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EquipmentShare Denies Patent Infringement as Alleged in Ahern Rentals’ Lawsuit

Oct. 20, 2020
EquipmentShare denies patent infringement, stating that the mechanism described in the patent is not one that is utilized by EquipmentShare or described in its patent application.

Ahern Rentals, one of the nation’s leading providers of large-scale construction equipment, has filed a patent infringement lawsuit against rival EquipmentShare. In addition to accusing EquipmentShare of willfully infringing on Ahern’s patented technology, the lawsuit asserts that EquipmentShare has waged a four-year campaign of misinformation, trade-secret theft and employee poaching against Ahern.      

Ahern’s complaint, filed in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas, in Marshall, Texas, seeks damages as well as an injunction against EquipmentShare’s further exploitation of technology based on Ahern’s patent. EquipmentShare has denied that it has infringed on a patent, stating that the mechanism described in the patent is not one EquipmentShare has utilized.

Founded in 1953 and still family owned, Ahern Rentals provides a full range of large, specialized construction equipment including heavy-duty digging, high-reach, and landscaping machinery. Its customers include leading industrial and residential developers, as well as municipalities and owners of utility, hospitality, entertainment, sports and other large buildings and sites. Ahern operates nationally and has company-owned locations in more than 30 states.      

Missouri-based EquipmentShare was initially established to share rental equipment between owners and operators. News reports at the time described the company as aspiring to be the “Airbnb of construction.” However, when its equipment sharing model didn’t work, according to the lawsuit, the company was forced into the brick-and-mortar equipment-rental business, in direct competition with Ahern.      

According to Ahern’s complaint, EquipmentShare launched an ambitious plan to saturate the construction rental market by opening upwards of 100 locations a year until the company could be sold or go public. It took advantage of Ahern’s lack of non-compete agreements to poach 200 to 300 Ahern employees, leveraging Ahern trade secrets such as customer contact, sales, and pricing information, and bolstering this conduct with misleading and defamatory statements about Ahern.   

The patent at issue in Ahern’s lawsuit, U.S. Patent No. 9,133,330 and titled “Method and a System for Controlling and Monitoring Operation of a Device,” is owned by Ahern since rights were transferred to the company by its inventor, Daniel Abshire. The patent governs keyless digital technology that allows Ahern, as the equipment’s owner, to limit equipment use to the period of time authorized by Ahern and paid for by the renter. A pre-programmed authorization code goes into effect at the start of the rental period and expires at the end, after which the equipment no longer responds to attempts at operation. The technology also permits remote lockdown of the equipment if any attempt is detected to disable the authorization code. This technology, known generally as telematics, enables suppliers to prevent wear and tear – as well as unauthorized use – of rental equipment in the field or left on building sites.                     

EquipmentShare denied infringing on Ahern’s patent:

      “EquipmentShare is still in the process of reviewing the complaint,” said an EquipmentShare official in a statement. “It is clear from our initial review that there is no infringement because the mechanism described in the patent is not one that is utilized by EquipmentShare or described in any patent application. EquipmentShare has filed. In developing the ES Track platform, EquipmentShare determined that mechanisms similar to the one described in Ahern’s patent would not be a practical solution for our customers and we are not currently aware of any company that utilizes the claimed mechanism.

      “EquipmentShare is proud of its record of continuing to attract top quality employees and new customers by offering a superior working environment and better products and services than the competition. Instead of offering better working conditions and services to retain employees and customers, Ahern has instead resorted to filing multiple lawsuits against EquipmentShare and former Ahern employees in a transparent attempt to accomplish through litigation what it cannot through fair competition. EquipmentShare is confident that Ahern’s claims are without merit and that it will prevail against Ahern’s abusive litigation tactics."

       Ahern’s complaint alleges that around 2016 a pair of EquipmentShare executives, who had previously known and done business with Abshire and were aware of the ’330 patent, proposed a meeting between the inventor and EquipmentShare co-founder Jabbock Schlacks.       

       According to the complaint, EquipmentShare’s own remote monitoring technology had suffered recurrent glitches and the executives suggested to Schlacks that licensing or purchasing the ’330 patent would resolve the troubles. The complaint states that during the meeting, Schlacks peppered Abshire for several hours with technical questions, taking notes throughout on his laptop. The complaint further asserts he told Abshire that EquipmentShare was prepared to offer the inventor money and stock options for the rights to the ’330 patent.       

       Following the meeting, says the complaint, EquipmentShare halted further communication with Abshire – it stopped responding to his follow-up messages and dropped any pretense of buying or licensing the ’330 patent. Shortly thereafter, according to the lawsuit, EquipmentShare reportedly fixed the problems bugging its Track system and a special group the company had formed to tackle the glitches was disbanded.      

       Ahern’s lawsuit contends that the sudden fix was accomplished with information gleaned from the meeting with Abshire, and infringes on his ’330 patent. In a more brazen act, states the complaint, EquipmentShare filed its own patent application with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, describing functionality of its system that directly mimics Abshire’s patent. Its application failed to mention either the ’330 patent or the company’s meeting with Abshire, the lawsuit contends.       

     Lacking the resources to enforce his intellectual property rights on his own, Abshire assigned them to Ahern.       

     As the complaint describes, EquipmentShare reconfigured and corrected its Track system with methods taken from Daniel Abshire’s patent, which constitutes willful infringement of Ahern’s intellectual property rights.       

     An Ahern representative states, “The EquipmentShare Track system’s use of a dedicated authorization code for each piece of rental equipment, which either permits or prohibits its operation depending on whether the user enters the matching code, also induces patent infringement on the part of anyone who rents from EquipmentShare and uses the Track system.”        

      Ahern added, “EquipmentShare was established by people with little apparent experience in the industry, whose technology product did not work as planned. As a result, it moved into the rental sector and tried to copy Ahern’s hard-won, decades-long success through taking trade secrets. EquipmentShare’s shameless misappropriation of patent technology is only the latest maneuver by a company that does not seem to have the patience to try to earn market share. We will pursue our rights vigorously in court.”         

      The complaint is captioned Ahern Rentals, Inc. v. EquipmentShare.com, Inc. Ahern is represented in the lawsuit by the Dallas office of national law firm McKool Smith.           

      Ahern Rentals, based in Las Vegas, was founded in 1953. Through organic growth, Ahern is today the largest independent rental company in North America, with 94 locations.