ROBERT J. SHELBY, District Judge.
This case is about the alleged misuse of proprietary information. Plaintiff Giles Construction, LLC alleges that Defendants Tooele Inventory Solution, Inc., Roger Earl, Karla Domire, Brian Domire, Russell Stapleton, and ATI Titanium, Inc. improperly disclosed and used its trade secrets related to barrel processing and pricing. Giles Construction alleges that Defendants violated the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA), the Lanham Act, and the Utah Uniform Trade Secret Act (UTSA). Further, Giles Construction alleges interference with contractual relations, unjust enrichment, and conversion. Before the court are Defendants' motions for summary judgment. For the reasons stated below, the court grants the motions and concludes that Giles Construction's claims fail as a matter of law.
ATI is a large company with operations throughout the world, including in Rowley, Utah. ATI manufactures and sells titanium. The company uses barrels to ship its product. Russell Stapleton is the purchasing manager at ATI's Rowley facility; Karla Domire is his assistant. For several months in 2011, Giles Construction supplied, refurbished, and shipped barrels for ATI. Ms. Domire's husband, Brian Domire, provided trucking and delivery services for Giles Construction. Tooele Inventory is a Utah company that currently provides barrel processing services to ATI. ATI hired Tooele Inventory after it submitted a lower bid than Giles Construction. Roger Earl is the owner of Tooele Inventory.
ATI began operations in its Rowley facility in 2007. Initially, the company's employees stored, cleaned, repainted, palletized, and shipped its barrels. In early 2011, Mr. Stapleton sought a vendor to take over the barrel processing. ATI eventually hired Giles Construction to provide barrel processing services, which required Giles Construction to obtain, clean, paint, stencil, palletize, shrink wrap, store, and deliver barrels to ATI's Rowley facility. ATI provided a sample barrel, along with the specifications for barrel dimensions. Giles Construction began using a company named Industrial Container Services as its barrel supplier. Industrial Container Services maintains a website that a Giles Construction employee found in a fifteen-minute internet search.
Giles Construction and Industrial Container Services had an open account, but not a binding contract. Similarly, there was no contractual agreement that required ATI to exclusively use Giles Construction for barrel processing. Rather, the companies had an open agreement that Giles Construction would fulfill any purchase orders ATI sent.
In Fall 2011, ATI began searching for a less expensive barrel processing service. ATI sought a vendor from which it could directly purchase barrels, as well as a separate vendor that could provide barrel processing. At the direction of Mr. Stapleton, Ms. Domire searched for both barrel suppliers and barrel processors. During Ms. Domire's inquiries, she was referred multiple times to Industrial Container Services. Ms. Domire also spoke with Mr. Domire's friend, Mr. Earl, regarding barrel processing. At the conclusion of Ms. Domire's search, only Giles Construction and Mr. Earl were interested in submitting bids to provide barrel processing. The parties provided price quotes to ATI. Mr. Earl's recently formed company, Tooele Inventory, provided a bid that was thirty percent lower than Giles Construction's bid. Based on the lower price, ATI hired Tooele Inventory.
Giles Construction sued three months after losing the bid, alleging that Mr. Stapleton, Ms. Domire, and Mr. Domire revealed trade secrets to Mr. Earl, which made it possible for Mr. Earl to anticipate Giles Construction's bid and submit a lower one.
Summary judgment is appropriate when "there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law."
Giles Construction contends that each defendant violated Section 1030 of the CFAA by accessing and misusing proprietary information. The CFAA prohibits parties from accessing a computer without authorization or from exceeding authorized access.
At the outset, it appears that at least some of the defendants did nothing to implicate the statute. There is no evidence that Mr. Domire, Mr. Earl, or Tooele Inventory accessed any information. Rather, Giles Construction alleges only that those parties received information from Mr. Stapleton and Ms. Domire. Because Mr. Domire, Mr. Earl, or Tooele Inventory did not access information, the statute does not apply to their conduct.
Next, the court must determine the meaning of unauthorized access under the statute. The CFAA prohibits individuals from "access[ing] a protected computer without authorization, or exceed[ing] authorized access." It is undisputed that Mr. Stapleton and Ms. Domire had authorization to access the information at issue. In fact, they accessed the information on their company's computers. The question presented by the parties is whether Mr. Stapleton's and Ms. Domire's alleged subsequent misuse of the information amounts to exceeding authorized accessed. There is a division among federal courts regarding this question and the Tenth Circuit has not squarely addressed it. The court provides an overview before reaching its own conclusion.
Federal courts are divided on the meaning of "exceeds authorized access." Some courts, including the Fourth and Ninth Circuits, have confined the clause to mean the procurement of information from a computer, not the subsequent use of that information.
After considering the relevant case law, the court concludes that the narrow construction is appropriate: an individual does not exceed authorized access by misusing information she had authority to access in the first place. The CFAA's plain language compels this conclusion. The statute defines "exceeds authorized access" as "to access a computer with authorization and to use such access to obtain or alter information in the computer that the accesser is not entitled so to obtain or alter."
