Beard Research, Inc. v. Kates

8 A.3d 573, 2010 WL 1644177, 2010 Del. Ch. LEXIS 75
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedApril 23, 2010
DocketCivil Action 1316-VCP
StatusPublished
Cited by192 cases

This text of 8 A.3d 573 (Beard Research, Inc. v. Kates) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beard Research, Inc. v. Kates, 8 A.3d 573, 2010 WL 1644177, 2010 Del. Ch. LEXIS 75 (Del. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION

PARSONS, Vice Chancellor.

Plaintiffs, two companies once involved in the development and sale of chemical compounds, brought this action against a number of business competitors and former employees claiming they were the victim of a scheme by these entities and individuals to put them out of business. Plaintiffs, Charles Beard Research & Development, Inc. (“CB”) and Beard Research, Inc. (“BR,” collectively, with CB, “Plaintiffs”), hired Michael Kates in 1998 and made him second in command in both companies to founder Charles Beard. By 2003, Kates was ready to move on and began talking frequently with Alan Blize, whose employer, ASDI, Inc. (“ASDI”), was *580 looking to set up a company that would compete with Plaintiffs. Blize knew Kates from his previous job at Pfizer, Inc. (“Pfizer”), Plaintiffs’ biggest customer. In early 2004, Kates left Plaintiffs to take a job with Advanced Synthesis Group, Inc. (“ASG”), a company funded by ASDI. Three other CB employees followed Kates to ASG. Within a couple of months of Kates’s departure, Pfizer signed a contract with ASG and terminated a $22 million contract it had with Plaintiffs, the biggest contract in Plaintiffs’ history. In the same timeframe, Plaintiffs saw numerous compounds that they alone had marketed listed for sale in a new ASG catalog.

Plaintiffs then filed suit against ASDI, ASG, Pfizer, 1 Blize, Kates, and the three former employees who followed Kates to ASG (Garry Smith, Steven Jones, and Michael Wagaman). The Complaint asserted eleven claims against various combinations of these defendants. Plaintiffs pursued five of these claims (misappropriation of trade secrets, breach of fiduciary duty, aiding and abetting a breach of fiduciary duty, tortious interference with contractual relations, and tortious interference with prospective business relations) through trial.

This Opinion constitutes my post-trial findings of fact and conclusions of law as to those claims. For the reasons stated herein, I conclude that: (1) ASDI, ASG, Kates, and Smith are liable for misappropriation of trade secrets; (2) Kates is liable for breach of fiduciary duty; (3) ASDI and Blize are liable for aiding and abetting Kates’s breach of fiduciary duty; (4) none of the defendants are liable for tortious interference with contractual relations; and (5) ASDI, ASG, Blize, and Kates are liable for tortious interference with prospective business relations. Finally, I conclude that ASDI, ASG, Blize, and Kates are jointly and severally liable to Plaintiffs for damages in the amount of $4,338,463, while Smith is liable to Plaintiffs jointly and severally for $668,544 of this amount. ASDI, ASG, Blize, Kates, and Smith are also liable for pre- and post-judgment interest on the amounts that they owe as damages.

I. BACKGROUND

A. The Parties

Plaintiff CB is a Delaware corporation that was organized as a chemistry-based contract research organization (“CRO”) in 1991. 2 CB’s business focused on one-off and catalog work. 3 CB’s founder and namesake, Charles Beard (“Beard”), has forty-five years of experience in pharmaceutical research, including significant experience in process chemistry, which involves the manufacture of large quantities of chemical material. 4 Because of Beard’s expertise in process chemistry, CB’s busi *581 ness model focused on making large quantities of compounds, sometimes in the hundreds of kilograms. 5 CB sold all of its assets to Adesis, Inc. (“Adesis”), a company in which Beard is a co-owner, for $3.4 million on September 1, 2005. 6

Beard organized Plaintiff BR as a Delaware corporation in 1999 to provide full time equivalent chemists (“FTEs”). 7 FTEs are chemists, usually with PhDs, hired by a CRO to service a client under an arrangement where the CRO pays the chemists’ salaries and benefits and receives a set annual fee from the client. 8 In the fall of 2004, Beard closed down BR, and CB took over BR’s FTE work. 9

Defendant ASDI is a Delaware corporation formed as the successor to Analytical Services of Delaware, Inc. ASDI was founded by Ronald Paloni and runs its operations from Newark, Delaware. 10 ASDI runs a “monomer store,” through which it stores and ships chemical compounds to chemists worldwide. 11

Defendant Advanced Synthesis Group, Inc. (“ASG”) was formed initially as MainLine Chemical Limited on December 19, 2003. 12 At that time, ASG’s shareholders were Kates’s wife, Wendy, Paloni and his wife, Oksana, Blize, and Smith. 13 ASDI provided start-up funding for ASG, which generally was viewed as an affiliate of ASDI, even though ASDI did not own any ASG stock. 14 ASG’s business model involved the custom synthesis of chemical compounds to create small libraries. 15 ASG ceased operations in 2005 when ASDI purchased its assets. 16

Defendant Blize served as a “Molecular Broker” 17 at Pfizer from 1995 to 2002. 18 In this capacity, Blize managed Pfizer’s relations with CB and BR. 19 Blize joined ASDI in 2002 and became its chief executive officer (“CEO”) in June 2006 and a part-owner in 2007. 20 ASDI hired Blize, in part, to develop custom synthesis operations. 21

Defendant Kates was hired by CB as a chemist in 1998 and later became CB’s Executive Vice President and Director of Marketing. 22 When BR was founded in *582 December 2003, Kates received a 33 percent ownership stake in the company and was appointed a director and an officer. 23 Kates was at all times an at-will employee of both CB and BR and never signed a written noncompete agreement. 24 Kates left CB and BR on February 13, 2004 to become ASG’s President. 25 Kates was removed as a director and officer of BR on the same date. 26

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Bluebook (online)
8 A.3d 573, 2010 WL 1644177, 2010 Del. Ch. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beard-research-inc-v-kates-delch-2010.