Just Funky, LLC v. Boom Trendz, LLC et al
Filing
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Order: The Court GRANTS IN PART AND DENIES IN PART Defendant's 105 Motion for reconsideration to Dissolve, Modify and/or Reconsider Preliminary Injunction. Furthermore, the Court hereby CONTINUES the Final Pretrial set for January 19, 2023 and the Jury Trial scheduled to begin on February 13, 2023, until Carpenter and Boom Trendz's Chapter 7 bankruptcies are completed. Judge Charles Esque Fleming on 1/18/2023. (S,SR)
Case: 5:21-cv-01127-CEF Doc #: 110 Filed: 01/18/23 1 of 7. PageID #: 2178
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
NORTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO
EASTERN DIVISION
JUST FUNKY, LLC,
Plaintiff,
v.
BOOM TRENDZ, LLC, et al.,
Defendants.
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CASE NO. 5:21-cv-01127
JUDGE CHARLES ESQUE FLEMING
ORDER GRANTING IN PART AND
DENYING IN PART DEFENDANTS’
MOTION TO DISSOLVE, MODIFY,
AND/OR RECONSIDER
PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION
AND
ORDER CONTINUING FINAL
PRETRIAL AND JURY TRIAL
Defendants Boom Trendz, LLC, Melissa Carpenter, and Deepak Tyagi have jointly moved
this Court to dissolve, modify, and/or reconsider the Preliminary Injunction (ECF No. 59) entered
on December 10, 2021. (ECF No. 105). Plaintiff Just Funky opposes Defendants’ Motion in part,
asking the Court to modify the Preliminary Injunction (1) to lift the prohibition on Tyagi’s ability
to compete with Just Funky and solicit Just Funky’s customers and vendors; and (2) to indicate
that the prohibitions on Carpenter’s ability to compete with Just Funky and solicit Just Funky’s
customers and vendors should end on June 17, 2023. (ECF No. 106, PageID# 2146–47). Just
Funky also opposes further dissolution, modification, or reconsideration of the Preliminary
Injunction. (Id.). Defendants filed a joint Reply Brief arguing that changed circumstances support
their Motion, and insisting that the Preliminary Injunction be dissolved in full. (ECF No. 109).
For the foregoing reasons, this Court GRANTS IN PART AND DENIES IN PART Defendant’s
Motion. Furthermore, the Court hereby CONTINUES the Final Pretrial set for January 19, 2023
and the Jury Trial scheduled to begin on February 13, 2023, until Carpenter and Boom Trendz’s
Chapter 7 bankruptcies are completed.
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BACKGROUND
On June 4, 2021, Just Funky filed suit against Boom Trendz, Carpenter, and Tyagi for
allegedly misappropriating Just Funky’s trade secrets and unfairly competing with it, as well as
Carpenter and Tyagi’s alleged violations of non-competition and non-solicitation agreements
between them and Just Funky. (ECF No. 1). Just Funky amended the Complaint on April 6, 2022.
(ECF No. 82, Amended Complaint). The Complaint alleges that Carpenter signed a restrictive
covenant agreement agreeing to, inter alia, not compete with Just Funky nor solicit its employees,
customers, manufacturers, or suppliers for 24 months after Carpenter’s employment terminated.
(Id. at PageID# 1810, ¶ 33). Carpenter’s employment terminated on April 5, 2019. (Id. at ¶ 34).
The Amended Complaint alleges that, “Well before Fall 2020, Carpenter was competing with Just
Funky and targeting Just Funky’s customers.” (Id. at PageID# 1814, ¶ 54).1
The Amended Complaint also alleges that Tyagi signed a similar agreement not to compete
with Just Funky nor solicit its employees, customers, manufacturers, or suppliers for 12 months
after Tyagi’s employment terminated. (Id. at PageID# 8–9, ¶ 40). Tyagi’s employment terminated
on October 20, 2020. (Id. at PageID# 1813, ¶ 48). Just Funky alleges that Tyagi “began competing
before he even departed Just Funky’s employment. (Id. at PageID# 1814, ¶ 55).
Finally, relevant to Defendants’ Motion, the Amended Complaint alleges that Defendants
misappropriated three types of trade secrets: “(1) Just Funky’s customer, vendor, pricing, and sales
pipeline spreadsheets, (2) pipeline information about Just Funky’s product development and
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Just Funky does not know the exact date that Carpenter began competing. (ECF No. 50-1, Motion for Leave to
Amend Complaint, PageID# 955, n.3). Just Funky claims that Exhibit 2, ECF No. 50-4, PageID# 1015 supports its
claim that Carpenter began competing with Just Funky before Fall 2020; that document contains an email from
December 29, 2020 between Carpenter and a customer, and does not include any indication of when Carpenter began
competing with Just Funky. (Id.).
