GORTON, J.
This suit arises out of a contractual dispute between Allscripts Healthcare, LLC ("Allscripts" or "plaintiff") and Decision Resources, LLC d/b/a Decision Resources Group ("DRG" or "defendant").
Pending before the Court is the motion of Allscripts to dismiss DRG's counterclaim for false and misleading statements pursuant to Section 43(a)(1)(B) of the Lanham Act.
Allscripts is a healthcare information technology company that collects, aggregates
Allscripts licenses its data to third party recipients, provided that, among other things, the third party agrees to protect the data and an independent statistician certifies that the data has been de-identified in compliance with HIPAA.
In June, 2014, Allscripts entered into a Master Data License Services Agreement ("the Agreement") with DRG, a healthcare data and consulting company that compiles and repackages licensed data for sale to third parties.
In February, 2018, Allscripts acquired Practice Fusion, an electronic health records company and data provider, and subsequently formed a new business unit, Veradigm, which competes directly with DRG.
Pursuant to the terms of the Agreement, which is governed by Delaware law, the parties agreed that
The Agreement further provides that either party can terminate if the other party commits a material breach and fails to cure within 30 days of receiving written notice.
In October, 2018, Allscripts exercised its audit rights under the Agreement to conduct an audit of DRG's facilities and records on suspicion that DRG was licensing patient level data to third parties in violation of the Agreement.
In February, 2019, Allscripts sent a letter to DRG asserting that DRG was in breach of the Agreement because it was providing Allscripts' patient level data to DRG clients. DRG maintained that it was acting in accordance with the terms of the Agreement and HIPAA. In response to DRG's disavowal of the accused conduct, Allscripts contended that DRG's provision of patient-level Allscripts data to DRG customers materially breached the Agreement.
DRG contends that shortly thereafter it learned that Allscripts, through Veradigm, "initiated contact with one of DRG's customers" and informed that customer, who remains unidentified, that "it should be concerned about DRG's sustained ability to sell [electronic health records ("EHR")] data." DRG submits that Allscripts also "falsely indicated to other DRG customers that DRG [would] soon lose access to Allscripts' data."
Mediation proved unsuccessful in May, 2019, whereupon Allscripts filed the instant action alleging 1) violation of the Defend Trade Secrets Act (Count I); 2) trade secret misappropriation under Massachusetts law (Count II); 3) breach of contract (Count III); 4) unfair and deceptive practices under M.G.L. c. 93A (Count
The parties filed cross motions for preliminary injunctions both of which were denied. Prior to the Court's ruling, Allscripts moved to dismiss only DRG's Lanham Act counterclaim (III).
To survive a motion to dismiss, a claim must contain sufficient factual matter, accepted as true, to "state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face."
Furthermore, the Court must accept all factual allegations in the claim as true and draw all reasonable inferences in the claimant's favor.
Although a court must accept as true all the factual allegations in a claim, that doctrine is not applicable to legal conclusions.
DRG alleges that Allscripts disseminated false and misleading statements in violation of Section 43(a)(1)(B) of the Lanham Act by initiating contact with at least one DRG customer and fostering concern about DRG's sustained right to sell EHR data. Section 43(a)(1)(B) of the Lanham Act provides that any person who "uses in commerce" any
15 U.S.C. § 1125(a)(1).
To state a claim pursuant to Section 43(a)(1)(B), a claimant must allege that: 1) the offending party made a false or misleading statement of fact; 2) in a commercial advertisement about its product or the product of another; 3) in interstate commerce; 4) that was material and either actually deceived or had the tendency to deceive a substantial segment of the declarant's audience; and 5) which caused injury to the claimant.
Section 43(a)(1)(B) prohibits falsehoods and misrepresentations only in "commercial advertising or promotion".
DRG claims that Allscripts contacted DRG customers and provided false or misleading information for the express purpose of influencing those customers to discontinue their relationships with DRG in favor of competitor Veradigm.
Allscripts first submits that DRG's claim must be dismissed because DRG identifies only a single instance of alleged misrepresentation. Where the market for a product is limited in number, however, "even a single [solicitation] to an individual purchaser may be enough to trigger the protections of the [Lanham] Act."
Allscripts next contends, relying on
Here, in contrast, DRG proffers specific false or misleading statements it alleges Allscripts disseminated to DRG's customers and identifies at least one particular occasion on which such a statement was made. Such a description is specific enough to survive Allscripts' motion to dismiss.
Section 43(a)(1)(B) applies only to statements that are false or misleading.
As DRG emphasizes in response, however, Allscripts was contractually bound by the Agreement at the time of the alleged statements. Indeed, whether DRG materially breached the Agreement such that Allscripts was discharged of its contractual obligation to provide EHR data to DRG is the subject of the instant dispute. DRG has, therefore, sufficiently alleged that the statements of Allscripts to DRG's customers regarding DRG's continued privilege to procure Allscripts' data were false or misleading.
A false or misleading statement must be placed in interstate commerce to be actionable pursuant to Section 43(a)(1)(B).
Allscripts submits that DRG cannot demonstrate the statements at issue were placed into interstate commerce because DRG fails to allege where, by whom and to whom the statements at issue were made. In its Complaint, however, DRG alleges that
Commerce, as defined in the Lanham Act, has been construed broadly to include false or misleading statements that "affect the sale of goods or services" in a manner that substantially affects interstate commerce in the aggregate even if made wholly intrastate.
Here, DRG has pled that Allscripts' statements were placed into interstate commerce by virtue of being made to Allscripts' customers throughout the country. DRG has further pled that Allscripts, a North Carolina corporation with its principal place of business in Illinois, contracted with DRG, a Delaware Corporation with its principal place of business in Massachusetts, and that the business models of both companies affect national medical research in the heavily federally-regulated healthcare industry. Drawing all reasonable inferences in DRG's favor, DRG has adequately alleged that Allscripts placed its statements into interstate commerce.
DRG moves pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 26 to enhance the protective order entered by this Court on September 11, 2019, ("the Protective Order"). DRG, by its own terms, seeks an "extremely limited enhancement" of the Protective Order to ensure the heightened confidentiality of a single document: "DRG's proprietary aggregate data product (the `Transformed Data Product')". According to DRG, the Transformed Data Product is "one of
Allscripts responds that DRG has failed to establish cause to enhance the Protective Order to prevent Allscripts' in-house attorneys from viewing the Transformed Data Product. Allscripts submits that such a modification would prevent its attorneys from being fully informed about key issues in the case such that their ability to represent their client would be compromised.
A party to a stipulated protective order seeking to modify the order must demonstrate good cause for modification.
Accordingly, DRG's motion to enhance the Protective Order will be denied.
For the forgoing reasons, the motion of plaintiff/counter-defendant Allscripts Healthcare, LLC to dismiss the claim of defendant/counter-claimant Decision Resources, LLC d/b/a Decision Resources Group ("DRG") for false and misleading statements in violation of Section 43(a)(1)(B) of the Lanham Act (Docket No. 34) is
Furthermore, the motion of DRG to enhance the Protective Order entered by this Court on September 11, 2019, (Docket No. 72) is