AMERICAN RED CROSS v. PALM BEACH BLOOD BANK, INC,
No. 96-5092
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
(June 16, 1998)
D. C. Docket No. 96-1584-CIV-KING; PUBLISH
Before TJOFLAT and BIRCH, Circuit Judges, and RONEY, Senior Circuit Judge.
BIRCH, Circuit Judge:
I. BACKGROUND
Defendant-appellant, Palm Beach Blood Bank, Inc. (“Palm Beach“), is a non-profit Florida corporation engaged in the business of collecting, processing, and distributing blood components. Similarly, plaintiff-appellee, American Red Cross (“Red Cross“), is also a non-profit corporation engaged in collecting, processing, and distributing blood components, though its activities are more national in scope. Despite a history of at least limited cooperation, Palm
In October 1995, Palm Beach opened a Miami branch and over the next several months hired a number of Red Cross‘s Miami personnel. At least one of these former Red Cross employees took a list of Red Cross donors with her to Palm Beach, where she used the list to contact and recruit blood donors for her new employer. Soon after opening its Miami office, Palm Beach succeeded in recruiting several former Red Cross donors, including apheresis donors, to participate in Palm Beach‘s blood collection program.
In April 1996, Red Cross discovered that Palm Beach was using at least one of Red Cross‘s donor lists for Palm Beach‘s own solicitations, leading Red Cross to demand that Palm Beach cease all efforts to contact Red Cross‘s donors. Unsatisfied with Palm
On several days in late June and early July, 1996, the district court held evidentiary hearings on Red Cross‘s motion to convert the
On August 6, 1996, the district court entered the following preliminary injunction that restrained Palm Beach from:
(a) possessing, copying, or making unauthorized use of Plaintiff‘s lists or any other documents that contain trade secrets that are the proprietary property of Plaintiff;
(b) contacting and/or soliciting donations from any donor whose name is contained on Plaintiff‘s lists;
(c) engaging in any other activity constituting a misappropriation of Plaintiff‘s lists, or in any way adversely affecting Plaintiff‘s reputation or good will;
(d) using any false designation of origin or false description which can or is likely to lead the trade or
public or individual members thereof to erroneously believe that Defendant is affiliated with Plaintiff; (e) disposing of or destroying any documents that are relevant to the Complaint in this action, including but not limited to Plaintiff‘s lists, or Defendant‘s donor lists, or donor information, whether in hard copy form or on a computer, or any simulation or copy thereof, or any document or computer data which has its genesis from any of Plaintiff‘s lists;
(f) disposing of or destroying any documents or related materials that evidence, relate, or pertain to Defendant‘s misappropriation of Plaintiff‘s lists, as well as the records of donations solicited and obtained from Plaintiff‘s donors.
R2-49-2-3. Soon thereafter, Palm Beach filed an emergency motion for clarification, expressing concern that the injunction appeared to allow Red Cross to determine which of Palm Beach‘s competitive practices were illegitimate (and which might therefore might lead to sanctions for contempt). Rejecting Palm Beach‘s motion, the court accepted Red Cross‘s representation “that it [Red Cross] is not concerned by legitimate recruiting efforts and unsolicited donations” and ruled that any further clarification or explanation of its order would amount to an “advisory opinion.” R2-48-1-2.
II. DISCUSSION
Palm Beach argues that the district court should not have issued the preliminary injunction because Red Cross‘s lists are not trade secrets. Additionally, Palm Beach contends that the preliminary injunction is impermissibly vague. We review the district court‘s grant of a preliminary injunction for abuse of discretion, but we examine its legal determinations de novo. See Lucero v. Trosch, 121 F.3d 591, 599 (11th Cir. 1997). We will not disturb the district court‘s factual determinations unless they are clearly erroneous. See id. at 599.
A. RED CROSS‘S DONOR LISTS AS TRADE SECRETS
In order to secure a preliminary injunction, a plaintiff must show (1) a substantial likelihood of success on the merits, (2) a substantial threat of irreparable injury if the injunction were not granted, (3) that the threatened injury to the plaintiff outweighs the harm an injunction may cause the defendant, and (4) that granting the injunction would
Under Florida law, a trade secret consists of information that (1) derives economic value from not being readily ascertainable by others and (2) is the subject of reasonable efforts to maintain its secrecy. See
After reviewing the incomplete record in this case, we are unable to determine that Red Cross is substantially likely to establish that its donor lists are trade secrets. Palm Beach has offered us a variety of evidence tending to show that Red Cross has not been particularly careful to protect the secrecy of its lists of names.3 Some of Red Cross‘s lists appear to have been posted on a computer bulletin board freely accessible to Red Cross‘s competitors, while many of Red Cross‘s donor groups have publicly revealed their sponsorship of Red Cross‘s blood drives. It may also
To rebut this evidence, Red Cross presents us with a number of confidentiality agreements that it requires its employees to sign. From the incomplete record now before us, though, it appears that many, if not all, of these confidentiality agreements protect donors’ personal medical information, not their identities. Further, even if we were to assume that these agreements proved that Red Cross had taken reasonable steps to protect the secrecy of its lists, Red Cross has pointed us to no evidence to rebut Palm Beach‘s contention that the lists at issue are not in fact secret but have instead entered the public domain.
Because the record at this preliminary stage is incomplete, and because we have decided to remand for reconsideration of the
B. THE SCOPE OF THE PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION
Palm Beach argues that several provisions of the preliminary injunction are so vague as to violate Rule 65(d) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (“Rule 65(d)“). As we have previously held, a court must craft its orders so that those who seek to obey may know precisely what the court intends to forbid. See Hughey v. JMS Dev., 78 F.3d 1523, 1531 (11th Cir. 1996). Thus,
Applying
Well, almost everybody that has ever donated before as a Red Cross donor, therein lies one of the problems. The
American Red Cross has been in existence for 50-odd years according to the testimony, or maybe longer, so it is very difficult, I presume, to go out and compete in the recruiting of donors without touching upon someone in this five percent of the donating population that is or has been at some point in time a Red Cross donor. I mean, if the two entities are going to compete at all, if they are entitled to compete, it is obvious they are going to be competing for each others’ donors.
R6-88. Since an ordinary person in Palm Beach‘s position could not ascertain which members of the public might be off-limits for its recruitment efforts, this provision contravenes
Second, the injunction bars Palm Beach from “possessing, copying, or making unauthorized use of Plaintiff‘s lists or any other documents that contain trade secrets that are the proprietary property of Plaintiff.” R2-46-2 (emphasis added). As Red Cross argues, a nonspecific injunction may sometimes be justified “when
In sum, the district court has crafted an injunction that leaves Palm Beach without reasonable notice of what the court means to
III. CONCLUSION
In its attempt to protect Red Cross from misappropriation of its trade secrets, the district court has fashioned an injunction that is impermissibly vague under
