Lead Opinion
Opinion by
This is an appeal by General Welding and Fabricating Company (General) and Vincent Q. Rapp (Rapp)
The historical background may . be summarized as follows:
Van was organized in 1944, and engaged in the making of air vises. In 1951, it was contacted by O. Clair Norton, who claimed to have invented a unique air drier that could be used profitably in many areas of industry and manufacturing to prevent and eliminate fouling, rusting and shortened life in tools and machinery operated by compressed air. Norton’s brain child, following years of experimentation, was a deliquescent desiccant air drier. A desiccant is a substance which attracts and holds moisture; to deliquesce means to become liquid-like. Norton’s idea was to channel the compressed air through a chemical mixture which would absorb the moisture in the compressed air lines and deliquesce in an orderly fashion. Only the chemical had to be replaced. This type of device was a substantial improvement over the expensive and cumbersоme driers then in general use, which required regeneration and the use of alternate driers. The chemical compound used, to be known as “Dryolite”, was in the form of a pellet consisting of 93 per cent sodium chloride impregnated with a small quantity of calcium chloride and sodium dichromate.
On June 23, 1953, the United States Patent Office issued a patent to Norton for the drier. These rights were then assigned to Van for the purpose of further development and for the sale of deliquescent desiccant air driers. In August 1957, Norton applied for a pat
On September 1, 1953, Rapp was employed by Van. He had no рrevious experience in this field, and, at first, his duties’ involved handling Van’s mail operation. As the development and sale of the air driers grew in volume and importance in the Van system, Rapp’s position of importance and value increased, so that eventually he ran the gamut of tasks involved in this segment of Van’s business to become the general manager of the entire operation. During the course of this employment, he was intimately involved with purchasing, selling, advertising, plan and blue prints drafting, training and conducting field experiments to overcome customer difficulties. In short, Rapp was thoroughly imbued, through his industrious application, with all the problems, procеsses and advantages involved in the production, sale, and maintenance of this type of drier. He learned everything there was to know about Van’s drier, except the composition of the desiccant itself.
Beginning in 1952, General began to make, engineer and design parts for Van’s drier; then from September, 1953, to February 1, 1958, General manufactured the entire drier on behalf of Van according to Norton’s patent. It was in this connection that General and Rapp were introduced. Because of the complicated nature of the construction of these devices and the intimate knowledge of these matters possessed by Rapp, he bеgan frequent visits to General to supervise construction. Then on February 1, 1958, suspecting that Rapp’s loyalty lay more with General than with it, Van terminated Rapp’s employment. One week later, Rapp was employed by General, and within days was actively planning the manufacture and sale of a
On September 6, 1960, the United States Patent Office granted Rapp a patent for his desiccant. On March 16, 1965, Letters Patent were granted to Rapp and General for their drier.
On September 5, 1958, Van instituted this action for injunctive relief and an accounting. After prolonged hearings, the chancellor entered a decree in favor of Van. The court en banc subsequently made the decree final. This appeal followed.
The initial question for determination is whether or not the lower court had jurisdiction of the cause of action. Appellants strongly maintain that the issue basically involves patеnt rights, and that the decree of the lower court in effect deprives them of utilization of such rights and invalidates patents which they received. In short, they maintain that this is strictly “a patent ease”, and, therefore, exclusive jurisdiction is in the federal courts.
It is established beyond question that the district courts of the United States have exclusive, original jurisdiction of all civil actions arising under the patent laws: 28 U.S.C. §1338(a). See also, Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. Stiffel Co.,
The gravamen of the action is the abuse of confidence by Rapp who, as a trusted employee, allegedly misappropriated secret information of Van and used it to produce and market a competing product manufactured by General. That the state courts have the power to enjoin the use of a trade secret in a proper case, there can be no doubt. See, Carl A. Colteryahn Dairy, Inc. v. Schneider Dairy,
This, in our opinion, is such a case. The pivotal and main issue here presented is whether or not the appellants caused damage to Van’s business through the use of confidential material misappropriated by Rapp while he was in its employ.
Moreover, appellants’ jurisdictional contention seems to be based upon a misconception of the nature
The right to make, use or sell, though a logical corollary, is dependent upon natural or common law. See, Bendix Aviation Corp. v. Kury,
We now come to the merits of the case.
In its adjudication, the trial court made certain findings of fact, including the following:
“13. General got direct from Van through Rapp the ‘know-how’ of the manufacture, operation and functioning of Van’s deliquescent desiccant air drier and from no other source.
*256 “14. Defendant Rapp wrongfully appropriated to his own use and that of Defendant, General Welding, the following trade secrets and confidential information and ideas:
“A. The idea and the original concept of the deliquescent type of air drier.
“B. The intimate knowledge of the need, use and demand for deliquescent desiccant air driers; namely, that this was a ‘hot product’.
“0. Information derived from building up and maintaining intimate card files on customers and their peculiar problems and needs, and in servicing such customers.
