RECENT DEVELOPMENTS IN TRADE SECRETS LAW (1994-1996)
ARCHIVE OF OVER 100 CASES
R. Mark Halligan, Esq.
COPYRIGHT 1995-1996 R. MARK HALLIGAN, ESQ.




- Anacomp, Inc. v. Shell Knob Servs., 93 Civ. 4003 (PKL), 1994 U.S.
Dist. LEXIS 223 (1/10/94) (SDNY), aff'd 29 F.3d 621 (2nd Cir. 1994).
Preliminary injunction entered to protect trade secrets in certain manuals and
diagnostic computer software used to maintain and service computer output
microfilm (COM) recorders. In addition to manufacturing and selling the COM
equipment, Anacomp's business involves servicing, repairing and maintaining
COM equipment. Anacomp implemented extensive procedures to protect the secrecy
of its maintenance manuals and diagnostic software. A showing of irreparable
harm is usually considered the single most important requirement in
determining whether or not to issue a preliminary injunction. An irreparable
injury is one that can not be adequately addressed through a monetary award.
The Second Circuit has held that the loss of the trade secret is not
measurable in terms of money damages because "a trade secret once lost,
is, of course, lost forever." Furthermore, it has been held that the
potential loss of an industry leader's present market and loss of the
advantage of being the pioneer in the field and a market leader constitutes
irreparable harm. If defendants are permitted to continue to use the
proprietary information to maintain, refurbish and service Anacomp COM
recorders, Anacomp will lose its leadership position in the maintenance of its
own equipment. This loss of market leadership, like the loss of a trade
secret, cannot be compensated through money damages. Accordingly, Anacomp has
sufficiently demonstrated that it is likely to suffer irreparable harm and the
injunction was affirmed. The term "reverse engineering" is not
a talisman that may immunize the theft of trade secrets. The proper inquiry is
not whether defendants alleged trade secret can be discovered by reverse
engineering, but whether in fact it has been discovered by such means. PRELIMINARY
INJUNCTION GRANTED.
- In re Orion Pictures Corp., 21 F.3d 24 (2d Cir. 1994). The Second
Circuit affirmed the trial court's decision not to modify a protective order
which had sealed documents relating to a promotional agreement between a
Chapter 11 debtor (Orion Pictures) and a preferred licensee (McDonald's). The
Second Circuit, after weighing the presumptive right of public access to court
records against the commercial interest of the parties in secret information,
found that confidential commercial information does not have to rise to the
level of a trade secret in order to be protected by the Bankruptcy Code §
107(b)(1), which not only protects "trade secrets" but also
"confidential research, development, [and] commercial information."PROTECTIVE
ORDER GRANTED.
- U.S. Reinsurance Corp. v. Humphreys, 618 N.Y.S.2d 270 (1st Dept.
1994). The Supreme Court, Appellate Division reversed the trial court's denial
of preliminary injunctive relief: "On this state of the record, the need
for injunctive relief is overwhelmingly apparent." Humphreys was a former
officer and director of the plaintiff. Humphreys boasted to others that he
would take about $1 million in brokerage commissions away from the plaintiff.
Plaintiff sought a preliminary injunction to protect the trade secrets in its
unique reinsurance products developed over nearly four years. It was
undisputed that considerable effort was expended in developing these
proprietary insurance products. The Court observed that whether or not the
scheme was a "true innovation" or just a marketing strategy, the
record is nevertheless replete with evidence of plaintiff's efforts to
maintain confidentiality of the product.PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION GRANTED.
- Vermont Microsystems, Inc. v. Autodesk, Inc., 2:92-CV-309, 1994 U.S.
Dist. LEXIS 18737 (12/23/94) (D. Vt.). VMI filed suit for statutory and
punitive damages, injunctive relief, and attorney's fees against Autodesk for
trade secret misappropriation (by way of a former employee Berks). Applying
the California version of the Uniform Trade Secrets Act, the Court found the
existence of trade secrets and the misappropriation of trade secrets by
Autodesk. Misappropriation does not require that a party use a trade secret in
the precise form in which it was disclosed. The test is one of substantial
similarity (or identity). Computer software can constitute and contain trade
secret information. VMI's software, combining certain public domain and
non-public domain features, is a unique combination and a protectable trade
secret. Berks took VMI code, containing VMI's trade secrets, with him to
Autodesk and transferred it to Autodesk's own computers. Autodesk had reason
to know that Berks misappropriated VMI's proprietary technology. Autodesk's
use of VMI's trade secret display list architecture and component technologies
violated VMI's proprietary rights. The Court assessed damages at $25.5 million
based upon a measure of damages that this was the amount VMI would have
charged for the technology. Although the trade secret statute itself does not
define "willful and malicious" the Court concluded that it could not
find that Autodesk had the requisite malice or ill will when it
misappropriated VMI's trade secrets. Rather, the Court found that Autodesk was
grossly negligent in its misappropriation. $25.5 MILLION JUDGMENT FOR TRADE
SECRET MISAPPROPRIATION.
- Baron Consulting Co. v. Complete Envtl. Testing, Inc., CV94-0245421,
1994 Conn. Super. LEXIS 2144 (8/24/94). Trade secret misappropriation case
against three employees who started their own company. Plaintiff alleged that
it had built up substantial expertise, knowledge, trade secrets and customer
lists in connection with its business of chemical and environmental analysis
over 27 years. Three former employees formed their own company and the
plaintiff filed a trade secrets misappropriation case seeking injunctive
relief. The Court rejected the plaintiff's contention that the plaintiff's
customer list and negotiated price list constituted trade secrets. The Court
found that the only thing the ex-employees took with them was "their own
recollection of the discounts, any particular customer received off the list
price." Applying the Connecticut version of the Uniform Trade Secrets
Act, the Court concluded that the plaintiff had not provided satisfactory
proof that its customer list and negotiated price list deserve protection as a
trade secret. The Court found that the information which the plaintiff seeks
to restrict, seems to be precisely the kind of knowledge that employees
legitimately acquire through experience. Furthermore, it is information easily
discoverable in the yellow pages or trade directories. The open and ready
availability of the price list invites discounting in the competitive and
environmental testing market which is serviced by approximately 250 vendors.
It therefore was readily ascertainable by proper means by the defendants who
can obtain economic value from its use. PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION DENIED.
- Filstein v. Filshtein, CV93 070 47 23, 1994 Conn. Super. LEXIS 3149
(12/9/94). A lawsuit between former partners for trade secret
misappropriation. The Defendant refused to answer deposition questions because
it would cause the defendant to divulge trade secret information involving his
new business venture. Plaintiff in turn argued that the discovery was
necessary to show that the defendant misappropriated the plaintiff's trade
secrets. To successfully resist discovery of trade secret information, a party
must first demonstrate that the information sought constitutes trade secret
information. The Court found that the defendant had made such a showing. Next,
the burden shifts to the party seeking discovery to establish that the
disclosure of the information is relevant and necessary to the action.
Applying this standard, the Court concluded that this discovery was relevant
and necessary. The Court concluded that "the balance between the need for
information and the need for protection against the injury caused by
disclosure is tilted in favor of disclosure once relevance and necessity have
been shown". Applying this balancing test, the Court was unable to
conclude that the potential economic harm to the defendant outweighed the need
for disclosure of the requested relevant information. The Court ordered the
defendant answer the deposition questions.COURT ORDERS DEFENDANT TO ANSWER
DEPOSITION QUESTIONS.
- Arco Oil & Gas Co. v. DeShazer, 1994 La. App. LEXIS 2947 (La.
Ct. App. Nov. 2, 1994). Lawsuit between Arco and former petroleum engineer
(DeShazer). DeShazer and his engineering staff of approximately 16 to 20
engineers were responsible for the design and construction of the South Pass
60-B platform in the Gulf of Mexico. In May of 1987, DeShazer was
"involuntarily" retired. On March 19, 1989 an explosion and fire
occurred on this platform destroying the entire facility and killing several
workers. When DeShazer heard about the accident, he contacted Arco and offered
his assistance, but there was no reply. Subsequently, Arco sued Sonat who was
working on the 60-B platform at the time, and Sonat in turn hired DeShazer as
a consultant in the Arco/Sonat litigation. Arco sought a temporary restraining
order, prohibiting DeShazer from serving as a consultant to Sonat and damages
for his breach of employment contract. After granting a temporary restraining
order preventing DeShazer from serving as a consultant to Sonat, the trial
court later dissolved that order and denied Arco's request for a temporary
injunction. The trial court based its decision on its finding that the
information DeShazer disclosed to Sonat's attorney's was public knowledge and
available through other means. The Louisiana Appellate Court agreed, holding
that a public hearing held by the Mineral Management Service as to the cause
of the fire, in which Arco presented testimony and exhibits, destroyed any
confidentiality status in the alleged trade secret information. FORMER
EMPLOYEE CAN BE EXPERT WITNESS AGAINST FORMER EMPLOYER.
- Corrosion Specialties and Supply, Inc. v. Dicharry, 631 So.2d 1389
(La. Ct. App.), cert. denied, 635 So.2d 242 (1994). The trial court
granted a preliminary injunction enjoining the defendants from manufacturing,
selling, marketing, displaying and/or distributing certain sealed globed
valves. The plaintiff had approached the defendants to manufacture the valves
and had provided designs, drawings, the names of his customers and other
information to the defendants for evaluation purposes. After negotiations
broke down, the defendants continued to proceed with designing and
manufacturing the valves. On appeal, the defendants contended that the trial
court erred in finding that there was a trade secret under the Louisiana
Uniform Trade Secrets Act. Defendants argued that the valves were unpatented
and were available to defendants on the open market. Also, the design
information requested by the defendants was information that was necessary for
the valves to conform to industry specifications. The Appellate Court affirmed
the entry of preliminary injunctive relief because the plaintiff had made a
prime facie showing that it had entered into a confidential
relationship with the defendants and had shared information developed through
a substantial investment of time, effort and money with the defendants in that
confidential relationship.PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION AFFIRMED.
- Omnitech International, Inc. v. Clorox Co., 11 F.3d 1316 (5th Cir.),
cert. denied, ___ U.S. ___, 115 S. Ct. 71, 130 L. Ed 2d 26 (1994).
Omnitech's trade secret claims against Clorox were dismissed as a matter of
law by the trial court and Omnitech appealed. The trial court found that
Omnitech did not own any trade secrets (The "Dr. X" formula had
originally been developed by the military) and, even if these
were trade secrets, there was legally insufficient evidence of
misappropriation. The Fifth Circuit affirmed. Omnitech had shared its alleged
trade secrets and business information with Clorox during negotiations for a
potential venture or sale of assets to Clorox. Negotiations broke down and
Clorox thereafter entered the insecticide market through another acquisition
of a division of American Cyanamid. There was no direct evidence at trial of
trade secret misappropriation. Further, the Court of Appeals found
"absolutely no evidence" that Clorox took the information obtained
from Omnitech and used it to implement their new "Combat" product
line. The Court of Appeals concluded as follows: At best, and as Omnitech
conceded at oral argument, Omnitech claims that its trade secrets made Clorox
"smarter" about the market in investigating the potential Combat
purchase. Certainly "misappropriation" of a trade secret means more
than simply using knowledge gained through a variety of experiences, including
analyses of possible target companies, to evaluate a potential purchase. To
hold otherwise would lead to one of two unacceptable results: (i) every time a
company entered into preliminary negotiations for a possible purchase of
another company's assets in which the acquiring company was given limited
access to the target's trade secrets, the acquiring party would effectively be
precluded from evaluating other potential targets; or (ii) the acquiring
company would, as a practical matter, be forced to make a purchase decision
without the benefit of examination of the target company's most important
assets-its trade secrets. We believe that Louisiana's trade secrets laws were
not designed to go this far.11 F.3d at 1325.TRADE SECRET CLAIMS DISMISSED.
- Cockerham v. Kerr-McGee Chemical Corp., 23 F.3d 101 (5th Cir. 1994).
Plaintiff, a fill dirt supplier, alleged that it had disclosed proprietary
information "in confidence" to a Kerr-McGee representative regarding
the location of commercially marketable fill dirt on Kerr-McGee's property and
Kerr McGee thereafter disclosed this information without the plaintiff's
authorization or consent. The Fifth Circuit, applying the Mississippi common
law of trade secrets, concluded that the location of the fill dirt site was
readily ascertainable, and even assuming that the location of the dirt supply
was a trade secret. it was not disclosed to a competitor of Plaintiff and
therefore, as a matter of law, there was no liability for trade secret
misappropriation. The trial court's entry of summary judgment was affirmed.TRADE
SECRET CLAIMS DISMISSED.
- Garth v. Staktek Corp., 876 S.W.2d 545 (Tex. App.--Austin 1994, writ
dism'd w.o.j.). The question presented on appeal was whether a temporary
injunction should be upheld against a corporation and an individual who would
otherwise continue to make use of certain trade secrets obtained through a
prior confidential relationship. Garth, Burns and Campbell formed a joint
venture in January, 1990 to produce a certain three-dimensional memory package
for computer applications. After Burns had made some important breakthroughs
in product design, the joint venture dissolved. Burns and Campbell formed
Staktek Corporation to produce Burns' memory module. In turn, Garth joined RTB
Technology, Inc. (RTB) to proceed with a competing product. Thereafter,
Staktek brought suit against RTB. The trial court issued a temporary
injunction and RTB appealed. On appeal, RTB argued that the public disclosure
of a patent abstract in Brussels on February 20, 1992 vitiated any trade
secret rights. RTB also argued that its activities in the design of a
competing product did not constitute "commercial use" for purposes
of finding a misappropriation of trade secrets. The Texas Court of Appeals
rejected both arguments. Any misappropriation of trade secrets, followed by an
exercise of control and dominion, is considered a commercial use. The trial
court found that RTB had used Burns' trade secrets to develop its competing
product before the Brussels publication. RTB's "use" of trade
secrets before such information was allegedly disclosed to the public is a
wrongful act that makes imminent financial harm from unfair competition
clearly foreseeable. An irreparable injury exists when unfair competition
deprives the initial producer of a fair opportunity to market its product.
Lost opportunity to gain control of a new market may result in unquantifiable
losses for which there is no adequate remedy of law. In technological
industries, the design stage and the start-up phase provide the creator of a
new device a period in which to market the new product before potential
competitors are able to copy the technology. By appropriating Staktek's
confidential information before its publication, RTB was able to prepare to
enter the market at the same time as Staktek, and thus could deprive Staktek
of the competitive advantage offered by the normal developmental period.
Additionally, a single industrial standard generally dominates the market for
computer components. The trial court found that only one product is likely to
survive, and that RTB's licensing a competing product with major manufacturers
would probably destroy Staktek's opportunity to develop the standard and
market its product. To provide any real protection in situations in which the
competing company uses the creator's trade secrets to concurrently develop a
similar product, injunctive relief beyond the date the company creating the
technology publicizes its product is an appropriate remedy. PRELIMINARY
INJUNCTION AFFIRMED.
- Stewart & Stevenson Services, Inc. v. Serv-Tech, Inc., 879
S.W.2d 89 (Tex. App.--Houston [14th Dist.] 1994, writ denied). A $17.5 million
dollar judgment for trade secret misappropriation which included a $5 million
dollar award of attorney's fees against one of the defendants was appealed.
One of the principal issues on appeal was the validity of a "confidential
information" jury instruction that stated although given information is
not a trade secret, one who receives the information in a confidential
relation or discovers it by improper means may be under some duty not to
disclose or use that information. The Court of Appeals reviewed the case law
and concluded that in prior cases involving confidential relationships, the
defendant always gained knowledge of a trade secret while it was still secret.
The Court of Appeals could not discern any support for a separate cause of
action for misappropriation of confidential information that is not a secret. NO
SEPARATE CAUSE OF ACTION FOR MISAPPROPRIATION OF "CONFIDENTIAL
INFORMATION."
- Curtis 1000, Inc. v. Suess, 24 F.3d 941; 1994 U.S. App. Lexis 10866
(7th Cir. 1994). Where customers of a business which sold customized
stationery and office products were readily obtainable through the yellow
pages, mailing lists, trade publications, association memberships and
directories, association endorsements, or simply by driving down the street,
information did not fall within the definition of a "trade secret"
under Illinois law. There was thus no likelihood of success on the merits, and
the business was not entitled to a preliminary injunction to prevent a former
sales representative from violating a noncompete agreement. The court found
that, unlike the Elmer Miller case, the customers and pricing
information could be readily duplicated from a variety of sources.CUSTOMER
LIST NOT A TRADE SECRET.
- Sokol Crystal Products Inc. v. DSC Communications Corp., 15 F.3d
1427; 1994 U.S. App. Lexis 2163; 29 U.S.P.Q.2D (BNA) 1756, (7th Cir. 1994).
Discovery of trade secret misappropriation does not occur until the plaintiff
has knowledge of the misuse, as opposed to an abstract concern or suspicion,
citing Intermedics Inc. v. Ventritex, Inc., 775 F. Supp. 1258, 1266
(N.D. Cal. 1991), and construing Wisconsin's version of the Uniform Trade
Secrets Act (which has identical statute of limitations language).KNOWLEDGE
OF MISUSE NECESSARY TO COMMENCE STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS.
- Computer Care v. Service Systems Enterprises, Inc., 982 F.2d 1063
(7th Cir. 1992). District Court granted preliminary injunction on Computer
Care's trade secret claims and the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals reversed.
Computer Care's business consists of computerized follow-up of car care to
generate business for car dealerships and other car repair businesses. The
Court of Appeals concluded from a review of the record that Computer Care
failed to demonstrate that any of its alleged trade secrets are not
either "within the realm of general skills and knowledge" in the car
service industry or "readily duplicated without involving considerable
time, effort or expense."
- Noddings Investment Group, Inc. v. Kelley, 1994 U.S. Dist. Lexis
3246 (N.D. Ill. March 17, 1994). Trade secrets and unfair competition case:
Defendant Brian Kelley was formerly employed by Noddings, a managing director
and executive vice president. Kelley left and started his own business in
competition with his former employer. Plaintiff moved for the entry of a
preliminary injunction. The case was referred to Magistrate Judge Ronald B.
Guzman and Magistrate Judge Guzman recommended that a preliminary injunction
issue on the trade secrets claim. District Judge Charles P. Kocoras affirmed.
The alleged trade secrets involved certain investment strategies called the
Noddings Seasonality Trading Rules ("NSTR"). The contested issue was
whether the Plaintiff took sufficient precautions to avoid disclosure of the
trade secret. The Court held that whether reasonable precautions were taken in
to be decided on a case-by-case basis. Although Noddings did not use written
confidentiality agreements, this was not fatal because under Illinois law,
employees owe a duty to employers to keep information confidential, even
absent a confidentiality agreement. The Court found that limiting disclosure
on a need-to-know basis to four or five persons who were "high corporate
officers" was sufficient to establish reasonable precautions under the
factual circumstances presented in the case.REASONABLE MEASURES TO PROTECT
TRADE SECRETS.
- Venango River Corp. v. NIPSCO Industries, 1994 U.S. Dist. Lexis 2700
(N.D. Ill. March 8, 1994). Conflict of Laws Analysis: Illinois courts
generally apply the law of the Defendant's principal place of business in
cases involving the misappropriation of trade secrets because that is where
the information was used or the benefit obtained, and thus, where the wrong
was committed. Although the plaintiff's principal place of business is in
Illinois and clearly, the injury occurred in Illinois, this factor is not
given significant weight in trade secret cases. Because Indiana law governs
plaintiff's misappropriation claims, plaintiff's cannot state a claim under
Illinois law. Report and Recommendation by Magistrate Judge Elaine B. Bucklo.CONFLICT
OF LAWS ANALYSIS.
- IDS Financial Services, Inc. v. Smithson, 834 F. Supp. 415 (N.D.
Ill. 1994). Smithson resigned from his position as a personal financial
planner representing IDS. Smithson signed a one-year covenant not-to-compete
agreement. Smithson went to work at Sun America as a financial planner.
