Asahi Glass Co., Ltd. v. TOLEDO ENGINEERING CO.

262 F. Supp. 2d 845, 2003 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8152, 2003 WL 21106267
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedApril 7, 2003
Docket3:03CV7120
StatusPublished

This text of 262 F. Supp. 2d 845 (Asahi Glass Co., Ltd. v. TOLEDO ENGINEERING CO.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Asahi Glass Co., Ltd. v. TOLEDO ENGINEERING CO., 262 F. Supp. 2d 845, 2003 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8152, 2003 WL 21106267 (N.D. Ohio 2003).

Opinion

ORDER

CARR, District Judge.

This is a diversity case in which plaintiff Asahi Glass Co. (“Asahi”) claims that defendant Toledo Engineering Co. (“TECO”) misappropriated Asahi’s trade secrets. Pending is Asahi’s motion for expedited discovery, which has been granted orally. Though requested to do so, the parties have been unable to agree to an order implementing that directive. This order formally orders the expedited discovery Asahi requests, sets certain conditions on such discovery, as requested by TECO, and, anticipating an appeal by TECO of an order, to be entered shortly following entry of this order, notifies TECO that this order shall not be stayed in the event of such appeal.

Asahi is a Japanese glass manufacturer. TECO, an Ohio corporation based in Toledo, Ohio, makes glass-melting furnaces and glass production equipment. Asahi claims TECO has misappropriated its proprietary float glass technology (“Asahi know-how”), which is used to design and operate a microfloat bath for producing thin film transistor (“TFT”) glass. Asahi claims TECO obtained the technology from Schott Glas (“Schott”), a German glass manufacturer.

In 1992, Asahi granted a limited license to Schott, allowing Schott to use Asahi know-how to construct a microfloat bath in Germany. Under the license agreement, Schott was not allowed to use the Asahi know-how to produce TFT glass.

Schott is building a German facility for producing TFT glass, scheduled for completion in summer, 2003. Schott has contracted with Tecoglas, Ltd., a United Kingdom corporation, to help build the facility. Tecoglas has contracted with TECO to provide materials to Schott for the facility. This relationship between Schott and TECO has led to Asahi’s complaint against TECO.

On May 9, 2002, Asahi began an arbitration proceeding against Schott.pursuant to an arbitration provision of its license agreement with Schott (the “Schott arbitration”). The arbitration is taking place in Switzerland under the arbitration rules of the International Chamber of Com- *847 meree (“ICC”). Asahi’s complaint in that proceeding alleges violations by Asahi of the 1992 license and misappropriation of trade secrets. TECO is not a party to that arbitration.

On May 21, 2002, Asahi notified TECO that Asahi had begun arbitration against Schott, and asked TECO not to obtain or use the Asahi know-how. On June 6, 2002, TECO responded that it was not obtaining or using the Asahi know-how. Asahi continued to believe that TECO had obtained the Asahi know-how and was using it to design, build, and install float bath equipment for producing TFT glass. 1

On March 12, 2003, Asahi filed its complaint in this case, arguing that it is suffering irreparable injury because of TECO’s alleged unauthorized use and disclosure of Asahi know-how. Asahi concurrently filed its motion for expedited discovery, claiming that it needed such discovery to determine whether to seek preliminary injunc-tive relief.

Various conferences relating 'to Asahi’s motion for expedited discovery culminated in a hearing on March 25, 2003, at the conclusion of which I granted Asahi’s expedited discovery motion.

Asahi believes and fears that Schott has disclosed to TECO information that Asahi has provided to Schott about the TFT process. In addition, Asahi is concerned that TECO, in turn, has used and will use such information for its own benefit, and that it has disclosed and will disclose such information to others with whom it does business.

Asahi has proposed a lengthy, detailed, and comprehensive order which, if entered, would regulate discovery and access to materials that are disclosed thereby. In addition, Asahi’s proposed order would regulate TECO’s relations with companies with which it does business, including not only subsidiaries and other entities that TECO controls, but subcontractors as well. That proposed order would, in some respects, be tantamount to a preliminary injunction that could impair, without a showing that such has been necessary, TECO’s conduct of its business in general, and fulfillment of its contract with Schott in particular.

Asahi’s proposals go beyond what I was contemplating at the conclusion of the March 25th hearing. To try to distill them to the point of acceptability to TECO, and refine out the defects TECO perceives in that proposal would take more time than this court has, given its other immediate obligations. In addition, the process of trying to do so would cause further delay in the production that Asahi demands, and TECO appears ready to provide. 2

TECO denies that it has received Asahi know-how from Schott; it is willing, however, to the extent it may be found to have obtained such know-how, or determine that it has done so, to refrain from using or disclosing any such Schott-derived As-ahi know-how. TECO also has called on Asahi to describe such information to TECO, so that it can respond to Asahi’s contentions about its acquisition, use, and disclosure of such information.

*848 TECO also contends that desires other than protection of Asahi know-how motivate this litigation. It points out that the Schott arbitration is being conducted under rules that bar almost entirely discovery of the sort that Asahi seeks in this. Asahi brings this suit, TECO asserts, merely as a device to get information about Schott’s communications and dealings with TECO that Asahi cannot obtain in the Schott arbitration.

In addition, TECO claims that Asahi, to the extent it may seek injunctive relief in this proceeding, would be by-passing the refusal of the arbitrators to grant it such relief in the Schott arbitration.

Finally, TECO notes that general know-how about making glass is largely in the public realm. It asserts, and its assertion is supported by its apparent willingness to disclose its project files on the Schott Glas project to Asahi, that there is little, if anything, that can properly be viewed as proprietary in the communications it has had with Schott.

Asahi, in response to these contentions, notes that TECO has been shipping components of the glass factory from this country and elsewhere, and that some shipments appear to have been made, if not expedited, since the filing of this suit. Asahii claims that TECO has opposed its motion for expedited discovery and delayed producing information that it has gathered in response to this court’s earlier directives to further its commercial desires to fulfill its contract with Schott. Asahi emphasizes that the know-how that it is trying to protect in this suit is the product of millions of dollars of research, and is unique and uniquely valuable to Asahi.

TECO has proposed a protective order that is substantially more in line with what I contemplated at the close of the March 25th hearing. Perhaps most importantly, entry of that order, as supplemented herein, will result in prompt disclosure by TECO of its project files. That appears to be the core material that Asahi needs to determine, or to begin to determine, what TECO has learned from Schott. This is an essential first step in this suit.

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262 F. Supp. 2d 845, 2003 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8152, 2003 WL 21106267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/asahi-glass-co-ltd-v-toledo-engineering-co-ohnd-2003.