TED STEWART, District Judge.
This matter is before the Court on Pfizer's Motion for Partial Summary Judgment on Plaintiffs' Claim that Defendants Have Misappropriated "Project" and "Compilation" Trade Secrets (Count VIII of the First Amended Complaint).
The facts of this case are fully set out in the Court's Order dated March 13, 2012,
Summary judgment is proper if the moving party can demonstrate that there is no genuine issue of material fact and it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
BYU has alleged that Pfizer misappropriated BYU's "project" and "compilation" trade secrets from BYU. Pfizer contends that BYU's trade secret claims fail for four reasons: (1) BYU has failed to identify what these trade secrets are with the requisite particularity; (2) BYU has not alleged that each element of the trade secret was misappropriated as is required; (3) BYU did not make reasonable efforts to maintain secrecy; and (4) Pfizer obtained a license to the disputed material through paragraph 3.2 of the Research Agreement, which gives Pfizer a license to any project output that is not patented. In its response, BYU does not differentiate between a project and a compilation trade secret and the Court will address them in the same manner.
Both Utah and Missouri have adopted the Uniform Trade Secrets Act ("UTSA"). The UTSA expressly provides that it "shall be applied and construed to effectuate its general purpose to make uniform the law with respect to the subject of the chapter among the states enacting it."
Under the UTSA, a trade secret is
The UTSA thus recognizes that a trade secret can be a "compilation" of several elements. A compilation can be made up of known elements, if the combination itself is outside the general knowledge and not readily ascertainable by proper means.
Pfizer contends that BYU's trade secret claim fails because it is not specific enough. Two types of particularity, according to Pfizer, are missing from BYU's compilation trade secret claims — particularity about what the trade secret is and particularity about how the compilation trade secret is unique. In reality, these requirements seem to be two sides of the same coin — in order to show uniqueness with particularity, one must be particular about what is involved in the compilation.
At the March 9, 2012 hearing, BYU was asked to identify when its alleged compilation was complete and unique and what elements made up the secret at that time. BYU presented a handout that purported to identify several compilations, including their contents and the date they were completed.
BYU provided a detailed break down of 42 trade secrets in a document entitled "Substance and Identity of BYU's Trade Secrets" drafted by Keith Ricker, which was marked as an exhibit in Mr. Ricker's deposition.
The last compilation BYU alleges before the Research Agreement was terminated is dated March 20, 1992, when Simmons sent Pfizer a progress report. That compilation included the following elements, which are the contents of BYU's first claimed compilation:
From there, BYU essentially alleges that each progressive increase in Simmons's
The Court understands the compilation trade secret to essentially be a plan or vision to find a COX-2 selective NSAID as well as the information and materials in existence by March 20, 1992, that provide tools to accomplish that goal. The Court finds that this vision could be a compilation trade secret, and that the parties dispute the facts that are essential for making the determination. Accordingly, the Court will deny summary judgment.
In so holding, the Court follows the Utah Supreme Court's reasoning in USA Power, LLC v. PacifiCorp.
The Court finds that Dr. Simmons's case is essentially the same: he had a vision, he did work to facilitate that vision, and communicated his vision and work to Pfizer. His vision could therefore be a compilation trade secret. Pfizer has tried to distinguish the case because the potential trade secret vision in USA Power was concrete (i.e. confined to three binders, with a last page, and therefore a defined limit), whereas Dr. Simmons's compilation is "amorphous." Pfizer's complaint is that, given this lack of specificity, it is impossible to tell whether the secret was unique or misappropriated. But the USA Power court did not undertake an analysis of the contents of the binder in order to determine if the vision was clearly defined. Rather, the court simply stated that a vision to develop something could be a compilation trade secret if the vision itself was outside of the general knowledge. The Supreme Court declined to undertake an analysis of whether USA Power's vision was outside the general knowledge because "to determine whether the product, design, or vision constitutes a trade secret is an intensely factual inquiry to be conducted by the trial court."
A vision is protectable if it is not "generally known or readily ascertainable."
BYU has presented testimony that during the time BYU was sharing information and materials with Pfizer "`no other research group, either academic or industrial, had access to the unique combination of Dr. Simmons['s] clones, antibodies, research data, expert advice and project.'"
Pfizer next contends that even if Simmons's vision could be a trade secret, a plaintiff must show that every element of a claimed trade secret was misappropriated, and BYU has failed to do so.
USA Power again dictates a different result. The court therein held that "a jury can infer misappropriation under the Utah Trade Secrets Act if presented with circumstantial evidence that shows access to information similar to the trade secret at issue."
In USA Power, plaintiffs cited to evidence showing that a rival company had access to their plans for a power plant, and had built a power plant similar to plaintiffs'. The lower court granted summary judgment in favor of defendants on the issue of misappropriation because plaintiffs had "not provided any evidence, direct or circumstantial, that specifically identifies any trade secrets that were used or misappropriated by [defendants]."
In the instant case, as Pfizer notes, BYU did not end up developing its own drug based on the trade secrets it alleges. Thus, the Court does not have two finished products to compare as the PacifiCorp court did. However, the vision portrayed in Dr. Simmons's work is the discovery of a COX-2 selective NSAID using the methods purportedly discovered by Dr. Simmons. BYU has presented facts showing that Pfizer did not have an active COX-2 NSAID program before the relationship with BYU. It is undisputed that Pfizer had access to the materials and information that comprised the alleged trade secret. Pfizer eventually ended up with a COX-2 selective product, allegedly obtained by using, in part, Dr. Simmons's materials. A reasonable juror could infer that Pfizer achieved its COX-2 success by using the alleged compilation trade secret.
Pfizer has also contended that BYU did not take reasonable steps to keep the compilation secret because, by the time the secret was fully communicated, the Agreement no longer protected the secrecy of
Finally, Pfizer contends that there was no trade secret misappropriation because, under the terms of paragraph 3.2 of the Research Agreement, Pfizer had an irrevocable license to all of the information contained in the alleged trade secret that was not patented. BYU responds that the only reason the materials involved remained unpatented is because Pfizer breached its obligations under 3.3. If Pfizer did breach paragraph 3.3, then Pfizer should not be rewarded for its breach with an irrevocable license. However, if no breach occurred, then Pfizer is correct that it had a license on the materials and cannot be held liable for its use. Because there are disputed issues of material fact concerning BYU's breach of 3.3 claim,
In the light of the foregoing, it is
ORDERED that Pfizer's Motion for Partial Summary Judgment on Plaintiffs' Claim that Defendants Have Misappropriated "Project" and "Compilation" Trade Secrets (Count VIII of the First Amended Complaint) (Docket No. 736) is DENIED.
If the cases mention a requirement of specificity in the definition of the compilation, the requirement is only imposed to the extent a lack of specificity of definition would prevent a showing of specific uniqueness. Having found that BYU did identify a compilation trade secret to Pfizer, the Court must simply consider whether BYU has proffered facts supporting uniqueness, and will therefore not engage in a laborious analysis of each case cited by the parties here.