Smithson copied the IDS files of his best customers. Applying Minnesota law,
the court found a likelihood of success on the restrictive covenant claims and
also a likelihood of success under the Illinois Trade Secrets Act because the
ITSA protects IDS's interest in confidential information, such as customer
identity, addresses and financial data. The threatened injury to IDS outweighs
the threatened harm the injunction may inflict on Smithson. Smithson is not
precluded from engaging in the business of financial planning itself. The
injunction does not prevent Smithson from dealing with new clients he acquires
independently. Furthermore, the conduct prohibited by the injunction is only
conduct that is unfair to begin with. Smithson agreed to abide by the terms of
the restrictive covenant when he began working with IDS and cannot now
complain that he is thereby harmed unfairly by it. Opinion by Judge Norgle.RESTRICTIVE
COVENANT TO PROTECT TRADE SECRETS ENFORCED.
- Elmer Miller, Inc. v. Landis, 253 Ill. App. 3d 129, 625 N.E.2d 338,
192 Ill. Dec. 378 (1st Dist. 1993). Preliminary injunction enjoining former
salesmen of a Elmer Miller, Inc. ("EMI") from soliciting any
customers of EMI affirmed. EMI purchased the Richard Bennett custom tailor
shop in Chicago for $70,000. $10,000 was allocated to inventory and $60,000
was allocated to the value of the business, including a list of customers and
customer files. The court found that only employees who needed to know the
information had access to it, that the customer files contained a high
percentage of active, repeat customers making the list valuable to a
competitor, that the customer files contained personal style and fabric
preferences for individual customers, that the list could not be easily
duplicated by the competitor, and most importantly, that the plaintiff alleged
that the defendants improperly took part of the customer list when they quit.
In Elmer Miller, the court distinguished cases where a telephone
directory could be used to find such things as restaurants or businesses that
needed cleaning services or office support from the cases involving customer
lists from a custom tailor business who needed a more particularized service.
The court found that the employer's competitors could not duplicate the
employer's list without a significant exposure of time, effort, and expense
and that the list was secret enough that Elmer Miller derived economic
value from it.CUSTOMER LIST PROTECTED AS TRADE SECRET.
- C&F Packing Co. v. IBP, Inc., 1994 U.S. Dist. Lexis 973 (N.D.
Ill. Jan. 26, 1994). Judge Ann Claire Williams. Suit alleging that Pizza Hut
misappropriated the secret process that C&F Packing Co. developed for
making precooked sausage thus denying C&F the full commercial benefits
from its "unique and revolutionary" process. The Defendants' place
of domicile was Kansas, the location of the tortious conduct was Illinois, the
relationship of the parties did not favor either Kansas or Illinois. The Court
concluded that Kansas law governs: "In cases involving the
misappropriation of trade secrets and allegations of unfair competition,
Illinois courts have long given special weight to one contact - the principal
place of the defendant's business. Mergenthaler Linotype Co. v. Leonard
Storch Enterprises, Inc., 66 Ill. App. 3d 789, 383 N.E.2d 1379, 1389, 23
Ill. Dec. 352 (Ill. App. 1978); Wilson v. Electro Marine Systems, Inc.,
915 F.2d 1110, 1115 (7th Cir. 1990). As the court explained in Mergenthaler,
this contact is particularly important because "that is, where the
information was used or the benefit of the use by the defendant was
enjoyed."CONFLICT OF LAWS ANALYSIS.
- Barr-Mullin, Inc. v. Browning, 108 N.C. App. 590, 424 S.E.2d 226
(1993). Plaintiff formerly employed Defendant as a software developer to
create "a lumber optimization system" to maximize the amount of
lumber cut from each log. After leaving Plaintiff's employ, Defendant
developed and marketed competing software. Plaintiff brought suit, alleging
misappropriation of trade secrets contained in the software source code, and
moved for a preliminary injunction. Defendant argued that the software could
not contain trade secrets since it was widely distributed in object code form,
which it was possible to reverse engineer. The court concluded that
distribution in object code form alone did not negate trade secret protection
because of the great difficulty in obtaining useful source code by reverse
engineering the object code version. The court granted a preliminary
injunction, based upon testimony that it would have been virtually impossible
to have created the competing software, based solely on reverse engineering
Plaintiff's software.COMPUTER SOFTWARE PROTECTED AS TRADE SECRET.
- Snead v. Redlen Aggregates, Ltd., 998 F.2d 1325 (5th Cir. 1993).
Plaintiff secured a nondisclosure agreement from Defendant representing that
it had obtained or was in the process of obtaining a patent on a particular
product. However, no such patent existed or was applied for. The court found
that the information that was conveyed to the Defendant was not a trade secret
and that the nondisclosure agreement was obtained by fraud and therefore had
no effect.NONDISCLOSURE AGREEMENT UNENFORCEABLE.
- Phillips v. Frey, 20 F.3d 623; 1994 U.S. App. Lexis 10407; 30
U.S.P.Q.2D (BNA) (5th Cir. 1994). It was not plain error to find that
prospective purchasers of a business which manufactured hunting tree stands
misappropriated the business owner's trade secret manufacturing process. The
prospective purchasers induced the owner to disclose the process by assuring
him that getting financing for the purchase would be easy. In fact, the
prospective purchasers never even applied for a loan. Court reaffirms
principle that trade secret owner will not lose trade secret rights if the
trade secret owner reveals the information to another in confidence and under
implied obligation not to use or disclose it.DUTY OF CONFIDENCE.
- Pioneer Hi-Bred International v. Holden Foundation Seeds Inc., 35
F.3d 1226; 1994 U.S. App. Lexis 16965; 31 U.S.P.Q.2D (BNA) 1385; 39 Fed. R.
Evid. Serv. 2d (Callaghan) 993. It was proper for the district court to infer
trade secret misappropriation of the genetic make-up of seed corn based on the
finding that seed sold by the defendant was derived from the plaintiff's
parent seed, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit held July 12,
affirming a $46 million damages award to the plaintiff. The court also held
that the misappropriation constituted "reverse palming off" in
violation of Section 43(a) of the Lanham Act, that the Plant Variety
Protection Act does not preempt the trade secret claims, and that prejudgment
interest was properly denied in view of the length of the proceedings and size
of the judgment. Judge Morris Sheppard Arnold concurred with the majority,
except with respect to the prejudgment interest issue.MISAPPROPRIATION OF
TRADE SECRETS CONSTITUTES "REVERSE PALMING OFF" IN VIOLATION OF
SECTION 43(a), LANHAM ACT.
- General Electric Co. v. Chien-Min Sung, 843 F. Supp. 776; 1994 U.S.
Dist. Lexis 553; 29 U.S.P.Q.2D (BNA) 1936, (D. Mass. 1994). Trade secret
protection extends not only to misappropriated trade secrets but also to
materials "substantially derived" from trade secret. An injunction
for trade secret violations may not only bar the use of the misappropriated
information but also bar production which the information facilitates where
the information is "inextricably connected" to such manufacture, the
U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts ruled Jan 4. imposing an
injunction against the production of saw-grade diamond for commercial sale,
the court explained that defendant had no pre-existing and independently
developed manufacturing process of its own, and could not be relied upon to
"unlearn" or abandon the misappropriated technology.BROAD
INJUNCTION TO COVER MATERIALS "SUBSTANTIALLY DERIVED" FROM TRADE
SECRET.
- Diversified Technology Inc. v. Dubin, 156 F.R.D. 132; 1994 U.S.
Dist. Lexis 14331; 31 U.S.P.Q.2D (BNA) 1692, (S.D. Miss. 1994). Sanctions:
Trade secret misappropriation. Plaintiff's failure to comply with court order
requiring plaintiff to identify, in writing, exact trade secrets at issue
warrants imposition of sanction precluding plaintiff from introducing any
evidence at trial regarding those trade secrets.SANCTIONS FOR FAILURE TO
IDENTIFY TRADE SECRETS.
- Rivendell Forest Products Ltd. v. Georgia-Pacific Corp., 28 F.3d
1042; 1994 U.S. App. Lexis 16307; 31 U.S.P.Q.2D (BNA) 1472, (10th Cir. 1994).
Computer Software System: Plaintiff lumber wholesaler's showing that its
computer software system integrates many computations regarding lumber so as
to provide immediate final pricing for customer, and that its system was only
system in industry to accomplish that task, is sufficient to preclude summary
judgment holding that system is not protectable as trade secret.COMPUTER
SOFTWARE PROTECTABLE AS TRADE SECRET.
- Amoco Production Co. v. Laird, 622 N.E.2d 912; 1993 Ind. Lexis 152;
62 U.S.L.W. 2294; 30 U.S.P.Q.2D (BNA) 1515, (Ind. 1993). Readily
Ascertainable: Showing that information is not "readily
ascertainable by proper means" does not require showing that measures to
duplicate or acquire information would not be economically feasible. This
standard is satisfied if duplication or acquisition requires substantial
investment of time, expense, or effort.TEST FOR "READILY
ASCERTAINABLE" STANDARD.
- Jensen v. Sandy City Redevelopment Agency, 998 F.2d 1550; 1993 U.S.
App. Lexis 23813; 30 U.S.P.Q.2D (BNA) 1032; 26 Fed. R. Serv. 3d (Callaghan)
457, July 15, 1993. Information regarding plaintiffs' proposed "auto
mall" was generally known, in that auto mall is not unique concept or
novel idea, and became "public" under state law after plaintiffs
disclosed it to municipality, and thus cannot be considered trade secret.GENERALLY
KNOWN INFORMATION NOT PROTECTABLE.
- Ashland Management v. Janien, 82 N.Y.2d 395; 624 N.E.2d 1007; 1993
N.Y. Lexis 3935; 604 N.Y.S.2d 912; 29 U.S.P.Q.2D (BNA) 1059 (1993).
Mathematical Model: Plaintiff's computerized mathematical model
"Alpha," used to analyze selected financial information and make
initial determination of which stocks should be bought and sold, is not trade
secret, in view of evidence showing that six financial criteria used by
"Alpha" were public knowledge, and that any financial analyst could,
based upon such public knowledge, reproduce calculations used by
"Alpha" without access to internal computer commands which
constitute "Alpha" software.MATHEMATICAL MODEL NOT A TRADE
SECRET.
- Play Bac S.A. v. Western Publishing Co., Inc., 31 USPQ 2nd 1338
(SDNY - Dec. 22 1993). Play Bac filed a complaint to enjoin Western from
selling, marketing or advertising an educational question-and-answer game
based upon misappropriation of trade secrets used in its own game. Western
moved for summary judgment on the grounds that the information disclosed by
Play Bac was not a trade secret and that even if the information did have
trade secret status, Western did not misappropriate any information in
designing its competing product. The parties stipulated that Wisconsin law
applied to the trade secret claims. Construing the Wisconsin Trade Secrets
Act, the district court concluded that there was sufficient evidence to create
a factual issue regarding this trade secret status of the "game
concept" information. "Know-how" in the context of trade secret
law, is the informational and experimental experience which can be applied to
a product. Where the secret use of such know-how creates a competitive
advantage, the know-how may be considered a trade secret. Such information may
often include marketing methods and pricing strategy. Moreover, while
individual elements of an idea might be well-known in the industry or
generally known, the combination of otherwise well-known principles may
be a trade secret. In the case of plaintiff's "game concept", the
principles and techniques for formulating and selecting the questions and
answers and the reasons behind the specific marketing strategies chosen may
all be considered "know-how" and may merit trade secret protection.
There is no support in Wisconsin law for the proposition that the mere failure
to sign non-disclosure agreements as a matter of law means that the holder of
the trade secrets failed to take reasonable measures to safeguard the
information. The relevant question is whether, under the circumstances, the
measures taken were reasonable. There is no direct evidence that Play Bac made
any attempt to preserve the confidentiality of the information it disclosed to
Western. However, there is evidence that Play Bac considered the information
confidential and reasonably assumed that Western had agreed to respect its
confidentiality. MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT DENIED.
- Northwest Airlines, Inc. v. American Airlines, Inc., 853 F.Supp.
1110 (D.Minn. 1994). In 1989 and 1990, Northwest began to reevaluate its yield
management system and decided to make an investment in improving it. Between
November, 1990 and approximately April, 1992, Northwest hired 17 former
employees from American's finance and yield management department. Northwest
argued that it was entitled to summary judgment on American's misappropriation
claim because any information obtained from American was generally known,
readily ascertainable and available in the public domain. Northwest contended
that the "exponential smoothing equations" and other information
were available in textbooks in the industry literature. American in turn
argued that its yield management information has tremendous economic value and
is responsible for yearly revenue increases of $100 million. While some
mundane types of information are shared between airlines, no technical data or
equations are shared. The court concluded that American has produced enough
evidence to create a genuine issue of material fact considering whether the
information brought to Northwest was generally known or readily ascertainable.
The existence of a trade secret is not negated merely because an employee or
other person has acquired the trade secret without express or specific notice
that it is a trade secret. Given the level of sophistication and technical
expertise of the employees that went to Northwest, the court cannot say that
as a matter of law that the measures taken by American did not give the
employees reason to know that American intended or expected the secrecy of
these types of information to be maintained.MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
DENIED.
- Vigoro Industries, Inc. v. Cleveland Chemical Company of Arkansas, Inc.,
866 F.Supp. 1150 (E.D. Ark., W.Div., 1994). The Plaintiff owned a farm market
which served the needs of farmers in the area by selling primarily fertilizer,
insecticides and seeds at the retail level. The General Manager left with
twelve employees and joined a competitor. A lawsuit was filed for trade secret
misappropriation. After a 7-day bench trial the District Court found that
there was no evidence that the former employees took anything in writing from
Vigoro when they left. Any "trade secrets" which were
misappropriated must have existed in the minds of the former employees. The
Court then identified the specific alleged trade secrets and found that the
identity of the farmers in the area was not a trade secret, the results of
soil samples that Vigoro performed free of charge for its customers were not
protectable trade secrets, that credit information about customers was not a
protectable trade secret because such information had a short shelf life and
could be obtained from a credit bureau and that other information about
product sales to a particular farmer was readily ascertainable information and
not the type of information that the Trade Secrets Act was intended to
protect. JUDGMENT ENTERED IN FAVOR OF THE DEFENDANTS.
- Pate v. National Fund Raising Consultants, Inc., 20 F.3d 341 (8th
Cir. 1994). The issue on appeal is whether certain alleged proprietary
information shared by NFRC in a franchise relationship constituted protectable
trade secrets. A jury verdict was returned in favor of NFRC. Under Colorado
law, the question whether something constitutes a trade secret is a question
of fact for the trial court. Citing the six factors in the Restatement of
Torts Section 759, the Eighth Circuit concluded that the materials shared in
the franchise relationship were a collection of time-and-cost saving measures
which the defendant used to generate substantial income in a short period of
time. There was also testimony that the NFRC materials and training would be
very difficult to duplicate. Accordingly, the jury verdict was affirmed.JURY
VERDICT FINDING TRADE SECRET MISAPPROPRIATION AFFIRMED.
- 205 Corporation v. Brandow, 517 N.W.2d 548 (Iowa 1994). Brandow was
hired to manage the plaintiff's restaurant and was provided with recipes for
the tavern's pizza sauce, pizza crust and grinder sandwiches. The secret
recipes for pizza sauce and grinders were known only to certain employees.
Brandow's employment was terminated and Brandow subsequently provided pizza
and grinder recipes to his new employer Mustard's Restaurant. A jury verdict
was returned in favor of the former employer for trade secret misappropriation
and on appeal to the Iowa Supreme Court, the verdict was affirmed. The court
found that there was adequate evidence in the record to support the verdict.
The exact amount of specific ingredients found in the recipes could not be
obtained without access to prohibitively expensive chemical analysis
machinery. Further, even if the core ingredients were determinable, the exact
assembly and baking process used could not be determined. JURY
VERDICT FINDING TRADE SECRET MISAPPROPRIATION AFFIRMED.
- Zawels v. Edutronics, Inc., 520 N.W.2d 520 (Minn.App. 1994).
Edutronics was found liable for misappropriating Zawels' trade secrets in a
computer-based interactive teaching system used to create a "virtually
identical" system. Under Minnesota Trade Secrets Act, the trial court
granted an award of treble damages for "wilful and malicious"
misappropriation. On appeal, the Minnesota Court of Appeals affirmed the award
of punitive damages holding that the Minnesota Trade Secrets Act
"prevails over" the general statutory provisions in Minnesota law
for an award of punitive damages in other types of cases. The trial court's
findings -- that Edutronics knew that the information it received from Zawels
was confidential but that Edutronics nonetheless took the information and used
it to create a virtually identical system -- was sufficient to find that the
conduct was "willful and malicious" for an award of exemplary
damages and attorney's fees under the Minnesota Trade Secrets Act.PUNITIVE
DAMAGES AWARD AFFIRMED.
- Intermedics, Inc. v. Ventritex, Inc., 822 F. Supp. 634 (N.D. Cal.
1993). Case of First Impression. Issue: Under California law,
when a cause of action accrues against a given defendant for misappropriation
of some alleged trade secrets or confidential information, does the statute of
limitations also begin to run from that time on possible claims against the
same defendant for misappropriation of other alleged trade secrets or
confidential information, without regards to whether there is evidence that
the defendant has disclosed or used any of those other alleged secrets? This
is an issue of first impressions. Holding: In the circumstances
presented here, however, where all the alleged trade secrets (or confidential
information) are related to one highly specialized and complex product whose
features and components are interdependent, where plaintiff alleges that all
the trade secrets (or confidential information) were acquired during the same
period, by the same two defendants, and from the same source (plaintiff),
where all the alleged misappropriations were committed in connection with the
development by those same defendants of one or two similar products for a
known competitor, and where misappropriation of those alleged trade secrets as
to which the statute clearly has run would have constituted such a clear
breach of the confidential relationship that a plaintiff who had actual or
constructive knowledge of the misappropriation would have been on notice that
its other confidences were at risk, we hold that when the statute of
limitations began to run on claims for misappropriation of some of the alleged
trade secrets it simultaneously began running as to claims for alleged
misappropriations of the other, related secrets, even if no acts of
misappropriation of the other secrets had yet occurred.STATUTE OF
LIMITATIONS BEGINS TO RUN EVEN THOUGH NO ACTS OF MISAPPROPRIATION HAVE YET
OCCURRED.
- Liberty Mutual Ins. Co. v. Arthur J. Gallagher & Co., No.
94-3384, 1994 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 18412 (N.D. Cal. December 19, 1994). Liberty
Mutual sued a former insurance salesman for trade secret misappropriation and
breach of a non-solicitation agreement. The non-solicitation agreement
prohibited solicitation of business from Liberty Mutual policyholders within a
25-mile radius for 18 months. The Court held that anti-solicitation clauses
will be upheld to the extent necessary to prevent the misappropriation of
trade secrets. Anti-solicitation clauses are less draconian than the absolute
bar of covenants not to compete. Applying the California version of the
Uniform Trade Secrets Act, the Court evaluated the alleged trade secrets and
concluded that certain information -- premium information and renewal
information -- qualify as trade secrets, and the Court issued a preliminary
injunction to enforce the non-solicitation agreement to prevent disclosure or
use of these items of information.NON-SOLICITATION AGREEMENT ENFORCEABLE TO
PROTECT TRADE SECRETS.
- Navistar Int'l Transp. Corp. v. State Bd. of Equalization, 884 P.2d
108 (Cal. 1994). One of the issues before the California Supreme Court in this
case was whether the sale of documents embodying trade secrets is a transfer
of tangible personal property and thus taxable, or whether the intellectual
content of the documents render the sale a nontaxable transfer of intangible
property. The court held that such documents constitute tangible personal
property and their transfer was a taxable event.TRADE SECRET DOCUMENTS ARE
TAXABLE TANGIBLE PERSONAL PROPERTY.
