, ECF No. 31.) The
Knight Sky Defendants and the Government have responded in opposition (ECF Nos. 32-33) and
Plaintiff has replied (ECF No. 34). Therefore, Plaintiff’s motion is ripe for review. There is no
need to hold a hearing to resolve the matter. See Local Rule 105.6 (D. Md. 2016). The Court
will grant Plaintiff’s motion for leave to amend because his amendments are not futile, nor were
they brought in bad faith or in a manner that is prejudicial to the Defendants. The Court
interprets the Government’s opposition in part as a motion to strike portions of Plaintiff’s
proposed amended complaint, which the Court will deny without prejudice, and in part as a
motion to vacate in part an earlier order of the Court (see March 20 Order, ECF No. 30), which
the court will grant.
I.
Background1
From 2006 to 2008 Plaintiff performed information technology and security work for
Knight Sky, a company that contracts with the Federal Government. (Compl. ¶¶ 10, 14, 18.)
Knight Sky used a system known as the Joint Personnel Adjudication Verification System
(“JPAS”) in order to process security-related information for its employees. (See id. ¶ 16; id. p.
1 (defining “JPAS”).) JPAS is an “electronic personnel database maintained by the Department
of Defense [(“DoD”)] for the purpose of collecting reports touching on a person’s ability to use
and to handle classified information.” (Id. ¶ 16.) During Plaintiff’s employment with Knight
Sky, Knight Sky was allowed to post reports to JPAS that would affect Plaintiff’s ability to
handle classified information.
(Id. ¶ 17.)
Before leaving Knight Sky in 2008, Plaintiff
“separated himself . . . from the JPAS system,” such that “Knight Sky was no longer a servicing
entity to Plaintiff’s security clearance” and was no longer allowed to update his record. (Id. ¶
19.)
Apparently, Plaintiff and Knight Sky did not part ways amicably. After leaving Knight
Sky, Plaintiff “activated” a corporation that he had formed a decade earlier, Astraeos
Technologies, Inc. (“Astraeos”), and he began bidding on government contracts, including
contracts that Knight Sky would bid on. (Id. ¶¶ 20, 22.) Plaintiff also took a job at Northrop
1
The Court is evaluating whether to grant Plaintiff’s motion for leave to amend his complaint, primarily on the basis
of whether his proposed amendments would be futile, which itself is primarily judged by determining whether
Plaintiff’s proposed amendments would survive a motion to dismiss. See Laber v. Harvey, 438 F.3d 404, 426 (4th
Cir. 2006) (motion for leave to amend should be denied if amendments are futile); Perkins v. United States, 55 F.3d
910, 917 (4th Cir. 1995) (amendments are futile if they would not survive a motion to dismiss). Therefore, the facts
set forth here are stated as if the Court were evaluating a motion to dismiss under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure
12(b)(6), i.e., they are taken from the Plaintiff’s complaint and assumed to be true. The Court will also discuss its
earlier memorandum opinion in this case.
2
Grumman. (Id. ¶ 21.) In March 2009, Knight Sky’s CEO, George Knizewski, told attendees at a
trade show that they should not do business with Astraeos. (Id. ¶ 23.) This led to Astraeos filing
suit against the Knight Sky Defendants in Maryland state court in April 2009, to which the
Knight Sky Defendants responded with several counterclaims. (Id. ¶¶ 24-25.) The Circuit Court
granted both parties directed verdicts, finding that each failed to show damages, and further that
Knight Sky failed to “present sufficient evidence as to liability.” (Id. ¶ 25.) The result was
upheld by the Maryland Court of Special Appeals in September 2010. (Id.)
In October 2010, one month after the Court of Special Appeals’ decision and two years
after Plaintiff had left Knight Sky, Knight Sky published a security incident report (the “Incident
Report”) on Plaintiff’s JPAS account. (Id. ¶ 26.) This report “contained falsehoods” and mostly
included accusations that Plaintiff had mishandled sensitive data or misused various systems
with the intent to harm Knight Sky financially. (Id. ¶¶ 26-28.) Knight Sky did not have proper
authorization to post this largely, if not entirely, false report. (Id. ¶ 26.) As a result of the
Incident Report, “a red flag was placed on Plaintiff’s JPAS account.” (Id. ¶ 28.)
