CODA Development s.r.o. v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedNovember 21, 2019
Docket5:15-cv-01572
StatusUnknown

This text of CODA Development s.r.o. v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company (CODA Development s.r.o. v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
CODA Development s.r.o. v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company, (N.D. Ohio 2019).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO EASTERN DIVISION

CODA DEVELOPMENT S.R.O, et al., ) CASE NO. 5:15-cv-1572 ) PLAINTIFFS, ) JUDGE SARA LIOI ) vs. ) MEMORANDUM OPINION ) AND ORDER GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER ) COMPANY, et al., ) ) DEFENDANTS. )

On November 1, 2019, the Court conducted a status conference wherein certain discovery disputes were discussed. (See Doc. Nos. 74, 76.) Following the conference, the Court issued a non- document minute order ruling in relevant part, as follows: First, as to Interrogatory Nos. 1 [and] 2, . . . propounded by defendants on plaintiffs, by 11/16/2019, plaintiffs will provide (1) a description of what was said at the meetings in January and June 2009, and (2) a complete list of the trade secrets (with particularity) that they claim were orally disclosed to defendants, including detail as to when plaintiffs conceived of and developed each of the features in each trade secret. The Court made clear that additions to this list at a later time will be permitted only upon showing of an exceptional reason to do so. . . .

(Minute Order 11/1/2019.1) The Court also directed counsel to brief “the issue of whether any description of what was said at the meetings may be supplemented at a later date or whether plaintiffs are bound by their written response.” (Id.) Those briefs have been submitted. (See Doc. No. 79 [“Defts’ Brief”]; Doc. No. 80 [“Pltfs’ Brief”].)2

1 The November 16, 2019 deadline was subsequently extended to November 22, 2019 for both Interrogatory No. 1 and Interrogatory No. 2. 2 The two discovery letters previously referenced were in agreement that the parties’ current dispute related to plaintiffs’ answers to defendants’ Interrogotory Nos. 1, 2, and 3, as well as to the parties’ inability to agree on an ESI protocol. Neither side, however, supplied the Court with copies of what has been exchanged to date. After discussion at the status conference on November 1, 2019, the disputes over the ESI protocol were worked out and the Court’s minute order resolved most of the dispute regarding the interrogatories, although plaintiffs’ instant brief is still DISCUSSION In their first amended complaint, plaintiffs explain the “nature of the action” as follows: 1. This action arises out of Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co.’s (“Goodyear”) theft of Coda’s secret self-inflating tire [“SIT”] technology. Coda shared with Goodyear its secret self-inflating tire technology, including specifically that a self-inflating tire could be created by embedding a tube in a groove in tire sidewalls that would act as a peristaltic pump and always keep the tire properly inflated. Goodyear promised that it would keep these trade secrets confidential and consider them solely to evaluate whether it would partner with Coda to develop Coda’s self-inflating tire technology further. Instead, without Coda’s knowledge, Goodyear applied for, and obtained, numerous patents on self-inflating tire technology based on Coda’s trade secrets and now is about to introduce to the market it’s “Air Maintenance Technology,” a self-inflating tire made up of a tube embedded in a groove in the tire sidewall.

2. At the behest of General Motors (“GM”), Goodyear and Coda met in January 2009, and again in June 2009 to discuss a potential partnership for commercializing Coda’s SIT technology. GM was interested in using Coda’s SIT technology on the new Chevy Volt. GM suggested that Goodyear work with Coda to bring Coda’s SIT technology to market because GM believed that Goodyear could deliver in time for the Volt’s anticipated 2010 launch date.

3. At those two 2009 meetings, and in various communications, Coda fully educated Goodyear about its SIT technology. This included SIT technology that Coda had publicly disclosed in its own patent application filings and issued patents, as well as Coda’s trade secret information that Coda has not publicly disclosed. Coda provided this information to Goodyear pursuant to a non-disclosure agreement.

4. At the first meeting in January 2009, among other things, Coda explained that it had produced a functional prototype, which generated sufficient pressure to inflate a vehicle tire. Following that meeting, representatives from Goodyear emailed Coda to ask for a second meeting so that Goodyear could perform a “technical readiness evaluation at your premises in Prague, in order to physically judge the concept feasibility on-site and to decide whether we will start a development project or not.” A Goodyear employee named Robert Benedict, who is a Defendant in this case, wrote separately to Mr. Hrabal and stated that “Our goal is to evaluate CODA’s Self Inflating Tire technology. We would like to: View the

challenging even that ruling. (See Pltfs’ Brief at 2652 n.6 [all page citations are to the Page ID# assigned by CMECF] (“respectfully submit[ting] that the Court’s ruling with respect to closing the enumerated trade secret list is at odds with federal precedent[]”.) As explained herein, plaintiffs’ view is simply incorrect and fails to acknowledge this Court’s discretion when it comes to discovery matters, particularly those involving trade secrets. 2 updated technical presentation[,] Review the prototype product[, and] Review testing methods and results.”

5. The second meeting occurred in June 2009. And just as Mr. Benedict requested, Mr. Hrabal showed Goodyear Coda’s prototype at that meeting, along with covering other subjects, including those other subjects addressed in Mr. Benedict’s email.

* * * 16. Ultimately, Goodyear did not move forward with a joint development project with Coda. Instead, on December 21, 2009, Goodyear filed two patent applications, claiming self-inflating tires based on the principles Mr. Hrabal shared with Goodyear. The first, United States Application Serial Number 12/643,243, claimed a self-inflating tire with a pump tube in a sidewall groove— an invention that was conceived by Mr. Hrabal, maintained by Mr. Hrabal as a trade secret, disclosed to Goodyear under the terms and conditions of a non-disclosures agreement, and ultimately misappropriated by Goodyear. (footnote omitted)

17. In the years since, Goodyear has developed an extensive portfolio of patents on self-inflating tire technologies. Many of these patents also claim other trade secrets that were developed by Mr. Hrabal. And Goodyear now stands on the verge of introducing its self-inflating tire technology to the world. Technology it would never have had if it didn’t meet with Coda in 2009.

(Doc. No. 52, First Amended Complaint [“FAC”].)3 It is readily apparent from these allegations that, in order to defend themselves, defendants must know precisely what “Coda claims to have discussed with [defendants] at two critical meetings in 2009.” (Doc. No. 74 at 2605.) Coda’s claims “are based entirely on alleged oral disclosure of trade secrets . . . over the course of a few hours of discussion in two meetings.” (Id. (emphasis in original).) There is no dispute that “[n]o written materials containing trade secrets were given to [d]efendants in the meetings.” (Id.) Defendants argue: “Since Coda contends that its spoken words at these two meetings are worth hundreds of millions of dollars, it is only fair to

3 Doc. No. 52 is a redacted version of the FAC. An unredacted copy is filed under seal. (See Doc. No. 53.) 3 require Coda to provide a complete, straightforward, and closed answer to [Interrogatory No. 1].” (Id.)4 And therein lies the dispute between the parties that is the subject of this order. Plaintiffs oppose any requirement that their answer to the interrogatory be “closed” and/or that they be precluded from supplementing at a later date. Plaintiffs claim that “[d]efendants’

demand is improper, and contrary to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure

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CODA Development s.r.o. v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coda-development-sro-v-goodyear-tire-rubber-company-ohnd-2019.