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11 June 2018
San Francisco
Reporter Jenna Lomax

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Fraud claims proceed to trial against FactSet

A San Francisco state court has ruled that fraud and breach of contract claims brought by plaintiff Ashbury Heights Capital against FactSet Research Systems, Revere Data and its founder, Doug Engmann are sufficiently supported by evidence and may proceed to trial.

The court denied the defendant’s motion for summary judgment, finding that a jury could find for Ashbury on all its claims.

Ashbury is founded by MIT graduates Eric McGill and Paul Mingardi.

According to the complaint, data partner Revere and its founder Doug Engmann, the former head of the Pacific Stock Exchange, misused Ashbury’s intellectual property to prop up its own sales, while hiding licensing revenues owed and fraudulently concealing other misuses of the technology.

The complaint stated Engmann then sold revere to market intelligence company FactSet Research Systems, which continued to use Ashbury’s intellectual property and represent to customers that it was licensed to do so without paying Ashbury.

Ashbury is seeking over $10 million plus punitive damages in excess of $30 million total.

At the core of the dispute is a patented methodology designed by Ashbury that helps predict how stock prices move, largely based on economic information and extrapolations from companies’ network of customer-supplier relationships.

In its ruling, the court found that enough evidence existed of Ashbury’s claims for theft of intellectual property, breach of contract, and fraud by Doug Engmann, FactSet and Revere that the matter should proceed to trial.

The court denied Defendant Engmann, FactSet and Revere’s motion for summary judgment in its entirety.

Eric McGill, Ashbury’s co-founder said: “Just because Engmann and FactSet have enormous resources at their disposal does not allow them to cheat their business partners.”

He added: “We are pleased that after years of delay by defendants, this action will finally be presented to a jury and we look forward to holding Engmann and FactSet accountable at trial.”

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