The DoD “reassured Plaintiff that the Incident Report would be favorably adjudicated
and removed from his JPAS account.” (Compl. ¶ 30.) As a result of the Incident Report (and
red flag) being on Plaintiff’s JPAS account, he lost his job at Northrop Grumman, and lost a five
year contract with iWatch Security Solutions, LLC.
(Id.¶¶ 31-32.)
Despite repeated
representations by the DoD that the Incident Report was adjudicated in Plaintiff’s favor and that
the red flag would be removed, the Incident Report remained on Plaintiff’s JPAS account as of
the commencement of this action in 2017. (Id. ¶ 42; see id. ¶¶ 35, 41-43.) The red flag was
removed in October 2015. (Id. ¶ 42.)
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On June 19, 2014, the Knight Sky Defendants posted an addendum (“the Addendum”) to
Plaintiff’s JPAS account. (Id. ¶ 36.) As printed in Plaintiff’s complaint, the Addendum reads as
follows:
Case against Astreos [sic] Mr. Press and his associates was brought inform to the
Civil Courts of Frederick Maryland. Case was dismissed as to the actions of Mr.
Press did nor [sic] result in a direct financial gain to Mr. Press. The case was
appealed on the grounds that his inability to achieve personnel gains does not
dismiss him wrongful conduct and illegal activities. As a direct result of Mr.
Press’s action, a $5 Million Dollar contact was terminated and put out on
competitive bid. Loss of Revenue resulting in the loss of all employees and forced
the company into near bankruptcy.
(Id. (alteration in the original).) As with the 2010 Incident Report, the Knight Sky Defendants
did not have authorization to post this information to Plaintiff’s JPAS account. But unlike the
2010 Incident Report, this Addendum does not seem to allege information that (regardless of its
accuracy) relates to Plaintiff’s ability to use or handle sensitive information. It appears to be an
irrelevant complaint about Plaintiff’s prior litigious activity and its purported impact on Knight
Sky.
“Upon [Plaintiff’s] information and belief, [the Knight Sky Defendants] filed the
Addendum intending that it would cause the security clearance to continue to be red flagged in
the JPAS system.” (Id. ¶ 37.)
Three years to the day after the Knight Sky Defendants posted the Addendum, Plaintiff
brought suit in this Court against the Knight Sky Defendants and the United States. Plaintiff
brought a claim of tortious interference with prospective economic and business relations against
the Knight Sky Defendants and a claim of negligence against the United States, brought under
the Federal Tort Claims Act (“FTCA”). The Knight Sky Defendants and the United States
brought motions to dismiss, and the Court granted the Knight Sky Defendants’ motion, and
granted in part and denied in part the Government’s motion. (See Mem., ECF No. 26.)
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The Knight Sky Defendants made four arguments in their motion to dismiss. First, the
Knight Sky Defendants argued that Maryland’s three-year statute of limitations barred Plaintiff’s
action, as it was based on the 2010 Incident Report but brought in 2017. Second, the Knight Sky
Defendants argued that they were entitled to the “federal contractor privilege,” which, generally
speaking, protects contractors from liability arising out of communications that they are required
to make to an agency of the United States. (See Mem. at 12-13 (discussing Becker v. Philco
Corp., 372 F.2d 771 (4th Cir. 1967).) Third, they argued that Plaintiff was required to plead a
“predicate tort,” i.e., a separate tort, to demonstrate wrongful conduct in a tortious interference
action. Finally, the Knight Sky Defendants argued that Plaintiff had not sufficiently alleged a
specific business relationship that was harmed by the Knight Sky Defendants’ alleged tortious
conduct, and therefore, under Maryland law, could not state a claim for tortious interference with
prospective business relations.
The Court found these arguments largely unavailing. Maryland’s three year statute of
limitations did bar Plaintiff’s action insofar as it was based on harms that he suffered due to the
2010 Incident Report, but it would not bar an action based on harms suffered due to the 2014
Addendum, which was posted three years prior to Plaintiff bringing suit. The Court found that
the Knight Sky Defendants’ reports to JPAS were not privileged because, at least given the
record before the Court and the standard of review, it did not appear that the Knight Sky
Defendants were “required” to make these communications to an agency of the United States.
