Ecore Int'l, Inc. v. Downey

343 F. Supp. 3d 459
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 12, 2018
DocketCIVIL ACTION NOS. 11-6843; 16-1993
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 343 F. Supp. 3d 459 (Ecore Int'l, Inc. v. Downey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ecore Int'l, Inc. v. Downey, 343 F. Supp. 3d 459 (E.D. Pa. 2018).

Opinion

(Confidentiality Agmt. Background.) The Confidentiality Agreement defined "Proprietary Information" as:

(a) all technology, know how, plans, designs, specifications, formulas, technical information, drawings, and other information related to the Company's products, production equipment, and manufacturing processes,
(b) audited and internally prepared financial statements and related supplementary information, and other financial information of the Company which may include information about revenue, expenses, prices, and profits, and
(c) all other information owned by or related to the Company which is not generally known within the industry in which the Company is engaged.

(Confidentiality Agmt. § 1.)

Under Section 2 of the Agreement, Downey agreed: (a) to treat Proprietary Information as "secret and confidential"; (b) to use Proprietary Information only for Ecore's benefit and not for his own benefit; (c) to not directly or indirectly disclose or communicate any Proprietary Information to anyone except as authorized by Ecore; and (d) to promptly return to Ecore all Proprietary Information, without retaining any copies, summaries, or excerpts, upon termination of his employment. (Id. § 2.) The Confidentiality Agreement also declared Ecore's "exclusive rights" to intellectual property relating to its Proprietary Information, stating:

All inventions or discoveries which relate to the Proprietary Information shall be the exclusive property of the Company. Whenever requested by the Company, either during or subsequent to employment, Employee shall execute such instruments as Company deems necessary for the purpose of confirming Company's exclusive rights to any such invention or discovery under applicable intellectual property law, including but not limited to any application for Letters patent and assignments thereof.

(Id. § 4.) The Agreement further provided that its terms "shall apply during and after the Employee's employment with Employer."15 (Id. § 5.) According to Dodge, confidentiality and intellectual property protections were an essential prerequisite to Ecore's willingness to work with Downey. Dodge testified:

Downey was retained by Ecore having worked for a competitor. One of the initial conversations I had with [Downey] was under no circumstances would *472we consider extending any relationship or employment or any other relationship with [Downey] unless he entered into a confidentiality and intellectual property protection and assignment agreement. That was absolutely sacred. We would never have hired somebody from a direct competitor and allowed them to pursue any alternative lines of business. It would have been foolhardy, foolish, never would have done it.

(Dodge 8/22/16 Dep. 89-90.) Downey has acknowledged that he agreed to the provisions of the Confidentiality Agreement. (Downey 8/29/16 Dep. 118-119.)

In 2008, Ecore asked Downey to sign an "Amended and Restated Confidentiality Agreement" that sought to: (1) refer to Downey as a "Key Person" of the Consultant instead of an "Employee"; and (2) create joint and several obligations on the part of Downey and CSR. (Defs.' SJ Opp. 8, Ex. 2; Ont. Ct. App. Op. ¶ 24.) Downey declined to sign the amended agreement. (Downey 1/3/17 Decl. ¶ 3, ECF No. 91-2.)

3. The Disputed Intellectual Property

a. The Impact Sound Isolation Invention and Assignment

As noted above, Downey began working as Ecore's business development manager for industrial products in October 1999. (Downey 6/27/07 Dep. 64; Downey 8/29/16 Dep. 65, 70.)16 In January 2000, Dodge told Downey that Ecore wanted to pursue business in the sound and vibration mitigation product market, and he asked Downey to investigate and develop opportunities in that market. (Downey 6/27/07 Dep. 84; Downey 8/29/16 Dep. 70.) To identify potential opportunities, Downey consulted with Ecore's engineers and decided to focus on flooring system products that could mitigate impact sound. (Downey 6/27/07 Dep. 87, 90-91.) At that time, Downey had no background in the sound and vibration flooring market, but he and Dodge knew that rubber was a good material with which to "build products ... that had sound and vibration qualities." (Downey 6/27/07 Dep. 85, 90.)

Downey considered the sound and vibration products already on the market and explored whether Ecore's existing rubber products might have a sound and vibration application. (Downey 8/29/16 Dep. 70-71; Downey 6/27/07 Dep. 106.) He examined Ecore products from its sample room and reviewed Ecore's formulas and specification sheets for its rubber products. (Downey 6/27/07 Dep. 87, 90-91; Downey 4/1/11 Dep. 22-23, 62; Downey 4/24/08 Dep. 217, Pl.'s SJ Ex. I.)17 Downey also consulted with employees of Ecore's joint venture partner, BSW, who informed him that the material used in Ecore's 6010 and 6510 formulations was "suitable for absorbing vibration." (Downey 4/1/11 Dep. 23.) BSW personnel also provided literature, including a binder, with test results and other information regarding the vibration isolation properties of the 6010 and 6510 formulations. (Id. at 22-27.)

Downey ultimately decided to modify Ecore's 6510-LC formulation so that it would be suitable for use as substrate between a subfloor and a decorative top floor covering, such as ceramic tile. (Downey 6/27/07 Dep. 106; Downey 4/1/11 Dep. 57, 62.) Downey asked Ecore employee Dierk Heinbach "to add some more regrind" to the 6510-LC formula in order to *473make the product "slightly more porous for the adhesive" and to give it a "slightly higher dynamic stiffness."18 (Downey 4/1/11 Dep. 57, 62, 73.) With this one modification, the resulting formulation - designated 6510-LC-2 - could be used as a flooring substrate that "could support the decorative floor covering and still perform acoustically." (Downey 4/1/11 Dep. 57, 73.) This new flooring system design became known as the Impact Sound Insulation ("ISI") invention.

On August 16, 2001, Ecore filed patent application No. 09/931,320 (the " '320 Application") for the ISI invention.19 (Downey 11/29/16 Decl. ¶ 14; Defs.' SJ Opp. Ex. 4.) The '320 Application named Downey as its sole inventor. (Downey 11/29/16 Decl. ¶ 15.) On October 10, 2001, Downey executed an Assignment to Ecore of the ISI invention set forth in the '320 Application (the "Assignment").20 Pursuant to the Assignment, Downey agreed to, inter alia :

1. Assign and convey to and confirm in the Assignee the entire right, title and interest in and to said inventions and discoveries, said ['320 Application], and any and all other applications for Letters Patent on said inventions and discoveries in whatsoever countries, including all divisional, renewal, substitute, continuation and Convention applications based in whole or in part upon said inventions or discoveries or upon said applications, and any and all Letters Patent and reissues and extensions of Letters Patent granted for said inventions and discoveries or upon said applications, and every priority right that is or may be predicated upon or arise from said inventions, said discoveries, said applications and said Letters Patent;
* * *

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Bluebook (online)
343 F. Supp. 3d 459, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ecore-intl-inc-v-downey-paed-2018.