Aarow Electrical Solutions, LLC v. TriCore Systems, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedApril 3, 2024
Docket8:22-cv-02363
StatusUnknown

This text of Aarow Electrical Solutions, LLC v. TriCore Systems, LLC (Aarow Electrical Solutions, LLC v. TriCore Systems, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aarow Electrical Solutions, LLC v. TriCore Systems, LLC, (D. Md. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF MARYLAND AAROW ELECTRICAL SOLUTIONS, * Plaintiff,

v. * CIVIL NO. JKB-22-2363 TRICORE SYSTEMS, LLC et al., * Defendants. * * * * x te * * x x * te * MEMORANDUM Plaintiff Aarow Electrical Solutions, LLC (“Aarow”) filed a Second Amended Complaint. (Sec. Am. Compl., ECF No. 106.) Aarow brings claims against two new defendants: Veritas Consulting Group, LLC (“Veritas”) and Thomas Bednarik.' Pending before the Court are four Motions to Dismiss filed by NTI and Tricore, the Individual Defendants, Veritas, and Bednarik. (ECF Nos. 111, 112, 133, 136.) I. Factual and Procedural Background In short, Aarow alleges that the Defendants used various means—including misappropriating trade secrets and confidential information and interfering with client contracts— to effectively steal a portion of its business. Because the Second Amended Complaint is nearly identical to the Amended Complaint, the Court will first provide below the factual background from a prior Memorandum. That prior Memorandum—which includes citations to the then- operative Amended Complaint—accompanied the Court’s Order denying in large part the Original

' Aarow also brings claims against defendants that had been named in prior complaints (the “Original Defendants”): National Technology Integrators, LLC (“NTI”) and Tricore Systems, LLC (“Tricore”) and Individual Defendants Ralph David Hummer, Anthony Reyes, Candace Santos, Jonathon Steele, John Taylor, Chad Tippett, Nathan Velozo, Michael Gregory Wilson, and David Paul Taylor.

Defendants’ Motions to Dismiss. The Court will next summarize the relevant procedural history. Finally, the Court will provide a summary of the additional allegations contained in the now- operative Second Amended Complaint. A, Factual Background from Amended Complaint As the Court explained in its prior Memorandum and Order: Aarow is a “full-service electrical contractor” which “means that Aarow works with low voltage lighting, power, fire alarms, and systems and medium voltage power.” (Am. Compl. § 17[, ECF No. 64].) Tricore, prior to the events at issue, “had never performed any electrical work and instead limited its business to low-voltage work.” (/d. § 43.) Tricore’s work was different from Aarow’s in that “Tricore only worked a low-voltage in A/V, communications, and security[.]” (/d.) NTI likewise performed low-voltage work. (Jd. § 44.) NTI and Tricore are different entities, but “maintain a close business relationship.” (Jd.) Aarow “possesses trade secret information from which it derives economic value” and “possesses non-trade secret confidential information as part of its existence as an operating company.” (/d. 18-19.) Aarow alleges that its work is “highly competitive” and that “[t]he way contractors develop their bid proposals, pricing strategies, and construction strategies is crucial to developing business, and if accessed by competitors, would allow competitors to undercut pricing and gain an easy economic advantage.” (/d. §§ 21—22.) Aarow alleges that it keeps its bidding, budgeting, and certain other information and documents confidential. (/d. {§] 23-25.) For instance, Aarow alleges that it “password-protect[s] computers and online accounts, us[es] a private server to store information, [and] operat[es] from a secure facility.” (/d. § 32.) It also “provided password-protected laptops for each employee to work remotely to prevent unnecessary overlap with employees’ personal electronics.” (/d. § 33.) In addition, Aarow includes a confidentiality statement on client proposals indicating that such proposal is “considered private and confidential” and that “[sJharing of Aarow Pricing and SOW is not allowed without specific written authorization[.]” (Id. § 34.) Further, Aarow’s Employee Handbook—which each of the Former Employees signed—provides that the “[uJnauthorized disclosure of business ‘secrets’ or confidential information” could result in “disciplinary action, up to and including termination of employment.” (/d. 37, 39.) Beginning in late 2021 through August 2022, the Former Employees left Aarow to work for Tricore: Hummer was the first to leave Aarow in late 2021 and became Tricore’s president, and John Taylor was the last to leave Aarow on August 23, 2022 and became a Tricore assistant project manager. (/d. {4 48, 89.) Aarow alleges that, during this exodus, the Defendants misappropriated Aarow’s business

