OPINION
DTM Research, L.L.C. (“DTM”), a Maryland limited liability company, commenced this diversity action against AT & T Corporation (“AT & T”), seeking a declaratory judgment, injunctive relief, and $24 million in damages. The complaint alleges that AT & T misappropriated DTM’s trade secrets during the course of contract negotiations between the two companies involving AT & T’s possible employment of DTM’s expertise in data mining. During the course of discovery, AT & T issued subpoenas to agencies of the United States and persons who have dealt with the agencies to discover evidence in support of AT & T’s hypothesis that DTM’s claimed trade secrets related to technology that DTM misappropriated from the United States. When the district court granted the United States’ motion to quash the subpoenas, based on the United States’ assertion of a “state secrets” privilege, AT & T moved for summary judgment on the ground that the district court’s protective order precluded it from defending the case effectively. The district court denied AT & T’s motion, but agreed to certify two issues to this court under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b). Although the questions cannot be definitively answered in the absence of fact-finding, we affirm the district court’s conclusions at this stage of the proceedings.
I
In connection with AT & T’s interest in efficiently marketing its telecommunications products and services to the rapidly growing work-at-home market by better exploiting its own extensive databases, it entered into negotiations with DTM in early 1995. DTM claimed special knowledge and expertise in analyzing large amounts of data and offered its “Orea Blue” process, which it described as a “new and unprecedented group of methods, techniques and processes for mining and analyzing immense quantities of call detail data, to identify, for marketing purposes, various segments of the population from telephone-call records.” Because DTM claimed that its knowledge and information were trade secrets, it demanded that AT &
AT & T personnel signed the confidentiality agreements and then worked with DTM personnel to set up a demonstration of DTM’s data mining techniques in a limited market in San Diego. Following the demonstration, AT & T acknowledged that the results were promising. The parties could not, however, agree on a contract because AT & T believed that the $24 million asking price was too high and that it would be better served if it used its own in-house capability to complete the task of data mining. AT & T also believ.ed that issues of customer confidentiality counseled against awarding the contract to DTM because the operation of “Orea Blue” might require sharing confidential consumer information with DTM.
Following AT & T’s rejection of DTM’s proposals, DTM filed this action, alleging that AT & T terminated negotiations only after obtaining its trade secrets in “Orea Blue” and that AT & T then incorporated the secret information into its already existing technology, thereby allowing it to enhance its in-house capabilities at the expense of DTM. AT & T’s defense is, in part, based on its “belief” that aspects of “Orea Blue” had been misappropriated by DTM from the United States in the course of work that DTM and other companies had earlier performed for the United States. AT & T also believes that the alleged “trade secrets” involve technology commonly used throughout the industry.
To discover evidence relating to its defenses, AT & T issued subpoenas to various agencies of the United States, as well as to various commercial entities that allegedly had worked in developing technology for the United States to obtain evidence to prove that whatever trade secret existed in “Orea Blue” did not belong to DTM but rather to the United States. The United States intervened and, invoking the “state secrets” privilege, moved to quash AT & T’s subpoenas. The United States took no position on whether the technology at issue is similar to any technology that it owns but claimed that any inquiry into technology of the type described in AT & T’s subpoenas would threaten national security. The district court granted the government’s motion and severely circumscribed AT & T’s discovery in this area. AT & T then filed a motion for summary judgment, arguing that the district court’s order quashing its subpoenas prevented AT & T from freely and fairly defending the claims brought against it and that therefore the district court should enter judgment in favor of AT & T.
After denying AT & T’s motion, the district court nevertheless granted AT & T’s request to certify two issues to this court under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b). The district court posed the following questions:
1. Did the Court, in its Opinion and Order of December 10, 1999 correctly hold that fee simple ownership is not an element of any of the claims set forth in Plaintiff DTM’s Complaint against Defendant AT & T for violation of the Maryland Trade Secrets Act (Count D, violation of a confidentiality agreement between the parties (Count II), quantum me-ruit (Count III), and unjust enrichment (Count IV)?
2. Do the Court’s Orders of December 10, 1999 and November 25, 1998 which preclude inquiry into the alleged theft of DTM of trade secrets from the U.S. government (based on the Government’s assertion of the state secrets privilege) deny AT & T a fair trial and therefore require termination of all or any part of this litigation?
II
On the first question posed, the district, court, applying Maryland law, which the parties agree applies, ruled:
The court is persuaded by DTM’s argument that ownership — in the sense of fee simple absolute title — is not necessary and that mere possession is sufficient to sustain a cause of action under the [Maryland Uniform Trade Secrets] Act. As DTM points out, neither the Act nor the case law itself explicitly require[s] the plaintiff in a trade secrets case to be the outright owner of the trade secret at issue. But DTM is also correct from a historical standpoint.
* * *
Maryland’s law of conversion fully reflects this heritage. In order to recover for conversion, one must either have been in actual possession or have had the right to immediate possession in the converted asset.
The Court concludes that possession, not ownership or right to title, is all that is required to sustain a cause of action under the Uniform Trade Secrets Act. Accordingly, the Court finds that AT & T’s ownership defense would not constitute a valid dispositive defense and that preclusion of discovery into the issue of DTM’s ownership of the Orea Blue technology can have no prejudicial impact on the ability of AT & T to continue in this litigation.
(Citation, footnote, and internal quotation marks omitted).
