OPINION
Plaintiff Safe Flight Instrument Corporation (Safe Flight) claims defendant Sundst-rand Data Control (Sundstrand) has been and still is infringing Safe Flight’s patents for wind shear detection systems. At this early stage of the litigation, Sundstrand moves this Court to enter a protective order pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(c)(7) to govern discovery. Safe Flight contests the motion. At issue is not what confidential materials are to be disclosed but rather to whom such disclosures will be made. While Sundstrand would (under appropriate guidelines) restrict disclosure to counsel and approved outside experts, Safe Flight proposes that its President additionally be permitted to have access to the information disclosed. Safe Flight alternatively argues that if its President is precluded from reviewing confidential documents then Sundstrand’s inside counsel should suffer the same restriction. For the reasons set forth below, the Court adopts the defendant’s position, limiting disclosure to trial counsel, inside (if admitted to the Bar of this Court) and/or outside, and to approved outside experts.
The patents-in-suit, U.S. Patent Nos. 4,012,713 and 4,079,906, involve wind shear detection systems. These systems alert airplane pilots of an abrupt change of speed or direction of wind, a potential avi-atic disaster. The systems employ high technology.
In its discovery requests, plaintiff seeks information related to the research and development, production, construction, and sales of defendant’s wind shear detection systems, including their incorporation into other avionics equipment manufactured by defendant. The defendant wishes to guard this information as its commercial value is enhanced by its secrecy.
Nonetheless, plaintiff asks that its President, Leonard M. Greene, be allowed to examine scientific documents that Sundst-rand considers confidential. Mr. Greene, founder of Safe Flight, ranks as a preeminent aeronautic engineer, having received more than sixty aeronautic patents. In support of its position, Safe Flight argues that Mr. Greene is “uniquely qualified” to assess the documents and further that Mr. Greene should be informed so that he, qua President, can make an educated business decision as to whether to pursue this litigation. Otherwise, the argument continues, plaintiff “would have to accept as a matter of blind faith its attorneys’ views of the merits of its infringement claims.”
Sundstrand objects to the use of Mr. Greene in addition to or in place of an outside consultant. Its concern is clear: Mr. Greene might (whether consciously or subconsciously) abuse the confidential scientific information revealed to Sundst-rand’s competitive disadvantage. The potential for abuse is real. Mr. Greene actively plies aeronautic engineering. The potential for competitive loss is real. Safe Flight and Sundstrand directly compete in the market for avionics equipment, and Safe Flight has expended considerable time and effort over years to develop its product.
The weight of judicial precedent does not favor Safe Flight’s position. This Court
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has recognized that proper safeguards should attend the disclosure of trade secrets.
United States v. Article of Drug Consisting of 30 Individually Cartoned Jars, Etc.,
Applying this precedent to the instant litigation, we rule that Mr. Greene should be precluded from reviewing defendant’s confidential materials. First, accepting that Mr. Greene is a man of great moral fiber, we nonetheless question his human ability during future years of research to separate the applications he has extrapolated from Sundstrand’s documents from those he develops from his own ideas. In this regard, plaintiff has not assured the Court that Mr. Greene is willing to curtail his future research of wind shear equipment. Second, plaintiff’s claim that Mr. Greene is “uniquely qualified” is speculative. Safe Flight has yet to investigate the availability of qualified outside experts. Third, while the inability of plaintiffs counsel to consult its President on the confidential materials may hamper plaintiff’s ability to assess the economic merits of this litigation, the Court suggests that the plaintiff might, if necessary in the future, nominate a non-technical officer to make such a business calculation in light of his/her review of the confidential documents, rather than an officer who is also a working scientist of the corporation.
Plaintiff alternatively argues for symmetry: if it cannot use an in-house expert then defendant should not be able to use in-house counsel. This argument is glib. Significant differences mark the comparison of research scientist and trial attorney. The defendant has represented to this Court that its in-house counsel involved in this litigation neither conduct scientific research nor prosecute patents. These attorneys simply do not face Mr. Greene’s prospect of having to distil one’s own thoughts from a competitor’s thoughts during the course of future aeronautic work.
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In
E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Company v. Phillips Petroleum Company,
The plaintiff refers to a recent decision of the Federal Circuit approving an International Trade Commission protective order that prohibited divulgence of confidential materials to in-house counsel.
Akzo N.V. v. United States Int’l Trade Comm’n,
As this Court observed in
du Pont,
the goals of full disclosure of relevant information and reasonable protection against economic injury “are in tension and each must be fairly balanced against the other.”
