MICHAEL M. BAYLSON, District Judge.
On July 26, 2012, Plaintiff Triage Consulting Group, Inc. ("Plaintiff') filed an action against Binoy Nazareth ("Nazareth") and Mantis Software Solutions LLC ("Mantis") for replevin and claiming misappropriation of trade secrets. On November 16, 2012, Plaintiff filed an Amended Complaint (ECF 6) adding as Defendants Implementation Management Assistance, Inc. ("IMA") and Sarah Lewis ("Lewis"). Plaintiff also dropped its replevin claim and added claims for breach of contract, intentional interference with contractual relations, and unfair competition. On February 12, 2013, Plaintiff filed a Second Amended Complaint (ECF 18), dropping its claims against Nazareth and Mantis, as well as its claim for unfair competition. As it now stands, Plaintiff brings claims for:
Plaintiff is in the business of providing reimbursement and consulting services to healthcare institutions. More specifically, Plaintiff assists healthcare institutions with underpayment recovery, i.e., obtaining full payment for services when those payments are supposed to come from third-party payers.
Plaintiff has invested well over one million hours developing what it calls a "proprietary recovery and resolution process," which includes propriety computer software, database applications and files, payment modeling spreadsheets, as well as sundry strategies, knowledge, and expertise. Of particular importance to this case is Plaintiff's database known as Trakker, which Plaintiff developed internally and is instrumental to its business operations. In order to prevent competitors from learning about Trakker and the other aspects of its proprietary business operations, Plaintiff maintains a culture of confidentiality, including limiting access to information and requiring employees to sign confidentiality agreements.
IMA is a direct competitor of Plaintiff. In December 2011, IMA hired Liana Hans ("Hans"), Plaintiff's former employee of approximately fourteen years. While working for Plaintiff, Hans had access to Plaintiff's proprietary information and process, including the Trakker database. Hans had signed a confidentiality agreement during her employment, and another, similar agreement when she left Plaintiff's employ.
In derogation of both of these agreements, Hans shared with IMA Plaintiff's proprietary information and processes, including the entire Trakker database. Hans also recruited Lewis, another of Plaintiff's former employees, for the purpose of assisting IMA to take advantage of Plaintiff's proprietary information and processes and disclosed to her that IMA intended to steal Plaintiff's clients. Lewis had signed a confidentiality agreement while working for Plaintiff.
IMA then had Hans and Lewis assist in developing a new database based on Trakker. IMA specifically wanted Lewis to work on this project because Lewis was familiar with Plaintiff's proprietary business operations. IMA tried to hide its misappropriation of Trakker by removing from its new database any reference to Plaintiff or the name Trakker.
On April 20, 2012, Plaintiff notified IMA that it believed that IMA possessed its proprietary information. IMA agreed to an investigation and, if any of Plaintiff's information was found on its systems, to remove it. IMA also agreed to pay for the investigation and the data removal.
On April 30, 2012, before the agreed upon investigation, Lewis notified Hans that IMA's systems contained Plaintiff's proprietary information. At Lewis's suggestion, IMA tried to delete the information. The subsequent, agreed upon investigation, however, revealed that IMA's systems contain significant amounts of Plaintiff's proprietary information.
As a result of the investigation, IMA terminated Hans. IMA, however,
In deciding a motion to dismiss pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6), courts may look only to the facts alleged in the complaint and its attachments.
A valid complaint requires only "a short and plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief" Fed. R. Civ. P. 8(a)(2). "To survive a motion to dismiss, a complaint must contain sufficient factual matter, accepted as true, to `state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.'"
Defendants contend that Plaintiff's PUTSA claim against Lewis should be dismissed because Plaintiff fails to allege facts that, even if true, could establish that Lewis engaged in misappropriation as that term is defined in section 5302 of the PUTSA. Defendants also contend that Plaintiff's claims for breach of contract against Lewis and intentional interference with contractual relations claim against IMA should be dismissed because they are preempted by PUTSA. The Court disagrees.
Under subsections (1)(ii)(A) and (C) of section 5302 of the PUTSA, misappropriation includes:
According to Defendants, Plaintiff alleges only that Lewis had knowledge of or "acquiesced in Hans'[s] improper use of [Plaintiff's] information," neither of which amounts to misappropriation under the PUTSA. Review of Plaintiff's Second Amended Complaint, however, reveals allegations sufficient to support the reasonable conclusion that Lewis knew, or should have known, that she uses Plaintiff's proprietary information in the regular course of her employment with IMA.
Plaintiff alleges that Lewis:
These allegations, if true, would support the reasonable conclusions that:
This is sufficient to satisfy the definition of misappropriation under section 5302 of the PUTSA.
The PUTSA generally preempts "tort, restitutionary[,] and other [Pennsylvania law] providing civil remedies for misappropriation of a trade secret." 12 Pa. Cons. Stat Ann. § 5308(a). However, the PUTSA does not preempt "contractual remedies, whether or not based upon misappropriation of a trade secret," and "other civil remedies that are not based upon misappropriation of a trade secret."
By its express terms then, the PUTSA does not preempt Plaintiff's breach of contract claim against Lewis, regardless of whether it is based on Lewis's alleged misappropriation of Plaintiff's trade secrets.
Regarding Plaintiff's intentional interference with contractual relations claim against IMA, tort claims and PUTSA claims are properly pled in the alternative, even though the tort claims may ultimately be deemed preempted pursuant to a factual finding that the information underlying the dispute is, in fact, a trade secret. Defendants have not conceded that Plaintiff's confidential information qualifies for trade secret status, and the Court will not force Plaintiff to choose between pleading a PUTSA claim and a tort claim with this issue outstanding.
Defendants' Motion is DENIED. An appropriate Order follows.