- Ex Parte General Motors Acceptance Corp., 631 So.2d 990 (Ala. 1994).
General Motors petitioned the Supreme Court of Alabama for a writ of mandamus
to order the trial judge to reinstate the original, more-restrictive version
of a protective order prohibiting the Attorney General's office from showing
any documents marked "confidential" to any expert witness who was an
"employee or ex-employee of General Motors or a GMAC Dealer, any
competitor of GMAC, or any entity that offers financial services." Later,
the Order was modified to permit disclosure to certain financial analysts that
were not in direct competition with GMAC's automobile financing. General
Motors argued that this more liberal order would result in leaks about its
"Mechanized Application Processing System" and the loss of its trade
secrets would occur without just compensation and in violation of due process
of law. The Supreme Court of Alabama denied the writ of mandamus finding that
certain past and present GM and GMAC employees and certain types of financial
analysts made up the only class of experts with the ability to understand the
subpoenaed materials.WRIT OF MANDAMUS TO PROTECT TRADE SECRETS DENIED.
- Soap Co. v. Ecolab, Inc., 646 So.2d 1366, 1994 WL 503317 (Ala.
1994). Former employee (Anderson) left Ecolab to form The Soap Company.
Thereafter, Anderson went to Ecolab after business hours and removed documents
from a trash dumpster shared by Ecolab and other companies. The trial court
granted summary judgment in favor of Anderson and the Alabama Supreme Court
reversed stating it is up to the trier of fact to determine whether the
discarded documents retrieved from the trash dumpster constituted trespass and
conversion. Also, the Alabama Supreme Court held that it was also a jury issue
under the Alabama Trade Secrets Act whether the Ecolab memoranda (retrieved
from the trash dumpster) contained trade secrets and whether these documents
were the subject of efforts that were reasonable under the circumstances to
maintain its secrecy. The dissent relying on California v. Greenwood,
486 U.S. 35 (1988), concluded that summary judgment was appropriate because
Ecolab failed to maintain the documents' secrecy by placing them, unshredded,
into a dumpster located in a parking lot shared by other tenants in the
building.REMOVAL OF DOCUMENTS FROM DUMPSTER IS ACTIONABLE.
- AG Sys. v. United Decorative Plastics Corp., 1995 U.S. App.
LEXIS 14231 (4th Cir. 1995). Jury verdict returned, upon special verdict
interrogatories, that Defendant did not misappropriate AG Systems' trade
secrets relating to certain chrome-foiled plastic laminates used in the
automotive after-market. Fourth Circuit affirms. Under North Carolina Trade
Secrets Act, misappropriation of a trade secret is defined on the
"acquisition, disclosure or use of a trade secret without express or
implied authority or consent." Special interrogatory stated: Did the
defendant . . . know or should have known of AG Systems' trade secrets and
disclose or sell AG Systems' trade secrets without the express or implied
authority or consent of AG Systems?The jury answered "No." Court of
Appeals held that AG Systems waived any error relating to the special
interrogatory in the trial court.JURY VERDICT -- NO MISAPPROPRIATION OF
TRADE SECRET -- AFFIRMED.
- PepsiCo, Inc. v. Redmond, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 10903 (7th Cir.
1995). Injunction entered (on December 15, 1994) restraining PepsiCo
ex-employee (William Redmond) from assuming his position at Quaker through
May, 1995 and permanently enjoining Redmond from using or disclosing any
PepsiCo trade secrets. Seventh Circuit affirms. Fierce competition between
PepsiCo ("All Sport") and Quaker ("Gatorade"). Redmond, a
General Manager who had worked for PepsiCo for 10 years, had access to
PepsiCo's strategic business plans, annual operating plan ("AOP"),
"pricing architecture," and "attack plans" for specific
markets. Quaker (through a former PepsiCo employee) "began courting
Redmond for Quaker in May, 1994." Redmond accepted employment with Quaker
on November 8, 1994. PepsiCo filed a lawsuit to enjoin the
"threatened" misappropriation of trade secrets on November 16, 1994.
The Seventh Circuit affirmed the trial court's entry of injunctive relief
based upon the "inevitable disclosure" doctrine. Having shown
Redmond's intimate knowledge of PepsiCo's plans for 1995, PepsiCo argued that
Redmond would inevitably disclose that information to Quaker in his new
position, as Chief Executive Officer of Gatorade/Snapple. PepsiCo argued that
Redmond cannot help but rely on PepsiCo's trade secrets as he plots Gatorade
and Snapple's new course and that these secrets will enable Quaker to achieve
a substantial [unfair] advantage by knowing exactly how PepsiCo will price,
distribute and market its sports drinks/new age drinks. "PepsiCo finds
itself in the position of a coach, one of whose players has left, playbook in
hand, to join the opposing team before the big game." A plaintiff may
prove a claim of trade secret misappropriation by demonstrating "that
defendant's new employment will inevitably lead him to rely on the plaintiff's
trade secrets."INJUNCTION BASED ON "INEVITABLE DISCLOSURE"
DOCTRINE AFFIRMED BY SEVENTH CIRCUIT.
- Teleconnect Co. v. Ensrud, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 10284 (8th Cir.
1995). Teleconnect sues U.S. West and U.S. West then retains one of
Teleconnect's former employees (Ensrud) as an expert witness to testify
against Teleconnect. Teleconnect then sues Ensrud for trade secret
misappropriation. The trial court dismisses the case and the Eighth Circuit
Court of Appeals reverses and remands. There was evidence submitted that
Ensrud formulated opinions and drafted a memorandum concerning tariffs, while
employed at Teleconnect, which is directly at issue in Teleconnect's lawsuit
against U.S. West. Court concludes that there are questions of fact relating
to the trade secret misappropriation and reverses the trial court. The Court
of Appeals rejected the notion that only a "smoking gun" will defeat
a motion for summary judgment in trade secret misappropriation cases.
Circumstantial evidence submitted by Teleconnect is sufficient to meet the
burden.DISMISSAL OF TRADE SECRET MISAPPROPRIATION CASE AGAINST EXPERT
WITNESS REVERSED AND REMANDED.
- Hutchison v. KFC Corp., 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 6211 (9th Cir. 1995).
Idea submission case involving Hutchison's alleged proprietary process for
making skinless fried chicken. The Ninth Circuit affirms summary judgment in
favor of KFC. The Court of Appeals observes that certain aspects of the
process could have constituted trade secrets (e.g., the recipes for the
batter, flour mixtures and marinade; the cooking temperatures, and the
contents of the cooking oils), but Hutchison has not alleged that KFC has
misappropriated those particular items. In contrast, Hutchison's general
process for making skinless fried chicken and combination of steps was not a
trade secret. Skinless fried chicken had been on public sale by Pudgie's
Famous Chicken since 1981. The basic sequence of steps (skinning, marinating,
dipping, breading, freezing and frying) is readily ascertainable.NO TRADE
SECRET IN GENERAL PROCESS STEPS FOR MAKING SKINLESS FRIED CHICKEN.
- Harbor Software, Inc. v. Applied Sys., 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7682
(S.D. N.Y. 1995). Dispute involving alleged misappropriation of computer
software. Defendant (Applied Systems) moved for summary judgment of no trade
secret misappropriation and trial court denied motion for summary judgment,
applying Illinois law (the Illinois Trade Secrets Act). No confidentiality
agreement was signed by Defendant but Court finds questions of fact whether
Plaintiff conditioned his work [and sharing information] with Defendant on the
Defendant maintaining confidentiality. Triable issue of fact.DUTY OF
CONFIDENCE -- TRIABLE ISSUE OF FACT.
- TDS Healthcare Systems Corporation v. Humana Hospital Illinois, Inc.,
880 F.Supp. 1572; (N.D. GA. 1995). Alleged breach of contract and
misappropriation of trade secrets relating to computer software for hospital
health care information. Court summarily rejects copyright preemption
argument. Computer programs are considered to be literary works within the
meaning of the copyright law. The Copyright Act's legislative history makes
clear that a breach of trust or confidentiality differs from a copyright
infringement and therefore such common law trade secrets claims are not
preempted.TRADE SECRET CLAIMS NOT PREEMPTED BY COPYRIGHT LAW.
- Curtis 1000, Inc. v. Daniel Youngblade, 878 F.Supp. 1224; 1995 U.S.
Dist. LEXIS 1514 (N.D. IA. 1995). Preliminary injunctive relief granted to
enforce restrictive covenant against former salesperson. 59-page decision with
table of contents on standards for preliminary injunctive relief in a
covenant-not-to-compete/breach of contract case. Curtis 1000 is a manufacturer
of business forms and papers. Curtis 1000 provides its sales staff with
extensive training. Curtis 1000 spends approximately $40,000 for training each
new sales representative during the sales representative's first year of
employment. The sales program is designed to have its sales representative
become an integral part of their customers businesses. Youngblade received
"special training or peculiar knowledge" in the Curtis 1000 sales
training program. The Court also found that Youngblade plainly had the chance
to "pirate" customers from Curtis 1000. Further, it was undisputed
that Youngblade had access to confidential client information while employed
at Curtis 1000. Use of this knowledge would enable Youngblade to efficiently
solicit Curtis 1000's customers and to undercut Curtis 1000's prices. When a
Curtis 1000 sales representative leaves, Curtis 1000 estimates that it needs
two years to hire, train, place in the field a substitute sales
representative, and have the sales representative develop a close relationship
with his or her customers. If Youngblade were to work for a competitor and
immediately call on his prior customers, Curtis 1000 would be placed in an
unfair competitive advantage.INJUNCTIVE RELIEF TO ENFORCE RESTRICTIVE
COVENANT TO PROTECT FORMER EMPLOYER'S CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIPS.
- Mangren Research & Dev. Corp. v. National Chem. Co., 1995 U.S.
Dist. LEXIS 871 (N.D. Ill. 1995). Jury verdict returned in favor of plaintiff
in trade secrets case in the amount of $259,684.89 in compensatory damages and
$505,369.38 in exemplary damages. JNOV motion denied. There was sufficient
evidence for the jury to conclude that the Plaintiff's formula, customer list,
and cost and price information are protectable trade secrets. Damage awards
were not excessive. The issue of exemplary damages was properly submitted to
the jury.JURY VERDICT UPHELD IN TRADE SECRETS CASE.
- Stampede Tool Warehouse, Inc. v. Mark May et al., 1995 Ill. App.
LEXIS 170 (1st Dist. 1995). Trial court entered an injunction enjoining former
salesmen "from engaging, directly or indirectly, in any of the following
acts: (a) soliciting or accepting any orders for the sale of automotive tools
and equipment to any of the Stampede customer accounts that [defendants] had
access to while employed at Stampede Tool Warehouse, Inc.; (b) selling any
automotive tools and equipment to any of the Stampede customer accounts that
[defendants] had access to while employed at Stampede Tool Warehouse, Inc.;
and (c) receiving any commissions or other monies for the sale of automotive
tools and equipment to any of the Stampede customer accounts that [defendants]
had access to while employed at Stampede Tool Warehouse, Inc." The Court
of Appeals affirmed the injunction but limited the injunction to four years
because the evidence in the record was that mobile tool jobbers remains in the
industry for 3-5 years and purchase tools from more than one warehouse. The
Court held that Stampede's customer list is a protectable trade secret under
the Illinois Trade Secrets Act because Stampede's customer list is not readily
available from any one public source and the customer list has been developed
through the laborious method of prospecting, which requires a substantial
amount of time, effort and expense by Stampede. The Court also found that
Stampede protects its customer lists using reasonable efforts to maintain its
secrecy and confidentiality. Defendants argued that misappropriation of trade
secrets does not apply to "memorized" information. The Court of
Appeals squarely rejected this argument: "Using memorization to rebuild a
trade secret does not transform that trade secret from confidential
information into non-confidential information. The memorization is one method
of misappropriation."INJUNCTION TO PROTECT CUSTOMER LISTS AFFIRMED.
MEMORIZATION IS ONE METHOD OF MISAPPROPRIATION.
- Computer Assocs. Intl. v. Altai, Inc., 1995 Tex. LEXIS 79 (Sup. Ct.
TX 1995). Texas Supreme Court rules on certified questions from the Second
Circuit Court of Appeals in the Computer Associates v. Altai
litigation. Issue presented was whether the discovery rule exception should
apply to defeat a statute-of-limitations defense in a trade secrets case. A
primary purpose of statutes of limitation is to prevent stale and fraudulent
claims. This policy -- combined with the nature of trade secret property
rights that requires an owner to vigilantly guard the secret from the world in
order to preserve its rights -- makes application of the two-year statute of
limitations (with no discovery rule exception) reasonable under the
circumstances. Discovery rule does not apply to trade secret claims. Strong
Dissent.DISCOVERY RULE DOES NOT APPLY TO STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS IN TRADE
SECRET CASES UNDER TEXAS LAW.
- McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Widnall, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 16081 (U.S.
Ct. App. D.C. June 30, 1995). Defense Department acquisition regulations
(DFARS) provide for the "public announcement" of certain contract
awards. McDonnell Douglas contracted to provide certain satellite launch
services to the Air Force. One of McDonnell Douglas' competitors, -- General
Dynamics Corp.-made a request under the Freedom of Information Act,
("FOIA") 5 U.S.C. § 552 (1988), for General Dynamics' price
information relating to the satellite launch services contracts.
McDonnell-Douglas objected citing FOIA Exception 4 which provides that FOIA
disclosure obligations do not extend to "trade secrets and commercial or
financial information obtained from a person and privileged or
confidential." 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(4) (1988). Further, McDonnell Douglas
also based its legal position on the Trade Secrets Act, 18 U.S.C. § 1905
(1988), a criminal statute, which prohibits "an officer or employee of
the United States or any department or agency thereof from publishing,
disclosing, or making known any information ... to any extent not
authorized by law."
The scope of FOIA Exception 4 was addressed in Critical Mass Energy Project
v. Nuclear Regulatory Comm'n, 198 U.S. App. D.C. 8, 975 F.2d 871 (D.C.
Cir. 1992) (en banc), cert. denied, 123 L. Ed. 2d 147, 113 S. Ct. 1579
(1993). In Critical Mass, the D.C. Court of Appeals held that
"financial or commercial information" provided to the U.S.
Government on a voluntary basis is "confidential" for the purposes
of Exception 4 if it is of a kind that would customarily not be released to
the public by the person from whom it was obtained." This scope of
protection is co-extensive with the Trade Secrets Act. Thus, whenever a party
succeeds in demonstrating that its materials fall within Exception 4, the
government is precluded from releasing the information by virtue of the Trade
Secrets Act.
However, here, the issue was whether Defense Department regulations required
disclosure and thus whether the disclosure was "authorized by law"
within the meaning of the Trade Secrets Act. The case was remanded for further
proceedings.PROTECTION OF COMMERCIAL TRADE SECRETS BY U.S. GOVERNMENT.
- Avenco Corp. v. Nicholas, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8199 (D. Ariz. June
13, 1995).Avenco filed a lawsuit against two former employees for breach of
employment agreements, interference with business relationships, Arizona Trade
Secrets Act, unfair competition, conversion, unjust enrichment, conspiracy,
and injunctive relief. A bench trial was held before United States District
Judge Roslyn O. Silver.
Avenco sells aviation insurance. The Court found that Avenco established at
trial that it had confidential trade secret information relating to client
lists and the expiration dates for aviation insurance policies. The evidence
further established that one of the defendants, Defendant Nichols, took
certain information relating to Avenco clients including the expiration dates.
The Court refused to enforce the "non-competition" provision in the
employment agreement finding that it was overbroad and "effectively
paralyzed the Defendants' employment opportunities ... for two years."
However, the Court found that Defendant Nichols violated the confidential
non-disclosure provisions of the employment agreement and the Arizona Trade
Secrets Act. There was no finding of misappropriation regarding the second
employee.
CLIENT INFORMATION AND INSURANCE EXPIRATION DATES CONSTITUTE TRADE SECRETS.
- Devon Indus. v. American Med Intl., Inc., 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 20719
(9th Cir. July 21, 1995).Court of Appeals affirms dismissal of Devon's trade
secret and unfair competition claims after a bench trial. Devon claimed trade
secret rights in a "disposable surgical light handle cover" and
"a vertical surgical blade remover." The Ninth Circuit affirmed the
trial court's rulings that Devon failed to employ reasonable security measures
to protect its trade secret rights.
The Ninth Circuit also affirmed the trial court's findings that the
Defendant's "surgical blade remover" was different and therefore not
derived from Plaintiff's alleged secrets in its "surgical blade
remover."
The Ninth Circuit affirmed the principle that absolute secrecy is not required
for trade secret protection. Under California law, information can be a trade
secret even though it can be readily ascertained (from a Company
"bulletin board"), so long as it has not yet been ascertained by
others in the industry. ABBA Rubber Co. v. Seaquest, 235 Cal. App. 3d
1, 286 Cal Rptr. 518, 529 (Cal. Ct. App. 1991). However, applying this
standard, the Court found ample evidence, including disclosures in various
patents, to support the conclusion that there were no trade secrets.NINTH
CIRCUIT AFFIRMS DISMISSAL OF TRADE SECRET CLAIMS.
- Softel, Inc. v. Dragon Med. & Scientific Communications, Ltd.,
1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9476 (S.D.N.Y. July 7, 1995).Softel sued Dragon for
misuse of trade secrets and copyright infringement relating to Dragon's
unauthorized use of certain source code relating to Softel's Videogram 2.0
"paint-and-draw" computer graphics program. After a bench trial in
1991, Dragon was found liable for copyright infringement and misuse of trade
secrets. The Court also found that the misuse of trade secrets was wilful and
in bad faith entitling plaintiff to punitive damages. See Softel, Inc. v.
Dragon Medical & Scientific Communications, Inc., 1992 U.S. Dist.
LEXIS 9502, No. 87 Civ. 0167 (JMC) (S.D.N.Y. June 29, 1992).
U.S. District Judge Miriam Goldman Cedarbaum held a bench trial on May 8-11,
1995 on damages. Excellent legal review of the law of trade secret and
copyright damages. Judge Cedarbaum awards compensatory damages, prejudgment
interest (at the rate of nine percent per year), and punitive damages.
DAMAGES FOR TRADE SECRET MISAPPROPRIATION, PREJUDGMENT INTEREST AND
PUNITIVE DAMAGES.
- Leo Publications, Inc. v. Reid, 458 S.E. 2d 651 (Sup. Ct. Ga. July
10, 1995).Leo brought suit against former advertising director (Reid) to
enjoin use of customer list. The Supreme Court of Georgia affirms the trial
court's conclusion that the "customer list" is not a trade secret
under the Georgia Trade Secrets Act because it was readily ascertainable by
proper means.
The record established that the list of (advertising) customers and the size
and frequency of their advertisements could be compiled by any of the 30,000
readers of the "West Georgia Shopper" published by Leo Publications,
Inc.
NO TRADE SECRET PROTECTION FOR PUBLICLY AVAILABLE LIST OF CUSTOMERS.
- Ackerman v. Kimball International, Inc., 1995 Ind. LEXIS 101 (Sup.
Ct. Indiana July 12, 1995).Supreme Court of Indiana issues opinion to clarify
certain rulings by Indiana Appellate Court in Ackerman v. Kimball Indus.,
Inc., 634 N.E.2d 778 (Ind. App. 1994).
Ackerman was employed by Kimball in 1994 and he signed an employment agreement
with both non-disclosure and non-compete provisions. Ackerman worked his way
up to Executive Vice-President but in 1992 he was demoted to General Manager.
Ackerman then interviewed for new employment with one on Kimball's direct
competitors (Genwove) in the wood veneer market. Ackerman was thereafter
terminated by Kimball.
A few days after his termination, Kimball learned that Ackerman had requested
Kimball's customer and supplier lists the day prior to his termination and
Kimball sought a temperory restraining order and preliminary injunction to
prohibit Ackerman's employment with Genwove. After a hearing, the trial court
enjoined Ackerman from accepting direct or indirect employment with Genwove
for a period of one year.
