The opinion issued by this Court on April 6, 1994, is withdrawn, and the following is substituted in lieu thereof.
The question presented is whether a temporary injunction should be upheld against a corporation and an individual who would otherwise continue to make use of certain trade secrets obtained through a prior confidential relationship.
BACKGROUND
In January 1990, Emory Garth, Carmen Burns, and Robert Campbell formed BCG Ventures to produce a three-dimensional high-density memory package for mini- and microcomputer application. On January 15, 1990, Burns and Garth signed a nondisclosure agreement covering information exchanged during that venture, excepting information that otherwise becomes “publicly available.” The parties decided to dissolve their venture roughly three months later, after Burns had made some important breakthroughs in product design. In April 1990, all three venturers signed a letter of agreement that Burns would retain all rights to the intellectual property he created while working with BCG Ventures. Most importantly, Burns had developed a “radiator” design that enables heat to escape stacked integrated circuits, which the parties acknowledge to be “the key concept needed to make the initial product concept manufacturable.”
In June 1990, Burns and Campbell formed Staktek Corporation to produce Burns’s memory module. Garth joined RTB Technology, Inc. in 1991, and this company attempted to license a competing product using the radiator principle. To protect his design, Burns filed patent applications with the United States Patent Office and the World International Property Organization. On February 20, 1992, the Gazette, a publication of the World Intellectual Property Organization in Brussels, published an abstract of Burns’s international patent application. In an October 1992 newspaper article, RTB Technology revealed some of its activities and announced its affiliation with Microelectronics and Computer Technology Corporation (MCC). In June 1993, another article provided additional information about RTB Technology’s new product. In July 1993, Staktek Corporation, Burns, and Campbell (“Staktek”) brought suit to enjoin RTB Technology and Garth (“RTB”) from using or distributing Staktek’s trade secrets. The trial court issued a temporary injunction from which RTB appeals.
*548 In six points of error, RTB asserts that the trial court erred in granting injunctive relief because: (1) the trade secrets in question had been publicly disclosed in February 1992, after which others could freely use Staktek’s confidential information; (2) RTB did not make commercial use of the trade secrets before Staktek’s public disclosure; (3) the Supremacy Clause of the United States Constitution preempts Texas law from granting injunctive relief to protect patents under these circumstances; (4) prior restraint on free speech is unconstitutional; (5) Staktek has an adequate remedy at law; and (6) laches should bar this action because of Stak-tek’s unreasonable delay in seeking injunc-tive relief. We will affirm the trial court’s order.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
A trial court’s order granting a temporary injunction may be reversed only on a showing of a clear abuse of discretion.
Davis v. Huey,
DISCUSSION
Public Disclosure of Trade Secrets
In its first point of error, RTB claims that on February 20, 1992, Staktek publicly disclosed its trade secrets, after which RTB was free to use this information. RTB further asserts, in its second point of error, that it did not make any commercial use of the trade secrets before this public disclosure. In its fifth point of error, RTB claims that injunctive relief after a public disclosure is inappropriate because its only liability to Staktek, if any, would be for monetary damages.
The dispute centers on whether Staktek’s trade secrets may be protected after public disclosure, whether the abstract published in Brussels was a public disclosure, and whether RTB commercially used Stak-tek’s technology before this disclosure. We begin by examining RTB’s actions before February 1992. By the time the
Gazette
published Staktek’s patent application, RTB had completed the basic design for its competing device, consulted a patent attorney about protecting this design, and sought financing from investors for the development of this product. RTB claims that these activities do not constitute a commercial use because it had not commenced production or sales of a final product. We disagree. Any misappropriation of trade secrets, followed by an exercise of control and domination, is considered a commercial use.
University Computing Co. v. Lykes-Youngstown Corp.,
Injunctive relief may be proper to prevent a party that has appropriated another’s trade secrets from gaining an unfair market advantage. To obtain injunctive relief, an applicant must show the following: (1) the existence of a wrongful act; (2) the existence of imminent harm; (3) the existence of irreparable injury; and (4) the absence of an adequate remedy, at law.
Hues v. Warren Petroleum Co.,
But in eases involving trade secret violations, is injunctive relief proper after the confidential information has entered the public domain? In technological industries, the design stage and the start-up phase provide the creator of a new device a period in which to market the new product before potential competitors are able to copy the technology. By appropriating Staktek’s confidential information before its publication, RTB was able to prepare to enter the market at the same time as Staktek, and thus could deprive Stak-tek of the competitive advantage offered by the normal developmental period. Additionally, a single industrial standard generally dominates the market for computer components. The trial court found that only one product is likely to survive, and that RTB’s licensing a competing product with major manufacturers would probably destroy Stak-tek’s opportunity to develop the standard and market its pi’oduct. To provide any real protection in situations in which the competing company uses the creator’s trade secrets to concurrently develop a similar product, injunctive relief beyond the date the company creating the technology publicizes its product is an appropriate remedy.
