DARDEN, Senior Judge.
HDNET LLC ("HD") appeals the trial court's grant of partial summary judgment in favor of North American Boxing Council ("NABC").
We reverse and remand.
HD is a television channel that broadcasts exclusively in high-definition via cable and satellite. Its programming is varied and has included mixed martial arts ("MMA"). NABC is a professional boxing and MMA sanctioning body.
In 2007, HD and NABC exchanged a series of e-mails discussing a broadcast arrangement involving HD's broadcast of MMA events and the future development of weekly broadcasts of a MMA fight series. Included in one of the e-mails was information wherein NABC outlined how NABC and HD could develop a "unique branded fight series for [HD]" that was significantly different from the "single entity" model then in use by the major players in the MMA industry. (App. 19). Further discussions between the parties fleshed out the information outlined in the e-mail. The parties did not enter into a contract; however, NABC considered the information communicated to HD to be a protectable commercial idea.
On March 17, 2008, NABC filed a complaint against HD in which it alleged the following facts:
In its May 31, 2011 scheduling order, the trial court acted upon a request by the parties and instructed them to file appropriate motions and supporting memoranda addressing the preemption provision of the IUTSA and its application to NABC's idea misappropriation and conversion claims. On June 10, 2011, NABC filed a motion for partial summary judgment addressing the preemption provision and NABC's claim of Count I: Idea Misappropriation and Count VII: Conversion of Trade Secrets,
On November 15, 2011, HD filed a motion to certify the trial court's order for interlocutory appeal, which the trial court granted. On February 3, 2012, we granted HD's motion to accept jurisdiction.
HD contends that the trial court erred in granting partial summary judgment on NABC's claim that the IUTSA does not preempt NABC's common law idea misappropriation and civil conversion counts. Summary judgment is appropriate where there is no genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Ind. Trial Rule 56(C). Questions of statutory construction are particularly amenable to resolution by summary judgment, as they are pure questions of law. Koppin v. Strode, 761 N.E.2d 455, 460 (Ind.Ct.App.2002), trans. denied. We review questions of law de novo and owe no deference to the trial court's legal conclusions. Id.
The UTSA was drafted by the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws ("Commissioners") in 1979 and amended in 1985. 14 Uniform Laws Annotated, Uniform Trade Secrets Act With 1985 Amendments, 529, 530 (historical notes) (2005). The Commissioners expressed the following rationale for drafting of the UTSA:
Id. at 531. The Commissioners intended that the UTSA "be applied and construed to effectuate its general purpose to make uniform the law with respect to the subject of this Act among states enacting it." Id. § 8 at 656 (brackets omitted). This general purpose has been stated as follows:
Firetrace USA, LLC v. Jesclard, 800 F.Supp.2d 1042, 1048-49 (D.Ariz.2010), reconsideration denied (citations omitted).
In 1982, Indiana adopted the UTSA "substantially as promulgated by the [Commissioners]." Amoco Prod. Co. v. Laird, 622 N.E.2d 912, 917 (Ind.1993). The Prefatory Note to the UTSA declares not only that the act is "a substitution for unitary definitions of trade secret, but that it `also codifies the results of the better reasoned cases concerning the remedies for trade secret misappropriation.'" Id. (quoting 14 Uniform Laws Annotated, Uniform Trade Secrets Act With 1985 Amendments, 435 (prefatory note) (1990)). "It is thus apparent that Indiana legislators, adopting the UTSA, sought the uniform application of the UTSA definitions of trade secret consistent with the application of the act in other adopting jurisdictions." Id. Therefore, "case law from other UTSA jurisdictions becomes relevant authority for construction of trade secret law in Indiana." Id. at 918.
The IUTSA contains two provisions that are central to the case before us. Indiana Code section 24-2-3-1(b) provides that the IUTSA "shall be applied and construed to effectuate its general purpose to make uniform the law with respect to the subject matter of this chapter among states enacting the provisions of this chapter." Indiana Code section 24-2-3-1(c), the preemption provision, provides that the IUTSA "displaces all conflicting law of this state pertaining to the misappropriation of trade secrets, except contract law and criminal law."
In statutory construction, our primary goal is to ascertain and give effect to the intent of the legislature. U.S. Steel Corp. v. Northern Ind. Pub. Serv. Co., 951 N.E.2d 542, 553 (Ind.Ct.App.2011), trans. denied. The language of the statute itself is the best evidence of legislative intent, and we must give all words their plain and ordinary meaning unless otherwise indicated by the statute. Id. Furthermore, we presume that the legislature intended statutory language to be applied in a logical manner consistent with the statute's underlying policies and goals. Id. We must read the statute as a whole and excessive reliance on a strict literal meaning should be avoided. Jones v. Farmers Mut. Ins.
NABC contends that the IUTSA is unambiguous, and that if the language of the preemption provision of Indiana Code section 24-2-3-1 is given its plain meaning, then it applies only to actions where a "conflicting law" that "pertains" to the misappropriation of "trade secrets" is at issue. NABC reasons that the preemption provision applies only to "trade secrets" and that its claim of idea misappropriation does not "pertain" to a "trade secret" as the term is used in the IUTSA. Thus, NABC concludes that its idea misappropriation claim cannot be "conflicting law." NABC claims that any other construction would read more into the statute than the plain language allows. NABC's Br. at 12-13.
