HOUSECANARY, INC. F/K/A CANARY ANALYTICS, INC., PETITIONER, V. TITLE SOURCE, INC., REPORTERS COMMITTEE FOR FREEDOM OF THE PRESS, AND HOUSTON FORWARD TIMES, RESPONDENTS
No. 19-0673
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS
April 30, 2021
Argued October 27, 2020
JUSTICE BUSBY delivered the opinion of the Court in which JUSTICE GUZMAN, JUSTICE LEHRMANN, JUSTICE BOYD, JUSTICE DEVINE, and JUSTICE BLACKLOCK joined.
CHIEF JUSTICE HECHT filed an opinion concurring in the judgment, joined by JUSTICE BLAND.
JUSTICE HUDDLE did not participate in the Court‘s decision.
In this case, we consider whether the Texas Uniform Trade Secrets Act (TUTSA) provides a separate pathway for sealing court records to which
We hold that TUTSA displaces some provisions of
BACKGROUND
HouseCanary, Inc. makes technology that estimates the current and future value of residential real estate. HouseCanary entered into a licensing agreement that allowed Title Source, Inc. to evaluate and ultimately use HouseCanary‘s appraisal technology. The parties later disputed the terms of the agreement, and Title Source sued for breach of contract, claiming HouseCanary failed to deliver what it promised. HouseCanary asserted counterclaims including misappropriation of its trade secrets, alleging Title Source used HouseCanary‘s technology to build derivative products in violation of the licensing agreement.
Anticipating that the litigation might require production and use of confidential, proprietary, or private information, the parties agreed to, and the trial court signed, a stipulated protective order. This order, which was issued under
Trial concluded with jury findings in favor of HouseCanary, including that Title Source misappropriated HouseCanary‘s trade secrets.1 Seven weeks later, HouseCanary filed a
HouseCanary moved to have the trial court reconsider sealing, this time limiting the request to eight exhibits and raising TUTSA as the sole basis for sealing. The trial court granted the motion to reconsider under TUTSA and asked HouseCanary to draft an order sealing the eight exhibits. HouseCanary‘s draft order added six more exhibits that it had not moved to seal. Title Source objected to this addition, but the trial court signed the order as drafted.
Title Source appealed the trial court‘s decision to seal the exhibits and a panel of the court of appeals reversed. 603 S.W.3d 829, 841 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 2019). A majority of the panel held that the trial court abused its discretion in granting the motion to reconsider because HouseCanary did not comply with the procedural and substantive requirements of
The majority first addressed whether it had jurisdiction over the appeal. Id. at 834. Title Source contended that jurisdiction was proper under
Any order (or portion of an order or judgment) relating to sealing or unsealing court records shall be deemed to be severed from the case and a final judgment which may be appealed by any party or intervenor who participated in the hearing preceding issuance of such order.
The majority then looked to the parties’ stipulated protective order to decide whether the trial court erred in ordering sealing. It saw the order as the parties’ and trial court‘s means of implementing
A concurring justice focused on HouseCanary‘s and the trial court‘s failure to comply with other aspects of the protective order. Id. at 842 (Marion, C.J., concurring). The concurring justice reasoned that the trial court satisfied its TUTSA obligation to take reasonable measures to preserve trade secrets by signing the stipulated protective order. Id. In addition to incorporating
We granted HouseCanary‘s petition for review.
ANALYSIS
Understanding the procedural context that frames the parties’ arguments is essential to the proper disposition of this appeal. The key procedural facts are these: HouseCanary filed a post-trial motion under
Because
Title Source appealed under
For the reasons explained below, we conclude that HouseCanary is partially correct. But many of
Because the trial court concluded otherwise and did not apply the non-displaced provisions of
I. TUTSA partially displaces the substantive sealing standards of Rule 76a , but it does not provide a separate procedural pathway for sealing court records containing alleged trade secrets.
We review a trial court‘s decision on a
We begin our analysis by setting out the relevant provisions of
A. Rule 76a provides procedures and standards for sealing court records that include trade secrets, while TUTSA provides standards for protecting secrets by means including sealing.
In 1989, the Legislature directed this Court to adopt rules that would guide trial courts in determining whether to seal court records.
Parties attempting to meet this standard must follow the rule‘s procedural requirements. In addition to filing a written motion with the court, a party must post a public notice informing the public of its right to intervene, the nature of the controversy, and the nature of the records sought to be sealed.
Almost every state in this country has adopted the Uniform Trade Secrets Act, drafted in 1979 and amended in 1985.2 Texas adopted a slightly modified version—the Texas Uniform Trade Secrets Act—in 2013, adding it to the Civil Practice and Remedies Code as Chapter 134A.
Although
For its part,
With these general differences in mind, we must consider how
Sometimes when the Legislature uses the language we find in
But as explained above, the Legislature did not provide procedures in TUTSA. TUTSA primarily supplies standards for relief in misappropriation actions.
