ALLENTOWN – Sherwin-Williams is seeking to protect from the dissemination of its confidential trade secrets in litigation brought by an Easton couple, who say they used one of its deck sealing products to stain their deck, before the product supposedly self-heated and caused a fire on their property.
Scott Mains and Andrea Mains of Easton first filed a complaint on Jan. 7 in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania against The Sherwin-Williams Co., of Cleveland, Ohio.
The Mains claimed they purchased Sherwin-Williams’ Thompson’s WaterSeal Penetrating Timber Oil for their deck and placed application materials with the product left on it on the lawn next to the deck.
They alleged that on Aug. 26, 2018, the application materials left on the lawn spontaneously caught on fire, causing extensive damage to the property. The Mains added the stain was defective and unreasonably dangerous, and that the product lacked adequate warnings and instructions.
On Feb. 27, Sherwin-Williams filed an answer to the Mains’ complaint, denying each of their claims in their entirety and countering with 42 affirmative defenses.
Among the forty-plus defenses were:
• The Mains’ lawsuit failing to state a claim against Sherwin-Williams upon which relief may be granted;
• If contributing negligence by the plaintiffs were discovered, then any recovery is barred pursuant to the Pennsylvania Comparative Negligence Act;
• Because of plaintiffs’ own contributory negligence, comparative negligence, assumption of the risk and/or because plaintiffs disregarded certain open and obvious risks; and
• Because their damages were proximately caused by an unforeseeable misuse, application, alteration, modification, and/or abuse of the Thompson’s WaterSeal Penetrating Timber Oil identified in the complaint.
UPDATE
Sherwin-Williams filed a motion on Dec. 23 seeking protective order and confidentiality in the instant action.
“Sherwin-Williams asks this Court to enter a confidentiality and protective order to prevent non-party State Farm Fire and Casualty Insurance Company from obtaining confidential trade secrets and other proprietary information that Sherwin-Williams expects to produce in discovery. State Farm is a non-party subrogating insurer that has authorized plaintiffs to pursue claims against Sherwin-Williams to recoup monies paid by State Farm to plaintiffs following a fire that damaged the plaintiffs’ home,” the motion stated.
“The parties agreed in the Joint Rule 26(f) Report that a confidentiality and protective order is necessary to protect the proprietary interests of Sherwin-Williams, but a dispute exists as to whether State Farm is entitled to access this information. Counsel for plaintiffs contends that State Farm is his ‘client’ and that he is ‘compelled’ to share confidential information with representatives at State Farm. This position is problematic because State Farm is not a party to the litigation, and its insurance agreement with plaintiffs cannot impose an obligation on Sherwin-Williams to disclose its confidential trade secrets. State Farm chose not to pursue Sherwin-Williams as a party, and has no ability compel public disclosure of confidential trade secrets.”
By virtue of the order, the motion asks to limit disclosure of protected information to the plaintiffs, testifying witnesses, and to any retained experts consistent with prevailing law.
“While Sherwin-Williams takes no position as to relevance and/or discoverability, it contends that any documents or materials containing this type of information are highly sensitive, proprietary, and constitute confidential trade secrets that warrant protection from disclosure to non-parties,” per the motion.
Without an order limiting public dissemination, including to non-party State Farm – the largest property and casualty insurer in the country and a regular litigant in fire-related subrogation claims – Sherwin-Williams will risk public disclosure of proprietary information related to its product development, chemical formulations, internal business operations, and other closely guarded trade secrets.”
For counts of strict liability, negligence and breach of implied warranty, the Mains are seeking monetary relief in excess of $75,000, plus interest, all other appropriate relief and a trial by jury.
The plaintiffs are represented by Kenneth Levine of de Luca Levine, in Blue Bell.
The defendant is represented by C. Tyler Havey, Ann T. Field and Eric C. Rosenberg of Gordon & Rees, in Philadelphia.
U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania case 5:20-cv-00112
From the Pennsylvania Record: Reach Courts Reporter Nicholas Malfitano at nick.malfitano@therecordinc.com