This is аn appeal from a judgment entered, pursuant to a special jury verdict in favor of the plaintiff,
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assessing damages and enjoining the defendant’s use and enjoyment of certain of the plaintiff’s trade secrets. The appeal, originally entered in the Appeals Court, was transferred to this court on our own motion. The defendant urges three grounds as reversible error. The defendant first claims error in the trial judge’s refusal to grant its motions for a judgment notwithstаnding the verdict and for a new
1. We turn first to the defendant’s claim that it was error for the trial judge to refuse to grant its motions for judgment notwithstanding the verdict and new trial on the ground that the evidence did not warrant the jury’s finding that the Navy’s disclosure of drawings containing Curtiss-Wright’s trade secrets constituted a violation of duty.
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In examining the denial of the defendant’s motion for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict, we employ the standard applicable to a motion for a directed verdict.
D’Annolfo
v.
Stoneham Hous. Auth.,
The defendant Edel-Brown Tool & Die Co., Inc. (EdelBrown) , a Massachusetts corporation engaged in the manufacture and sale of such items as airplane engine replacement parts, was solicited in January, 1978, by the Aviation Supply Office, Department of the Navy, as a potential manufacturer of pistons for the so called R-1820 engine. The Navy had previously ordered the pistons only from the plaintiff, Curtiss-Wright Corporation (Curtiss-Wright), which considered itself a sole-source supplier and the owner of trade secrets represented on the drawings.
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In connection with the solicitation, a Navy contracting officer gave Edel-Brown’s government contracts manager certain drawings to examine so that the latter might determine whether Edel-Brown could produce the depicted piston. The evidencе was such that the jury could have found that the drawings had been prepared, at the solicitation of the Navy, by Aircraft Supplies Company (Aircraft Supplies) from government copies of the Curtiss-Wright drawings in Aircraft Supplies’ possession. Edel-Brown was told that Curtiss-Wright drawings for the piston were proprietary but that the Aircraft Supplies drawings were not. Edel-Brown was also told that if it
In August, 1978, the Navy’s Aviation Supply Office sent invitations to bid on a piston procurement contract to Edel-Brown, Curtiss-Wright, and Aircraft Supplies. The provisions of the bid invitation indicated that the Curtiss-Wright drawings were the specifications for manufacture but that the drawings could not be obtained from the government by other bidders. The bid invitation was subsequently amended to indicate that any of the three sets of drawings by Aircraft Supplies, Edel-Brown, or Curtiss-Wright would operate as the performance specification.
The Navy’s request for proposals was announced August 8 in the Commerce Business Daily and included the names and addresses of all three companies being solicited. Curtiss-Wright’s manager of рroduct support, George Guillot, read the announcement and testified that he was “flabbergasted” by what he read. On August 14, 1978, he notified corporate counsel of his belief that Curtiss-Wright’s proprietary rights were about to be or had been violated. Having submitted its bid on September 7, 1978, Curtiss-Wright wrote to the Navy Aviation Supply Office later that month to inquire as to the release of its drawings in connection with the bid invitation. In November, 1978, the Navy notified Curtiss-Wright that its drawings had not been releаsed and informed the company that the contract had been awarded on October 31 to Edel-Brown. Thereafter, Curtiss-Wright gave Edel-Brown written notice of its claim of proprietary or trade secret rights. Edel-Brown responded that it did not have Curtiss-Wright drawings or data, and this suit followed.
It is true, as the defendant asserts, that one must have notice of both the fact that the information claimed to be a trade secret is in fact secret and the fact that disclоsure by
In light of the foregoing principles and the standard applicable to a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, the jury were warranted in finding that Edel-Brown had notice that the Navy had given it Curtiss-Wright’s trade secrets in violation of a duty to Curtiss-Wright. As of Edel-Brown’s January, 1978, meeting with the Navy contracting officer, the jury could find that Edel-Brown’s contract manager knew that the Curtiss-Wright drawings were trade secrets; that the Navy was under a contractual duty not to disclose the Curtiss-Wright drawings to a competitor; that the Aircraft Supplies drawings were in all material respects identical to the Curtiss-Wright drawings; that Edel-Brown could use the Aircraft Supplies drawings in the place of the Curtiss-Wright drawings to build the piston; that, where
Nor was there error with regard to the trial judge’s rеfusal to order a new trial on the ground of the alleged insufficiency of evidence. Everything that we have said above supports our conclusion that the trial judge did not abuse his discretion. See
Ryan
v.