in various ways. Aarow’s allegations against the Former Employees can be summed up as follows: While employees of Aarow, the Former Employees systematically paved the way for their future employer, Tricore, by among other things, forwarding competitive pricing materials to Tricore, delaying progress on current Aarow projects, and performing work on behalf of Tricore during working hours as Aarow employees. (Ud. § 67.) Below are examples of such allegations. In January 2022, when Steele was still employed at Aarow, he created a spreadsheet “detail[ing] a five-year plan to open up a Tricore electrical division with a year one revenue of $6,850,000. The only way to generate such revenue in the first year of a new business is to bring on pre-existing work.” (Jd. 951.) Aarow alleges that the spreadsheet contained “specific references to Tricore and / or NTI weighing in on the cost projections”; that David Taylor (part owner of NTI and Tricore) edited the spreadsheet; and that Steele’s Aarow laptop files show that he was corresponding with David Taylor in March of 2022. (Jd. §§ 52-53.) Steele also “uploaded and sent numerous files or emails from his Aarow laptop to his personal Gmail account with titles matching projects that Aarow was working, had bid, or was in the process of bidding” and that “[m]any of those projects” were “ultimately [] worked by Tricore[.]” (Jd. § 69.) Steele received an offer of employment from Tricore in April 2022 and became their Chief Operating Officer (“COO”). (Id. § 64.) Steele allegedly deleted all sent emails from his Aarow email address for the two years prior to leaving Aarow. (/d. § 75.) Aarow also alleges that, on May 5, 2022, John Taylor (then an Aarow employee) downloaded data from Aarow’s “Accubid” database, which Aarow uses to track and prepare bids. (/d. § 72.) The data included information “for numerous projects, includ[ing] names, dates of bids, the cost of bids, the status of the bid, and the anticipated hours to complete the bidded work.” (/d.) He then created a spreadsheet with this information. (/d.) Aarow alleges that it never downloads Accubid data in this manner, and that the spreadsheet created by John Taylor would be a “surplus” which “clearly indicates it was intended for use outside of Aarow].]” (/d.) John Taylor ultimately left Aarow for Tricore in August 2022. (/d. § 89.) He allegedly deleted all documents from October 21, 2020 through his last day at Aarow from his “Documents” folder. (Jd. § 77.) Aarow alleges that the Defendants misappropriated or otherwise interfered with various specific projects. (/d. § 95-96.) For instance, on June 21, 2022, John Taylor (then an Aarow employee) submitted a proposal on behalf of Aarow for a Kaiser Permanente “Ashburn Project.” (/d. § 97.) Two weeks later, Steele (then the COO of Tricore) submitted a proposal for the Ashburn Project. (/d. § 101.) Aarow only learned that Tricore also bid on the project when “Kaiser Permanente apparently attempted to email Tony Reyes (then a Tricore employee) on August 9, 2022 about the KP Ashburn Project, but instead responded to Tony Reyes’s Aarow

email address.” (/d. 102.) Tricore’s proposal had “the same sections as Aarow’s proposal” and “each of those sections [was] letter-for-letter identical to the Aarow proposal.” (/d. { 103.) A nearly identical chain of events occurred with respect to a Kaiser Permanente “Manassas Nurse Call Project.” (/d.

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Aarow Electrical Solutions, LLC v. TriCore Systems, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aarow-electrical-solutions-llc-v-tricore-systems-llc-mdd-2024.