Attia v. Helix RE CA6

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 10, 2023
DocketH048803
StatusUnpublished

This text of Attia v. Helix RE CA6 (Attia v. Helix RE CA6) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Attia v. Helix RE CA6, (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 7/7/23 Attia v. Helix RE CA6 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

ELI ATTIA et al., H048803 (Santa Clara County Plaintiffs and Appellants, Super. Ct. No. 2014-1-CV-274103)

v.

HELIX RE, INC.,

Defendant and Respondent.

Defendant Google LLC, through its outside counsel, made certain of its source code available to plaintiffs Eli Attia and Eli Attia Architect PC for review by plaintiffs’ expert. The computer Google’s counsel provided for the purpose also had source code that had been produced to Google’s counsel by defendant Helix RE, Inc. earlier in the litigation.1 At the time, pursuant to the parties’ stipulated protective order, Helix had a pending objection to plaintiffs’ expert reviewing its source code. Under the protective order, plaintiffs could not permit their expert to review Helix’s protected information until the trial court resolved the objection. But plaintiffs’ counsel allowed their expert to

1 Helix was originally named Vannevar Technology and later, including in the earlier stages of the trial court proceedings and during relevant communications between the parties, Flux Factory, Inc. For clarity, we refer to Helix by its current name and to source code generated under its prior names as Helix code. Undesignated references to a party’s counsel are to that party’s outside counsel only. review the Helix code that Google had inadvertently disclosed. Finding that counsel had knowingly violated the protective order without good cause or substantial justification, the trial court sanctioned plaintiffs and one of their attorneys a total of $16,215 for the violation. Plaintiffs and their sanctioned counsel appeal. We find no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s determination that, by the terms of the protective order, plaintiffs’ counsel “should not have permitted [the expert] to proceed with his review without alerting opposing counsel” that Helix source code had been disclosed, and that plaintiffs’ counsel lacked good cause and substantial justification for the violation. We therefore affirm. I. BACKGROUND Plaintiffs initiated this lawsuit in December 2014, asserting claims including misappropriation of trade secrets, and breach of contract. As is pertinent here, plaintiffs alleged: Eli Attia, an architect, developed a technology called “Engineered Architecture.” He agreed to share his trade secrets with Google to build “Project Genie,” a software system implementing his technology, in return for reasonable compensation if the project succeeded. In June 2011, Google decided to spin-off Project Genie into a separate company and initially offered Attia a share of the new company to compensate him for his proprietary information. But by December 2011, Google effectively forced Attia off of the project. Also in 2011, Google and others formed a company called Vannevar Technology to pursue Project Genie. Vannevar was renamed Flux in 2014 and was later renamed Helix. In 2014, Helix began selling an automated software system for building design and construction called “Flux Metro Austin Preview,” which plaintiffs maintain was based on Attia’s trade secrets. In May 2015, by stipulation of all the parties, the trial court entered a protective order governing the parties’ treatment of confidential information produced in this litigation.

2 Helix first offered in a July 2017 e-mail to make its source code available for review in the litigation. In the e-mail, Helix designated its source code as “Confidential – Outside Counsel Only under section 1-C of the protective order” such that “only counsel of record and technical advisers (assuming any are cleared under section III of the P.O.) may conduct the initial inspection.” Google’s counsel and its adviser began inspecting the Helix source code in September 2017. Helix was aware that Google’s counsel and its adviser had retained some of the code following their inspection but was not aware of the full extent of the retention. Google itself was never given access to the code. Plaintiffs and their counsel were at the time unaware of the review or of the related retention of Helix source code. In February 2018, Google first advised plaintiffs’ that it would make available for inspection the Project Genie source code, which it also designated “ ‘Confidential – Outside Counsel Only’ ” under the protective order. Google noted that Helix had made its code available for inspection, stated its understanding that plaintiffs had not inspected Helix’s code, and argued that if plaintiffs inspected both Helix’s code and Google’s Project Genie code, plaintiffs would see that Helix had written different code, independent of Project Genie. By December 2019, Helix had prevailed on all of plaintiffs’ claims, and plaintiffs’ sole surviving cause of action was against only Google, for breach of contract. In late December 2019, plaintiffs notified Google that they wished to review “the Google source code for the prototypes [Helix employee Nicholas Chim] discussed [during] his deposition, as well as any other software that was developed at Google during Project Genie and for Project Genie.” Google agreed to make its code available but noted “that Google’s code is not Flux’s code, or vice versa. Google does not have custody or control of any Flux code.” At the same time, plaintiffs notified Helix that they would like to review “the [Helix] source code for the Austin Preview product and any other software that was 3 developed at Google during Project Genie and ended up at [Helix].” In January 2020, Helix responded by (1) stating that it did not possess any Project Genie code; and (2) disputing the relevance of any Helix code to plaintiffs’ sole remaining contract claim against Google. At the end of December 2019, pursuant to the protective order, plaintiffs notified defendants, including Helix, of their intention to disclose “Protected Information” to their outside technical adviser, Dr. Mani Golparvar Fard. Helix objected to Fard’s access to its protected information on the ground that Fard served as an executive for a Helix competitor. Because the dispute could not be resolved informally, Helix filed a motion for a ruling on its objection on January 22, 2020, with a noticed hearing date of April 2, 2020. Google did not object to Fard’s review of Google’s protected information. In February 2020, with Helix’s motion pending, Fard and Nick Kliewer, an attorney and former electrical engineer representing plaintiffs, went to the offices of Google’s outside counsel, Wilson, Sonsini, Goodrich & Rosati (Wilson Sonsini), to review Google’s Project Genie code on a secured, non-networked computer that Wilson Sonsini provided for this purpose. Wilson Sonsini inadvertently included on the review computer not only Google’s Project Genie source code but also the Helix code Wilson Sonsini had retained from the 2017 inspection. Prior to accessing the computer, Fard confirmed that “this computer contained all the Google code [he] was to inspect.” Because all of the source code on the computer was password-protected, Fard and Kliewer requested and received assistance from Wilson Sonsini’s IT manager in unlocking the folders, after which Fard asked the IT manager to confirm that the unlocked folders contained the Google source code. Fard and Kliewer proceeded to review the code using the computer. Kliewer saw that there were references to Vannevar and Flux in the code and file paths.

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Attia v. Helix RE CA6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/attia-v-helix-re-ca6-calctapp-2023.