Hickey,
2. We next consider the defendant’s arguments relating to the defense of estoppel. Edel-Brown argues that since Curtiss-Wright had notice in August of the potential use of information which it, Curtiss-Wright, considered proprietary; since Curtiss-Wright had the opportunity to object or otherwise give notice to Edel-Brown of its claim prior to the Navy’s award of the contract on October 31; and since there was sufficient evidence to support the conclusion that there was a mistaken belief of fact on the part of Edel-Brown as to the nonproprietary nature of the Aircraft Supplies drawing, Curtiss-Wright had a duty to correct Edel-Brown’s mistaken belief.
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The defendant further asserts that even though the
In light of the fact that the jury specifically found that Edel-Brown had notice of Curtiss-Wright’s proprietary interests as of August, 1978, the requested instructions and questions would require an owner of a trade sеcret to give notice to a defendant of his wrongful conduct even if the defendant already has notice, constructive or actual. We have not found, and the defendant has not cited, any authority for such a proposition. Cf. R. Milgrim, Trade Secrets § 5.04[2], at 5-99 (1978). Moreover, any possible claim of estoppel was encompassed in the judge’s instructions pursuant to Restatement of Torts § 758.
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Finally, proof of an evil motive or bad faith intention to injure nеed not be shown.
Eutectic Corp.
v.
Astralloy-Vulcan Corp.,
3. Edel-Brown next presses a question of evidence related to its estoppel argument. At trial Edel-Brown sought to introduce a letter which it considered to be evidence of a Cur-tiss-Wright business habit of taking swift action to prevent contract awards whenever there was a question of trade secret rights. Again relying on an estoppel theory, Edel-Brown argues that the letter would tend to prove that
The trial judge excluded the letter on the grounds that it related to a collateral matter about which the circumstances were not known and that it might consume an amount of trial time disproportionate to its contribution to the case to develop the circumstances. In general, the trial judge has wide discretion in applying to a particular case policy considerations, such as those relied on here, which may limit the introduction of otherwise logically relevant information. K.B. Hughes, Evidence § 284 (1961). We do not think that the judge abused his discretion here.
4. The problem remains as to the appropriateness of the remedy afforded the plaintiff. The jury found that the amount of damages sustained by Curtiss-Wright as a result of Edel-Brown’s use of thе Aircraft Supplies drawings given to it by the Navy was $178,214. As part of the final judgment, the trial judge also ordered a permanent injunction restraining Edel-Brown from performance under any contract in which it utilized information contained on the Cur-tiss-Wright drawings or contained on any other drawings embodying the same information. Edel-Brown was also ordered to surrender all documents, computer programs, tools, cutters, and fixtures prepared for manufacturing the pistons. As of the timе of this appeal, Edel-Brown, in accordance with the trial judge’s order, had not delivered the contracted pistons and had not been paid for them. Although the Navy has not cancelled the 1978 contract, it has awarded a new contract to Curtiss-Wright for a different quantity of the same pistons at the Curtiss-Wright 1978 bid price.
The defendant contends that the issuance of a permanent injunction of unlimited duration was unreasonable. It further argues that the measurе of damages, based on a jury charge that was framed in terms of Edel-Brown’s being allowed to complete its contract and receive profits therefrom, was inconsistent with the injunction forbidding per
We have had occasion in prior cases to consider the apprоpriateness of permanent injunctions to prevent trade secret violations. While we have acknowledged that injunctions must be reasonable as to time, we have nonetheless emphasized that “an injunction is not unreasonable merely because it is permanent.” “[Wjhat is reasonable [must] depend in each instance on the facts in the particular case.”
Eastern Marble Prods. Corp. v. Roman Marble, Inc.,
The defendant contends that because the piston has been marketed, there has been an opportunity for competitors to reverse engineer it and consequently the maximum period of time an injunction should be imposed should reflect the time needed for reverse engineering. 7 We have previously held that the amount of time necessary to reverse engineer a plaintiff’s device without improper use of trade secrets is relevant to determining the scope of any injunctive relief. Analogic Corp. v. Data Translation, Inc., supra at 647-649. However, we have been careful to stress the fact that reverse engineering is but one factor in the calculus of reasonableness. Id. at 648-649. In conformity with our emphasis on commercial morality, we have stated that “ defendants should not be permitted a competitive advantage from their avoidance of the normal costs of invention and duplication.” Id. at 649.