“D. Van Products’ know-how in manufacturing of these driers which it only achieved after years of success and failure, mistakes and corrections, testing and retesting, field testing, experimentation, study and analysis of problems in actual operation.
“E. Van Products’ know-how in selling, which was an evolutionary process of direct-mail and finally to distributors and direct company contacts.
“F. Van Products material sources and costs.
“G. Results of and intimate knowledge concerning Van Products’ research and development and experimentation in the field, dew point testing, analysis of ratios of the parts involved and the solved mechanical problems contained in their blueprints.
“H. Van Products’ labor costs.
“I. The secret of the desiccant, namely, the impregnation of a soluble pellet holding material with other hydroscopic materials.
“J. Van Products’ suppliers and accounts payable.
“K. Van Products’ customers and accounts receivable.
“L. Mechanical secrets of the Van drier involving peculiar knowledge of design, material, dimensions and*257 positioning of baffles, orifices, screens, and supports other than those disclosed in sales literature or patents or otherwise in the public domain.
“M. Van Products’ advertising methods and material.
“15. The misappropriаtion and use of said trade secrets, confidential information and ideas thus enumerated gave the Defendants an opportunity to achieve a competitive position in a field otherwise devoid of competition and thus to gain an unconscionable advantage and thereby become unjustly enriched at the expense of Plaintiffs.”
These findings are further amplified (or condensed, as the case may be) in the court’s “Discussion”: “The trade secret hereinvolved ... is all embracing rather than confined to any one particular item ... or to any particular phase of its functioning. ... It is not any one of these features or any others which cоnstitute the trade secret contended for by Van but rather the whole picture combining the original idea or theory as worked up mechanically by Van into a tangible and marketable product and the know-how all along the line. . . .”
It is fundamental that the findings of fact of a chancellor which are approved by the court en banc have the weight of a jury’s verdict, and will not be disturbed on appeal if there is adequate evidence in the record to sustain the findings: St. Andrew’s Evangelical Lutheran Church v. Lower Providence Township,
It is our considered judgment that the lower court erred in concluding that the facts established a misap
As noted before, Van prosecuted this action upon the theory that Rapp, as a trusted employee, learned of these secrets while in a confidential relationship, to wit, employee-employer, and misappropriated and used them after the termination of his employment with Van for the benefit and with the consent and knowledge of General.
The concept of trade secret is at best a nebulous one and has been variously defined by ease and text authority. Restatement, Torts, §757, comment b, states that “a trade secret may consist of any formula, pat
Levine v. E. A. Johnson & Co.,
Certain of the elements of the “trade secret” enunciated by the trial judge in Paragraph 14 of his opinion certainly fall within this category of “general knowledge, skill and experience” and are not thus proper subjects for a mental purge. For instance, 14B: “the intimate knowledge of the need, use and demand” for this product could not be a trade secret. It is something that would be learned in any productive industry, as are the “material sources and costs” (14F), “labor costs” (14H), the “suppliers and accounts payable” (14J), “customers and accounts receivable” (14K), and “advertising methods and material” (14M).
A further extension of this concept of “general knowledge” includes the little nuances and refinements developed by Rapp himself while not engaged in specific product research. For instance, 14E: the “know-how in selling, ... an evolutionary process of direct-mail” was a process that Rapp was hired to conduct and of which he made a viable selling process. 14G: “results of . . . research and development and experimentation in the field . . . [etc.]” would not seem, upon
Customer information such as that embraced in item 14C has been the subject of varied litigation. It is clear that this jurisdiction affords protection to an employer’s confidential customer information: Morgan’s Home Equipment Corp. v. Martucci,
The key to the lower court’s thinking seems to be contained in Paragraph 14D: “know-how in manufacturing . . . which [Van] only achieved after years of success and failure, mistakes and corrections . . . [etc.].”
Paragraphs 14A and L: “The idea and the original cоncept” and the “mechanical secrets of the Van drier” present a question which has produced a conflict of authority among the jurisdictions: to wit, whether prior public disclosure is permitted to be raised as a defense by a defendant charged with violating a confidence in business.
In the first place, the “idea and original concept” of a deliquescent desiccant air drier was conceived by Norton many years ago, and was finally patented by him in 1953, prior to the time Rapp began to work for Van. 35 U.S.C. §112 provides that “the specification [required to be appended to a patent application] shall contain a writtеn description of the invention, and of the manner and process of making and using it, in such full, clear, concise, and exact terms as to enable any person skilled in the art to which it pertains ... to make and use the same . . . .” The result of this sec
Further, thesе air driers were sold on the open market and described and covered extensively in the trade literature and Van’s own advertising media. And there is considerable authority
As above noted, there is a split of authority upon the question of the effect of public disclosure (either prior or subsequent) of the matters alleged to be trade secrets through patent application and grant, descriptive literature, intentional disclosure, advertising and/or sale of the product embodying the seсret.
