DE LONG CORPORATION v. Lucas

138 F. Supp. 805, 1956 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3830
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedFebruary 24, 1956
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 138 F. Supp. 805 (DE LONG CORPORATION v. Lucas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DE LONG CORPORATION v. Lucas, 138 F. Supp. 805, 1956 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3830 (S.D.N.Y. 1956).

Opinion

IRVING R. KAUFMAN, District Judge.

In this action for injunctive relief and the recovery of $5,000,000 damages, plaintiff seeks by this motion an order compelling the defendant to answer certain questions which the defendant refused to answer upon his deposition, and an order requiring the defendant to produce and permit the inspection and copying of certain documents dealing with the engineering and sale of docks, platforms and equipment for marine and oil field use including equipment making use of self-elevating mechanisms.

In a well considered opinion in this action, filed January 27, 1956, 139 F. Supp. 127, Judge McGohey denied plaintiff’s application for a temporary injunction. The facts are fully discussed in that opinion and will therefore be mentioned only briefly here so that the issues on this motion may be put in their proper perspective.

The plaintiff, DeLong Corporation (hereinafter DeLong), was and is engaged in the business of engineering, constructing and installing docks, barges and other over-water structures which, by means of built-in jacks, are self-elevating.

To the layman, plaintiff’s type of work might be clarified by a reference to its most recent project, the construction of the “Texas Tower”, an advanced radar warning platform in the Atlantic Ocean, 110 miles from Cape Cod.

In March 1950, after several years’ experience as a mining engineer, the defendant, Joseph E. Lucas (hereinafter Lucas), entered the plaintiff’s employ. In addition to salary and expenses, Lucas was to receive a fixed percentage of DeLong’s net profits on certain specified contracts. In February 1953, a dispute arose over the computation of net profits. Lucas was demanding an accounting but without success. DeLong, on the other hand, was demanding that Lucas assign his then pending application for a jacking mechanism, which he had evolved while in DeLong’s employ. In April 1953, DeLong started a suit against Lu *807 cas. ■ This was discontinued pursuant to a written agreement executed June 10, 1953.

Under this agreement of settlement, DeLong was to pay Lucas approximately $135,000 and at a later date the further sum of $50,000. Upon payment of the latter sum, Lucas was to assign his pending patent application and any improvements thereon. The two payments and the assignment have been made. Lucas further agreed “for a period of two years after the signing of this agreement not to compete or assist anyone to compete with [DeLong] in any business related to [Lucas’] former employment by [DeLong] consisting of engineering and sales of docks, barges, platforms and similar equipment for marine and/or oil field use including equipment making use of self-elevating mechanisms, pneumatic, mechanical, manual or otherwise any place in the world”; and “for a period of two years after the signing of this agreement not to divulge to anyone any trade secrets or confidential information concerning the business of [DeLong] learned by [Lucas] during his employment.” This latter clause was necessary because in the course of Lucas’ employment he had access to DeLong’s files and had allegedly gained secret and valuable information concerning DeLong’s jacking devices.

The present complaint was filed November 12, 1955. Two days previous DeLong had failed in its bid for a contract with the Navy to construct and install a number of advance warning radar stations at sea similar to the initial Texas Tower. The successful bidder was Morrison-Knudsen Company, Inc., of Boise, Idaho (hereinafter Morrison-Knudsen). The bids were received some time in September 1955, in response to invitations issued in July, 1955.

It is DeLong’s contention that for several months during the “no competition” period which ended on June 10, 1955, Lucas, by certain activities, was himself competing and in addition was assisting Morrison-Knudsen to compete with DeLong. It is also claimed that three applications for patents which Lucas filed in 1954 are improvements on the patent assigned to DeLong under the settlement agreement and that failure to assign these violates that agreement. In this action, therefore, in addition to damages, plaintiff is seeking to enjoin the defendant from carrying out any arrangements, commenced prior to June 10, 1955, for competing with plaintiff or assisting others to compete with plaintiff in the type of work covered by the settlement agreement.

It is conceded that after settlement of the suit on June 10, 1953, Lucas applied himself to the study of new designs, equipment and methods of construction and operation for reducing the cost of marine oil field operations and that between May and August 1954 he filed applications for three patents. In September 1954, he sought financial assistance for his studies from Morrison-Knudsen.' Indeed, in April 1955, Morrison-Knudsen by letter agreed to finance Lucas’ studies and experiments in return for a renewable option' to purchase his three patents. On June 10,1955, the “no competition” period of two years expired, followed by the Navy’s invitation for bids, their submission, and the award to Morrison-Knudsen as above stated. Lucas concedes that throughout the “no competition” period he was actively “preparing to compete” with DeLong as soon as the period expired after June 10,1955. He insists, however, that he has faithfully kept that agreement by not soliciting major oil companies to use his so-called Lucas system during that period.

Judge McGohey pointed out in his opinion that whether Lucas has adhered to the terms of the agreement depends upon an interpretation of the intention of the parties with respect to the “no competition” clause. Judge McGohey framed the issues by stating that on the one hand, DeLong’s attorneys assert that “no competition” means that Lucas could not, even in the strictest secrecy, make any studies' or prepare any plans with respect to self-elevating mechanisms or structures and that, during the two years’ *808 period he was required to completely put this entire matter out of his mind. On the other hand, Lucas contends that the “no competition” provision merely required him not to bid against DeLong or assist others to do so on contracts to be let during the two year period. A third possible construction by DeLong might foe that Lucas could think in secrecy, but could not aid or solicit aid from potential competitors of DeLong. Without deciding the issue, Judge McGohey stated that the determination of whose version of the “no competition” clause is correct must await a trial. While the Judge leaned towards the defendant’s interpretation, he said: “A trial may develop evidence to support DeLong’s contention but, absent such evidence, I cannot accept his construction as correct.”

Plaintiff now seeks a direction by this Court requiring the defendant to answer in an oral deposition questions relating to activities post the start of this lawsuit, which questions it insists relate to the alleged violation of the agreement during the two year “no competition” period. The defendant objects to this on the ground that the plaintiff is really seeking to inquire into the secrets of the defendant’s business activities after the expiration of the agreement, and that this is irrelevant and oppressive since both the plaintiff and the defendant are engaged now in construction of mechanisms highly competitive with one another.

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Bluebook (online)
138 F. Supp. 805, 1956 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3830, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-long-corporation-v-lucas-nysd-1956.