Third, under Maryland law Plaintiff only needed to plead that the conduct undergirding his
tortious interference claim was wrongful or improper; not an entirely separate tort. Plaintiff
alleged that the Knight Sky Defendants had uploaded injurious information to Plaintiff’s JPAS
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account without proper authorization, and that was sufficiently “improper” to assert a claim of
tortious interference.
Finally, with respect to the Knight Sky Defendants’ contention that Plaintiff had not
identified specific business relationships that had been harmed by their alleged tortious conduct,
the Court noted that Plaintiff had alleged several such relationships, including his lost job at
Northrop Grumman, and a lost $1 million contract. But, Plaintiff alleged that these economic
opportunities were harmed as a result of the 2010 Incident Report—Plaintiff lost his job and the
contract in 2011, three years before the Addendum was even posted. Given the Court’s earlier
finding that the statute of limitations had run on claims arising out of the 2010 Incident Report,
the Court explained that Plaintiff needed to allege some “specific business relationship that ha[d]
been harmed as a result of the 2014 Addendum.” (Mem. at 17.) Plaintiff had not done so. He
had alleged that his Security Management Officer warned him that “he may encounter
difficulties” as a result of the Addendum, and he conclusorily alleged that he “lost contract and
employment opportunities” as a result of both the Incident Report and Addendum (Compl. ¶¶ 39,
43), but he nowhere alleged a particular business relationship that was “damaged because of the
2014 Addendum alone.” (Mem. at 17.) The Court therefore granted the Knight Sky Defendants’
motion to dismiss under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6), but noted that Plaintiff could
seek leave to amend his complaint to include allegations of relationships that were harmed
specifically due to the 2014 Addendum, should he believe he can prove such allegations at trial.
The Government argued that Plaintiff’s claim was barred by sovereign immunity because
it was not a type of claim permitted under the FTCA, nor was it brought in accordance with the
FTCA’s administrative process. The Court found that the claim was at heart a negligence claim,
which may be brought under the FTCA, but it agreed with the Government that Plaintiff had not
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followed the FTCA’s administrative process with respect to his claim arising out of the 2010
Incident Report. Therefore, the Court granted the Government’s motion in part, but denied it in
part and permitted Plaintiff to proceed with his claim insofar as it was based on the 2014
Addendum.
The Court entered its order granting the Knight Sky Defendants’ motion to dismiss and
granting in part and denying in part the Government’s motion on March 8, 2018. The Court
ordered the Government to answer Plaintiff’s complaint within the time allotted under Federal
Rule of Civil Procedure 12(a)(4). Plaintiff, however, indicated that he was going to move to
amend his complaint. The Government therefore moved the Court to grant the Government
additional time to respond, so that, should the Court grant Plaintiff’s motion to amend, the
Government would only have to answer a single complaint.
The Court granted the
Government’s motion by an order issued on March 20. In that order, the Court stated that if
Plaintiff moved to amend his complaint by March 30, and if the Court granted that motion to
amend, the Government would be ordered to answer that amended complaint in the time set forth
under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(a)(4).
Plaintiff did move to amend his complaint by March 30. Plaintiff moved for leave to file
an amended complaint, and styled his motion as one for leave to amend and to vacate a
judgment. That motion is now fully briefed and ripe, and the Court will turn to its disposition.
II.
Standard
After a party has amended his pleading once, he “may amend [his] pleading only with the
opposing party’s written consent or the court’s leave.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(a)(2). The Court
“should freely give leave when justice so requires.” Id. The Fourth Circuit has stated that leave
to amend under Rule 15(a) should be denied only in three situations: when the opposing party
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would be prejudiced, when the amendment is sought in bad faith, or when the proposed
amendment would be futile. Laber v. Harvey, 438 F.3d 404, 426 (4th Cir. 2006). A proposed
amendment is considered futile if it cannot withstand a motion to dismiss. Perkins v. United
States, 55 F.3d 910, 917 (4th Cir. 1995).
When considering whether a proposed amended complaint could withstand a motion to
dismiss under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6), the Court considers only the legal
sufficiency of the proposed complaint. See Presley v. City of Charlottesville, 464 F.3d 480, 483
(4th Cir. 2006) (explaining the standard for a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6)). It does not
“resolve contests surrounding the facts, the merits of a claim, or the applicability of defenses.”