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marketing strategies, and (3) information, including specifications, standards, and procedures,
related to Just Funky’s product production.” (Id. at PageID# 1815, ¶ 58).
The Preliminary Injunction
The Preliminary Injunction entered on December 10, 2021, was the product of an
agreement between Just Funky and the Defendants, and “represents language jointly approved by
the parties.” (ECF No. 58, Notice of Filing Revised Proposed Agreed Order Issuing Preliminary
Injunction, PageID# 1532). The Preliminary Injunction itself contains no termination date nor
proposed case schedule; rather, it states that it “shall remain in effect until the merits of Just
Funky’s claims have been resolved, whether by dispositive motions, settlement, or completion of
the trial on the merits or until notified by the Court.” (ECF No. 59, PageID# 1537). It is divided
into two main parts: Part (a) of the Preliminary Injunction enjoins Carpenter and Tyagi from
competing with Just Funky, soliciting Just Funky’s customers and vendors, and “using, disclosing,
and/or misappropriating any of Just Funky’s confidential, proprietary, and trade secret
information, including through their operation of Boom Trendz; Part (b) enjoins Boom Trendz
from competing with Just Funky based on the confidential and trade secret information allegedly
acquired by Carpenter and Tyagi during their employment with Just Funky. (Id. at PageID# 1536).
Two additional sections, (c) and (d), pertain to specific Boom Trendz purchase orders, and states
that the Preliminary Injunction shall remain in effect until Just Funky’s claims against Defendants
are resolved, either by mutual resolution or by judicial decision. (Id. at PageID# 1537).
Defendants’ Motion to Dissolve, Modify, and/or Reconsider the Preliminary Injunction
On December 6, 2022, Defendants Carpenter and Boom Trendz filed a Notice of Filing
Bankruptcy and Suggestion of Stay. (ECF Nos. 101 & 102, respectively). Since a jury trial is
currently set to commence on February 13, 2023, this Court held a telephonic Status Conference
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on December 19, 2022 to discuss the possibility of continuing the trial. Defendants objected to
the continuance because of the pending Preliminary Injunction and informed the Court that it
intended to move to lift the Preliminary Injunction. The Court set a briefing schedule, and
Defendants filed their Motion to Dissolve, Modify, and/or Reconsider the Preliminary Injunction
on January 3, 2023. In their Motion, Defendants allege that Just Funky has already received the
benefit of its bargains with both Carpenter and Tyagi, because the Preliminary Injunction
effectively prevented Carpenter from competing and/or soliciting for more than 24 months, and
Tyagi for more than 12 months. (ECF No. 105-1, PageID# 2141). Regarding Just Funky’s trade
secrets, Defendants state that “the scope of any alleged Trade Secrets in this case has not been
decided by the Court,” and that the concern over Defendants’ use of those trade secrets is “moot”
(though Defendants do not explain why the concern is moot). (Id. at PageID# 2142–43).
On January 10, 2023, Just Funky opposed Defendants’ Motion in part: Just Funky agreed
that the Preliminary Injunction could be modified to lift the non-competition and non-solicitation
provisions against Tyagi, and stated that the same provisions pertaining to Carpenter should be
lifted as of June 17, 2023, which Just Funky alleged would be 24 months since Carpenter began
wrongfully competing and soliciting. (ECF No. 106, PageID# 2146–47). Just Funky also noted
that Defendants have not alleged any changed circumstances that would justify lifting the
Preliminary Injunction applicable to trade secrets. (Id. at PageID# 2154–55). Defendants filed
their Reply Brief on January 17, 2023, stating that the passage of time qualifies as a changed
circumstance for the purpose of dissolving a Preliminary Injunction, and that Just Funky need not
worry about its trade secrets, because “Defendants do not intend to use Just Funky’s trade secret
information, as that phrase is defined by law.” (Id. at PageID# 2172–73).
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DISCUSSION
Dissolution, Modification, and/or Reconsideration of a Preliminary Injunction
This Court has the inherent power to revisit its own injunction for the purpose of
modification or complete dissolution. Toledo Area AFL-CIO Council v. Pizza, 907 F. Supp. 263,
265 (N.D. Ohio 1995). A party seeking dissolution or modification of an injunction “must
demonstrate significant changes in fact, law, or circumstances since the previous ruling.” Id.
(citing Gooch v. Life Investors Ins. Co. of Am., 672 F.3d 402, 414 (6th Cir. 2012)).
