Christopher Yvars (Partner, Denver, CO) Kimberly Viergever (Of Counsel-Denver, CO), and Michael McCloskey (Senior Counsel-San Diego, CA) secured a complete defense victory for a national health care client in a commercial arbitration where the claimant sought more than $50 million in damages. The dispute centered on long-term services and nondisclosure agreements involving an alleged proprietary software platform, which claimant developed to streamline and enhance health care outcomes management for large-scale providers. The claimant alleged breach of contract and theft of trade secrets, asserting that the firm’s client had improperly used and disclosed confidential processes, data integration methods, and reporting functionalities unique to the claimant’s product. After a multi-day evidentiary hearing featuring testimony from technical experts and company executives, as well as extensive written submissions, the AAA Arbitration, Denver, Colorado, issued a final award denying all claims and dismissing the case in its entirety.
Christopher D. Yvars, Kimberly Viergever and Michael P. McCloskey
Daniel Coffman (Associate-Washington, DC), Anjali Das (Partner-Chicago, IL), David Ross (Partner-Washington, DC), Kim Viergever (Of Counsel-Denver, CO) and Ryan Williams (Partner-Denver, CO) obtained dismissal with prejudice of a federal data breach class action filed against a services vendor for mental health care providers in the District of Colorado. The case comprised eight consolidated class actions brought by 15 named plaintiffs that arose out of a ransomware incident that involved the personal information of almost 4.3 million individuals and included sensitive information such as health information and Social Security numbers. The court agreed that all of the named plaintiffs lack Article III standing, dissecting each of their alleged theories of harm and coming down on the side of the more reasoned courts that have found these types of theories fail to establish standing – public disclosure of private information, increased spam, diminution in value of PHI/PII, emotional distress and future harm. The court concluded that “Plaintiffs have failed to allege injuries in fact that are fairly traceable to the Defendants’ complained-of conduct,” and issued a judgment dismissing the plaintiffs’ claims with prejudice and closing the case.
Daniel R. Coffman, Anjali C. Das, David M. Ross, Kimberly Viergever and Ryan A. Williams