Id. (quoting Edwards v. City of Goldsboro, 178 F.3d 231, 243 (4th Cir. 1999)). Instead it must
take as true all plausible factual allegations, and determine whether they state a claim upon
which relief could be granted. See Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly, 550 U.S. 544, 555 (2007).
III.
Analysis
The Court will first discuss the Government’s opposition to the Plaintiff’s motion, and
then turn to the arguments put forth by the Knight Sky Defendants.
a. The Government’s Opposition
The Government filed an opposition to Plaintiff’s motion for leave to amend, but does
not really oppose Plaintiff’s motion. The Government does not oppose Plaintiff’s request to
amend his complaint nor does it oppose any particular amendment. Rather, the Government
filed its opposition to raise two concerns. First, the Government points out that, despite the
Court’s earlier opinion explaining that Plaintiff did not comply with the FTCA for claims arising
out of the 2010 Incident Report, Plaintiff’s proposed amended complaint continues to
incorporate the 2010 Incident Report into his negligence claim against the Government. (See,
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e.g., Proposed Am. Compl. ¶ 62, ECF No. 31-1.) Put differently, Plaintiff has not proposed any
amendments to his negligence claim against the Government despite the Court’s earlier opinion.
Second, the Government wishes to “reserve[] the right to move to dismiss Plaintiff’s proposed
[new] Privacy Act claim.”
(Gov’t’s Opp’n 4, ECF No. 33.)
Given the substance of the
Government’s opposition, the Court sees the Government’s pleading in the following light: as a
motion to strike certain statements from Plaintiff’s proposed amended complaint, and as a
motion to vacate the Court’s March 20 Order in part, specifically the order that the Government
“answer” Plaintiff’s amended complaint should the Court grant Plaintiff leave to amend.
With respect to the Government’s request that the Court “require Plaintiff to excise
[certain] allegations” (Gov’t’s Opp’n at 4), the Court will decline the request and deny without
prejudice what it construes as the Government’s motion to strike. Under Federal Rule of Civil
Procedure 12(f) the Court has discretion to strike material from a pleading that is “redundant,
immaterial, impertinent, or scandalous.” Although the Government is correct that the Court did
explicitly grant the Government’s motion to dismiss in part based on its finding that the
Government had not waived sovereign immunity for a claim brought by Plaintiff arising out of
the 2010 Incident Report, the Court finds its earlier memorandum and order in this case
sufficient to foreclose Plaintiff’s recovery on such a claim. It is not necessary to comb through
Plaintiff’s complaint and redact any mention of the 2010 Incident Report.
Should the
Government be found liable on Plaintiff’s negligence claim, Plaintiff cannot recover for harm
caused by the 2010 Incident Report alone.
There is a subtle distinction here.
In the Court’s earlier memorandum opinion, it
explained that the continuing violations doctrine did not apply to Plaintiff’s claim. (See Mem. at
11 n.7.) The Court explained that “[t]he continuing tort doctrine applies where there is no single
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incident that can fairly or realistically be identified as the cause of significant harm.” (Id.
(quoting Gaudreau v. American Promotional Events, Inc., 511 F. Supp. 2d 152, 156 (D.D.C.
2007).) Plaintiff was harmed by the 2010 Incident Report well before the 2014 Addendum was
posted, and knew that the source of that harm was the 2010 Incident Report. “It was not as
though Plaintiff did not realize he had been harmed by the 2010 Report until after the 2014
Addendum was posted.” (Id.) So, Plaintiff cannot recover for harm caused by the 2010 Incident
Report alone, i.e., the harms Plaintiff suffered because of the 2010 Incident Report prior to the
2014 Addendum being posted, or any harms that Plaintiff may have suffered regardless of the
2014 Addendum. Those claims accrued sometime in 2011 and Plaintiff did not timely present
them to the appropriate Federal agency.
But, Plaintiff can recover for harm “caused” in part by the 2010 Incident Report, so long
as the legal cause of that harm was the 2014 Addendum. Plaintiff’s surviving negligence claim
against the Government is basically this: because of the Government’s negligence in resolving
the 2014 Addendum, Plaintiff suffered harm. That harm may be in part due to the information
contained in the 2010 Incident Report, and thus, in a sense, Plaintiff is alleging harm that was
“caused” by the 2010 Incident Report. But the legal cause of the harm was the Government’s
negligence regarding the 2014 Addendum. Causation in tort cases can often be confusing, and
this case is no different, but the result of the Court’s analysis is fairly simple: Plaintiff cannot
recover for harms caused solely by the 2010 Incident Report, meaning Plaintiff cannot recover
for his lost job at Northrop Grumman, his lost $1 million contract, or anything else that occurred
before the 2014 Addendum was posted.