On interlocutory appeal, the Indiana Supreme Court clarified the decision of
the Indiana Court of Appeals to make it clear that the absence of a
geographical limitation in a non-competition provision is only one factor to
be considered in ruling upon the reasonableness of a covenant-not-to-compete
provision. The proper test is whether the lack of geographical
limitation-together with all the other provisions of the restrictive
covenant-are reasonably necessary to protect the employer, not unreasonably
restrictive of the employee, and not against public policy.
The Indiana Supreme Court affirmed the entry of injunctive relief against
Ackerman under the Indiana Trade Secrets Act because the trial court
specifically found that "Ackerman's pre-departure harvesting of Kimball's
proprietary information" constituted "threatened
misappropriation" under the Indiana Trade Secrets Act:
We think on the facts of this case, enjoining Ackerman from working for
Kimball's competitors for a year was arguably necessary to meet the threat of
disclosure of Kimball's trade secrets. Were the trial court not permitted, on
facts such as these, to enjoin Ackerman for a limited period from being
employed by any of Kimball's competitors, Kimball might, under the Trade
Secrets Act, have a right without a remedy. We cannot believe that this is
what the legislature intended, and we cannot say, consequently, that the trial
court abused its discretion in issuing its injunction.
COURT MAY ENJOIN ACCEPTANCE OF EMPLOYMENT WITH COMPETITOR TO PREVENT THE
"THREATENED" MISAPPROPRIATION OF TRADE SECRETS.
- Janex Oil Co., Inc. v. Hector Operating Inc., 1995 U.S.
Dist. LEXIS 12982 (USDC E.D. LA. September 6, 1995). Janex sued
Defendants alleging misappropriation of Janex's trade secrets disclosed during
negotiations involving mineral leases owned by Janex.
Both sides asserted claims for attorneys fees under the Louisiana [Uniform]
Trade Secrets Act. Janex claims attorney's fees because the alleged
misappropriation was "wilful." Defendants claim attorney's fees
alleging that Janex acted in "bad faith" by bringing this lawsuit
for trade secret misappropriation because the evidence on the merits will show
that (1) there were no trade secrets and (2) that there was no
"misappropriation" as that term is defined by the statute.
Janex filed a motion for "partial" summary judgment for a Court
ruling that Plaintiff's complaint was not brought in "bad
faith." The Court refused to rule on this issue as a matter of law
finding that there is a genuine issue of material fact, citing International
Shortstop, Inc. v. Rally's, Inc., 939 F.2d 1257, 1265 (5th Cir. 1991)
(cases which turn on the party's "state of mind" are not well-suited
for summary judgment).
"BAD FAITH" CLAIM FOR MISAPPROPRIATION OF TRADE SECRETS IS A
QUESTION OF FACT.
- Moridge Manufacturing, Inc. v. WEC Company, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS
12728 (USDC D. Kansas August 3, 1995). Breach of contract/trade secret
misappropriation action. Moridge manufactured "ride-on" turf
tractors for sale by Defendant. Thereafter, Defendant entered the market with
its own "Mow'n Machine" ride-on turf tractor.
Defendant moved to dismiss Plaintiff's trade secret misappropriation claims
pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6). A complaint may not be dismissed for failure to
state a claim upon which relief may be granted unless it appears beyond a
doubt that the plaintiff can prove no set of facts in support of the theory of
recovery that would entitle him to relief. Conley v. Gibson, 355 U.S.
41, 45-46, 2 L. Ed. 2d 80, 78 S. Ct. 99 (1957). Applying this standard, the
trial court summarily denied Defendant's motion to dismiss Plaintiff's trade
secret misappropriation claims and granted Plaintiff's motion to amend the
complaint to allege additional facts to support its claims for violation of
the Kansas Uniform Trade Secrets Act.
MOTION TO DISMISS TRADE SECRET MISAPPROPRIATION CLAIM SUMMARILY DENIED.
- Schinzing v. Stenberg Welding & Fabricating, 1995 Minn. App.
LEXIS 1119 (Ct. App. Minn. August 29, 1995). In 1988, Walter Schinzing, the
inventor of a wheelchair washer, hired Stenberg Welding to build a prototype.
Stenberg signed a confidentiality agreement.
In June, 1992, Stenberg entered into an agreement with Dakota Laundry
Equipment and its subsidiary Wheel-Ease to build a wheelchair washer.
Schinzing thereafter sued Stenberg Welding and Wheel-Ease for trade secret
misappropriation.
At trial, the Court granted a direct verdict for Wheel-Ease because there was
no evidence that Wheel-Ease knew about the confidentiality agreement. A jury
verdict was returned against Stenberg and the jury awarded Schinzing $160,000
in damages.
Appellate Court affirms in all respects. The Minnesota Court of Appeals
rejects the argument that the confidentiality agreement was too vague to be
enforceable: "Stenberg signed the confidentiality agreement
simultaneously with the discussion about the wheelchair washer invention and
had fair notice of what constituted confidential information."
JURY VERDICT FOR MISAPPROPRIATION OF INVENTOR'S TRADE SECRETS IN WHEELCHAIR
WASHER.
- FMC Corporation v. Cyprus Foote Mineral Company, 899 F.Supp. 1477
(W.D.N.C. September 20, 1995). FMC and Foote are the only two producers of
battery-quality lithium products in the United States. They are head-to-head
competitors in the marketplace.
Fickling was a key FMC metallurgical engineer who was "instrumental in
inventing or developing many of FMC's current technologies." Fickling
began his career with Lithium Corporation which was acquired by FMC in 1985.
Between 1990 and 1994, FMC laid off a number of engineers and technical
employees. Fickling was the only former employee of Lithian still employed in
his department at FMC.
On July 10, 1995, Fickling resigned his position at FMC and went to work for
Foote as a development engineer in the same general areas that
he worked while he was an employee of FMC. Fickling has signed a
non-disclosure agreement while employed by FMC.
FMC brought an action for breach of contract and for violation of North
Carolina's Trade Secret Protection Act seeking to enjoin Fickling from
performing any research and development work in seven general areas relating
to battery-quality lithium products.
The Court denied the motion for a preliminary injunction because FMC had not
come forward with evidence establishing "the precise nature of its trade
secrets." Further, the Court found that FMC has not presented sufficient
evidence that it processes are trade secrets.
"In short FMC asserts that it has trade secrets that implicate about
every stage in the production of battery-quality lithium metals. But the
evidence offered in support of those assertions is very general, and FMC seeks
an injunction that effectively precludes Fickling from doing any work in his
general area of expertise."
The Court refused to apply the "inevitable disclosure" doctrine
under these factual circumstances. To hold otherwise, the Court reasoned, no
employee could ever work for its former employer's competitor on the theory
that disclosure of confidential information is "inevitable."
The Court noted that Fickling had a great deal of general skill and knowledge
as an engineer who had worked for 14 years in the area of lithium production.
Reviewing North Carolina case law, the Court noted that an employee will not
be enjoined from working for its former employer's competitor under the
"inevitable disclosure" doctrine absent some showing of "bad
faith, underhanded dealing, or employment by an entity so plainly lacking
comparable technology that misappropriation can be inferred."
INEVITABLE DISCLOSURE DOCTRINE NOT APPLICABLE ABSENT SPECIAL CIRCUMSTANCES
- Economy Roofing & Insulating Co. v. Zumoris, 538 N.W.2d 641
(September 20, 1995) The former president (son) and his mother terminated
their employment with the family business (Economy Roofing) and started a
competing business, Roofing Technologies, Inc.
A lawsuit ensued for (1) breach of fiduciary duties, (2) intentional
interference with contractual and business expectancies and (3) violation of
the Iowa Trade Secrets Act.
A motion for preliminary injunction based on the trade secrets claim was
denied and the case proceeded to a full trial on the merits. Prior to the jury
trial, the Defendant filed a motion in limine to bar the trade secrets claim
because the previous motion for a preliminary injunction had been denied. The
alleged trade secrets included customer information, pricing lists, bid
information, profit margins, supply cost information, and other types of
confidential information which the Defendants had access to in the Company's
computer. The Court granted the motion in limine.
The Iowa Supreme Court reversed. Citing its previous decision in US West
Communications, Inc. v Office of Consumer Advocate, 498 N.W.2d 711, 714
(Iowa 1993), the Court stated:
Trade secrets can range from customer information, to financial information,
to information about manufacturing processes to the composition of products.
There is virtually no category of information that cannot, as long as the
information is protected from disclosure to the public, constitute a trade
secret. We believe that a broad range of business data and facts which, if
kept secret, provide the holder with an economic advantage over competitors or
others, qualify as trade secrets.
The Court reversed the trial court because of the trial court's ruling on the
preliminary injunction was not dispositive of whether the information in the
computer was a trade secret. A denial of a temporary injunction does not
deprive the plaintiff of the right to a trial on the merits or the petition
seeking a permanent injunction, nor is it an adjudication against such a
right. PlAINTIFF ENTITLED TO A TRIAL BY JURY ON TRADE SECRET CLAIMS.
- TODD NOAH AND NOAH'S ART, INC. V. ENESCO CORPORATION, 1995 U.S.
Dist. Lexis 13965 (ND.Ill. September 25,1995).Todd Noah is an artist who
created several hand-made figurines called "[New] Beginnings" based
upon his interpretation of the Biblical Noah's Ark story.
Noah established Noah's Art, Inc. to market the figurines.
In December, 1991, Noah contacted Enesco, the country's largest marketer of
giftware, in an attempt to negotiate a licensing agreement. Enesco signed a
nondisclosure agreement and sent Noah a draft license.
In January of 1992, Noah sent Enesco more detailed figurines. Enesco then
shipped the figurines overseas for development of preproduction samples and
costing. Pursuant to a written agreement, the parties understood that the
final decision to license and produce the figurines was at Enesco's sole
discretion.
After the samples were made, Enesco exhibited them at its fall 1993
"Pre-Show" trade show. At the same time, Enesco Precious Moments
line also introduced a new line based on Noah's Ark called the "Two by
Two" collection.
There was only minimal customer orders for Noah's figurines and Enesco decided
not to pursue a license. Noah, charging both fraud and trade secret
misappropriation, sued Enesco alleging that Enesco incorporated his unique
concept into the "Two by Two" collection.
The district court (Judge Charles P. Kocoras) granted Enesco's Motion for
Summary Judgment. The Court rejected Noah's "duty to disclose" fraud
count concluding that there was no fiduciary or other special relationship
creating such a duty.
With respect to the trade secret misappropriation claim, the Court found that
the Plaintiff had disclosed his theme of Ark animals interacting with each
other as they descended the Ark to other giftmarkers before he presented his
"New Beginnings" concept to Enesco. Thus, the Court found that
"this evidence negates Noah's contention that his concept was new and not
generally known to those in the industry." Thus, Noah's concept is not a
trade secret and this obviates the need to decide the misappropriation claim.
PRODUCT IDEA SUBMISSION CASE DISMISSED ON MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT; NO
TRADE SECRET.
- Religious Technology Center v. Lerma, 1995 U.S. Dist. Lexis 17833
(E.D. Va. November 28, 1995). The Church of Scientology sued Steven Fishman, a
disgruntled former member of the Church of Scientology, in the United States
District Court for the Central District of California.
Fishman filed a 69-page affidavit describing various Advanced Technology
("AT") works that the Religious Technology Center ("RTC")
argues are protected from both unauthorized use and unauthorized disclosure
under the copyright law of the United States and under the trade secret laws.
However, the motion to seal the Fishman affidavit was denied and affirmed by
the Ninth Circuit in Church of Scientology Int'l v. Fishman, 35 F.3d
570 (9th Cir. 1994).
Defendant Lerma, another former Scientologist, obtained a copy of the Fishman
affidavit and the attached AT documents and on July 31 and August 1, 1995
published the AT documents on the Internet through defendant Digital Gateway
Systems. RTC, which regularly scans the Internet, discovered the publication
of documents and obtained a TRO prohibiting Lerma from any further publication
of the documents and a seizure warrant that authorized the U.S. Marshal to
seize Lerma's personal computer, floppy disks and any copies of the
copyrighted works of L. Ron Hubbard, the author of the AT documents.
During the same period, Lerma sent a hard copy of Fishman's affidavit and AT
attachments to the Washington Post. RTC discussed this disclosure, approached
the Washington Post, and the Post [was] told that the Fishman affidavit might
be stolen.
On August 14, 1995, the Post sent a news aide in California to the Clerk's
office to obtain a copy of the Fishman affidavit. The Clerk's office made a
copy. The next day, August 15, 1995, the RTC filed a Motion to seal the file
and the trial judge ordered the file sealed.
On August 19, 1995, the Washington Post published a news article: "Church
in Cyberspace: Its Sacred Writs is on the Net. Its Lawyers are on the
Case."
The court granted summary judgment in favor of The Washington Post on both the
copyright and trade secret claims.
With respect to the copyright infringement claim, the Court granted attorneys'
fees because the context and extent in which The Post copied and quoted from
the AT documents was so de minimis that the Court finds that no reasonable
copyright holder could have in good faith brought a copyright infringement
action.
With respect to the trade secret misappropriation claim, the Court concluded
that the AT documents were no longer trade secrets by the time the Post
acquired them. The Fishman affidavit had been in the Clerk's files from April
14, 1993 until August 15, 1995, for a total of 29 months. The Post was able to
obtain a copy of the Fishman affidavit without any difficulty by merely asking
the Clerk of Courts to copy it. Further, for more than 10 days, the documents
were potentially available to millions of Internet users around the world.
The Court cited Religious Technology Centers v. Netcon On-Line
Communications, Inc., No. C-95-20091 (N.D. Calif., September 22, 1995)
that "posting works to the Internet makes them 'generally known' at least
to the relevant persons interested in the new group." Once a trade secret
is posted on the Internet, it is effectively part of the public domain,
impossible to retrieve. Although the person who originally posted the trade
secret on the Internet may be liable for trade secret misappropriation, the
person who merely downloads Internet information cannot be liable for trade
secret misappropriation because there is no misconduct involved in interacting
with Internet.
Because there is no evidence that the Post abused any confidence, committed
impropriety, violated any court order or committed any other improper act in
gathering information from the court file or downloading information from the
Internet, there is no possible liability for the Post in its acquisition of
the information.
PUBLICATION OF TRADE SECRET INFORMATION ON THE INTERNET MAY DESTROY TRADE
SECRET STATUS.
- Burlington Industries, Inc. v. Palmetto Spinning Corp., et al., 1996
U.S. App. LEXIS 1284 (4th Cir. January 31, 1996). From 1989-1991,
Burlington developed the "Spectra" machine for manufacturing
space-dyed yarn for use in rugs. Three former employees of Burlington formed a
new corporation (BVA) in 1992 and began selling space-dyed yarn machines. On
August 25, 1993, Burlington sued BVA for trade secret misappropriation and
thereafter the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Kansas on
September 22, 1994 held that the Spectra machine was a trade secret, that
BVA's machines constituted a misappropriation of Burlington's trade secrets,
and enjoined BVA from further use of the trade secret.
On May 11, 1995, Burlington sued Palmetto and Color-Fi in this action for
misappropriation of trade secrets in violation of South Carolina's Uniform
Trade Secrets Act. Palmetto had acquired a space-dyed yarn machine from BVA
prior to the trade secret misappropriation suit against BVA.
The Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit finds that Palmetto and Color-Fi
are not collaterally estopped from litigating whether their machine is a
Burlington trade secret. The collateral estoppel doctrine does not apply
without "privity". The mere fact that Palmetto "knew" that
Burlington was about to sue BVA for trade secret misappropriation when it
received its space dyed yarn machine is an insufficient basis for finding that
Palmetto was in privity with BVA. PARTY CAN RELITIGATE TRADE SECRET ISSUES;
NO COLLATERAL ESTOPPEL WITHOUT PRIVITY.
- BVA.Buffets, Inc. v. Klinke, 1996 U.S. LEXIS 436 (9th Cir. January 16,
1996) Plaintiff ("Old County Buffets"-OCB) sued Defendant
("Granny's Buffet Restaurant) for trade secret misappropriation of (1)
recipes and (2) job manuals.
Following a bench trial, the trial court found that the recipes and job
manuals were not trade secrets. The Ninth Circuit affirms.
(1) Recipes. The trial court found that the recipes were not trade
secrets because they were "readily ascertainable" and very little
effort was required to "discover" them. The trial court also found
that the recipes had no "independent economic value" because OCB had
not proven that its food offerings was "superior in quality to that of
its rivals." In other words, there was no demonstrated relationship
between the lack of success of OCB's competitors and the unavailability of the
recipes, i.e., OCB failed to provide any evidence that it necessarily derived
any economic benefit from the recipes being kept secret. Further, the recipes
were simplified because of "the limited reading skills of its cooks"
which further weighed against any finding of economic value.
(2) Job Manual. Reasonable measures were not taken to protect the job
manuals as trade secrets. Employees were not advised of the manuals' status as
secrets, nor of security measures that should be taken to prevent their being
obtained by others. "Thus, while it may have been reasonable to conclude
that OCB obtained value from the manuals, there is little to suggest that any
value was obtained from the manuals being kept secret." TRADE SECRET
STATUS REQUIRED A SHOWING OF INDEPENDENT ECONOMIC VALUE DERIVED FROM SECRECY.
- Inorganic Coatings, Inc. v. Falberg, 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 937 (E.D. Pa.
February 1, 1996). Inorganic Coatings, Inc. ("ICI") was formed
in 1983 after it obtained a sub-licensing agreement to make zinc-silicate
coatings pursuant to a patent owned by NASA. ICI then entered into a
"Disclosure Agreement" with Polyset to manufacture the coatings.
Between 1983 and 1990, Polyset manufactured 90,000 gallons of coatings for
ICI. In 1990, ICI decided to begin manufacturing the coatings itself and the
relationship between ICI and Polyset ended. At issue, in this case, is trade
secret ownership rights in improvements and/or refinements in the
manufacturing process for these coatings. IDI cited Computer Associates
International, Inc. v. American Fundware, Inc., 831 F.Supp. 1516 (D. Colo.
1993) for the proposition that "when disclosures of a confidential nature
are made to an employee or independent contractor hired to facilitate the
development of a product or process, all trade secrets created out of that
process are the exclusive property of the employer." Id. at 1524.
Polyset denies that it was specifically hired by ICI "to facilitate the
development of a manufacturing process" for these coatings and therefore
Polyset owns the trade secret rights in these improvements and refinements in
the manufacturing process.Trial court (upon reconsideration) finds that this
is a question of fact for the jury and denies ICI's Motion for Summary
Judgment.
TRADE SECRET OWNERSHIP RIGHTS IN IMPROVEMENTS IN MANUFACTURING PROCESS
QUESTION OF FACT FOR JURY.
- J.H. Chapman Group, Ltd. v. Norman Chapman d/b/a The Chapman Group, 1996
U.S. Dist. LEXIS 899 (N.D. Ill. January 30, 1996).Plaintiff ("J.H.
Chapman Group") sued Defendants for trademark infringement and
misappropriation of trade secrets ("customer list").
Upon a motion for preliminary injunction, District Judge Suzanne B. Conlon
found that J.H. Chapman Group had failed to demonstrate a likelihood of
success on its trade secrets claim because (1) the evidence fails to show
other persons can obtain economic value from the disclosure or use of J.H.
Chapman Group's customer list; (2) the evidence fails to show J.H. Chapman
Group's customer list derived economic value from secrecy; (3) the evidence
fails to show J.H. Chapman made reasonable efforts to keep its customer list
secret. Evidence that the J.H. Chapman customer list was "not publicly
available", -- without more-was held to be insufficient evidence to
establish the existence of a trade secret. INSUFFICIENT EVIDENCE TO
ESTABLISH THAT A "CUSTOMER LIST' WAS A TRADE SECRET.
- Flavorchem Corp. v. Mission Flavors and Fragrances, Inc., 1996 U.S.