Hyde Corp.,
In ruling on RTB’s first point of error we do not decide whether the publication of the patent application in the Gazette was sufficient disclosure to permit other parties to make use of Staktek’s technology after February 1992. Because the trial court determined that RTB had appropriated Staktek’s trade secrets before that date, and because the court could have determined that imposing injunctive relief beyond that date was the only way to protect Staktek from RTB’s concurrent marketing of a similar product, we hold that the trial court did not err in granting continuing injunctive relief against RTB.
RTB claims that, regardless of its previous acts, it is entitled to use Staktek’s technology after the
Gazette
publication by virtue of the nondisclosure agreement signed in January 1990. However, RTB’s misappropriation of trade secrets before February 1992 permitted the trial court to grant in-junctive relief despite the publication in Brussels and regardless of whether it was a public disclosure of confidential information.
Luccous,
Prior Restraint on Expression
In its fourth point of error, RTB claims that the district court’s injunction violates the United States and Texas Constitutions by oi’dering a prior restraint on expression. Texas operates under the “well-settled rule that injunctive relief may be employed when one breaches his confidential relationship in order to unfairly use a trade secret.”
Luccous v. J.C. Kinley Co.,
Texas law begins with the presumption that prior restraints on free speech are unconstitutional.
Davenport,
Despite the existence of an imminent and irreparable harm, an injunction may be granted only when it is the least restrictive means of providing appropriate relief. When the court attempts to protect trade secrets, speech itself may cause the harm meant to be guarded against. Considering RTB’s earlier attempts to sell the protected technology to other computer-parts manufacturers, there appears to be no less restrictive method of protecting Staktek than enjoining RTB from disseminating the technology or revealing to third parties the manner of design and manufacture of the device. Under these circumstances, the injunctive relief granted is not an unconstitutional prior restraint. We overrule RTB’s fourth point of error.
Federal Preemption
In its third point of error, RTB claims that the Supremacy Clause of the United States Constitution preempts states from enjoining disclosures that are permitted under federal patent law: “[S]tate regulation of intellectual property must yield to the extent that it clashes with the balance struck by Congress in our patent laws.”
Bonito Boats v. Thunder Craft Boats,
If, as has been said in numerous cases, the equitable remedy of injunction to prevent one person from damaging another through an abuse of confidence in wrongfully appropriating trade secrets is a separate remedy and incident to a different right than that secured by a patent, it would seem that injunctive protection of the trade secret as against a licensee should not necessarily cease upon the issuance of a patent.
Hyde Corp.,
RTB argues that, under
Luccous,
the state may not use trade secret law to prevent an invention from being copied by another manufacturer. In
Luccous,
however, the supreme court refused to grant relief because it found that no trade secret existed.
Luccous,
Unreasonable Delay
In its sixth point of error, RTB claims that this suit for injunction was barred by laches. However, Texas caselaw does not prevent injunctive relief merely because a potential plaintiff did not file a claim as quickly as possible. In a similar suit, the Texas Supreme Court allowed a ease to be brought a year after a competitor began production using the first producer’s trade secrets.
K & G Oil Tool & Serv. Co.,
As a rule equity follows the law and generally in the absence of some element of estoppel or something akin thereto, the doctrine of laches will not bar a suit short of the period set forth in the limitation *551 statutes. .Considering the past business relations between the parties and the lack of any positive action or deliberate nonaction on the part of petitioners which could reasonably be considered as having induced respondents to act to their disadvantage, there is no basis for a shortening of the limitation period, so to speak.
Id. at 791.
In the present case, Staktek filed this suit only nine months after learning that RTB might be using its trade secrets. In October 1992, two weeks after Staktek had learned that RTB was working on a competing product, Staktek’s attorney wrote RTB Technology, MCC, and Garth to notify them of their possible trade secret infringement and of Staktek’s pending patent. At the time, Staktek did not know if RTB’s product used Burns’s design, but it reserved its rights to take future legal action. A picture of RTB’s product, published in June 1993, demonstrated RTB’s use of Staktek’s technology; Staktek filed this suit the following month.
RTB claims it was harmed when Staktek did not file suit as soon as it learned that RTB was producing a competing product. RTB continued to invest substantial sums over the next nine months, while Staktek refused to swap technologies. The evidence suggests that Staktek did not learn that RTB was actually using Staktek’s design until June 1993. Additionally, although Staktek refused to discuss its technology with RTB, it repeatedly expressed its intention to enforce any infringement of its trade secrets. These letters should have spurred RTB to determine its possible liability for trade secret infringement before continuing production plans. Staktek did not induce RTB to act to its own disadvantage. We overrule RTB’s sixth point of error.
CONCLUSION
Concluding that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in granting the requested injunctive relief, we affirm the order.