With respect to the Government’s reservation of its “right to move to dismiss Plaintiff’s
proposed Privacy Act claim,” the Court will grant what it construes as the Government’s request
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to vacate in part the Court’s March 20 order. In that Order, at the request of the Government, the
Court granted the Government additional time to answer Plaintiff’s complaint. The Court (and,
it would seem, the Government) was operating on the assumption that any proposed amendments
to Plaintiff’s complaint would be allegations against the Knight Sky Defendants, and that
Plaintiff would not change his claim against the Government. That assumption has proven
partially correct, in that Plaintiff does not propose to amend his negligence claim. But, Plaintiff
proposes to add an entirely new claim against the Government. The Court will therefore vacate
in part its March 20 Order. The Government is no longer required to “answer” Plaintiff’s
amended complaint within the time allotted under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(a)(4). The
order accompanying this memorandum will explain that the Government shall “respond” to
Plaintiff’s amended complaint within the time allotted under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure
12(a)(4). The Government may, if it chooses, bring a motion to dismiss the new claim in
Plaintiff’s amended complaint.
b. Knight Sky Defendants’ Opposition
As an initial matter, although Plaintiff styled his motion in part as one to vacate a
judgment, the Court does not find it necessary to consider Plaintiff’s motion in that light. In the
Court’s March 8 Order it granted the Knight Sky Defendants’ motion to dismiss under Federal
Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) but it did not explicitly state that such dismissal was with
prejudice, nor did it explicitly dismiss the Knight Sky Defendants as parties to this case.
Furthermore, the Court explained in its earlier memorandum accompanying that order, that
Plaintiff could seek leave to amend his complaint to include additional allegations against the
Knight Sky Defendants. Thus, the Court does not view its original dismissal of the Knight Sky
Defendants as a final dismissal, and accordingly does not need to vacate a judgment in order to
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grant Plaintiff’s motion for leave to amend his complaint. See 5A Charles Alan Wright & Arthur
R. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 1357 (3d ed. 1998) (“As . . . numerous case citations
. . . make clear, dismissal under Rule 12(b)(6) generally is not immediately final.” (citing, inter
alia, Simmons v. United Mortg. and Loan Inv., LLC, 634 F.3d 754, 769 (4th Cir. 2011)).
The Court will grant Plaintiff leave to amend his complaint unless the opposing party
would be prejudiced by the amendments, the amendments are sought in bad faith, or when the
proposed amendments would be futile. Laber, 438 F.3d at 426. Plaintiff’s proposed allegations
regarding his claim against the Knight Sky Defendants set forth two specific business
relationships that were harmed by the Knight Sky Defendant’s tortious posting of the 2014
Addendum. The Knight Sky Defendants argue that these amendments would be futile, as they
would not survive a motion to dismiss.
Plaintiff’s relevant proposed allegations set forth the following:
In 2014-2015, Mr. Marvin Greenlee, a long-time independent contractor that
works with civil and government sectors installing network access control (NAC)
systems, approached Plaintiff, whose company was a Service Disabled Veteran
Owned (SDVO) Business, to partner with him to service government contracts
installing and maintaining NAC systems . . . .
. . . . Mr. Greenlee sought Plaintiff’s partnership [because] he had the requisite
skills, knowledge, and expertise in cybersecurity which would make him qualified
for such government contracts, especially ones with a Section 8A caveat. When
Plaintiff informed Mr. Greenlee of the 2014 Addendum to his JPAS incident
report, however, Mr. Greenlee understood that such information on his JPAS
record–specifically information that he misused government computers–would be
an automatic bar for consideration of contracts involving cybersecurity, and that
any such endeavors to bid on those respective contracts with Plaintiff would be an
unnecessary expenditure of time, money, and resources. Accordingly, in or about
October 2015, Mr. Greenlee ceased discussions with Plaintiff on pursuing such
contracts with him.