Dist. LEXIS 730 (N.D. Ill. January 23, 1996) Flavorchem (an Illinois
corporation) sued ex-employee Patrick Imburgia for misappropriation of certain
flavor formulas from Flavorchem. Patrick Imburgia moved to California and
formed a company called Mission Flavors and Fragrances, Inc. ("Mission
Flavors") which has allegedly used the misappropriated flavor
formulas.The Illinois Trade Secrets Act has a 5-year statute of limitations
for trade secret misappropriation; the California Trade Secrets Act has a
3-year statute of limitations.The issue was which statute of limitations
applies.
In a diversity suit, the district court applies the choice-of-law rules of the
state in which the Court sits. Klaxon v. Stentor Electronic Mfg Co.,
313 U.S. 487, 61 S. Ct. 1020 (1941).Illinois follows the "most
significant contacts" approach in tort claims. See RESTATEMENT (SECOND)
of Conflicts of Law §145: (1) the place where the injury occurred; (2) the
place where the conduct causing the injury occurred; (3) the domicile,
residence, nationality, place of incorporation and place of business of the
parties; and (4) the place where the relationship, if any, between the parties
is centered. Analyzing these factors, the Court found that Factors 1, 2 and 4
favor Illinois, Factor 3 is a "split" because Flavorchem is an
Illinois corporation and Mission Flavors is a California corporation. Court
holds Illinois law applies under "most significant contracts" test.
Court distinguishes C&F Packing, Inc. v. IBP, Inc., 1994 U.S. Dist.
LEXIS 973 (N.D. Ill. January 26, 1994) because in C&F Packing,
"plaintiff voluntarily conveyed its secret sausage making process to
defendants pursuant to an arms-length business agreement." Alternatively,
since Illinois Courts consider a statute of limitations to be
"procedural" (affecting only the remedy available and not the
substantive rights), the Illinois statute of limitations should apply to this
case brought in an Illinois forum. CHOICE OF LAW/STATUTE OF
LIMITATIONS/TRADE SECRETS CASE
- Geritrex Corporation v. DermaRite Industries, 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 277
(S.D.N.Y. January 10, 1996). Plaintiff (Geritrex) sued two former
employees (DermaRite) inter alia for trade secret
misappropriation of (1) information relating to Plaintiff's manufacturing
process and product formulas for personal hygiene and cleansing products; (2)
customer list; (3) pricing information.With respect to plaintiff's
manufacturing process and product formulas, the Court found a lack of
substantial measures to keep the information secret because Plaintiff had not
produced convincing evidence that any of the employees involved in
production-from the operations director and the plant manager down to the
batch workers who actually mixed the products signed Confidentiality
Agreements prior to September, 1995. The batch cards were not stamped
confidential and there was no procedure for destroying batch cards or
preventing employees from taking batch cards home.
With respect to the alleged misappropriation of Geritrex's customer list and
price information, the trial court found that the evidence was insufficient to
establish actual use of any such alleged misappropriated information. The
evidence established that only 12 of DermaRite's two largest customers were
accounting for 60% of sales; DermaRite's two largest customers were never
Geritrex customers. Further, balancing the equities, the effect of a
preliminary injunction on DermaRite, a fledgling company with only 35
customers, would be devastating. Motion for preliminary injunction denied. SECURITY
MEASURES ARE NECESSARY FOR BATCH CARDS TO PROTECT TRADE SECRETS IN PRODUCT
FORMULAS AND MANUFACTURING PROCESSES.
- Flexible Technologies, Inc. v. World Tubing Corp., 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS
283 (January 10, 1996). Flexible sued ex-employees who had set up World
Tubing Corp. for trade secret misappropriation. Flexible is a South Carolina
corporation which has sold vacuum hoses for 40 years.The injunction proceeding
arose because World Tubing Corp. was going to ship its hose-making machine
outside the United States to Scotland. The Court found that Flexible had
established a likelihood of success on the merits inter alia
because of the "striking similarity" between Flexible's and World
Tubing's hoses.Further, the balance of hardship weights decidedly in
Flexible's favor. World Tubing states that its seeks to move the machine to
Scotland to save labor costs. Flexible, on the other hand, argued that the
World Tubing machine incorporates its trade secrets and is about to be shipped
out of the country resulting in the loss of its trade secrets forever.
"STRIKING SIMILARITY" BETWEEN PRODUCTS IS EVIDENCE OF TRADE
SECRET MISAPPROPRIATION.
- Slijepcevich v. Caremark, Inc., 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 110 (N.D. Ill.
January 8, 1996).Plaintiff Walter Slijepcevich worked as a manager for
Caremark, a company that specializes in mail order prescriptions. In
September, 1995, he quit Caremark and became general manager of the mail order
facility at Caremark's competitor, Eckerd Corporation
("Eckerd").After Caremark threatened to sue Plaintiff for violation
of his employment agreement, Slijepcevich brought this declaratory judgment
action. Caremark in turn filed a counterclaim for trade secret
misappropriation and filed a motion for a temporary restraining order. Motion
for temporary restraining order denied.
Caremark's alleged trade secrets were "specific therapies"
characterized as "cost-effective recommendations not generally known in
the pharmaceutical industry." Caremark persuades physicians to agree to a
less costly generic or alternative form of treatment. Pharmacists review
individual prescription profiles to determine whether there is a cheaper form
of treatment. At oral argument, it became apparent that comparable information
regarding drug interaction and alternative medications can be obtained from
the physician dispensing register ("PDR"). "What Caremark
cryptically refers to as 'specific therapies' is nothing more than a
practical, cost conscious application of basic knowledge of
pharmaceuticals." Slijepcevich was a licensed pharmacist with
professional training in drug treatment when he was hired by Caremark. The
alleged trade secrets fall "within the realm of general skills and
knowledge" and are not protectable trade secrets. TRO FOR TRADE SECRET
MISAPPROPRIATION DENIED.
- Smithfield Ham & Products Company, Inc. v. Portion Pac, Inc., 905
F.Supp. 346 (E.D. Va. November 27, 1995).Plaintiff (Smithfield) contracted
with Defendant (PPI) to manufacture and package barbecue and horseradish
sauces for resale by Smithfield to restaurant chains. Plaintiff sued PPI
alleging that PPI misappropriated a proprietary recipe for Smithfield's James
River brand barbecue sauce and used that sauce to persuade one of Smithfield's
longtime customers ("Flagstar") to contract directly with PPI for
its future barbecue and horseradish sauce requirements.Smithfield's Complaint
alleged inter alia (1) violations of the Virginia Uniform Trade
Secrets Act, (2) tortious interference with contractual relations, and (3)
tortious interference with present and prospective contractual relations.
The issue before the Court was whether the "tortious interference"
claims were pre-empted by the Virginia Uniform Trade Secrets Act
("VUTSA").The Court held that the "tortious interference"
claims were not preempted by the VUTSA because "Smithfield could lose its
misappropriation claim yet still recover for tortious interference." The
plain language of the VUTSA preemption language is to prevent inconsistent
theories of relief for the same underlying harm by eliminating alternative
theories of common law recovery which are premised on the misappropriation of
a trade secret. Here, even if the trier of fact believes the sauce was
developed independently, given PPI's knowledge of Smithfield's relationship
with Flagstar, and Flagstar's interest in the Smithfield sauce, the
exploitation of that knowledge through the direct solicitation of Flagstar
might still constitute tortious interference with contractual relations."TORTIOUS
INTERFERENCE" CLAIMS NOT PREEMPTED BY VIRGINIA UNIFORM TRADE SECRETS ACT.
- Rowe Oil, Inc. v. McCoy, 1995 Banke LEXIS 1695 (November 6, 1995).Plaintiff
Rowe Oil, Inc. sued its ex-employee Harriet E. McCoy for trade secret
misappropriation of customer lists and obtained a judgment for $1,226.67 in
damages and $31,356.62 in attorney's fees. McCoy (Debtor) thereafter filed
bankruptcy under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code, listing Plaintiff as an
unsecured creditor.
11 USC § 523 of the Bankruptcy Code sets forth the following exceptions to
discharge:
(a) A discharge under section 727, 1141, 1228[a] 1228(b), or 1328(b) of this
title does not discharge an individual from any debt-
(2) for money, property, services, or an extension, renewal, or refinancing of
credit, to the extent obtained by-
(A) false pretense, a false representation, or actual fraud, other than a
statement respecting the debtor's or an insider's financial condition;
(4) for fraud or defalcation while acting in a fiduciary capacity,embezzlement
or larceny; (6) for willful and malicious injury
by the debtor to another entity or to the property of anotherentity.The Court
finds that the trade secrets debt is not dischargeable under both Sections
523(a)(4) and 523(a)(6) above. Trade secret misappropriation falls within the
meaning of "larceny" in Section 523(a)(4). Further, misappropriation
of trade secrets constitutes willful and malicious injury, as set forth in
Section 523(a)(6) where, as here, attorney's fees were awarded to Plaintiff
which requires a showing of malice under Ohio law. JUDGMENT FOR TRADE
SECRET MISAPPROPRIATION NONDISCHARGEABLE IN BANKRUPTCY.
- .Thomas v. Alloy Fasteners, Inc., 664 So.2d 59 (Ct. App. Fla. December
8, 1995)Trial court granted temporary injunction for misappropriation of
confidential order edit lists and Plaintiff appealed because there was no
evidence that Plaintiff "used" the order edit lists to solicit
customers.The Florida Court of Appeals held that "actual or threatened
misappropriation may be enjoined" and "in appropriate circumstances,
affirmative acts to protect a trade secret may be compelled by Court
order." Florida Uniform Trade Secrets Act Section 688.03 (1993). There is
no requirement that the trade secret first be used before it can be enjoined
under the Florida Trade Secrets Act.
The order edit lists certain confidential information not available in the
public domain, i.e., the mark-up on the items ordered and the profit margin
thereof." The information would obviously be important for a competitor
in deciding how much it could undercut Alley's (?) prices." Injunction
affirmed. NO REQUIREMENT OF ACTUAL USE TO ISSUE TRADE SECRET INJUNCTION.
- White v. Arthur Enterprise, Inc., 219 Ga. App. 124 (Ct. App. Ga.
November 8, 1995). Jury returned verdict for trade secret misappropriation
in violation of Georgia Trade Secrets Act and John White and White Pharmacy
appealed.The jury found that White and White's Pharmacy were each separately
liable in the amount of $18,000 for willful and malicious misappropriation of
trade secrets.
Appellants argued that jury's verdict of damages was not supported by
evidence.Court of Appeals affirms jury verdict for damages. Under the Georgia
Trade Secrets Act, the Plaintiff can recover for unjust enrichment. "The
unjust enrichment doctrine provides that a party shall not be allowed to
profit or enrich itself inequitably at another's expense."
In the instant case, the Plaintiff sought damages based on unjust enrichment
and presented evidence that the information contained in its corporate files
had a value of $90,000. Relying on this evidence, the jury could have
determined with reasonable certainty that White and White's Pharmacy each
realized a gain of $18,000 for the misappropriation of those files. VALUE
OF INFORMATION MISAPPROPRIATED PROPER MEASURE OF UNJUST ENRICHMENT DAMAGES.
- United Group of National Paper Distributors, Inc. v. Vinson, 1996 La.
App. LEXIS 30 (Ct. App. Louisiana January 25, 1996).After a lengthy trial,
a jury found that Defendants-Appellants misappropriated trade secrets,
breached duties owed, and violated the Louisiana Unfair Trade Secrets Act and
awarded $9.5 million in damages to Plaintiff, The United Group of National
Paper Distributors, Inc.
Court of Appeals reverses and renders judgment in favor of Defendants.The
Court of Appeals found that the alleged trade secrets-supplier lists, policies
and procedures and unspecified financial information-were readily disseminated
and available to the membership and, in some instances, to prospective new
members. Plaintiff presented no evidence that any precautions were taken to
safeguard any of the information's secrecy. Therefore, the Court of Appeals
concluded that this readily ascertainable information does not rise to the
level of a "trade secret." JURY VERDICT FOR TRADE SECRET
MISAPPROPRIATION REVERSED.
- Vigoro Industries, Inc. v. Kenneth Crisp, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 9861
(8th Cir. April, 1996). Kenneth Crisp managed a successful farm store in
Marvell, Arkansas for 24 years. Vigoro acquired the store in 1986 and, in late
1992, Crisp approached Cleveland Chemical (a competitor), who wanted to enter
the retail market in Marvell. Crisp had detailed discussions with Cleveland
Chemical about facilities, estimated salaries and wages, equipment and
personnel.
On July 16, 1993, Crisp sent a letter of resignation to Vigoro management.
Shortly before resigning, Crisp invited other Marvell employees to join him at
the new Cleveland Chemical store. A dozen employees left with Crisp including
three salesmen. On July 28, 1993, Crisp sent a letter to the farmers he
considered to be Vigoro's best customers-"our valued
customers"-stating "we feel this change will enable us to offer you
better services in the future."
Crisp left on August 7, 1993 and began working at Cleveland Chemical. The
other Marvell employees joined him later that month. Vigoro hired a new sales
manager and sales force as quickly as possible but Marvell lost 70% of its
customers.
Vigoro sued the former employees, Cleveland Chemical, and Cleveland Chemical's
principal officers for misappropriation of trade secrets, breach of fiduciary
duties, conspiracy to breach these duties and intentional interference with
business expectancies.
Following a one-week bench trial, the district court awarded Vigoro $75,000
against Crisp for breach of the employee's duty of loyalty. All other claims,
including the trade secret misappropriation claim, were dismissed.
The Court observed: "It is ... a common occurrence for corporate
fiduciaries to resign and form a competing enterprise. Unless restricted by
contract, this may be done with complete immunity because freedom of
employment and encouragement of competition generally dictate that such
persons can leave their corporation at any time and go into a competing
business. They cannot while still corporate fiduciaries set up a competitive
enterprise..or resign and take with them the key personnel of their
corporation for the purpose of operating their own competitive enterprise. But
they can, while still employed, notify their corporation's customers of their
intention to resign and subsequently go into business for themselves, and
accept business from them when offered to them."
Applying this standard, the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the trial
court's finding of breach of fiduciary because (1) the July 28 letter to key
Vigoro customers "crossed the line from simple notification to an active
solicitation at a time when Mr. Crisp was still working for Vigoro" and
(2) Crisp "interfered with its other Marvell employees by securing
commitments from them to join him at Cleveland Chemical while he was still a
Vigoro employee."
With respect to the trade secret misappropriation claim, the Court of Appeals
affirmed the trial court's "fact-intensive" determination that the
customer information was readily ascertainable because the identity of
Vigoro's two hundred farm store customers could easily be discovered in a
small geographic area. Also, the other types of information (each farmer's
planting history, types of products purchased, etc.) was not protectable
because "interested farmers would readily provide these other types of
information because that helps them purchase the most appropriate farm
supplies." "Absent an enforceable covenant not to compete, a former
employer may not prevent a former employee from exploiting this kind of
knowledge with a new employer. The former employer should not be permitted to
achieve this anticompetitive objective indirectly through an overly-expansive
definition of customer trade secrets." EIGHTH CIRCUIT UPHOLDS BREACH
OF FIDUCIARY DUTY CLAIM. DENIES TRADE SECRET MISAPPROPRIATION CLAIM RE FARM
SUPPLY STORE.
- Simply Fresh Fruit, Inc. v. Continental Insurance Co., 1996 U.S.
App. LEXIS 5278 (9th Cir. March 8, 1996). Simply Fresh is in the business of
processing and selling fresh fruit and fruit segments for use in salads and
similar products. P & C was its primary processing facility (collectively
"Appellants"). The district court found that Continental did not
have a "duty to defend" under the "advertising injury"
provisions of Continental's insurance policies. The Ninth Circuit affirms.
The allegation in the state court action was that Simply Fresh and P & C
had misappropriated one of its competitor's [Reddi-Made] secret automated
process for slicing fruit. In federal actions, Reddi-Made alleged that Simply
Fresh and P & C had infringed certain patents.
With respect to the trade secret misappropriation claims, Appellant argued
that these claims could potentially trigger claims for "false designation
of origin" under the Lanham Act therefore implicating "advertising
injury" liability. The Ninth Circuit rejected this argument because there
was no evidence that Reddi-Made had suffered damages because of Appellant's
advertising activities citing Microtec Research, Inc. v. Nationwide
Mutual Ins. Co., 40 F.3d 968 (9th Cir. 1994).
With respect to the patent infringement claims, the Court of Appeals likewise
rejected an "advertising injury" claim because Reddi-Made's federal
claims "for direct, contributory and inducing infringement all occurred
when Simply Fresh and P & C used the patented devices and
processes. The injury has no causal connection to advertising activities as a
matter of law." NO "ADVERTISING INJURY" LIABILITY FOR TRADE
SECRET MISAPPROPRIATION CLAIMS.
- Roton Barrier, Inc. v. Stanley Works, 79 F.3d 1112 (Fed. Cir. March
4, 1996).Stanley was found liable for trade secret misappropriation and patent
infringement and appealed to the Federal Circuit.
Stanley approached Roton for a possible acquisition. A Confidentiality
Agreement was executed and then Stanley's Vice President of Manufacturing,
Comptroller and President inspected the Roton manufacturing facility.
Thereafter, Stanley made an offer to purchase Roton. Roton rejected the offer,
and negotiations were terminated. Later, Stanley introduced its own continuous
pinless hinge similar to the unique Roton hinges.
Illinois law applied to the trade secret misappropriation claims. The trial
court found nine areas of trade secrets: (1) Roton's gross margins, (2) sales
data, (3) market analysis information, (4) hinge profile sales data, (5)
customer lists, (6) milling process, (7) lubrication information, (8) machine
and hinge fixturing methods, and (9) capitalization requirements.
On appeal, Stanley contended that Roton was "unable directly to prove
misappropriation of any specific trade secret" and Roton had improperly
relied on a "head start" theory in which unspecified trade secret
information was given to Stanley affording Stanley with a head start in
developing a continuous pinless hinge.
The Federal Circuit rejected Stanley's argument. The Court found that Roton
had identified specific trade secret information which was "quite
valuable" and the result of "the cumulative knowledge of 30 years in
the business as the pioneer of continuous pinless hinges."
With respect to the evidence of misappropriation, the Federal Circuit
observed: "It is abundantly clear from the record that parties at Stanley
instrumental in reviewing Roton's manufacturing facilities and financial data
were the same people placed in charge of developing the LS500." Based
upon the totality of the record, the Federal Circuit affirmed the trial
court's finding of trade secret misappropriation.
The trial court found that Roton had sustained both "lost sales" and
"price erosion" from the trade secret misappropriation and
"price erosion" included both (1) historical price erosion and (2)
future price erosion. The Federal Circuit affirmed this measure of damages.
With respect to "willful and malicious" misappropriation (entitling
the Plaintiff to exemplary damages and attorney's fees) the Federal Circuit
noted that Illinois courts have distinguished between "motivation by
malice" and "motivation by competition" and have awarded
punitive damages in the former but not the latter situation citing Embassy/Main,
508 N.E. 2d 331, 335 (Ill. App. Ct. 1987). In this case, Stanley was
"motivated by competition" and therefore exemplary damages were not
recoverable.
The Federal Circuit also reversed the broad injunction enjoining Stanley from
"further using, disclosing and/or disseminating any of [Roton's] trade
secret business and technical information in any manner whatsoever"
because the injunction "does not use specific terms or describe in
reasonable detail the acts sought to be restrained" in violation of Rule
65(d) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. EXEMPLARY DAMAGES NOT
RECOVERABLE WHERE TRADE SECRET MISAPPROPRIATION "MOTIVATED BY
COMPETITION.
- Petroscan AB v. Mobil Corporation, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 7834 (Fed.
Cir. March 4, 1996). Count I of Plaintiff's Complaint for Petroscan's
"breach of a confidential relationship" claim against Mobil was
dismissed as time-barred by the applicable statute of limitations. The trial
court also found non-infringement of a patent and Petroscan appealed to the
Federal Circuit.