One final item was listed by the court below as a trade secret (141) : “The secret of the desiccant, namely, the impregnation of a soluble pellet holding material with other hydroscopic materials.” However, this is in direct contradiction to the following discussion in the court’s opinion: “. . . [A] t no time was the secret formula of Norton’s desiccant. . . ever revealed to [Kapp]. 'This was a secret of the highest order .... [Kapp] never did secure [the exact chemical formula] . . . .” Printed record, pp. 1858a-1859a. Of course, the idea and the practical functioning of such a deliquescent desiccant could not be a secret, in itself, since the prod-
We do not consider the result herein reached as harsh or out of tune with accepted commercial morality as it may, at first blush, appear. Van has either sold its secret to the public or has traded it, through its agent, Norton, to the public for a 17 year monopoly. We are statutorily
Decree reversed. Each party to pay own costs.
Notes
It appears that the patent would have issued for the desiccant as constituted, but Norton kept insisting on broader rights.
See, Patterson v. Kentucky,
Restatement, Torts, §757, provides, i.a., that “one who discloses or uses another’s trade secret, without a privilege to do so, is liable to the other if (a) he discovered the secret by improper means, or (b) his disclosure or use constitutes a breach of confidence reposed in him by the other in disclosing the secret to him. . . .” This Court has long recognized such a right in the employer: see, e.g., Robinson Electronic Supervisory Co., Inc. v. Johnson,
This definition, according to tlie particular authority involved, is either too broad or too restrictive, but in general it seems to represent the consensus. Compare the definition in Notes, 14 Minn. L. Rev. 543, 548, supra note 3 (“any information of peculiar value to its owner, not protected by patent, and not generally known or accessible to everyone.” [Footnotes omitted. Emphasis in original.]), with that approved in Progress Laundry Co. v. Hamilton,
See also, Wexler v. Greenberg,
See also, Carl A. Colteryahn Dairy, Inc. v. Schneider Dairy,
See, Bishop, Jr., Employers, Employees, and Inventions, 31 S. Cal. L. Rev. 38 (1957), and Notes, Protection and Use of Trade Secrets, 64 Harv. L. Rev. 976 (1951). Cf. Wellington Print Works, Inc. v. Magid,
Progress Laundry Co. v. Hamilton, supra note 4; Sarkes Tarzian, Inc. v. Audio Devices, Inc.,
McClain, Jr., Injunctive Eelief Against Employees Using Confidential Information, 23 Ky. L. J. 248 (1935), and Ellis, Trade Secrets §§71, 72 74 & 79 (1953).
Ellis, Trade Secrets §75.
With this, compare the statement in Ellis, Trade Secrets §211, to the effect that there are no property rights in the knowledge of mistakes to be avoided, citing Detachable Bit Co. v. Timken Roller Bearing Co.,
Compare the implication of the statement in Carver v. Harr,
Bickley v. Frutchey Bean Co., supra note 6; Kinnear-Weed Corp. v. Humble Oil & Refining Co.,
Jessar Manufacturing Corp. v. Berlin,
Pittsburgh Cut Wire Co. v. Sufrin, supra note 5; Bickley v. Frutchey Bean Co., supra note 6; Kinnear-Weed Corp. v. Humble Oil & Refining Co., supra note 13; American Gage & Manufacturing Co. v. Maasdam,
It is true, however, that, regardless of the fact that an article’s individual components are part of the prior art or are ascertainable by inspection of sold articles, a secret may obtain in the composite or in the process of manufacture (providing, of course, that the process itself is a secret one). See, Sun Dial Corp. v. Rideout,
Compare authorities cited supra, notes 13 and 15 (public disclosure destroys secret), with Franke v. Wiltschek,
Ostensibly, following diversity of citizenship and conflicts of law principles, the Court of Appeals in this case applied Pennsylvania law to the facts.
E. I. DuPont de Nemours Powder Co. v. Masland,
28 U.S.C. §1338(a).
Concurrence Opinion
Concurring Opinion by
While I need not reach the merits of this litigation, I concur in and join with the majority of this Court in its determination and result.
But I need reach no conclusion on the merits because I find that the lower court lacked jurisdiction to enjoin the appellants from making, manufacturing and selling their patented desiccant and dryer. Relief may not be granted in this case because of the inextricable involvement of the alleged trade secrets with plaintiff’s and defendant’s patents thereby creating a possibility of conflict between state concepts of unfair competition and the uniform application of the patent law and patent policy. This field has been occupied exclusively by the Federal Patent Law. Two recent landmark cases — Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. Stiffel Co.,
Were we to allow relief in this case we would be encroaching upon the Federal Patent Law and giving protection of a kind that clashes with the objectives of the law. Further, we would be doing these things under our state concept of unfair competition which thе United States Supreme Court specifically said may not be done. We can neither extend the life of a patent nor have we the power to restrict its use even though the patent was obtained as a result of fraud and misrepresentation. Appellee recognized, as it did in its counter-statement of questions involved, that some aspects of the alleged secrets appropriated by appellants might be