Similarly, in September 2014, Plaintiff was approached by Mr. Brian Tunson to
assist him on an existing contract involving cybersecurity, which would pay up to
$150,000. Mr. Tunson was unable to use Plaintiff due to the open incident report,
which included the Addendum.
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(Proposed Am. Compl. ¶¶ 40-42.)
The Knight Sky Defendants make two arguments with regard to futility: First, they argue
that these amendments describe business relationships that would have been formed between
third parties and Astraeos, Plaintiff’s company, and not Plaintiff individually. Therefore, the
Knight Sky Defendants argue, Plaintiff does not have standing to assert a tortious interference
claim in regard to these business relationships. Second, they argue that these allegations are not
sufficiently specific to allege a claim of tortious interference under Maryland law.
With regard to the Knight Sky Defendant’s first argument—that Plaintiff has no standing
to bring a claim for tortious interference with a business relationship between a third party and
Astraeos—their reading of the law is too technical. The Knight Sky Defendants rely almost
entirely on Baron Financial Corp. v. Natanzon, 471 F. Supp. 2d 535 (D. Md. 2006), which was a
case involving a claim of tortious interference with an existing contract. Baron explained that,
“Tortious interference with business relationships arises only out of the relationship between
three parties, the parties to a contract or other economic relationship . . . and the interferer.” 471
F. Supp. 2d at 539 (quoting K & K Mgmt., Inc. v. Lee, 557 A.2d 965, 973 (Md. 1989)). “As a
result,” the Baron court stated, “a shareholder or member of a corporation or LLC may not
recover for tortious interference of the business or contract of the corporation or LLC.” Id. at
540.
This proposition may be generally correct, but it is not a rule. The Restatement (Second)
of Torts § 766, which discusses tortious interference with an existing contract, and which Baron
cited with approval, explains:
[. . .] [I]f A induces B to break a contract with C, persons other than C who may
be harmed by the action as, for example, his employees or suppliers, are not
within the scope of the protection afforded by this rule, unless A intends to affect
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them. Even then they may not be able to recover unless A acted for the purpose of
interfering with their contracts.
(emphasis added) (citation omitted) (cited in Baron, 471 F. Supp. 2d at 540). It is not as though
shareholders or owners of a company are by definition precluded from bringing a tortious
interference suit against a party that tortiously interferes with a business relationship between the
company and a third party. Rather, such persons would only be able to bring such a suit if they
could demonstrate that the third party was really trying to harm them, specifically, but did so by
improperly harming the business.2
So, even if Plaintiff’s claim was that because of the Knight Sky Defendants’ actions,
Astraeos was unable to enter into a contract, Plaintiff would still be a proper party to bring the
claim, if he alleged that the Knight Sky Defendants were trying to harm him specifically. Cf.
Baron, 471 F. Supp. 2d 535, 541-42 (noting that the person bringing the tortious interference
claim “failed to allege that he was either a separate party to the contract or that he had a distinct
business relationship with the [third parties].” (emphasis added)).
But, it is important to note that Plaintiff, unlike the aggrieved party in Baron, did not
bring such a claim. He alleged tortious interference with prospective business relations, not
interference with an existing contract. See Macklin v. Robert Logan Assocs., 639 A.2d 112, 117
(Md. 1994) (noting that tortious interference “is committed when a third party’s intentional
interference with another in his or her business or occupation induces a breach of an existing
contract or, absent an existing contract, maliciously or wrongfully infringes upon an economic
relationship.” (emphasis added)). He does not allege that there was a particular contract between
Astraeos and a third party that was harmed by the Knight Sky Defendants’ actions, and he does
2
This principle generally applies to contract law as well: when a promisor breaks a promise to a promisee, a third
party who may be harmed by the breach generally cannot sue on a breach of the contract unless they were an
intended beneficiary of the contract. See Stroh Brewery Co. v. Allegany Beer Dist., 989 F. Supp. 740, 743 (D. Md.
1996) (citing Bolick v. Bd. of Educ. of Charles Cty., 260 A.2d 31 (Md. 1969)).
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not need to. Nor does he have to allege that there was a particular contract that would have been
formed between Astraeos and a third party but for the Knight Sky Defendants’ behavior (though
his proposed allegations suggest the possibility of such contracts). Instead, Plaintiff may plead
malicious and improper interference with a prospective economic relationship. And he has.