Virginia has a five-year statute for "injury to property" and a
one-year statute which covers claims not falling under a specific statute.
The Federal Circuit construed Count III of the Complaint as a claim that Mobil
misappropriated Petroscan's trade secrets. Trade secret rights are generally
recognized as property rights. See Rackleshaus v. Montsato Co.,
467 U.S. 986, 1003-04, 81 L. Ed. 815, 104 S.Ct. 2862 (1984). Therefore, since
the Complaint alleges an "injury to property" the 5-year statute of
limitations applies and the Federal Circuit reversed the trial court's
dismissal of Count III. FEDERAL CIRCUIT RECOGNIZES THAT TRADE SECRETS ARE
PROPERTY RIGHTS UNDER STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS.
- McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. United States Equal Employment Opportunity
Commission, 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4960 (E.D. Mo. April 16, 1996).
McDonnell Douglas Corporation ("MDC") produced documents pursuant to
an EEOC administrative subpoena. Thereafter, an FOIA request was made by a
private litigant to obtain the documents. McDonnell Douglas brought this
action to enjoin the EEOC from releasing the trade secret documents pursuant
to the FOIA request. McDonnell Douglas wins.
FOIA's exception 4 protects from disclosure "trade secrets and commercial
or financial information obtained from a person and privileged or
confidential." 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(4). There was no dispute that the
"adverse impact" documents contained commercial and financial
information but the dispute was whether this was a voluntary submission (Critical
Mass test) or an obligatory submission to the government (National
Parks test).
The Court concluded that the documents were produced voluntarily, were not
publicly available, and therefore Exception 4 applies. Further, the Court
found that the documents were also protected by the attorney-client privilege
because the "adverse impact" analyses were prepared at the request
of counsel for the purpose of rendering legal advice. Under the rule of Diversified
Industries, Inc. v. Meredith, 572 F.2d 596 (8th Cir. 1978), MDC's
disclosure of the documents to the EEOC constituted only a limited waiver and
did not destroy the attorney-client privilege. The Court found that Exception
4 applies on this ground as well. TRADE SECRET DOCUMENTS PROTECTED FROM
FOIA DISCLOSURE.
- Uncle B's Bakery, Inc. v. O'Rourke, 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4754 (C.D.
Iowa April 1, 1996). Uncle B's Bakery sued its former manager (Kevin O'Rourke)
for trade secret misappropriation and violation of a non-competition agreement
in his new employment at Brooklyn Bagel Boys.
A preliminary injunction hearing was held on March 25-26, 1996.
Uncle B's Bakery is in the business of producing and distributing its unique
line of "fresh, never-frozen" bagels sold in refrigerated cases in
supermarkets. Uncle B's "air tight" packaging process eliminates the
need to freeze the bagel to preserve the shelf life of the bagel.
The Court noted that Uncle B's Bakery had invested over seven years and
several million dollars in developing its freshness technology and processes.
The Court found the existence of protectable trade secrets and that Uncle B's
Bakery had "carefully guarded" its trade secrets and confidential
information.
The Non-Disclosure/Non-Compete Agreement was missing from O'Rourke's personnel
file. O'Rourke claimed he never signed one. Uncle B's Bakery argued that
O'Rourke signed it and that O'Rourke had both the motive and opportunity to
remove it from his personnel file.
O'Rourke was hired as the production manager of Uncle B's Ellsworth, Iowa
plant in 1994 (he had been recruited from a supermarket chain in Richmond,
Virginia where his responsibilities included managing a bakery and bagel
manufacturing plant). Thereafter, O'Rourke quit and became plant manager of
one of Brooklyn Bagel Boys' two bagel production plants in Franklin Park in
December of 1995.
The Court found that Uncle B's Bakery has a reasonable likelihood of success
that O'Rourke agreed to be bound by the "Non-Disclosure/Non-Compete"
Agreement (even though the agreement could not be found). The Court granted an
injunction enforcing the non-compete restrictions. However, the Court set a
$100,000 bond adequate to cover lost salary. PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION GRANTED
BASED UPON MISSING NON-COMPETE AGREEMENT; $100,000 BOND SET.
- PulseCard, Inc. v. Discover Card Services, Inc., 1996 U.S. Dist.
LEXIS 3676 (D. Kansas March 6, 1996). PulseCard and SPS Payment Systems, Inc.
("SPS") entered into a confidential non-disclosure agreement.
PulseCard thereafter brought suit against SPS for trade secret
misappropriation and against Discover Card because SPS "provided
confidential PulseCard client information to Discover Card." Discover
Card moved for summary judgment.
The evidence submitted by PulseCard showed that Discover Card and SPS occupied
the same office building and used the same computer system. Further, the Court
found that the PulseCard "information" in the possession of Discover
Card related only to Discover Card merchants and therefore was not
"confidential" via-avis Discover Card.
The Court rejected PulseCard's generalized argument that Discover Card used
PulseCard's purported "secret" information "in their efforts to
injure PulseCard by retarding its growth and using it to create a competing
venture in the health care transaction industry" because PulseCard had
"failed to present affirmative, specific, evidentiary facts" which
demonstrate the existence of genuine issues regarding whether Discover Card
misappropriated any trade secrets of PulseCard. A general conclusionary
statement that "defendants" misappropriated PulseCard's marketing
strategy [or other confidential information] is insufficient to avoid summary
judgment. SUMMARY JUDGMENT GRANTED; NO EVIDENCE OF MISAPPROPRIATION.
- Multiform Desiccants v. Sullivan, 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2802 (W.D.
N.Y. March 8, 1996). Multiform manufactures and distributes desiccant
products. On March 21, 1991, Sullivan became employed as Director of Sales and
Marketing and executed a one-year covenant not to compete agreement. A
Sullivan acquaintance (Hauser) formed Classique Packaging in January, 1994 as
a distributor of Multiform desiccant products.
In early 1994, Sullivan requested the 1994 Master Distributor Price List.
During the Spring of 1994, Sullivan requested copies of Multiform's product
specifications and cost and manufacturing standards. Sullivan was also
allegedly seen carrying boxes filled with documents out the back stairway at
Multiform. On June 8, 1994, Sullivan met with Houser and others to discuss a
machine designed to copy Multiform's machines. Sullivan was terminated on June
24, 1994.
On July 12, 1994, a company called Dessicare, Inc. was formed. Sullivan became
President and a member of the Board of Directors.
A lawsuit for trade secret misappropriation was thereafter filed by Multiform
against Sullivan. Multiform confidential documents were found in Sullivan's
possession and the Court found that "there is no doubt that Sullivan
absconded with trade secret and confidential information." However, the
Court denied preliminary injunctive relief on the trade secret
misappropriation claim because Sullivan had already disclosed the trade
secrets to Dessicare and therefore there was nothing to enjoin.
"Dessicare is making use of [the trade secret] material, but is not a
defendant in the case. Furthermore, "it is unlikely that Sullivan will
disseminate the purloined information to anyone else, as such would harm
Dessicare in which he has a substantial financial interest." The Court
likewise would not enforce the restrictive covenant because the one-year
period had expired. No preliminary injunction was granted: "The theft and
use of the information has already occurred. A preliminary injunction is not
appropriate."
PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION DENIED WHERE THEFT OF TRADE SECRETS HAS ALREADY
OCCURRED.
- J. H. Chapman Group, Ltd. v. Chapman d/b/a The Chapman Group, 1966
U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2256 (N.D. Ill. February 28, 1996).Count VIII of the
Complaint alleged that Norman Chapman breached his fiduciary duty to J. H.
Chapman Group by (1) not advising J. H. Chapman Group that he was forming a
directly competing company during his tenure as Chairman of the Board of J. H.
Chapman Group and (2) by misappropriating J. H. Chapman Group's trade secrets
and confidential business information.
Under Illinois law, a fiduciary relationship exists between a corporation and
the officers of the corporation. As fiduciaries, corporate officers have an
obligation to act with good faith and loyalty and cannot enhance their own
personal interests at the expense of their corporation's interests. Thus, a
corporate officer must disavow any opportunity that would permit his private
interests to clash with those of his corporation. In addition, corporate
officers owe a duty to deal honestly and fairly with their corporations.
Consequently, a corporation officer must disclose facts of which he is aware
that threatens his corporation's existence. Unichem Corp. v. William
W. Gurtler, 148 Ill. App. 3d 284, 498 N.E. 2d 724, 728 (1st Dist. 1990).
Applying these standards, the Court held that the formation of a rival company
clearly threatens a corporation's existence.
Therefore, the Court denied the motion to dismiss Count VIII to the extent
that it was not based upon misappropriation of trade secrets-rejecting
the "preemption" argument under the Illinois Trade Secrets Act.
BREACH OF FIDUCIARY DUTY CLAIM NOT PREEMPTED BY ILLINOIS TRADE SECRETS ACT.
- Engineering Resources, Inc. v. CRS Steam, Inc., 1996 U.S. Dist.
LEXIS 1817 (N.D. Ill. February 16, 1996). Engineering Resources, Inc. (ERI)
alleged inter alia that CRS misappropriated trade secrets. CRS
moved for summary judgment. CRS claimed that the statute of limitations had
run. The Court denied summary judgment on this ground because "whether or
not a party should have reasonably known that it had been wronged is a
question of fact."
Similarly, the question of due diligence is a question generally reserved for
the trier of fact. Here, plaintiff insists that the material it received in
October 1989 was insufficient to confirm suspicions that its trade secret
rights had been violated. Citing Sokol Crystal Products v. DSC
Communications, 15 F.3d 1427 (7th Cir. 1994), the Court concluded that
"suspicion" alone is not sufficient to start the statute of
limitations running.
With respect to the "misappropriation" evidence, the Court held that
there were "numerous factual disputes." Plaintiff has represented
that it took 5 to 15 years of research to develop its methods; CRS's ability
to develop similar methods in only one year raises a material issue of fact
regarding misappropriation. Further, the Court held that whether the
"customer list" constitutes a trade secret could not be decided on a
motion for summary judgment. MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT ON STATUTE OF
LIMITATIONS DENIED.
- United Technologies Corp. v. Turbine Kinetics, Inc., 1996 Conn.
Super. LEXIS 778 (March 18, 1996). he Pratt & Whitney Division of United
Technologies Corp. brought a four-count complaint against Turbine Kinetics for
misappropriation of trade secrets (Count I), unfair competition (Count II),
interference with financial expectations (Count III) and unfair trade
practices (Count IV).
The Court rejected the argument that Count II, Count III and Count IV was
preempted by the Connecticut Unfair Trade Secrets Act. It is difficult to
understand what the legislature means by saying "conflicting remedies
will be superseded." Does it mean "conflicting" in terms of the
type of damages that may be awarded? Is it necessary to throw out the whole
cause of action or can any apparent "conflict" be resolved by jury
instructions?
A cause of action based on interference with financial expectations is an
intentional tort; a UTSA claim can be based on negligence. UTSA, unlike an
unfair competitive claim, does not require a showing of competition. Without a
trial record, or at least a summary judgment record, the Court denied the
motion to strike the other causes of action on "preemption" grounds.MOTION
TO STRIKE ON "PREEMPTION" GROUNDS DENIED.
- Sethscot Collection, Inc. v. Drbul, 669 So. 2d 1076 (Ct. App. Fla.
March 6, 1996).Walter Drbul is a former officer, director and employee of the
Plaintiff.
Sethscot sued Walter Drbul for trade secret misappropriation and moved for a
preliminary injunction to enjoin the defendant from utilizing the plaintiff's
prospective and active customer lists.
The prospective customer list contained the names of 9,600 social fraternities
and sororities and was compiled from information readily ascertainable to the
public and was not a protectable trade secret.
In contrast, the list of active customers contains "a detailed purchasing
history for each sorority and fraternity on the list" and the "active
customer list" is not readily ascertainable to the public.
The Court of Appeals therefore found that the trial court erred in failing to
enjoin the defendant from utilizing the "active customer"
information list because this information is a protectable trade secret.FORMER
EMPLOYEE ENJOINED FROM USING "ACTIVE CUSTOMER" LIST.
- DeGiorgio v. Megabyte International, Inc., 1996 GA. LEXIS 135 (Sup.
Ct. Georgia April 8, 1996).DeGiorgio was a salesman for Megabyte (a
distributor of computer hardware products) and then DeGiorgio began working
for a newly formed competitor, America Megabyte Distributors.
The trial court granted a preliminary injunction for enjoining all
solicitation and sale to customers that DeGiorgio knew or had reason to know
were Megabyte's customers during DeGiorgio's employment with Megabyte. On
appeal, the Supreme Court of Georgia held that there was sufficient evidence
of misappropriation because (1) customer lists were missing from DeGiorgio's
desk and (2) Megabyte received numerous complaints about DeGiorgio's
activities from top customers who could not be identified through phone books
or commercial lists. Further, during the search, Megabyte found a list of its
top vendors in the form of a single-page fax dated May 1, 1995. DeGiorgio
admitted preparing the fax but denied sending it.
The Court, however, held that the injunction was overly broad because
"the trial court effectively enjoined appellants from utilizing personal
knowledge of customer and vendor information" and "such utilization
of personal knowledge may be forbidden through the use of restrictive
covenants, but not under the Trade Secrets Act." The case was remanded to
the trial court to frame a narrower injunction consistent with the Georgia
Supreme Court's decision.CUSTOMER LIST PROTECTED BUT INJUNCTION OVERLY
BROAD.
- Mangren Research and Development Corp. v. National Chemical Co.,
1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 16011 (7th Cir. July 3, 1996).Defendants appealed from a
jury verdict awarding Mangren $252,684.69 in compensatory damages and
$505,369.38 in exemplary damages. The trial court also awarded Mangren its
attorney's fees and costs. Defendants appealed asserting (1) Mangren did not
establish protectable trade secrets, (2) Mangren did not establish evidence of
misappropriation, (3) the jury's compensatory damages award is excessive, (4)
there was no evidentiary basis for an award of exemplary damages or an award
of attorney's fees. The Seventh Circuit rejected all the Defendants' arguments
and affirmed the trial court judgment. The evidence at trial established that
Mangren had developed a unique mold release agent. Mangren also alleged that
its trade secrets also included its customer list and pricing information. The
jury returned a general verdict and the jury was not asked to make findings as
to each alleged trade secret. Therefore, the Seventh Circuit held that the
jury verdict must be sustained if the evidence supports misappropriation of
any of the alleged trade secrets citing Composite Marine Propellers, Inc.
v. Van Der Woude, 962 F.2d 1263, 1265 (7th Cir. 1992). The Seventh
Circuit then limited its review to whether the formula for Mangren's mold
release agent was a trade secret (and misappropriated). With respect to
Mangren's mold release agent, the Court of Appeals observed that the evidence
in this case presents a "textbook example" of a trade secret. The
formula was unique, not generally known or accepted in the industry and
secrecy imparted considerable economic value as shown by the high profit
margins on the product. The signed confidentiality agreements for the two
ex-employees (Venable and Allen) involved in the alleged misappropriation were
missing at the time of trial but the Seventh Circuit found "considerable
evidence" that the company made "substantial efforts" to
protect the secrecy of the formula. Even if Mangren could have taken further
protective measures to protect against a devious competitor, whether or not
the actions that Mangren actually took were sufficient to satisfy ITSA's
reasonableness standard was a question for the jury. See Rockwell Graphic
Sys., Inc. v. Dev Indus., Inc., 925 F.2d 174, 179-80 (7th Cir.
1991). With respect to the issue of misappropriation, Defendants argued on
appeal that their mold release agent formula was different because they used
slightly different ingredients and a slightly smaller volume of the primary
ingredient. The Seventh Circuit rejected the Defendants' argument based upon
the "traditional trade secret law" jury instruction agreed to below:
You [the jury] do not have to find the defendants copied or used each and
every element of the trade secret. You may find that defendants
misappropriated Mangren's trade secrets even if defendant created a new
product if defendants could not have done so without use of Mangren's trade
secret. The Seventh Circuit stated: "the user of another's trade secret
is liable even if he uses it with modifications or improvements upon it
effected by his own efforts, so long as the substance of the process used by
the actor is derived for the other's secret." In re Innovative Constr.
Sys., Inc., 793 F.2d 875, 887 (7th Cir. 1986). In fact, "if trade
secret law were not flexible enough to encompass modified or even new products
that are substantially derived from the trade secret of others, the
protections that law provides would be hollow indeed." Innovative
Constr., 793 F.2d at 887; American Car Co. v. Mansukhani,
742 F.2d 314, 329 (7th Cir. 1984). Under the ITSA, a party proving trade
secret misappropriation is entitled to recover the "actual loss caused by
[the] misappropriation" as well as any unjust enrichment not taken into
account in computing actual loss. 765 ILCS 1065/4(a). Mangren presented
evidence of (1) lost profits and (2) reduced prices on account of the
misappropriation. The evidence established that the two ex-employees disclosed
the formula to two companies: National Chemical (a named defendant) and Bash
(a non-party). Both took away sales from Mangren but defendants argued that
they did not profit from Bash's sales so the "lost profits"
attributable to Bash's sales could not be included in Plaintiff's damages
against the Defendants. The Seventh Circuit disagreed: "the fact that
defendants may not have personally benefited from Bash's sales is not
dispositive under the jury instructions so long as defendants'
misappropriation was a "but for" cause of the third party's
sales." With respect to "willful and malicious"
misappropriation, the Court held: "although we have found no Illinois
case interpreting that phrase, "it surely must include an intentional
misappropriation as well as a misappropriation resulting from the economic
disregard of the rights of another." The evidence at trial shows that the
defendants knew that they "might be sued" by Mangren but went ahead
anyway only slightly changing the formula. The Seventh Circuit therefore
concluded that this was sufficient evidence for the jury to find "willful
and malicious" misappropriation under the ITSA. The award of attorney's
fees by the trial court was also proper for the same reasons.SEVENTH
CIRCUIT AFFIRMS JURY VERDICT FOR TRADE SECRET MISAPPROPRIATION AND THE AWARD
OF EXEMPLARY DAMAGES AND ATTORNEY'S FEES.
- Trailor Leasing Co. v. Associates Commercial Corp., 1996 U.S. Dist.
LEXIS 9654 (N.D. Ill. July 10, 1996). The district court (Judge David H. Coar)
finds the Trailor Leasing Company (TLA) restrictive covenants with Gary Chase
unenforceable. Gary Chase signed an employment agreement with TLC which
contained the following post-employment restrictions: (1) a
covenant-not-to-compete provision, (2) a non-disclosure provision and (3) a
non-solicitation provision. The Court found all three post-employment
restrictions unenforceable under Illinois law and Judge Coar declined to
"blue-pencil" the post-employment restriction to make them
reasonable in order "to encourage employees to write restrictive
covenants more narrowly." With respect to the covenant-not-to-compete
restriction, the Court found that the activities restriction was too broad and
prevented Chase from working for any company, in any manner, in any business
"leasing, renting, selling and using all sorts of transportation."
The Court stated: "The universe of companies falling within the broad
scope of these loosely defined terms is simply too large to be considered
reasonable" as a matter of law. The non-solicitation provisions were
likewise found to be overbroad. Chase was prohibited from "soliciting,
diverting or taking away any of TLC's customers or prospective
customers." Defendants argued that this non-solicitation provision was
overbroad because Chase was prohibited from (1) soliciting TLC's existing
customers with whom he had never had any contact and (2) TLC's prospective
customers. The Court agreed citing Coreen, 45 Ill. App. 3d at 155, that
a non-solicitation covenant must be reasonably related to the employer's
interest in protecting customer relations. Finally, with respect to the
nondisclosure provision, the Court found the provision overbroad because it
restrained Chase from disclosing inter alia "any methods
and manners by which Employer leases, rents, sells, finances or deals with its
products and its customers" which-like NAPCO, 172 Ill. App. 3d at 415-16,
purported to protect everything that the employee has learned while employed
without any regard for whether the information was confidential. RESTRICTIVE
COVENANT UNENFORCEABLE UNDER ILLINOIS LAW.
