Al Minor & Associates, Inc. v. Martin

117 Ohio St. 3d 58
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 6, 2008
DocketNos. 2006-2340 and 2007-0121
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 117 Ohio St. 3d 58 (Al Minor & Associates, Inc. v. Martin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Al Minor & Associates, Inc. v. Martin, 117 Ohio St. 3d 58 (Ohio 2008).

Opinion

O’Donnell, J.

[59]*59{¶ 1} Robert E. Martin, a former employee of A1 Minor & Associates, Inc. (“AMA”), appeals from a decision of the Franklin County Court of Appeals that affirmed a trial court judgment that denied equitable relief but entered a $25,973 verdict in favor of AMA for fees not generated from former clients Martin had solicited using information he had memorized while working for AMA. The court of appeals also certified that its decision conflicted with the decision in Michael Shore & Co. v. Greenwald (Mar. 21, 1985), Cuyahoga App. No. 48824, 1985 WL 17713, on the following question of law: “Whether customer lists compiled by former employees strictly from memory can be the basis for a statutory trade secret violation.”

{¶ 2} Thus, the issue here concerns whether the use of a memorized client list can be the basis of a trade secret violation pursuant to Ohio’s Uniform Trade Secrets Act (“UTSA”), R.C. 1333.61 et seq. After review, we have concluded that the client information at issue in this case did not lose its status as a trade secret, or the protection of the UTSA, because it had been memorized by a former employee.

{¶ 3} AMA is an actuarial firm that designs and administers retirement plans and that employs several “pension analysts” who work with approximately 500 clients. A1 Minor Jr., who founded AMA in 1983 and serves as its president and sole shareholder, developed AMA’s clientele, for which the firm maintains a confidential list.

{¶ 4} In 1998, AMA hired Martin as a pension analyst but did not require him to sign either an employment contract or a noncompetition agreement. In 2002, while still employed by AMA, Martin organized his own company, Martin Consultants, L.L.C., with the purpose of providing the. same type of services as AMA. In 2003, he resigned from AMA and, without taking any documents containing confidential client information, successfully solicited 15 AMA clients with information from his memory.

{¶ 5} After learning of Martin’s competing business, AMA filed the instant action against him for monetary and injunctive relief, claiming that he had violated Ohio’s Trade Secrets Act by using confidential client information to solicit those clients. The trial court referred the trial to a magistrate, who determined that Martin had misappropriated AMA’s client list in violation of the UTSA. In addition, the magistrate specifically concluded that the fact that Martin had solicited AMA’s clients from memory did not prevent the finding of a trade secret violation. The magistrate further recommended finding against Martin for $25,973 in fees that AMA would have earned from its former clients and denying injunctive relief. Martin filed objections, but the court overruled them, adopted the magistrate’s findings and recommendations, and entered judgment in favor of AMA.

[60]*60{¶ 6} Martin appealed to the Franklin County Court of Appeals, arguing that a memorized client list does not satisfy the definition of a trade secret, a contention disputed by AMA. The court of appeals affirmed the trial court, stating that because “a client list such as the one at issue fits the statutory definition of a trade secret under R.C. 1333.61(D), AMA’s memorized client list warrants trade secret status.” Al Minor & Assoc., Inc. v. Martin, Franklin App. No. 06AP-217, 2006-Ohio-5948, 2006 WL 3240654, ¶ 15. The appellate court also certified its decision as being in conflict with Greenwald, Cuyahoga App. No. 48824, 1985 WL 17713. Martin filed a discretionary appeal, and we accepted the conflict and agreed to review his appeal.

{¶ 7} In this court, Martin asserts that a client list memorized by a former employee cannot be the basis of a trade secret violation and that the appellate court’s decision in this case overly restricts his right to compete in business against AMA. He also argues that AMA should not have the right to control the use of his memory and that AMA had the opportunity to protect its confidential information by way of an employment contract, which it did not do.

{¶ 8} AMA counters that public policy in Ohio favors the protection of trade secrets, whether written or memorized; that the definition of a trade secret should focus on the nature of the information and the potential harm that its use would cause the former employer; and that no meaningful difference exists between a written and memorized client list.

{¶ 9} We note that Martin has also briefed a second proposition of law asserting that AMA’s client list does not satisfy the definition of a trade secret because it contained information that is available to the public via the Internet. However, because Martin never raised this issue in his memorandum in support of jurisdiction, we never agreed to consider it. Thus, we concern ourselves only with the proposition of law that we accepted for review: whether a memorized client list can be the basis of a trade secret violation in Ohio pursuant to the UTSA.

{¶ 10} Ohio’s protection of trade secrets arose at common law. In one of the earliest appellate decisions concerning trade secrets, Natl. Tube Co. v. E. Tube Co. (1902), 3 Ohio C.C. (N.S.) 459, 1902 WL 874, affirmed without opinion (1903), 69 Ohio St. 560, 70 N.E. 1127, an Ohio circuit court defined a trade secret as “a plan or process, tool, mechanism, or compound, known only to its owner and those of his employees to whom it is necessary to confide it, in order to apply it to the uses for which it is intended.” Id. at 462, 1902 WL 874. In 1937, this court acknowledged that “[t]he authorities are quite uniform that disclosures of trade secrets by an employee secured by him in the course of confidential employment will be restrained by the process of injunction, and in numerous instances attempts to use for himself or for a new employer information relative to the [61]*61trade or business in which he had been engaged, such as lists of customers regarded as confidential, have been restrained.” Curry v. Marquart (1937), 133 Ohio St. 77, 79,10 O.O. 93,11 N.E.2d 868.

{¶ 11} Moreover, as the United States Supreme Court noted in its 1974 decision in Kewanee Oil Co. v. Bicron Corp., “Ohio has adopted the widely relied-upon definition of a trade secret found at Restatement of Torts § 757, comment b (1939).” 416 U.S. 470, 474, 94 S.Ct. 1879, 40 L.Ed.2d 315, citing B.F. Goodrich Co. v. Wohlgemuth (1963), 117 Ohio App. 493, 498, 24 O.O.2d 290, 192 N.E.2d 99, and W.R. Grace & Co. v. Hargadine (C.A.6, 1968), 17 Ohio Misc. 199, 392 F.2d 9, 14. The General Assembly also codified the Restatement definition of a trade secret at former R.C. 1333.51(A)(3), although it has since repealed that statute. See Valeo Cincinnati Inc. v. N & D Machining Serv., Inc. (1986), 24 Ohio St.3d 41, 44, 24 OBR 83, 492 N.E.2d 814; and State ex rel. The Plain Dealer v. Ohio Dept. of Ins. (1997), 80 Ohio St.3d 513, 524, 687 N.E.2d 661.

{¶ 12} In 1994, the General Assembly enacted the UTSA, R.C. 1333.61 through 1333.69, which defines a “trade secret” as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
117 Ohio St. 3d 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/al-minor-associates-inc-v-martin-ohio-2008.