The meat of Plaintiff’s claim is that the Knight Sky Defendants’ improper behavior
prevented Plaintiff, himself, from being able to work with certain third parties. Perhaps the
actual business relationship that would have resulted would have involved Plaintiff’s company,
Astraeos, but that is largely immaterial (for a determination of liability at least). Simply put,
Plaintiff does not allege that the Knight Sky Defendants intended to harm Astraeos, that they
acted improperly to do so, and that Plaintiff, as the owner of Astraeos, was harmed economically
as a result. The claim has a slight but important difference. Plaintiff alleges that the Knight Sky
Defendants intended to harm him and acted improperly to do so.
Therefore, Plaintiff has
standing to bring this claim.
To be sure, Plaintiff’s proposed complaint may be susceptible to a contrary interpretation.
Plaintiff alleges that in 2009 Knizewski told trade show attendees not to do business with
Astraeos, and that Astraeos sued Knight Sky in 2010 as a result. This could suggest that the
Knight Sky Defendants’ ire was directed towards Astraeos, whom they saw as a competitor, and
that their tortious conduct of besmirching Plaintiff’s security credentials was really conduct
directed at undermining Astraeos’ ability to compete for contracts. Under that interpretation,
Astraeos is the victim with standing to sue; Plaintiff is merely a bystander. At this stage in the
proceedings however, the Court is to make inferences in Plaintiff’s favor, not against him. If the
Court does so, Plaintiff’s complaint tells a tale of a former employee who, after competing with
his former boss, became the target of that company’s ill will, resulting in the company
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improperly posting negative information about him and, when his record was going to be
cleared, posting more unauthorized and irrelevant material to further prevent him from obtaining
work. Perhaps none of that can be proven, and maybe it can even be proven untrue. But as it
stands, it is enough to support a tortious interference claim brought by Plaintiff himself.
The Knight Sky Defendants’ second argument as to why Plaintiff’s proposed new
allegations would be futile is that these new allegations do not present, with sufficient specificity,
particular business relationships that were harmed by the Knight Sky Defendants’ allegedly
tortious behavior. Again, the Knight Sky Defendants appear to misunderstand the law of tortious
interference, or perhaps the substance of Plaintiff’s proposed amended complaint.
The elements of tortious interference with prospective business relations are:
“(1)
intentional and wilful acts; (2) calculated to cause damage to the plaintiffs in their lawful
business; (3) done with the unlawful purpose to cause such damage and loss, without right or
justifiable cause on the part of the defendants (which constitutes malice); and (4) actual damage
and loss resulting.” Alexander & Alexander, Inc. v. B. Dixon Evander & Assocs., Inc., 650 A.2d
260, 269 (Md. 1994) (quoting Willner v. Silverman, 71 A. 962, 964 (Md. 1909)). None of these
elements dictate that a plaintiff must allege specific, concrete prospective business relationships
that were harmed in order to state a claim.
Still, it is true that a plaintiff must allege more than “interference with one’s occupation
and livelihood in general.” Baron, 471 F. Supp. 2d at 542. A plaintiff “must identify a possible
future relationship which [was] likely to occur.”
Id.
As the court in Baron explained,
identifying a specific relationship is necessary at least because it brings the other elements into
clearer view; i.e., without a particular business relationship to focus on, how can the factfinder
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determine causation (that defendant’s tortious acts caused the deterioration of this particular
relationship), or damages (what was this particular relationship “worth”)? See id.
As for causation, “in order to establish causation in a wrongful interference action, the
plaintiff must prove that the defendant’s wrongful or unlawful act caused the destruction of the
business relationship which was the target of the interference.” Med. Mut. Liability Soc. of Md.
v. B. Dixon Evander and Assocs., Inc., 660 A.2d 433, 439 (Md. 1995). This is not, however, a
particularly special aspect of a tortious interference claim. Rather, “[i]n any tort action, the
plaintiff must establish that the defendant’s tortious conduct was a cause in fact of the injury for
which compensation is sought.” Id.