- Glaxo Inc. v. Novopharm Ltd., 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9592 (E.D. N.C.
July 5, 1996).Novopharm is a generic drug manufacturer of such products.
Novopharm filed a counterclaim for attempted monopolization of the ???
hydrochloride market in violation of the Sherman and Clayton Anti-Trust Acts,
15 U.S.C. §§ 2, 15. On July 22, 1994, Glaxo sued Novopharm for patent
infringement and trade secret misappropriation (Glaxo II) relating to
Glaxo's "Zantac"(ranitidine hydrochloride) products. [Glaxo had
prevailed in a previous trial for patent infringement against Novopharm (Glaxo
I)].A bench trial was held on Glaxo's claims from April 16-30, 1996.
Novopharm wins on all claims. With respect to the trade secret
misappropriation claims filed pursuant to the North Carolina Trade Secrets
Protection Act, the trial court first noted that "the owner of a valid
patent will have disclosed the mode for practicing the invention , and no
longer possess a valuable trade secret relating to the practice of the
invention unless he later develops some unanticipated alternative
practice." The Court found that Glaxo never identified any specific trade
secrets-"Glaxo never devised a specific process for the stable continuous
production of Form 1" [crystals]. Instead, Glaxo's "trade
secrets" case rests on the theory that it was "the general body of
its research which provided Novopharm with a platform from which to construct
its Form 1 production process." Secrecy is claimed in a "broad
competitive advantage, allegedly misappropriated by Novopharm, which
facilitated Novopharm's discovery of the precise combination of solvent
system, ph, temperature, and seeding constituting the only known stable,
reproductible method for obtaining Form 1 crystals. In other words, the Court
noted that secrecy is claimed not in the final combination or unfinished
design, but in the knowledge that individual elements could be components of a
valuable process." With this definition of the alleged trade secret, the
Court found that knowledge of these elements were "generally known"
and part of the public record (Volume 830 of the Federal Supplement) in the Glaxo
I litigation. The Court stated: "As a matter of law, information
which a party wishes to maintain as a trade secret may be introduced as
evidence only if it is absolutely necessary to do so, and only after asking
the court to maintain the trade secret's integrity by sealing the exhibits,
conducting an in-camera hearing, or taking other appropriate steps."
Glaxo took no steps at the previous trial. Glaxo admitted 135 of its own
documents, without seal, which it now claims to contain trade secrets.
"If an individual discloses his trade secret to others who are under no
obligation to protect the confidentiality of the information, or otherwise
publicly discloses the secret, his property right is extinguished. Ruckelshaus,
467 U.S. at 1002. Failure to object to the admission of documents into
evidence, without seal, is a waiver of confidentiality. Littlejohn, 851
F.2d at 680, National Polyman Products v. Borg-Warner Corp., 641
F.2d 418, 421 (6th Cir. 1981). The Court found that the industry closely
followed the Glaxo I trial. Numerous persons have examined the Glaxo
I trial exhibits. Copies of the trial transcripts have been purchased and
various representatives of pharmaceutical companies attended the Glaxo I
trial. The trial court therefore concluded that Glaxo has waived any trade
secret rights that existed due to publication of the alleged trade secrets,
without seal, in Glaxo I. The court also found no evidence of alleged
"misappropriation" because, once again, the documents containing the
alleged trade secrets were not placed under seal pursuant to the
Protective Order entered in Glaxo I. Therefore, there was no
"contempt" of the protective order. Further, even if Glaxo
established a prima facie case of trade secret misappropriation (which
Glaxo did not) at trial, the court found that such a case would be rebutted by
the evidence which "clearly established" at trial that Novopharm
independently developed its Form 1 production process.DOCUMENTS NOT
UNDER SEAL WAIVE ALLEGED TRADE SECRET RIGHTS.
- Sweetzel, Inc. v. Hawk Hill Cookies, Inc., 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS
8562 (E.D. PA. June 20, 1996). Sweetzel brought an action for misappropriation
of trade secrets, unfair competition, Lanham Act violations, etc. against
ex-employee Kummer and his new employer (Hawk Hill Cookies, Inc.) regarding
misappropriation of spiced wafer recipes. The Court found the defendants
liable for misappropriation of trade secrets and unfair competition in
violation of the Lanham Act and issued injunctive relief. This decision
relates to Plaintiff's damages claim. With respect to trade secret damages,
the court found that the proper measure of damages was the costs the
defendants would have incurred had they independently developed the
information in question (instead of misappropriating the information). MEASURE
OF DAMAGES IN TRADE SECRETS CASE.
- RSR Corp. v. Browner, 924 F.Supp. 504 (S.D. N.Y. April 30, 1996).
Plaintiff (RSR) operated a secondary lead smelting plant in Wallkill, New York
(the "Wallkill Plant"). On March 2, 1994, the EPA received a request
under the Freedom of Information ("FOIA"), 5 U.S.C. § 552 for
records showing Wallkill Plant's compliance with the Clear Water Act, 33
U.S.C. § 1251 et. seq. RSR objected to the disclosure due to
the proprietary nature of the data and that disclosure of the data could harm
RSR's competitive position in the secondary lead smelting industry. In a final
determination issued by EPA's Regional Counsel pursuant to 40 C.F.R. § 2.205,
the EPA rejected plaintiff's claim that the records were exempt for disclosure
under exemption 4 of FOIA, 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(4), because the requested
records contained "effluent data" which is necessary to determine
the amount of pollutants and such information by law is not eligible for
confidential treatment. On appeal, the District Court affirms the EPA
determination. The Court rejects the argument that disclosure of the requested
records will violate the Trade Secrets Act, 18 U.S.C. § 1905 which prohibits
United States officers or employees from disclosing inter alia
trade secrets "to any extent not authorized by law." Here, the
disclosure of the effluent data is authorized by law and therefore the Trade
Secrets Act is inapplicable. FOIA DISCLOSURE OF EPA INFORMATION DOES NOT
VIOLATE THE FEDERAL TRADE SECRETS ACT.
- Aloi Electric Service v. ASAP Fire Equipment, 1996 Conn. Super.
LEXIS 1564 (Superior CT. June 18, 1996). The plaintiff (doing business as Fire
Defense Centers) sued three ex-employees (Boland, Ryan and Lewandowski) who
left and set up ASAP Fire Equipment, Inc. Plaintiff claimed that defendants
misappropriated its customer lists, a list of the systems and equipment owned
by the customers, plaintiff's pricing schedules, lists of its customers'
service inspection and maintenance requirements, a list of scheduled
inspection and maintenance dates, and a list of contact persons for each
customer. The defendants filed a motion for summary judgment that the alleged
information was well known or readily obtainable by all persons working in the
fire equipment suppression industry. The plaintiff countered, through the
affidavit of its president, Paul Aloi, that the information was not readily
obtainable in the industry, especially detailed information about customers'
service and inspection schedules, and the information was accumulated over a
period of years, by acquisition and servicing of the accounts and the
development of goodwill. The Court denied Defendants' motion for summary
judgment stating: "where, as here, there is evidence that the information
includes not only customer names but sensitive customer service data that has
been accumulated over a number of years, is essential to the effective serving
of accounts, and has been maintained privately by the plaintiff's president
for the plaintiff's exclusive use and benefit, there is-a genuine issue of
material fact that such information constitutes trade secrets." CUSTOMER
INFORMATION IS A PROTECTABLE TRADE SECRET.
- Air Support, Inc. v. Acuna, et al., 1996 Conn. Super. LEXIS 1378
(Superior Ct. May 29, 1996). Air Support, Inc. sued former employee for trade
secret misappropriation and sought a temporary injunction to restrain the
former employee from "soliciting any customers of the plaintiff."
The Plaintiff, through its President (Dennis Kameon), claims that the
ex-employee had taken its customer list database and customer-programmed
computer software. However, in contrast, plaintiff's former office manager
testified that she had no idea what "the customer list database" was
and the only database that existed was a "leads" database compiled
from business directories, college and university directories, telephone
books, junk mail, etc. The court found that the "leads" database was
compiled from publicly available information and did not contain any detailed
information (such as customers' buying habits, requirements, preferences or
other difficult to obtain data) and therefore the information in the
"leads" database was not a protectable trade secret. MOTION FOR
PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION TO PROTECT CUSTOMER "LEADS" DATABASE DENIED.
- GME, Inc. v. Carter, 917 F.2d 254 (Super. Idaho May 24, 1996). GME,
Inc. manufactures and markets hydrocutters which cut potatoes into french
fries by using a continuous flow of water to force the potatoes through a
stationary array of cutting blades. Scott Carter was employed as an engineer
in charge of research and development at GME for 2 ½ years and prior to his
departure, Carter took home and retained 76 blueprint drawings belonging to
GME. After leaving GME, Carter worked on design modifications to hydrocutters
in his spare time. After GME learned of Carter's possession of the blueprints,
GME sued Carter inter alia for trade secret misappropriation.
The trial court found that Carter misappropriated GME's trade secrets and
entered a permanent injunction enjoining Carter from using the misappropriated
trade secrets and from designing food-processing hydrocutters for five years.
The Idaho Trade Secrets Act does not contain a provision for the recovery of
attorney's fees and exemplary damages (unlike the Uniform Trade Secrets Act).
Thus, Plaintiff was awarded only $1.00 for the trade secret violations and
appealed to the Idaho Supreme Court. GME argued that it should have been
awarded its development costs of $100,000 - $150,000 as the measure of
Carter's unjust enrichment. The trial court rejected this damages theory (and
the Idaho Supreme Court affirms) because the cases awarding development costs
apply only where the wrongdoer has gained some advantage that it has exploited
or will be able to do so in the future. Because the trial court concluded that
Carter had not yet exploited his misappropriation or been unjustly enriched
and that the five-year injunction would prevent him from doing so in the
future, the trial court properly declined to award GME its development costs.
GME argued that its "actual loss" under the Idaho Trade Secrets Act
should include the attorney's fees that GME has incurred pursuing its claim
against Carter. The Idaho Supreme Court disagreed (affirming the trial court)
pointing out that when the Idaho legislature enacted the Idaho Trade Secrets
Act, it copied much of the UTSA, but did not include the portion of the UTSA
which provides for an award of attorney's fees. GME, however, was entitled to
receive a portion of its attorney's fees under another state statute. NO
"UNJUST ENRICHMENT" DAMAGES ABSENT EXPLOITATION OF THE TRADE SECRET.
- Carolina Chemical Equipment Company, Inc. v. Muckenfuss, 1996 S.C.
App. LEXIS 65 (Ct. App. S.C. April 22, 1996). Muckenfuss was one of the three
shareholders of Carolina Chemical from 1982 to August, 1989 when he was voted
out by the other two shareholders. Muckenfuss sold his shares back to Carolina
Chemical pursuant to a Stock Redemption Agreement which contained a covenant
not to compete and a covenant not to disclose trade secrets. Muckenfuss
refrained from selling industrial cleaning supplies from August, 1989 until
March, 1991, when he went to work for Energen, a competitor of Carolina
Chemical. A trade secret misappropriation was filed, the case was tried to a
jury twice, and both times the jury returned a verdict for Carolina Chemical.
On appeal, the South Carolina Court of Appeals reversed the judgment, ordering
the trial court to enter directed verdicts in favor of Muckenfuss and Energen,
vacate the permanent injunction, and vacate the award of attorney's fees. The
Court refused to enforce the "trade secret" nondisclosure provision
as a matter of law. Noting that the contractual provision does not identify
any specific trade secrets; rather, it defines trade secrets so broadly that
virtually all of the information Muckenfuss acquired during his employment
would fall within its definition. Viewing the evidence in the light went
favorable to Carolina Chemical, the Court of Appeals found that Muckenfuss had
not done anything wrong. Six months after the expiration of the noncompetition
period, Muckenfuss began competing with Carolina Chemical. He contracted some
of Carolina Chemical's non-exclusive customers and he made sales to these
customers of products similar to Carolina Chemical. One of the products, paint
thinner is manufactured by neither Carolina Chemical nor Energen. The
remaining three products (sold by Muckenfuss) are "built" by
purchasing raw materials, and then mixing, packaging and selling them.
Formulas for these three products are readily available from the supplier of
raw materials. Applying Illinois law and citing AMP, Inc. v. Fleischhacker,
823 F.2d 1199 (7th Cir. 1987), the Court found no misappropriation of a
"trade secret." JURY VERDICT FOR TRADE SECRET MISAPPROPRIATION
REVERSED.
- Bestechnologies, Inc. v. Trident Environmental System, Inc. f/k/a Probac
International Corporation, 1996 Fla. App. LEXIS 10474 (CT. App. Fla.
October 11, 1996). Third-party competitor (Bestechnologies, Inc.) was
served with a Subpoena regarding issues relating to whether Bestechnologies,
Inc. uses a certain bacteria process in its grease remediation system. The
trade secret misappropriation suit was between two other competitors.
Bestechnologies was not a party to the lawsuit. Bestechnologies moved to quash
the subpoena and for a protective order that its employees not be required to
answer certain questions (which involved Bestechnologies' trade secrets) and
the trial court ordered that the deposition go forward with an "attorneys
eyes" only protective order. Bestechnologies appealed the trial court
ruling and the Florida Court of Appeals (Second District) affirmed noting that
a factual issue existed in the underlying trade secret case whether every
competitor had discovered the same process and therefore the alleged trade
secret process was "generally known" and not protectable as a trade
secret. The Court held that the strict "attorneys eyes" only
confidentiality order entered by the trial court adequately protected
Bestechnologies interests as there was no basis for the Appellate Court to
issue a writ of certiorari.THIRD-PARTY DISCOVERY FROM COMPETITORS
IS PERMISSIBLE IN A TRADE SECRETS CASE.
- Enhanced Computer Solutions, Inc. v. Joel Rose, 927 F.Supp. 738
(S.D.N.Y.). Plaintiff (Enhanced Computer Solutions, Inc.) brought a trade
secret misappropriation case against Defendant (Joel Rose) in state court.
Following receipt of Plaintiff's answers to interrogatories, Defendant removed
the action to federal court asserting that Plaintiff's claims of trade secret
misappropriation are dependent upon determinations involving federal copyright
law. Plaintiff filed a motion to remand the case back to state court because
the removal was untimely and the federal court lacks subject matter
jurisdiction. The United States District Court for the Southern District of
New York favors this issue whether plaintiffs' state law (trade secret
misappropriation) claim was preempted by the Copyright Act. This
"question is central" because "if there is no preemption, then
the disputed claim does not arise under federal law for purposes of
removal." Citing Computer Associates International, Inc. v. Altai,
Inc., 982 F.2d 693 (2d Cir. 1992), the Court found no preemption because
trade secret misappropriation claims have an "extra element" [breach
of trust or confidentiality] in addition to the acts of reproduction,
performance, distribution or display protected under Section 301 of the
Copyright Act. Finding this "extra element" present in the
allegations in the state court complaint, the Court concluded that the claims
do not arise under federal law and the federal court recommended the case to
the state court.REMOVAL TO FEDERAL COURT DENIED; NO COPYRIGHT PREEMPTION.
- Anderson, Greenwood & Co. v. Nibisco Supply, Inc. et al., 1996
U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9413 (W.D.N.Y. June 27, 1996). A non-party competitor (Flow
Safe, Inc.) brought a motion pursuant to Rule 45(c)(3)(a) of the Federal Rules
of Civil Procedure to quash a subpoena duces tecum and for a protective order
pursuant to FRCP 26(c) in response to discovery sought by the Plaintiff
("AGCO") in a breach of restrictive covenant/trade secret
misappropriation case. AGCO was a manufacturer of safety pressure relief
valves and the Defendants ("Nibisco" and "Niabco") were
sales and marketing companies for AGCO pursuant to restrictive covenant
contracts, which prohibited defendants inter alia from manufacturing
and selling other competitive safety valve products. AGCO alleged that
defendants, in contravention of the contractual restrictive covenants, stole
AGCO's proprietary information and developed and marketed safety valve
products through Flow Safe. Flow Safe moved to quash because it is not a party
to the litigation between AGCO and defendants and the requested discovery
calls for the disclosure of Flow Safe's proprietary business information. Flow
Safe had "officers in common" with the defendants. Balancing the
interests of the parties, the Court granted a protective order permitting Flow
Safe to redact "manufacturing or internal product specifications,
tolerances, materials, costs and similar data" but to produce documents
relating to the chronology of the development of Flow Safe's competing safety
or pressure valves, external specifications and pertinent customer information
during the time period only of the alleged breach of the restrictive covenant
provisions.DISCOVERY AGAINST THIRD-PARTY COMPETITOR BY PLAINTIFF IN
RESTRICTIVE COVENANT/TRADE SECRET MISAPPROPRIATION CASE GRANTED.
- Radisson Hotels International, Inc. v.Westin Hotel Company, 931
F.Supp. 638 (D.C. Minn. June 28, 1996). Radisson is a Delaware corporation
with its principal place of business in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Westin is a
Delaware corporation with its principal place of business located in Seattle,
Washington. Radisson developed an innovative marketing program called the
"Look to Book" program which provides credits to travel agents
(redeemable for various "incentive" prizes) if Radisson hotels are
booked by the travel agent. Radisson alleged that a :high level employee"
[Bartels] left his position with Radisson in May, 1995, joined Westin, and
therefore wrongfully used Radisson's proprietary and trade secret information
to develop a competing travel counselor incentive program for Westin. Westin
moved to transfer the case to Seattle, Washington where the alleged acts of
misappropriation occurred. Radisson, of course, wanted the case to stay in its
home court in Minneapolis, Minnesota. A motion to transfer venue shall not
be freely granted. 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a). In determining whether the transfer
venue under § 1404(a), courts consider three factors (1) the convenience of
the parties, (2) the convenience of witnesses and (3) the interests of
justice. On Factor 1, the Court found (not surprisingly) that Minneapolis is a
more convenient forum for Radisson and Seattle Washington is a more convenient
forum for Westin. This factor was a wash. On Factor 2, both corporate
defendants have material company witnesses in Minnesota (for Radisson) and in
Seattle, Washington (for Westin). With respect to third-party witnesses, the
Court found that a substantial number of witnesses will suffer hardship if
this case is in trial in either Minnesota or Washington. This second factor
was therefore a wash. Regarding Factor 3, ("Interest of Justice"),
the Court noted that this is the most important § 1404(a) factor. In
considering the interests of justice, the courts consider the relative ability
of the parties to bear the expenses of litigating in a distant forum and the
relative familiarity of the two courts with the law to be applied. Apply these
considerations, the Court denied Westin's motion to transfer venue to Seattle,
Washington. Westin is a large corporation with multi-national operations and
it can adequately defend its interests (financially) in either Minnesota or
Washington. Further, this action involves several claims governed by Minnesota
law and this Court is more likely to be familiar with applicable Minnesota law
rather than the Washington Court.MOTION TO TRANSFER VENUE DENIED IN TRADE
SECRET CASE DENIED.
- Architectronics, Inc. v. Control Systems, Inc. et al., 1996 U.S.
Dist. LEXIS 10942 (S.D.N.Y. August 1, 1996). The Plaintiff (Architectronics)
was a computer software development company in New York. Plaintiff sued two
former joint venturers relating to a 1986-1987 software development project to
create a new computer software product designed to "enhance"
then-existing computer-aided design (CAD) software [AutoCAD]. The joint
venture involved the plaintiff, CSI and CADSource, a distributor of CSI
graphics boards used in PCs to run AutoCAD. A software Development and
Licensing Agreement ("SDLA") was executed by the parties on
September 1, 1987. Thereafter, in June, 1990, CSI released its own product
("GT Flexicon") that Defendant's claim was derived from Plaintiff's
software and prototypes. The lawsuit was filed on December 18, 1992 for inter
alia trade secret misappropriation and copyright infringement. In
resolving statute of limitation issues, the Court conducted that the
"predominant" feature of the SDLA related to the transfer of
intellectual property rights and therefore the general contract statute of
limitations applied (6 years) rather than the UCC four-year statute of goods.