This court has recognized three acceptable methods of measuring damages in cases involving business torts such as the misappropriation of trade secrets: the defendant’s profits realized from his tortious conduct, the plaintiff’s lost profits, or a reasonable royalty.
Jet Spray Cooler, Inc.
v.
Crampton,
The judgment is reversed in so far as it awards damages. In all other respects the judgment is affirmed. The case is remanded to the Superior Court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
So ordered.
Notes
In response to special questions the jury found the following: (1) that Curtiss-Wright piston drawings numbered 149453 and 149486 contained trade secrets owned by Curtiss-Wright; (2) that Curtiss-Wright had taken all proper and reasonable steps to protect its tradе, secrets; (3) that EdelBrown used Aircraft Supplies drawings given to it by the Department of the Navy in January, 1978; (4) that Edel-Brown had notice that the Aircraft Supplies drawings given to it by the Navy contained trade secrets owned by Curtiss-Wright and that the Navy was breaching the duty it owed Curtiss-Wright in disclosing the secrets; (5) that Edel-Brown first had notice of the facts found in (4), supra, in August, 1978; (6) that EdelBrown did not change its position in a substantial way at any time prior to August, 1978; and (7) that the amount of damages sustained by CurtissWright as a result of Edel-Brown’s use of the Aircraft Supplies drawings given to it by the Navy was $178,214.
The defendant has not argued before this court the correctness of the jury’s finding that the drawings in question contained trade secrets owned by Curtiss-Wright. See
USM Corp.
v.
Marson Fastener Corp.,
Beginning around 1965 Curtiss-Wright, pursuant to its contracts with the U.S. government, began sending the government microfilm drawings of parts of the R-1820 engine. The contract provisions and the legends on the drawings prohibited the government from releasing, using, duplicating, or disclosing, in whole or in part, the drawings for manufacture or procurement, without Curtiss-Wright’s written permission.
It is generally acknowledged that thе notice necessary to make receipt or use of a trade secret tortious need not be actual notice: “One has notice of facts . . . when he knows of them or when he should know of them .... He should know of them if, from the information which he has, a reasonable man would infer the facts in question, or if, under the circumstances, a reasonable man would be put on inquiry and an inquiry pursued with reasonable intelligence and diligence would disclose the facts.” Restatement of Torts § 757, Comment 1 (1939). See
Carter Prods., Inc.
v.
Colgate-Palmolive Co.,
Edel-Brown relies on Restatement (Second) of Torts § 894(2) (1979), which provides: “If one realizes that another because of his mistaken belief of fact is about to do an act that would not be tortious if the facts were as the other believes them to be, he is not entitled to maintain an action of tort for the act if he could easily inform the other of his mistake but makes no effort to do so.” Edel-Brown’s reliance on this section of the Restatement is misplaced. The jury specifically found that Edel-Brown had notice of its violation of Curtiss-Wright’s proprietary rights as of August, 1978. Consequently this section by its terms is inapposite.
Restatement of Torts § 758 (1939) provides: “One who learns another’s trade secret from a third person without notice that it is secret and that the third person’s disclosure is a breach of his duty to the other, or who learns the secret through a mistake without notice of the secrecy and the mistake, (a) is not liable to the other for a disclosure or use of the secret prior to receipt of such notice, and (b) is liable to the other for a disclosure or use of the secret after the receipt of-such notice, unless prior thereto he has in good faith paid value for the secret or has so changed his position that to subject him to liability would be inequitable.” The definition of notice supplied by Comment 1 of § 757, see note 4, supra, is made applicable to § 758 by Comment d of § 758.
The defendant also points to
Air Technology Corp.
v.
General Elec. Co.,
We do not preclude the possibility that at some time in the future a substantial change of circumstances may entitle the defendant to seek judicial consideration as to whether the injunction should be dissolved.
We have noted that “the ‘reasonable royalty’ measure of damages is only appropriate where the defendant has made no actual profits and the
The judge charged as follows: “To figure out the award of damages, you will need to make some calculations. I would suggest that you set up two columns. In the first column determine how much profit CurtissWright would have made if they had gotten the contract. And, in the second column, determine how much profit Edel-Brown will make on its government contract. Compare the two figures on the bottom of each column; make your award the larger of the two figures” (emphasis supplied) .