Plaintiff’s proposed allegations describe more than “interference with one’s occupation
and livelihood in general,” and much more than what the party in Baron pleaded, which was
“some damage to his relationship with some unidentified [third-parties] at some future time in
some future business he might have.” 471 F. Supp. 2d at 542, 546. Plaintiff identifies two
“possible future relationship[s] which [were] likely to occur.” Id. He alleges damage to specific
relationships with identified third-parties at a specific time in a specific business.
These
allegations are enough that a factfinder can weigh the impact of the still timely tortious
conduct—i.e., the 2014 Addendum. Did the Knight Sky Defendants intend to target, and cause
the destruction of, these types of business relationships, or even these specific business
relationships? See B. Dixon Evander, 660 A.2d at 439. If so, what would these relationships
have been worth? That Plaintiff was not more specific in his allegations—outlining particular
terms, compensation, and so forth—is, if Plaintiff is to be believed, largely the fault of the
Knight Sky Defendants. According to Plaintiff, these relationships were “made hypothetical by
17
the very wrong of the defendant.” See Baron, 471 F. Supp. 2d at 546 (quoting Restatement
(Second) of Torts § 774A).
The Knight Sky Defendants argue that Plaintiff engaged in some “wishful thinking”
regarding what contracts he and Mr. Greenlee may have won. (See Knight Sky Defs.’ Opp’n 56, ECF No. 32.) Perhaps they are correct. But that argument misunderstands the relationship
that Plaintiff alleges was harmed by the Knight Sky Defendants’ conduct. Plaintiff alleges that it
was his prospective relationships with Mr. Greenlee and Mr. Tunson that were harmed; not
Astraeos’ prospective contracts with the Federal Government. Perhaps the proof will show that
Mr. Greenlee and Plaintiff would likely not have been able to secure contracts, and that their
relationship would not have been profitable at all. That may affect damages in this case, in the
event that liability is found. But at this early stage, taking Plaintiff’s allegations as fact and
making all inferences in his favor, Plaintiff has clearly alleged some specific business
relationships that were harmed by the Knight Sky Defendants’ tortious conduct.3
IV.
Conclusion
The Court construes the Government’s opposition in part as a motion to strike material
from Plaintiff’s amended complaint, and will deny that motion without prejudice. The Court
also construes the Government’s opposition in part as a motion to vacate in part the Court’s
March 20 Order, and the Court will grant that motion, vacate its earlier order that the
3
The Court will reiterate that the “tortious conduct” at issue is the 2014 Addendum, not the posting of the 2010
Incident Report. Plaintiff proposes to allege that “Mr. Greenlee understood that such information on his JPAS
record–specifically information that he misused government computers–would be an automatic bar for consideration
of contracts involving cybersecurity.” (Proposed Am. Compl. ¶ 41 (emphasis added).) The 2014 Addendum,
however, does not include information that Plaintiff misused government computers; only the 2010 Incident Report
does and Plaintiff’s claim based on harm suffered because of the 2010 Incident Report has expired. The Court,
however, sees Plaintiff’s current claim as this: the Knight Sky Defendants intentionally posted the (irrelevant) 2014
Addendum in order to keep the red flag on Plaintiff’s JPAS account (see Proposed Am. Compl. ¶ 37), and the harm
from this action was that Plaintiff lost out on productive relationships with Mr. Greenlee and Mr. Tunson. So, to be
clear, Plaintiff’s claim may involve the substance of the 2010 Incident Report, in that it first caused a red flag to
appear on his JPAS account and affected his security credentials, but he cannot recover for damages caused by the
2010 Incident Report, e.g., losing his job at Northrop Grumman, or losing his five-year contract with iWatch. (See
Proposed Am. Compl. ¶¶ 31-32).
18
Government must answer Plaintiff’s proposed amended complaint, and, by accompanying order,
order the Government to respond to Plaintiff’s proposed amended complaint in the time provided
by Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(a)(4). Plaintiff has included new, non-futile allegations in
his proposed amended complaint, and Plaintiff has not sought to amend his complaint in bad
faith or in a manner that is prejudicial to the Knight Sky Defendants. Accordingly, the Court
will grant Plaintiff’s motion for leave to file an amended complaint by accompanying order, and
will order the Clerk to docket the Plaintiff’s proposed first amended complaint as the Plaintiff’s
First Amended Complaint.
DATED this 15th day of May, 2018.
BY THE COURT:
___________/s/_________________
James K. Bredar
Chief Judge
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