Caliber Home Loans Inc v. Cove

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Texas
DecidedMay 7, 2024
Docket3:22-cv-02298
StatusUnknown

This text of Caliber Home Loans Inc v. Cove (Caliber Home Loans Inc v. Cove) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Caliber Home Loans Inc v. Cove, (N.D. Tex. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS DALLAS DIVISION CALIBER HOME LOANS, INC., § § Plaintiff, § § V. § No. 3:22-cv-2298-M § LEE COVE and CARDINAL § FINANCIAL COMPANY, LP, § § Defendants. § MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER Defendant Cardinal Financial Company LP has filed a Motion to Compel or Strike Interrogatory Responses. See Dkt. No. 79. Cardinal asks the Court for (1) an order compelling Plaintiff Caliber Home Loans, Inc. to “supplement its response to Interrogatory No. 8 to identify with specificity the information it claims as a trade secret” and to “distinguish its claimed trade secret information from what is merely confidential information, and information that Caliber acknowledges is available to the public or otherwise readily ascertainable” and (2) for an order “that the broad categories of information that Caliber claims as its trade secrets, including ‘employee compensation information,’ ‘employee performance information,’ ‘special skills,’ ‘production,’ ‘customer pipeline information,’ ‘customer information,’ ‘contact information,’ ‘financial information,’ and ‘borrowing needs’ be stricken to the extent that Caliber does not disclose a more -1- detailed description of a trade secret.” Dkt. No. 79-1 at 1-2; accord Dkt. No. 79 at 14-15 of 16. Caliber filed a response, see Dkt. No. 91, and Cardinal filed a reply, see Dkt.

No. 102. For the reasons below, the Court denies Cardinal’s Motion to Compel or Strike Interrogatory Responses [Dkt. No. 79]. Background Cardinal asserts that “Caliber’s central claim is misappropriation of trade secrets, but Caliber refuses to identify its trade secrets with reasonable particularity”; that, “[w]ithout a clearly identified trade secret, there is no cause of

action for misappropriation”; and that, “[a]s the parties prepare to depose Caliber’s corporate representative, it is essential that Caliber immediately identify, with reasonable specificity the information that it alleges is protected as a trade secret by the Defend Trade Secrets Act (‘DTSA’), or the Texas Uniform Trade Secret Act (‘TUTSA’).” Dkt. No. 79 at 5 of 16. Cardinal reports that it “served its first set of interrogatories on Caliber on

December 15, 2023, asking Caliber to identify the trade secrets it alleges that Cardinal misappropriated,” specifically through Interrogatory Nos. 8, 9, 11, 12, and 13. Dkt. No. 79 at 6 & n.1 of 16. Those interrogatories asked the following of Caliber: • INTERROGATORY NO. 8: Identify all Confidential Information and Trade Secrets that You allege Cardinal wrongfully obtained and/or -2- misappropriated. • INTERROGATORY NO. 9: Describe in detail the damages, including the method for calculating such damages, allegedly suffered by Caliber as a result of the alleged misappropriation/conversion of trade secrets and/or confidential business information as set forth as Count III of the Second Amended Complaint. • INTERROGATORY NO. 11: For the damages identified by You in response to Interrogatory No. 9, identify what portion of said damages are directly attributable to Cardinal. Provide a detailed analysis of how you arrived at this conclusion. • INTERROGATORY NO. 12: For every trade secret identified in response to Interrogatory No. 8, state the independent economic value of each alleged Trade Secret. • INTERROGATORY NO. 13: For every trade secret identified in response to Interrogatory No. 8, describe in detail each effort Caliber has undertaken to maintain the secrecy of each alleged Trade Secret. Cardinal contends that “Caliber served its responses to the interrogatories on January 22, 2024” and that “[t]hese responses were deficient” because “Caliber failed to identify, with reasonable particularity, the trade secrets that it alleges Cardinal misappropriated.” Dkt. No. 79 at 6 of 16. Cardinal explains that the parties conferred on March 7, 2024 and that “Caliber provided a supplemental response on March 19, 2024,” but, according to Cardinal, “the supplement failed to identify the specific information claimed as trade secrets, failed to differentiate the claimed trade secrets from claimed ‘confidential information’ or from information in the public domain.” Dkt. No. 79 at 6-7 of 16 (footnote omitted). Cardinal contends that, “[i]n its supplemental response to Interrogatory No. 8, Caliber describes all its allegedly proprietary information as ‘Confidential -3- Information and/or Trade Secrets’” and that “Caliber makes this non-distinction throughout its response, never taking a position on what it is alleging as a trade secret, and what it merely claims as confidential.” Dkt. No. 79 at 7 of 16 (footnote

omitted). And Cardinal reports that “Caliber then points to several general categories of ‘secret’ information without disclosing any specific information that allegedly qualifies as a trade secret” and without tying “any of those categories of information directly to any specific information or documents.” Id. Cardinal also complains that “Caliber has identified five documents it claims contain Caliber’s trade secrets but did not identify what information in those documents is supposedly a trade secret” and instead “claims that each of those

documents contains ‘Confidential Information and/or Trade Secrets’ and that each is ‘a compilation of various confidential, proprietary, and nonpublic data that Caliber created and uses in its business and were protected under Confidentiality and non-Solicitation Agreements signed by employees.’” Dkt. No. 79 at 7-8 of 16 (footnote omitted). And, according to Cardinal, “Caliber does not identify what information in these documents is merely confidential, what information it claims as trade secrets,

and what it admits is in the public domain.” Id. at 8 of 16. Caliber responds that: • “The only issue before the Court appears to be whether [Caliber] has provided a full and complete answer to Interrogatory No. 8”; • “Cardinal’s Motion to Compel should be denied because the answer is ‘yes:’ Caliber has answered – fully, completely, specifically, and without -4- reservation” – where “Caliber’s answer precisely identifies, by name and Bates label, five computer files (Excel spreadsheets) taken by Defendant Lee Cove,” and “Caliber produced the exact files too”; • “With no real basis for complaining that Caliber has failed to answer, Cardinal now demands a baffling array of information that was not requested as part of Interrogatory No. 8”; • “Contrary to Cardinal’s argument, the legal merits of whether any information might be a ‘trade secret’ is irrelevant to the issue of whether the same information has, in fact, been identified in the response”; • “Contrary to Cardinal’s tortured framing of the issue, ‘misappropriation of trade secrets’ is not the central issue in the case, but rather that Cove’s misconduct with or on behalf of Cardinal included misappropriation of confidential information and trade secrets, an unlawful means of accomplishing their goal of raiding Caliber’s workforce and, by extension, its source of business”; • “Thus, under the [TUTSA] and the federal [DTSA], whether any isolated piece of data found within a spreadsheet would independently constitute a ‘trade secret’ is beside the point because the allegation is that all of the data was improperly taken, not just some component parts of the spreadsheets” and that “[t]he documents did not belong to Cardinal” and that “Cardinal was not allowed to use them (irrespective of whether any given data point might, arguably, have been identifiable externally)” – and, according to Caliber, “[f]or identification, that is sufficient”; and • “Cardinal has come nowhere close to showing any entitlement to discovery sanctions under Rule 37(b), such as an order ‘striking’ any material.” Dkt. No. 91 at 4-5 of 15 (cleaned up).

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Bluebook (online)
Caliber Home Loans Inc v. Cove, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caliber-home-loans-inc-v-cove-txnd-2024.