As stated above, one essential goal of the UTSA is to make uniform the law of the states adopting it. Indeed, our legislature specifically adopted this goal in Indiana Code section 24-2-3-1(b). NABC's construction of the preemption provision completely disregards the legislature's directive that the IUTSA is to be "applied and construed to effectuate its general purpose to make uniform the law...." Thus, NABC fails to read Indiana Code section 24-2-3-1 as a whole, ignoring subsection (b) to excessively rely on the isolated terms of subsection (c). The result is a narrow reading of the IUTSA that does not comport with the intent of our legislature or the majority of courts that have analyzed the preemption provisions of their uniform trade secret acts.
NABC's construction of IUTSA's preemption provision is reminiscent of that proposed by the plaintiff in BlueEarth Biofuels, LLC v. Hawaiian Elec. Co., 123 Haw. 314, 235 P.3d 310, 319 (Haw.2010), wherein BlueEarth argues that
In rejecting BlueEarth's construction of the Hawai'i preemption statute, the Supreme Court of Hawai'i recognized that a minority of courts have adopted the "plain language" construction of UTSA-inspired state statutes. However, the BlueEarth court joined the majority of jurisdictions in holding that the UTSA's preemption provision "abolishes all free-standing alternative causes of action for theft or misuse of confidential, proprietary, or otherwise secret information falling short of trade secret status (e.g. idea misappropriation, information piracy, theft or commercial information,
The rationale for these majority decisions has been explained as follows:
Id. at 321-22, 235 P.3d 310 (quoting Unikel, Bridging the "Trade Secret" Gap, 29 Loy. U. Chi. L.J. at 887-88 (footnotes omitted)). The UTSA creates a "two-tiered" approach to protection of commercial knowledge, under which "information is classified only as either a protected `trade secret' or unprotected `general skill and knowledge.'" Id. at 322, 235 P.3d 310 (quoting Unikel at 867-68 (footnote omitted)).
Although such an interpretation of Indiana Code section 24-2-3-1(c) seems harsh, we emphasize that our statute does not preempt claims for misappropriation of information or ideas that are protected by contract. See BlueEarth, 123 Hawai'i at 322, 235 P.3d 310. To the extent that a plaintiff is seeking to recover for the defendant's misappropriation of plaintiff's intellectual property, it is seeking to recover for misappropriation of trade secrets. These secrets are protected under the IUTSA, and
Id. (quoting Mark A. Lemley, The Surprising Virtues of Treating Trade Secrets as IP Rights, 61 Stanford L.Rev. 311, 345-46 (Nov. 2008)). In short,
Hauck, 375 F.Supp.2d at 657.
NABC's interpretation of the IUTSA would encourage piece meal litigation and would thus fail to implement the legislature's intended goal of uniformity. Accordingly, we conclude that the trial
HD contends that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment on NABC's civil conversion claim. In evaluating HD's contention, it is important to understand NABC's argument. First, NABC claims that its civil conversion claim falls within the preemption provision of the IUTSA, which as stated above, provides that the IUTSA "displaces all conflicting law of this state pertaining to the misappropriation of trade secrets, except contract law and criminal law." I.C. § 24-2-3-1(c). NABC points to AGS Capital as particularly instructive. In AGS Capital, we examined a civil RICO claim related to the theft of trade secrets and specifically addressed the question of whether that claim was preempted by the IUTSA. 884 N.E.2d at 306. We held that the RICO claim was not preempted by the IUTSA because the civil remedy is derivative of criminal law. Id. at 308.
NABC argues that civil conversion is also "derivative" of criminal law because it provides a civil remedy for a crime.
However, our analysis in AGS Capital is more nuanced than NABC's reading of the case. In reaching our conclusion in AGS Capital, we considered that civil RICO and criminal RICO were part of the same statutory scheme having a significant deterrent purpose. Id. at 308. Although the civil and criminal RICO statutes were codified in different locations in the Indiana Code, they were enacted as part of the same public law.
Id. We further explained that our ruling would result in a greater disincentive for the "strategic, repetitive theft of trade secrets" because under the civil RICO provision treble damages and attorney fees are mandatory, whereas under the IUTSA they are discretionary. Id. at 308-09. It is for these reasons that the civil RICO
The same is not true of the Crime Victim's Relief Act ("the Act"), which contains Indiana Code section 34-24-3-1, the statute that defines civil conversion. The Act was not enacted as part of the same statutory scheme as criminal conversion.
The upshot is that NABC's civil conversion allegation does not delineate a criminal act; it merely outlines another allegation of civil misappropriation of NABC's ideas. Thus, the conversion action is not saved by the criminal law exception to the IUTSA's preemption provision.
The IUTSA is intended to foster uniformity in the definition of state laws, and a party may not read this design out of the statutory scheme under the guise of "plain language" or any other rule of construction. NABC's "plain language" reading of IUTSA's preemption provision lays waste to both legislative intent of the IUTSA and the overall intent of the UTSA. Accordingly, the trial court erred in granting summary judgment on NABC's idea misappropriation claim.
NABC's civil conversion claim does not fall within the "criminal law" exception to the IUTSA's preemption provision. Therefore, the trial erred in granting summary judgment on the claim.
Reversed and remanded for further proceedings.
FRIEDLANDER and BROWN, JJ., concur.
(b) This chapter does not affect:
HRS § 482B-8 (2008).
Hauck, 375 F.Supp.2d at 658.