Contending that the district court erred in this ruling, AT & T argues that well established principles of trade secrets law oblige a plaintiff, as part of its prima facie case, to establish that it owns the trade secret that is the subject of the dispute, see Surgidev Corp. v. Eye Tech., Inc.,
DTM accepts the proposition that as part of its pnima facie case, it must show either that it developed the trade secret at issue or otherwise is in lawful possession of it. It asserts that it is prepared to present evidence at trial on the means by which it developed “Orea Blue” to satisfy this obligation. DTM, however, disagrees with AT & T’s contention that if AT & T proved that DTM misappropriated “Orea Blue” technology from a third party, AT & T would be exonerated of its own misappropriation of that technology from DTM. DTM relies on the Maryland law of theft which provides that “[i]t is not a defense to theft that the property was taken, obtained, or withheld from a person who had obtained possession of the property by illegal means.” Md.Code Ann., Art. 27, § 343(b).
To the extent that a trade secret misappropriation case draws on principles of personal property law, we agree with
But the question of whether “fee simple ownership” is an element of a claim for misappropriation of a trade secret may not be particularly relevant in this context. While trade secrets are considered property for various analyses, see e.g., Bond v. PolyCycle, Inc.,
Thus, the concept of a “fee simple” interest in a trade secret, or any proprietary interest, is not entirely useful in defining the elements of a misappropriation claim. In supervising the further prosecution of this case, the district court should instead articulate the elements of the claim based on the language of the Uniform Trade Secrets Act and have the factfinder measure the proof of the parties against those elements.
Accordingly, if DTM demonstrates that it possesses secret information satisfying the definition of § ll-1201(e) and that AT & T misappropriated that information, as defined in § 11 — 1201(c), by improper means, as defined in § 11-1201(b), then DTM may be entitled to the remedies authorized by §§ 11-1202 through 11-1205. AT & T may defend the action by demonstrating, among other things, that DTM failed to satisfy its burden of proving the existence of a trade secret as defined in § ll-1201(e). Relevant to such a defense would be AT & T’s
More relevant, perhaps, is the question whether AT & T “misappropriated” the secret information in the sense defined by the Act. See Md.Code Ann., Com. L. Art. § 11 — 1201(c). Proving this element would require DTM to show that AT & T used improper means to acquire from DTM the information currently in AT & T’s possession. See id. § 11 — 1201(c); see also id. § ll-1201(b) (defining “improper means”). While DTM could attempt to prove that AT & T violated the confidentiality agreements by misusing disclosures made during negotiations, AT & T might attempt to prove that it always possessed the information, as did others in the industry, and that the information was therefore neither secret nor misappropriated.
Accordingly, we answer the district court’s first question in the affirmative, concluding that fee simple ownership in its traditional sense is not an element of a trade secrets misappropriation claim in Maryland.
III
On the second question of whether the district court’s recognition of the “state secrets” privilege requires termination of this litigation, we agree with the district court’s analysis and its conclusions.
Responding to AT & T’s claim that it needed discovery from the United States about the United States’ alleged technology in order to establish a defense that the technology is “generally known in the industry,” the district court pointed out that the evidence would be irrelevant because the information would still be a secret and therefore not probative of what is “generally known in the industry.” The court appropriately observed that “[a] secret may still be a secret, though shared by others,” and continued, “While AT & T remains free to establish that other companies in non-secret ways may have developed technology similar or identical to Orea Blue, it does not need to delve into the possible existence of the [United States’ technology] to do so.” The court concluded on this subject:
The court is satisfied that this case can go forward through remaining discovery and trial without risking disclosure of any materials which have been ruled out-of-bounds. This is not a case in which “the very subject matter of[the] litigation is itself a state secret,” and thus neither party should have any “incentive to probe dangerously close to the state secrets themselves.” DTM ought not lose its day in court simply because its case may involve a level of complexity necessitating additional preparation and motions in limine before the matter gets to the jury.
(Alteration in original, footnote omitted) (quoting Fitzgerald v.. Penthouse Int% Ltd.,
The evidence protected from discovery in this case is potentially relevant to some aspects of AT & T’s defense, but it is not central to the question of whether AT & T is liable for trade secret misappropriation, and thus AT & T overstates its importance. DTM has undertaken to prove at trial “that [it] developed the technology that constituted trade secrets that did all kinds of things that AT & T couldn’t do, [that the technology] had enormous value to AT & T and value which they appreciated, and [that] AT & T stole [it].” That DTM has a valuable secret can be proved or disproved even if, as AT & T alleges, the government also has the same secret. More importantly, as the district court noted, the court has not precluded AT & T from discovering from others in the industry whether they use the same technology claimed by DTM as a trade secret, nor has the court precluded AT & T from presenting evidence that it created its own technology prior to or independently of its contacts with DTM. Moreover, that AT & T did not misappropriate the secrets also can be proved or disproved without any evidence from the United States. The district court’s prohibition of discovery into whether DTM’s trade secret information was developed when DTM employees did work for the government may affect AT & T’s efforts to impeach the employees or attack aspects of DTM’s damage claim. But even allowing for this possibility, we cannot conclude at this stage as a matter of law that a fair trial cannot be had.
In Farnsworth Cannon, Inc. v. Grimes,
Of course, whatever we decide now must be tempered by the recognition that this appeal is an interlocutory one and that the nature of the evidence ultimately presented will determine the ultimate application of these principles. But as the record now
AFFIRMED AND REMANDED FOR FURTHER PROCEEDINGS