With respect to the trade secret misappropriation claims, the Court concluded
that "accrual" of the claim occurs in one of two ways: (1) If a
defendant misappropriates a trade secret and discloses the trade secret [in
the public domain], the defendant becomes liable to the plaintiff upon
disclosure; (2) If the defendant keeps the secret confidential yet makes use
of it to his own commercial advantage, each successive use constitutes a new
actionable tort for purposes of the Statute of Limitations. Defendant argued
that any trade secret rights were extinguished when Defendant released GT ICON
on January 15, 1989. (Therefore, the three-year statute of limitations had run
out). However, the Court denied Defendants' motion for summary judgment noting
that "the technology may have been concealed within impenetrable
programming codes" or it is possible that "CSI used the
misappropriated technology to create GT ICON without actually disclosing the
secret know-how in the released product." The copyright infringement
claim was likewise not barred because "every act of infringement is a
distinct harm giving rise to an independent claim for relief. Stone v. Williams,
970 F.2d 1043, 1049-50 (2d Cir. 1992), cert. denied, 508 U.S.
906 (1993). On the merits, the Court noted that the dispute boils down to
whether the allegedly misappropriated technology was "generally
known" or "readily ascertainable" under the Minnesota Trade
Secrets Act. Protection of trade secret information requires less novelty than
federal patent protection. Although "mere violations of widely use
processes cannot be trade secrets," (Electro-Craft Corp. v. Controlled
Motion, Inc., 332 N.W.2d 890, 899 (Minn. 1983), "generally knows computer
elements may gain trade secret protection from the nature of their unique
combination. Imperial Chem. Indus. Ltd. v. National Distillers & Chem
Corp., 342 F.2d 737, 742 (2d Cir. 1965); 1 Roger M. Milgrim, Milgrim on Trade
Secrets P 1.08[5] (1993) ("Recognition in accorded to a new singular or
particularly useful combination of familiar substances or principles, which
combination constitutes a new result"). The court denied Defendants'
motion for summary judgment on the trade secret misappropriation claim. The
Court also rejected defendants' copyright "preemption" argument
citing the "extra element" test (breach of some duty of trust or
confidentiality). The Court also cited Nimmer on Copyright Section
1.01[B][1][g]. ("Actions for disclosure and exploitation of trade secrets
require a status of secrecy, not required for copyright, and hence, are not
preempted").WHETHER ELEMENTS (OR COMBINATION OF ELEMENTS) IN A
COMPUTER SOFTWARE PROGRAM WERE "GENERALLY KNOWN" IS QUESTION OF FACT
FOR THE JURY, NO PREEMPTION OF TRADE SECRET CLAIMS UNDER COPYRIGHT LAW.
- Sperry Rail, Inc. v. Herzog Services, Inc., 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS
13134, (D. Kansas August 5, 1996). Plaintiff (Sperry Rail, Inc.) is engaged in
the business of providing rail testing service for commercial railroads and
subway lines to detect flaws and defects in the rail lines. Plaintiff has been
involved in this business since 1928. Plaintiff utilizes two highly
technological detection systems (1) magnetic induction technology and (2)
ultrasonic technology. One of Plaintiff;s engineers (Fitzgerald), after 13
years of research and development on new rail testing technology, announced
his "retirement" effective January 9, 1996. On a Sunday when the
place was closed, Fitzgerald deposited his retirement letter in the Company's
mailbox and then he removed several boxes containing books and documents from
Plaintiff's Research and Development laboratory. On January 11, 1996,
Fitzgerald met with Defendants' representative (Herzog Services, Inc.) and
worked out an "Independent Contractor's Agreement" to be paid
&75,000 per year in salary and a $54,000 signing bonus. Defendant was also
engaged in the rail testing business but defendant only used "ultrasonic
technology" not "magnetic induction technology."
Defendant had never paid a new employee a "signing bonus." Defendant
also executed an indemnification agreement to indemnify, defend and hold
Fitzgerald harmless from any claims made by Plaintiff for breach of his
employment (confidentiality) agreement with Plaintiff. The first project that
Fitzgerald was assigned was "to complete a comprehensive review of
Defendant's rail testing technology and to prepare a report detailing his
findings and recommendations." Based on these facts, the Court granted
Plaintiff's motion for preliminary injunction concluding that Plaintiff had
established a likelihood of success on its trade secret misappropriation claim
under the Missouri Uniform Trade Secrets Act. The corporate defendant knew
about Fitzgerald's obligations under the confidentiality agreement, paid him a
$54,000 signing bonus, and agreed to indemnify him. The Court concluded:
Defendant knew or had reason to know that it was acquiring trade secrets from
Fitzgerald who had a duty to maintain the secrecy of the trade secrets.
"Defendant's actions in hiring Fitzgerald were calculated to
misappropriate plaintiff's trade secrets concerning its technology, marketing
strategies and pricing structure." The Court entered a preliminary
injunction enjoining Defendant from "seeking, acquiring, using or
disclosing any trade secrets of plaintiff acquired by Fitzgerald int he course
of, or arising out of his employment with Plaintiff, and Defendant is enjoined
from employing Fitzgerald in any capacity which will call upon him to use or
disclose any trade secrets or confidential information of Plaintiff.PRELIMINARY
INJUNCTION GRANTED BASED INTER ALIA ON $54,000 SIGNING
BONUS.
- SAFCO Corp. v. Miletic, 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11685 (N.D. Ill.
August 9, 1996). Richard Miletic was employed by Safco Corporation (plaintiff)
from October 6, 1991 through June 7, 1996. Until May 19, 1994, Miletic worked
in the home office of Safco in Chicago, Ill. From May 19, 1994 to June 7, 1996
Miletic (while still employed by Safco) was located in Hong Kong. Thereafter,
Miletic purchased a one-third interest in Z.K Celltest, Inc.
("Celltest"), a California corporation. Celltest is a direct
competitor of Safco. Plaintiff sued Miletic for trade secret misappropriation
and breach of restrictive covenant in the Circuit Court of Cook County,
Chancery Division. Subsequently, the defendants the action to federal court
based upon diversity of citizenship. Defendants filed a motion to transfer
venue to the Northern District of California pursuant to 28 U.S.C. 1404(a). It
was undisputed that venue is proper in either the transferor court (N.D.
Illinois) or the transferee court (N.D. California). Applying the 1404(a)
standard, the Court noted that the restrictive covenant agreement was executed
in Illinois but that much of the evidence relating to Celltest's alleged
status as a competitor was in California. On the other hand, much of the
information relating to the trade secret misappropriation claim will be
located in Illinois. The "convenience of the witness" factor was not
given much weight by the Court because testimony can be taken by video
depositions. With respect to the convenience of the parties, the Court noted
that Plaintiff Safco is a corporation that employs over 200 employees and
Celltest is a relatively small corporation that employs only 4 employees.
Based on these facts, the Court concluded that the burden would be greater on
Celltest to litigate in the Northern District of Illinois rather than vice
versa. The Court acknowledged that the Northern District of Illinois
would be more familiar with Illinois Law; the Northern District of California
with California Law. The final argument was "judicial economy." The
Northern District of Illinois had already dismissed the corporate defendant,
Celltest, for lack of personal jurisdiction. Therefore, if the case were
litigated in the Northern District of California, both of these defendants
could be litigated in a single cause of action." Motion to transfer venue
to the Northern District of Illinois granted.MOTION TO TRANSFER VENUE IN
TRADE SECRET MISAPPROPRIATION CASE GRANTED.
- La Calhene, Inc. v. Spolyar, 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12909 (W.D. Wisc.
August 23, 1996). Spolyar was the Chief Operating Officer and President of
Plaintiff's (La Calhene, Inc.) sales and marketing division. La Calhene, Inc.
is a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business in Minnesota.
Plaintiff sells isolator products for total containment of hazardous
substances or protection of products in a sterile environment. La Calhene
(France) has been engaged in this business for 35 years. Plaintiff develops
customized products to meet the needs of its customers. The customer
identifies La Calhene of its needs (and what it hopes to achieve) and La
Calhene then engineers as effective isolator installation for a particular
customer to solve specific sterilization problems. Each customer installation
raises special challenges often requiring the installer to make design changes
as the installation programmer and new problems surface. Over time, La Calhene
has gained valuable designs and engineering experience that assists in
designing and bidding on future projects. In this regard, learning "what
doesn't work" can be extremely valuable in avoiding similar blind alleys
in the future. Spolyar had no prior experience with this isolator technology
when he was hired by La Calhene in July, 1994. He resigned less than two years
later on April 29, 1996. Spolyar signed a restrictive covenant agreement.
After Spolyar left La Calhene, he became an "unsalaried, commissional
salesperson" for Walker Stainless Equipment Company which had worked as a
subcontractor for Plaintiff and had designed isolator installations directly
for customers. La Calhene moved for a preliminary injunction against Spolyar.
The evidence at the preliminary injunction hearing established that La Calhene
did not have a formal program of identifying documents or other items
considered to be trade secrets. Further: it does not use a confidentiality
stamp on documents or keep records of confidential information or maintain a
records retrieval policy or records destruction program. Plaintiff does not
have procedures in place to keep confidential documents out of the hands of
persons outside the company. It has no policy on leaving documents on desks or
photocopying sensitive documents. It does not post security guards, screen
visitors or require visitors to wear badges while inside the facility.
However, plaintiff does not allow visitors to wander about its facility
unaccompanied. Plaintiff does not keep sensitive documents in locked cabinets
and it does not have a written exit program under which departing employees
are required to account for documents in their possession. As chief operating
officer of plaintiff, defendant was responsible for instituting and
implementing a confidentiality policy. In defense, La Calhene argued that the
dissemination of confidential information was controlled by limiting the
disclosure of confidential information on a "need to know" basis to
only three persons in upper management (one of whom was a defendant) and each
of the three upper management employees had signed confidentiality/restrictive
covenant agreements. La Calhene relies on the good sense of its employees not
to give customers or competitors sensitive information. It is a common
understanding of salespeople that lists of customers and completed projects
and drawings of installations should not be circulated outside the company or
shown to anyone other than a customer when use of the list or drawings might
help secure a sale. After Spolyar left, two of three of the other salespersons
left crippling Plaintiff's sale force. In fact, Spolyar assisted one of the
salespeople (Bill Friedheim) in drafting a letter announcing Friedheim's new
job as salesman for Walker Stainless. The evidence also established that since
Spolyar has left his employment with Plaintiff, he has talked with all but one
of the customers to whom he had submitted bids on isolator installations on
behalf of La Calhene. In one instance, he learned that the customer was going
to rebid a project on which plaintiff had bid previously and Spolyar was able
to bid the modified project on behalf of Walker Stainless. Upon analysis of
the various alleged trade secrets, the Court found that La Calhene's customer
list was not protectable because the information contained in those lists is
"general in nature and much of it was readily obtainable from other
sources." However, the Court found that La Calhene's (1) research and
development information, (2) manufacturing and engineering information, and
(3) strategic and marketing plans were protectable trade secrets. The Court
rejected Defendants' "reverse engineering" defense which was based
upon the testimony of "experts in the field." The Court noted that
"certainly, many of plaintiff's standard products and installations could
be reverse engineered" (albeit not in the short time that
defendant postulated), but "it would be considerably more difficult to do
it with the customer applications for which the specific requirements cover a
wide range of possible configurations, Corporate parts and special
designs." With respect to the argument that customers have copies of the
drawings for its particular installation, the Court noted: "The fact that
different customers have copies of their own project drawings does not render
the full set of drawings less valuable." Despite considerable evidence
introduced by Defendant regarding the lack of security measures, the Court
concluded: "the steps that plaintiff took were reasonable under the
circumstances." Primarily, plaintiff restricted the number of people who
had access to confidential information and imposed confidential requirements
upon those upper management personnel. The Court also noted that there was a
visitor escort policy. Since it was the defendant's duty as Chief Operating
Officer to protect the Company's intellectual property assets, "it would
be ironic, and unfair to plaintiff, if defendant's failure to take proper
measures to protect plaintiff's confidential information and knowledge inured
to his benefit." Finally, the Defendant argued that no preliminary
injunction could be entered because Plaintiff had not shown that defendant had
actually misappropriated any of La Calhene's trade secrets. The Court
summarily rejected this argument. "Actual or threatened misappropriation
may be enjoined" and "it is all but inevitable that he will utilize
that knowledge during his work with Walker Stainless or any other competitor
so long as he is selling a competing product." SeE PepsiCo, Inc.
v. Redmond, 54 F.3d 1262, 1269 (7th Cir. 1995); Teradyne, Inc.
v. Clear Communications Corp., 707 F.Supp. 353, 356 (N.D. Ill. 1989).
The Court entered a 1-year injunction prohibiting employment with a
competitor.INEVITABLE DISCLOSURE DOCTRINE APPLIED; "REVERSE
ENGINEERING" DEFENSE REJECTED; LACK OF TRADE SECRETS PROGRAM NOT FATAL.
- Precision Screen Machines, Inc. v. Elexon, Inc., 1996 U.S. Dist.
LEXIS 12487 (August 26, 1996). In early 1994, Elexon became interested in
purchasing Precision Screen Machines, Inc. During these discussions, Precision
provided Elexon with confidential "evaluation materials" containing
alleged trade secret information. Elexon retained the "evaluation
materials" and did not return the materials after the negotiations broke
down. Plaintiff filed a lawsuit for trade secret misappropriation. Elexon
filed a Motion to Dismiss the Complaint. The district court (Judge Nordberg)
summarily denied Defendant's motion to dismiss the trade secret and breach of
contract counts but the Court granted Defendant's motion to dismiss the
"tortious breach of confidential relationship" count. Common law
claims for trade secret misappropriation are now preempted by the Illinois
Trade Secrets Act. 765 ILCS § 1065(8) (1993). COMMON LAW CLAIM FOR TRADE
SECRET MISAPPROPRIATION DISMISSED.
- Harbor Software, Inc. v.Applied Systems, Inc., 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS
13224 (SDNY September 9, 1996). Harbor Software, Inc. sued Applied Systems,
Inc. for copyright infringement and trade secret misappropriation upon claims
that Harbor Software stole and copied its "Sales Center Manager"
(SCM) software and incorporated it into an updated version of its "The
Agency Manager" (TAM) program. Applied Systems moved for summary judgment
on both counts. The motion for summary judgment on the copyright infringement
count was denied because the Court found that "the selection and
arrangement of the data categories" were protectable copyright
expression. With respect to the trade secret misappropriation claim, the Court
stated: "the overall design of a software program may be protectable as a
trade secret, even if the individual components of that program are common
knowledge in the programming industry. Computer Care v. Service
Systems Enterprises, Inc., 982 F.2d 1063, 1074 (7th Cir. 1992).COMBINATION
ANALYSIS APPLIED TO TRADE SECRET PROTECTION FOR COMPUTER SOFTWARE; MOTION FOR
SUMMARY JUDGMENT DENIED.
- Merck & Co., Inc. ET AL. v. Lyon, et al., 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS
14645, (M.D. N.C. September 11, 1996). Lyon was employed by Merck from
October, 1990. In November, 1995, Lyon was contacted by an executive recruiter
to become Director of Global Marketing for Glaxo Wellcome, PLC,
("GLAXO") a competitor of Merck. The executive search was directed
by Mark Weedon, general manager of Glaxo Wellcome who talked with Lyon about
the position one week before the executive recruiter called. On December 15,
1995, a Glaxo official offered Lyon the position. Lyon's last day of
employment at Merck was March 1, 1996. During this interim period, Lyon
attended Glaxo/Warner Lambert planning sessions while still working with
plaintiffs. On January 26, 1996, one day after accepting employment with
Glaxo, Merck asked Lyon whether he was going to work with a competitor and
Lyon said he was not. Several weeks later, he once again denied that he was
going to work for a competitor. Lyon said he was considering two options (1) a
marketing consultant position in Canada, or (2) a position with a
pharmaceutical company in the Far East. At the preliminary injunction hearing,
it was established that Lyon had access to Merck's strategic business plans
and marketing plans relating to the PEPCID launch in Canada. The Court also
found that a certain famotidine supply agreement was a trade secret. The Court
noted that Plaintiff's have not shown any evidence of actual misappropriation
by Lyon. However, "actual or threatened misappropriation" may be
enjoined under the North Carolina Trade Secrets Act. The Court rejected
Defendant's argument that courts in Illinois have refused to apply the
"inevitable disclosure" doctrine citing FMC Corp. v. Cyprus Foote
Mineral Company, 889 F.Supp. 1477 (W.D. N.C. 1995). The federal district court
in Cyprus Foote concluded that a North Carolina state court would
probably require "some showing of bad faith, underhanded dealing or
employment by an entity so plainly lacking comparable technology that
misappropriation can be inferred." Id. at 1483. Here, the Plaintiff has
not sought a broad injunction preventing Lyon from working in the area of his
general expertise. The scope of the requested ruling is to prevent Lyon from
working on a particular project [ZANTAC 75]. Further, the plaintiffs have
(unlike the plaintiffs in Cyprus Foote) identified the precise nature
of the alleged trade secret information. In finding likelihood of disclosure,
the courts look to (1) the degree of competition between the former and the
new employee, (2) the new employee's efforts to safeguard the former
employer's trade secret, and (3) the former employee's "lack of
forthrightness both in his activities before accepting the job and in the
degree of similarity between the employee's former and current position."
Apply these factors, the Court granted a preliminary injunction applying the
"inevitable disclosure" doctrine restraining Glaxo and all of its
officers, agents, and employees from (1) discussing with Lyon any pricing
relating to PEPCID AC or ZANTAC 75 until March 1, 1997, and (2) discussing
with Lyon the line extensions of PEPCID or ZANTAC until March 1, 1988.INEVITABLE
DISCLOSURE DOCTRINE APPLIED IN NORTH CAROLINA.
- Thermodyne Food Service Products, Inc. v. AFTEC, Inc., 1996 U.S.
Dist. LEXIS 14566 (N.D. Ill. October 1, 1996). Thermodyne is engaged in the
manufacture and sale of food service products and ovens. It's claim to fame in
the "Thermodyne technology" for transferring heat to food ovens. The
"Thermodyne technology uses a combination of precise computer controls
and the interrelationship of numerous component parts to cook and hold food
items (for a long time) at lower temperatures (by means of convention heat)
without water loss and without harmful bacteriological development. Not
surprisingly, McDonald's Corporation was interested in this technology. In
May, 1987, McDonald's contacted Thermodyne/AFTEC, and there were "joint
venture" discussions at McDonald's corporate officers in June of 1989. In
June of 1990, McDonald's informed Plaintiffs that the "Thermodyne
technology" had been approved for use at McDonald's restaurants. However,
Thermodyne/AFTEC did not get the contract to manufacture the cooking ovens for
McDonald's. The work went instead to another company and the product was
called the "Temperfect Oven." Upon investigation, it was determined
that certain former employees of Plaintiff were involved and a lawsuit (with
various counts) was thereafter filed. The Defendants moved for summary
judgment, inter alia, to dismiss the trade secret misappropriation
claim. District Judge Alesia correctly observed that the existence of a trade
secret [in Illinois] is now "a creation of state statutory law."
Defendants broke down the "Thermodyne" oven into component parts and
demonstrated that each component was (somehow) in the public domain or
generally known. The Plaintiffs, on the other hand, argued that "the
trade secret in the interrelationship of the component parts and technologies
which comprise and create the broader Thermodyne technology." The
District Court agreed with the Plaintiffs and denied Defendants' Motion for
Summary Judgment.COMBINATION ANALYSIS; INTERRELATIONSHIP OF COMPONENT PARTS
ESTABLISHES TRADE SECRET.