Versa Products - Thrive Home Furnishings Sues Stitch Industries - Joybird Furniture - Joybird.com

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Versa Products / Thrive Home Furnishings Sues Stitch Industries / Joybird Furniture - Joybird.com Versa claims that former employees, Christopher Stormer, Joshua Stellin, Andres Hinostroza, and Alejandro Andres Del Toro (also known as Alex Del Toro) violated their employment contracts by stealing Thrive Furnitures’s resources and furniture designs to create a competing company, Joybird Furniture (Los Angeles, April 24, 2018) — Versa Products / Thrive Home Furnishings has filed a suit claiming that four former employees breached their fiduciary duties, as well as their duties of loyalty and confidentiality, to create a competitor, Stitch Industries and Joybird Furniture. According to Thrives’s complaint, beginning in 2012 those employees began to steal from their employer, a manufacturer of high-quality furniture for corporate, private, and publicsector clients. The employees are alleged to have used Thrive’s money, trade secrets, computer system, and customer data to create Stitch. The employees - Christopher Stormer, Joshua Stellin, Andres Hinostroza, and Alejandro Andres Del Toro (also known as Alex Del Toro), are claimed to have begun to work for their own company while still employed by Thrive, which they did not leave until the end of 2013. (Stitch was incorporated in Delaware in December 2013.) These four employees allegedly used Thrive’s money and their own hours as Thrives’s employees to develop a website, a logo, and a promotional video that they later used for their competing business. The website alone cost Thrive more than $90,000. In another example of the former employees’ injurious conduct, Thrive estimates that from January to May of 2014, they cost it $16.5 million in lost sales. The furniture business is highly competitive, which makes a company’s information about designs and fabrics very valuable. Thrive indicates in its suit that the former employees stole design information for 20 types of sofas, 47 types of chairs, 28 types of tables and desks, 19 designs of credenzas and other furniture for storage, 5 types of beds to start Joybird Furniture. To accomplish this, Thrive alleges that the defendants misappropriated Thrive’s database of computer design files, engineering schematics, frame designs, and fabric designs. Stitch allegedly began making identical pieces of furniture shortly before or soon after Stormer, Stellin, Hinostroza, and Del Toro left Thrive. In particular, Thrive’s complaint outlines how it spends many man-hours developing its furniture designs by use of a shared computer network and computer-aided design (CAD) system. Using this system, the company’s designers create initial designs, which are then developed into actual pieces of furniture. Using a computer network that can be accessed by mobile devices, employees may comment on the initial designs, leading to revisions. Further work in preparation of a final product includes frame design and such final touches as selection of hardware and fabrics. Fabric designs and patterns are especially valuable because well-designed fabric patterns waste a minimum of fabric. Completed designs, in turn, are turned into engineering schematics and computer files that are to be used in the automated construction of the


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