Additionally, the statute as a whole supports a narrow construction.
The court need not go beyond the statute's plain text. But even if the text were ambiguous, the rule of lenity would compel a narrow construction.
Here, it is undisputed that Mr. Stapleton and Ms. Domire had authorization to access the information at issue. Indeed, Mr. Stapleton and Ms. Domire accessed the information on their company's computers. Giles Construction's contention is that Mr. Stapleton and Ms. Domire violated the CFAA by disclosing the information in violation of ATI's corporate guidelines. The alleged misuse does not implicate the CFAA. The court thus grants summary judgment in favor of Defendants and dismisses the CFAA claim.
Giles Construction contends that Defendants violated Section 43 of the Lanham Act.
Giles Construction's claim misses the mark. The claim is not based on false advertising or consumer misperception. Instead, Giles Construction maintains that Defendants violated the Lanham Act in two ways: (1) Mr. Stapleton and Ms. Domire leaked confidential information to Mr. Domire and Mr. Earl, and (2) Mr. Earl used the confidential information to prepare Tooele Inventory's competitive bid. Giles Construction has submitted no evidence that Defendants made misleading representations to consumers in connection with commercial advertising. What's more, there is no evidence that Defendants made any representation to any consumer. Simply put, the Lanham Act does not reach Defendants' alleged conduct. The court grants summary judgment in favor of Defendants and dismisses the Lanham Act claim.
Under 28 USC § 1367(c), a federal court may decline to exercise supplement jurisdiction when it "has dismissed all claims over which it has original jurisdiction."
Giles Construction filed this case well over three years ago. The pretrial practice has included amended pleadings, discovery motions, and hearings before the Magistrate Judge. The parties have fully briefed and extensively argued the state law claims. The court has carefully reviewed and considered the parties' arguments and is prepared to address the viability of the state claims. Given the substantial time and resources the parties and the court have invested, the court concludes that it would be judicially economical, convenient, and fair to resolve the remaining state law claims. Doing so would give the parties a clear resolution of their claims without imposing additional delay and expense associated with refiling and litigating the state law claims further in state court. This is especially so here, as it is apparent that Giles Construction's state law claims fail as a matter of law.
Giles Construction contends that Mr. Stapleton and Ms. Domire misappropriated trade secrets. Under the Utah Uniform Trade Secret Act (UTSA),
Giles Construction maintains that its trade secrets consisted of (1) the identity of its barrel supplier (Industrial Container Services), (2) its pricing information, and (3) its entire process, which includes "providing new, used and refurbished drums to ATI including pick up, inspection, disposal, refurbishing and painting, weighing, marking, storage, coordination, palletizing, shrink wrapping, inventory/stocking and delivery and the associated pricing."
The identity of Industrial Container Services as a barrel supplier does not constitute a trade secret. "Where information alleged to be a trade secret can be readily ascertained by performing a basic research task, the information does not qualify as a trade secret."
Likewise, Giles Construction's pricing is not a trade secret. To prove pricing is a trade secret, a plaintiff must submit "evidence indicating that [the] pricing information or [the] method for obtaining pricing information is unique or especially innovative, such that it could not be readily duplicated by others in the industry."
Defendants point out that Giles Construction has not articulated how its pricing is especially innovative or unique. Rather, Giles Construction has simply stated in interrogatory responses that its pricing is proprietary. Defendants also point to a lack of specificity in the deposition testimony that Giles Construction contends supports its claim. Giles Construction submits testimony from Mr. Stapleton that Giles Construction provided competitive pricing and that it took the company some time and effort to be able to fully run its process. That testimony does not articulate how Giles Construction formulated its pricing, or why the pricing was unique or innovative. The court finds that Defendants have carried their burden of production to show that Giles Construction cannot meet its burden of persuasion at trial. Put differently, Defendants have established that Giles Construction does not have enough evidence to prove its claim at trial. The company's pricing is not a trade secret.
Neither is Giles Construction's barrel processing a compilation trade secret. To establish a compilation trade secret, a plaintiff must demonstrate that the process is "[a] unique combination of generally known elements or steps [that] ... represents a valuable contribution attributable to the independent efforts of the one claiming to have conceived it."
In the end, the court finds that the undisputed facts compel the court to enter judgment as a matter of law in Defendants' favor.
The UTSA preempts "conflicting tort, restitutionary, and other law of this state providing civil remedies for misappropriation of a trade secret."
The UTSA preemption reaches any state law claim that is based on allegations of misuse of confidential information, regardless of whether the claim contains additional, separate allegations.
For the reasons stated above, the court GRANTS Defendants' Motions for Summary Judgment (Dkt. Nos. 67, 69, 71). Accordingly, the court DISMISSES WITH PREJUDICE Giles Construction's claims. The court also DENIES AS MOOT Giles Construction's Motion to Exclude Expert Report (Dkt. 63). Lastly, the court DENIES the pending Motion to Seal (Dkt. 64). The court directs the Clerk of Court to close the case.
IT IS SO ORDERED.