B. TUTSA displaces some of Rule 76a‘s sealing standards, but it prescribes no conflicting procedures.
This distinction informs our analysis of whether—and to what extent—
HouseCanary is incorrect, however, that TUTSA supplants all of
HouseCanary has not shown that TUTSA‘s lack of procedures conflicts with and was intended to replace the procedural portions of
Courts have sensibly construed the public notice requirement of
Nor is
In sum, TUTSA leaves much of
Our concurring colleagues respond that all of
More importantly, these procedures serve our fundamental commitment to open courts, which is rooted in the common law and the First Amendment.6 The public‘s right of access to judicial proceedings “is a fundamental element of the rule of law” because “monitor[ing] the exercise of judicial authority” helps “maintain[] the integrity and legitimacy of an independent Judicial Branch.” Le v. Exeter Fin. Corp., 990 F.3d 410, 417 (5th Cir. 2021).
Nothing about TUTSA‘s presumption in favor of protective orders signals that the Legislature wanted courts to abandon this commitment and their procedures any time a trade secret is alleged. Recognizing a duty to seal with no accompanying procedures would rewrite the Legislature‘s presumption, turning it into a conclusive command. Procedures allowing public scrutiny and adversary testing of requests to seal court records do not conflict with a rebuttable presumption that some form of protection is proper; to the contrary, they are essential for its proper
II. The trial court abused its discretion by sealing records based solely on TUTSA.
With this understanding of the relationship between
HouseCanary‘s motion for reconsideration could succeed only if TUTSA provides a path to sealing court records separate from
We recognize, of course, that a party can raise TUTSA‘s presumption—which HouseCanary did in its motion to reconsider—as part of its
The trial court‘s sealing order on reconsideration is also an abuse of discretion because HouseCanary‘s public notice and motions make no mention of six of the fourteen exhibits sealed. These six exhibits were not even raised at the hearing on HouseCanary‘s motion for reconsideration; HouseCanary first cited them in its draft order granting that motion. Title Source promptly objected to the proposed order, informing the trial court that would grant more relief than HouseCanary requested, but the trial court signed the order as drafted. HouseCanary‘s failure to comply with
We also conclude that the trial court‘s errors probably caused the rendition of an improper sealing order. See
Title Source and the intervenors also argued that HouseCanary failed to comply with the stipulated protective order‘s requirement that a party seeking to maintain the confidentiality of protected discovery material during trial move for sealing within five business days of submitting that material under temporary seal.8 The protective order was expressly issued under
Title Source and the intervenors therefore offered a collection of reasons for denying the motion to seal on grounds that were not displaced by TUTSA‘s presumption favoring protective orders. The public-notice requirement is one of
III. A remand is appropriate for the trial court to reconsider sealing under the applicable provisions of both TUTSA and Rule 76a .
The remaining question for the court of appeals was whether to render or remand, see
Unlike the court of appeals, we have held that TUTSA partially displaces
Title Source and the intervenors argue that we should instead affirm the court of appeals’ judgment, pointing to two grounds for denying sealing that they raised in the court of appeals but the majority of that court did not reach. We conclude neither ground demonstrates that sealing would be improper as a matter of law.
First, Title Source argues that HouseCanary‘s trade secrets lost their secrecy when it introduced exhibits containing those secrets into evidence at trial without obtaining an order to protect their secrecy (as the protective order required) and discussed some of them in open court. The concurring justice in the court of appeals agreed. 603 S.W.3d at 842–43 (Marion, C.J., concurring). We conclude, however, thаt these facts alone do not conclusively establish a waiver of HouseCanary‘s trade secrets.
Information need not be kept absolutely secret in order to constitute a trade secret. Rather, the owner must “take[] reasonable measures under the circumstances to keep the information secret,” and the information must “not be[] generally known to, and not be[] readily ascertainable through proper means by, another person who can obtain economic value” from it.
Here, the trial court was in the best position to determine whether the exhibits’ unsealed admission into evidence and the extent to which they were discussed at trial made the secret information generally known to or readily ascertainable by competitors, as well as whether the measures taken by HouseCanary and the court itself to protect the exhibits were reasonable. HouseCanаry argues that the discussion of the exhibits in open court was too limited to allow a competitor to recreate or reverse engineer its secrets, and the record shows that the trial court limited public access to the exhibits even before HouseCanary moved to seal them following the trial. Title Source takes a different view of the exhibits’ accessibility and the amount of information disclosed in court.
Having heard these arguments from both sides, the trial court granted the motion to reconsider sealing and included a finding in its order that the exhibits contained trade secrets. Because Title Source has not conclusively shown that the exhibits lost their secrecy, we cannot affirm the court of appeals’ judgment denying sealing on this basis.
Second, Title Source and the intervenors argue that the triаl court‘s retroactive sealing of these exhibits violates rights to courtroom access under the common law and First Amendment.10
CONCLUSION
Because TUTSA does not displace
OPINION DELIVERED: April 30, 2021
J. Brett Busby
Justice