1. Carpenter and Tyagi’s Non-Competition and Non-Solicitation
Addressing the first part of the Preliminary Injunction enjoining Carpenter and Tyagi from
competing with Just Funky and soliciting its customers and vendors, the Court may equitably toll
the time period of the prohibition within the restrictive covenant in order to afford an employer
“the benefit of its bargain” with its employee. Total Quality Logistics, LLC v. OTC Logistics LLC,
No. 1:19-cv-151, 2019 WL 1300223, at *5 (S.D. Ohio Mar. 21, 2019) (citing Rogers v. Runfola &
Assocs., 57 Ohio St.3d 5, 9 (Ohio 1991). Here, the parties do not dispute that Just Funky has
received the benefit of its non-competition and non-solicitation agreement with Tyagi, and that the
Preliminary Injunction enjoining Tyagi from competing with Just Funky and soliciting its
customers and vendors should be lifted. (ECF No. 106, PageID# 2146–47).
Regarding Carpenter, the Amended Complaint alleges that Carpenter’s employment with
Just Funky terminated on April 5, 2019, and that she began competing with Just Funky “[w]ell
before Fall 2020.” (ECF No. 82, PageID# 1810, ¶ 33; PageID# 1814, ¶ 54). Absent a date upon
which Carpenter began competing, this Court estimates that Carpenter honored the noncompetition and non-solicitation agreement for around 15 months. The Preliminary Injunction
was then entered on December 10, 2021, and has remained in effect ever since. (See ECF No. 59).
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Carpenter, therefore, has been kept from competing with Just Funky or soliciting its customers and
vendors for approximately 27 months, which is in excess of the 24-month time period described
in the Amended Complaint. (See ECF No. 82, PageID# 1810, ¶ 33). The Court therefore finds
that Just Funky received the benefit of its bargain with Carpenter, and lifts the part of the
Preliminary Injunction prohibiting Carpenter and Tyagi from competing with Just Funky or
soliciting Just Funky’s customers and vendors.
2. Just Funky’s Trade Secrets
Regarding Just Funky’s purported trade secrets, Defendants correctly observe that this
Court has yet to determine the scope of those trade secrets nor whether Defendants
misappropriated them. (See ECF No. 105-1, PageID# 2143). The Preliminary Injunction was
entered based on an agreement of the parties, and expressly states that it shall remain in effect until
Just Funky’s claims against defendants are resolved. (ECF No. 59, PageID# 1537). Indeed,
nothing has changed with respect to Just Funky’s trade secrets claim apart from Defendants
Carpenter and Boom Trendz filing for bankruptcy protection, the passage of time, and Defendants’
assertion that they will not utilize Just Funky’s trade secrets, as they are defined by law. (ECF No.
106, PageID# 2172–73). That being the case, Defendants would not be prejudiced by leaving this
portion of the injunction in place; it simply serves to reinforce their stated intentions. Further,
Defendants’ Motion does not present the Court with any viable arguments supporting dissolution
of the trade secrets portion of the Preliminary Injunction, and since the Court has not yet made any
findings concerning Just Funky’s trade secrets, that part of the Preliminary Injunction shall remain
in effect.
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CONCLUSION
In light of the foregoing, Defendants’ Motion to Dissolve, Modify, and/or Reconsider the
Preliminary Injunction is GRANTED IN PART AND DENIED IN PART. The December 10,
2021 Preliminary Injunction (ECF No. 59) is hereby MODIFIED as follows:
1. Section (a) of the Preliminary Injunction is dissolved as of the date of this order.
2. Sections (b), (c), and (d), which are the product of negotiation between the parties, shall
remain in effect until Just Funky’s claims have been resolved in the manner described
in section (d).
CONTINUANCE OF THE FINAL PRETRIAL AND TRIAL
As an additional matter, this Court possesses inherent power to stay proceedings “to control
the disposition of the causes on its own docket with economy of time and effort for itself, for
counsel, and for litigants. Glazer v. Whirlpool Corp., No. 1:08-cv-1624, 2008 WL 4534133 (N.D.
Ohio Oct. 6, 2008) (quoting Landis v. N. Am. Co., 299 U.S. 248, 254 (1936)). Due to the Chapter
7 bankruptcies filed by Defendants Boom Trendz and Carpenter, the Final Pretrial set for January
19, 2023 and the Jury Trial scheduled to commence on February 13, 2023 are hereby
CONTINUED until further order of the Court. Defendants Boom Trendz and Carpenter are hereby
ORDERED to promptly inform the Court upon the resolution of their bankruptcies.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Date: January 18, 2023
____________________________________
CHARLES E. FLEMING
U.S. DISTRICT COURT JUDGE
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