Cardinal Health 414, Inc. v. Adams

582 F. Supp. 2d 967, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 84713, 2008 WL 4706364
CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Tennessee
DecidedOctober 10, 2008
DocketCase 3:07-00691
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 582 F. Supp. 2d 967 (Cardinal Health 414, Inc. v. Adams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cardinal Health 414, Inc. v. Adams, 582 F. Supp. 2d 967, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 84713, 2008 WL 4706364 (M.D. Tenn. 2008).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

ALETA A. TRAUGER, District Judge.

Pending before the court is the plaintiff Cardinal Health 414, Inc.’s (“Cardinal’s”) Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (Docket No. 42), the defendant Daniel Adams’ Motion For Summary Judgment (Docket No. 86), and the defendants Allen B. Townsend and Mid-South/Music City Nuclear Pharmacy’s (collectively “Townsend/Music City’s”) Motion for Summary Judgment (Docket No. 95). For the reasons discussed herein, all these motions will be granted in part and denied in part. Also pending is Cardinal’s Motion to Strike the Affirmative Defenses of Illegality and Laches or in the Alternative for Summary Judgment on These Defenses. (Docket No. 92.) This motion will be granted as a motion for summary judgment. Finally, Townsend/Music City’s Motion For Attorney’s Fees (Docket No. 103) will be denied.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

This case concerns e-mail snooping in Nashville’s nuclear pharmacy industry. 1 A *970 nuclear pharmacy compounds and dispenses radioactive materials for use in nuclear medicine procedures, and, therefore, a nuclear pharmacy only serves a select group of customers, i.e., hospitals and clinics with nuclear medicine departments. In the entire mid-South area covering Middle Tennessee, Southern Kentucky, Bowling Green, Memphis, Knoxville, and Huntsville, Alabama, there are only about fifty potential customers for a nuclear pharmacy serving the mid-South.

Cardinal is a company that provides nuclear pharmacy services in this mid-South area. More than twenty-five years ago, defendant Townsend began working in Nashville’s nuclear pharmacy industry for Cardinal’s nuclear pharmacy predecessor company, Syncor, and remained with Cardinal’s nuclear pharmacy division until the end of 2004. With that experience, Townsend gained an understanding of the customers in the mid-South nuclear pharmacy market and the prices they paid for nuclear pharmacy products. Defendant Adams is a licensed nuclear pharmacist who worked in the Nashville Syncor/Cardinal lab from 1997 until his resignation from Cardinal in February 2005. Like Townsend, Adams, through his years at Cardinal, gained an understanding of who the customers were in the mid-South’s nuclear pharmacy market, the prices they paid, and what their needs were.

In the spring of 2003, Adams, while not losing his job at Cardinal, was replaced in the position of pharmacy manager by Robert “Greg” Young. To assist in the transition of pharmacy manager responsibilities, Young and Adams exchanged the user-name and password information that they each used to log onto the Cardinal web server to access e-mail and other work-related materials stored on-line.

In late 2004, Townsend decided to leave Cardinal to start his own nuclear pharmacy that would provide direct competition to Cardinal for the mid-South customer base. At this time, there was no competing nuclear pharmacy in the Nashville area. Townsend resigned from Cardinal in December 2004 on generally good terms with the people at Cardinal, and started Music City Nuclear Pharmacy (“Music City”) in Februarjr 2005. Independently, Adams, who was friendly with Townsend, also decided to leave Cardinal in February 2005. Adams took a job at PETNET, which is located at Vanderbilt University in Nashville. PETNET provides a nuclear pharmacy service different from the service Adams provided at Cardinal, and PET-NET does not engage in direct competition with Cardinal for Cardinal’s nuclear pharmacy business to anywhere near the extent that Townsend/Music City now competes with Cardinal. Adams had a tense and “unpleasant” departure from Cardinal and did not have a final meeting with Young, who was out of the country at the time Adams left. In addition to taking the job at PETNET, Adams started a side business providing “health physics services” to nuclear pharmacy customers, and, for about a dozen hours over 2005 and 2006, Adams worked as a relief pharmacist at Music City.

Despite leaving Cardinal, Adams continued to log on to the Cardinal employee email system. While Adams’ access to his own Cardinal e-mail account had been ter *971 minated as of the day of his departure, Adams continued to log on to the system using Young’s username and password, reading and reviewing the messages that Young received in his e-mail account. Adams also used the username and password of Marni Gardner, another Cardinal employee, whose log-on information Adams had obtained while at Cardinal. In his deposition, Adams testified that he accessed Cardinal e-mails from the time he left Cardinal until August 2006, when Cardinal changed Young’s username and password information. It is not disputed that Cardinal’s log-on page explicitly told visitors that the content therein was for Cardinal employees only.

Sometime in the late spring or early summer of 2005, Adams had a telephone conversation with Townsend, in which he told Townsend of his continued ability to log on to the Cardinal web server and to read the e-mails of Robert Young. Adams proposed the idea of sending some of these e-mails to Townsend. Adams and Townsend testified in them depositions that Adams thought Townsend might “enjoy” the e-mails because they concerned Cardinal employees that Adams and Townsend both knew. Townsend testified that, when Adams told him he wanted to give him these e-mails, Townsend said “okay.”

There is no question that Adams and Townsend had a continuing relationship over the course of the next year, in which Adams sent Townsend certain e-mails that he pulled from Young’s account. There is also no question that Townsend reviewed certain e-mails Adams sent, and there is also no question that Townsend discussed the content of certain e-mails with the people at Music City. There remains ample dispute, however, as to the frequency of these practices, as to the number of emails involved, and as to the content of the e-mails. Early in discovery in this matter, Cardinal submitted the affidavit of nuclear pharmacy technician Tim Kirkland, who had left Cardinal in December 2004 to work with Townsend at Music City. Kirkland left Music City in July 2006, and, in conjunction with seeking another job with Cardinal, Kirkland told Robert Young about the e-mail snooping. In his sworn affidavit, Kirkland stated that, on a weekly basis from “early 2005” to November 2005, he picked up a “stack” of Cardinal e-mails from Adams at PETNET and delivered them to Townsend at Music City. According to Kirkland, after November 2005, Adams still prepared the weekly delivery for Townsend, but Adams provided Kirkland with the documents in a sealed envelope, so Kirkland was no longer privy to the content of the deliveries. Kirkland also stated that, on a weekly basis from early 2005 to July 2006, Adams faxed Cardinal materials to Townsend’s fax machine at Music City. Kirkland stated that he observed Cardinal’s profit and loss statements, customer pricing information, and other private and confidential information of a sensitive nature passing from Adams to Townsend over this year-and-one-half period.

The defendants vigorously challenge the details of Kirkland’s account. They point out that Kirkland offered deposition testimony somewhat inconsistent with his affidavit. At one point in his deposition, Kirkland agreed with the proposition that he saw only “ten to twenty” illicitly obtained e-mails in total.

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Bluebook (online)
582 F. Supp. 2d 967, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 84713, 2008 WL 4706364, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cardinal-health-414-inc-v-adams-tnmd-2008.