ATI Industrial Automation, Inc. v. Applied Robotics, Inc.

801 F. Supp. 2d 419, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 75125, 2011 WL 2728359
CourtDistrict Court, M.D. North Carolina
DecidedJuly 12, 2011
Docket1:09CV471
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 801 F. Supp. 2d 419 (ATI Industrial Automation, Inc. v. Applied Robotics, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ATI Industrial Automation, Inc. v. Applied Robotics, Inc., 801 F. Supp. 2d 419, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 75125, 2011 WL 2728359 (M.D.N.C. 2011).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

L. PATRICK AULD, United States Magistrate Judge.

This matter comes before the Court on the Joint Renewed Motion for Impoundment (Docket Entry 48) filed by Plaintiff ATI Industrial Automation, Inc. (“ATI”) and Defendant Applied Robotics, Inc. *421 (“ARI”). For the reasons that follow, the Court will grant said motion.

I. BACKGROUND

ATI’s Amended Complaint seeks to enforce patents concerning a device that serves as “a mechanical interface between an industrial robot arm and a variety of tools, or end effectors, that may be attached to the robot arm to perform various tasks.” (Docket Entry 20, ¶ 7.) ARI filed a “Motion to Dismiss, or Alternatively, to Transfer” (Docket Entry 24) and, in support thereof, a “Declaration of Clifford Annis” (Docket Entry 26) and “Declaration of Steve Listing” (Docket Entry 27). ATI responded (Docket Entry 29) and ARI replied (Docket Entry 30).

Via said motion, ARI sought dismissal of this action for lack of personal jurisdiction pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(2) and/or improper venue pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(3); alternatively, ARI requested transfer of this action to the Northern District of New York under 28 U.S.C. § 1406(a). (Docket Entry 24 at 1.) ATI contended that, should the Court find personal jurisdiction lacking, the Court should nonetheless refrain from dismissing the case or transferring it to the Northern District of New York (as ARI proposes); instead, ATI asked the Court to “transfer this case to the District of South Carolina or, in the alternative, to permit ATI to conduct jurisdictional discovery.” (Docket Entry 29 at 4.)

The Court granted ATI’s request for jurisdictional discovery and deferred further action on ARI’s motion to dismiss. (Docket Entry 35 at 15.) In addition, the Court approved a Consent Protective Order to which both parties stipulated. (Docket Entry 37.) Consistent with that protective order, ATI filed a Motion for Impoundment (Docket Entry 41), a document titled “Notice of Filing Under Seal” (Docket Entry 38), an Affidavit of Karen S. Boardman (Docket Entry 39), and a “Supplemental Memorandum Opposing Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss” (Docket Entry 40).

In the Motion for Impoundment, ATI moved “to seal documents provided to [ATI] by [ARI] under the terms of the protective order____ Although [ATI] requested [ARI] lower its designations, [ARI] refused.” (Docket Entry 41 at 1.) Specifically, ATI sought to file under seal three categories of documents:

(1) “[e]xcerpts from the Rule 30(b)(6) Deposition of Applied Robotics with Clifford Annis as its designee (and associated exhibits)” (id. at 1), in particular, Exhibits 4, 5, 7, 11, 14, 15, 19-26, 28, 29, 33, 34, 38-40 (id. at 2-3);

(2) redacted portions of the Affidavit of Karen S. Boardman and exhibits A, E-V, and X (id. at 3-4); and

(3) ATI’s Supplemental Memorandum (id. at 4).

The Court denied the foregoing motion for impoundment because: (1) ATI failed to “fil[e] under seal the materials that it seeks to keep secret” and sought to seal documents “which [did] not appear to require such secrecy” (Docket Entry 46 at 11-12); (2) ATI did not indicate that certain materials were “subject to any confidentiality or non-disclosure agreements” (id. at 12); (3) ATI failed to explain “why the public should be denied access to [] materials, despite the public filing of other apparently similar documents” (id. at 13); (4)“ATI [did] not address how disclosure of each document identified in the motion, could potentially harm ARI” (id. at 14-15); and (5) “ATI [did] not discuss why less drastic alternatives ... would be inappropriate” (id. at 15). Therefore, the Court ordered that “ATI’s Motion for Impoundment (Docket Entry 41) is DENIED with *422 out prejudice to the parties filing a Joint Renewed Motion for Impoundment that addresses the matters discussed in this Memorandum Opinion and Order for each document identified in the motion as requiring sealing.” (Docket Entry 46 at 15 (emphasis added).)

The parties now have filed a Joint Renewed Motion for Impoundment (Docket Entry 48) and a supporting brief (Docket Entry 49). The motion states that “the parties move the Court to seal Exhibits 11, 26 and 35 to the Deposition of Clifford Annis (“Annis Deposition”) and Exhibits A, O-Q and S to the Affidavit of Karen S. Boardman (“Boardman Affidavit”)....” (Docket Entry 48 at 1.) In their brief, the parties briefly discuss other exhibits:

[T]he parties have agreed to file Exhibits 4, 28-29, 34, and 38-10 to the Annis Deposition, Exhibits E-N, U-V and X to the Boardman Affidavit, and the Board-man Affidavit on the public record, with some agreed redactions of specific customer contacts and customers of Defendant ARI that are unknown to Plaintiff ATI. Defendant ARI stipulates that the emails of Exhibits 4, 28-29, 38-39, and 40 to the Annis Deposition and Exhibits E-N, U-V and X to the Boardman Affidavit involve communications between Defendant ARI and companies located in North Carolina or having a plant in North Carolina. Regarding the Board-man Affidavit, the redacted customer contacts and customer names are the same names that were redacted in the referenced exhibits.

(Docket Entry 49 at 3-4.)

In addition, ATI filed:

(1) a document titled “Notice of Filing” which includes ATI’s unredacted Supplemental Memorandum (Docket Entry 50-1), 1 excerpts from the Annis Deposition (Docket Entry 50-2), and, in connection with that deposition, unredacted copies of Exhibits 5, 7, 11, 14, 15, 19-25, and 33 (Docket Entries 50-4-50-17, 50-20), as well as redacted copies of Exhibits 4, 28, 29, 34, and 38-40 (Docket Entries 50-3, 50-18, 50-19, 50-21-50-24);

(2) a redacted copy of the Boardman Affidavit (Docket Entry 51), unredacted copies of Exhibits B, C, D, R, T, and W (Docket Entries 51-1-51-3, 51-14, 51-15, 51-18), 2 and redacted copies of Exhibits E-N, U, V, and X (Docket Entries 51-4-51-13, 51-16, 51-17, 51-19); and

(3) Exhibits 11, 26 and 35 to Annis’s deposition (Docket Entries 52, 53 & 54), which were filed under seal, and Exhibits A, O, P, Q, and S to Ms. Boardman’s Affidavit (Docket Entries 55-59), which were also filed under seal.

Thereafter, ATI filed Exhibits 4, 28-29, 34, and 38-40 to the Annis Deposition, Exhibits E-N, U-V and X to the Board-man Affidavit, and the Boardman Affidavit, in an unredacted form, under seal. (See Docket Entries 62-82 (filed under seal).)

II. DISCUSSION

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Bluebook (online)
801 F. Supp. 2d 419, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 75125, 2011 WL 2728359, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ati-industrial-automation-inc-v-applied-robotics-inc-ncmd-2011.