EJ Madison, LLC., a Texas Limited Liability Company v. Pro-Tech Diesel, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 22, 2019
Docket08-17-00229-CV
StatusPublished

This text of EJ Madison, LLC., a Texas Limited Liability Company v. Pro-Tech Diesel, Inc. (EJ Madison, LLC., a Texas Limited Liability Company v. Pro-Tech Diesel, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
EJ Madison, LLC., a Texas Limited Liability Company v. Pro-Tech Diesel, Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS EL PASO, TEXAS

EJ MADISON, LLC, § No. 08-17-00229-CV Appellant, § Appeal from the v. § 205th District Court PRO-TECH DIESEL, INC., A Texas § Corp. of El Paso County, Texas § Appellee. (TC# 2015-DCV2479) §

OPINION

Appellant, EJ Madison, LLC (“Madison”) appeals from a take-nothing judgment after a

bench trial in which it raised claims against Pro-Tech Diesel, Inc. (“Pro-Tech”) for breach of

contract, breach of fiduciary duty, and misappropriation of trade secrets. In twenty issues,

Madison asserts that the evidence was factually and legally insufficient to support the trial court’s

findings of fact and that it erred in its application of Texas law. Finding no error, we affirm the

trial court judgment.

BACKGROUND

In 2008, Madison, a trucking company, began doing business with Pro-Tech, a company

that services and repairs trucks. In 2013, John Warren, the owner and manager of Madison,

approached Ricardo Rivera, the owner and president of Pro-Tech with a business venture. Warren told Rivera that Madison wanted to explore the feasibility of creating duel fuel conversion kits to

convert its truck engines from diesel to ones that run primarily on natural gas. Warren considered

Rivera a “diesel expert,” and was interested in Rivera’s input. Warren also wanted Pro-Tech to

install the conversion kits after they were developed.

After sharing the idea with Rivera, Warren presented a Non-Disclosure and Non-

Circumvention Agreement (“Agreement”), which Rivera signed on behalf of Pro-Tech on

February 25, 2013. The paragraph entitled “Non-Disclosure, Non-Use and Non-Circumvention”

provided as follows:

Pro-Tech shall: (a) keep EJM’s Confidential Information in strict confidence: (b) protect it with the same degree of care as the Pro-Tech treats its own Confidential Information; (c) not, without the prior written consent of EJM, disclose or permit it to be disclosed to anyone other than the Pro-Tech’s directors, officers, employees, agents or consultants who have a legitimate need to know the Confidential Information for the Pro-Tech to negotiate, participate in, or perform services with respect to the Projects; (d) will not use, and will not permit its directors, officers, employees, agents or consultants to use, the Confidential Information for any reason other than for the Project; and (e) not circumvent EJM in connection with the Confidential Information. In addition to any other relief that may be available to EJM, Pro-Tech hereby assigns to EJM the profits, benefits and/or proceeds obtained by Pro-Tech as a result of any use of the Confidential Information that is not authorized in writing by EJM and to keep and hold same in trust for EJM and to tender same to EJM upon EJM’s request. Pro-Tech also hereby grants as security interest to EJM in all of Pro-Tech’s equipment, accounts and general intangibles to secure Pro-Tech’s obligations to EJM under this Agreement.

The Agreement defined Confidential Information as follows:

[C]onfidential financial and business information concerning EJM’s business plans, financing sources, sales, margins, profits, customers, marketing programs and plans, new product developments, contractual relationships, as well as proprietary information concerning product technology, software, trade secrets, product development, new product ideas, and new applications for existing products and technology. . . all written and electronic communications that are derived from, or contain, in whole or in part, Confidential Information, including spreadsheets, memoranda, correspondence, emails, and all other documents.

2 . . .

For purposes of this Agreement, Confidential Information will not include information which (i) is now or hereafter becomes, through no act or failure to act on the part of either Party, generally known or available to the public; (ii) was acquired by the receiving Party before receiving such Information from EJM and without restriction as to use or disclosure; (iii) is hereafter rightfully furnished to the Pro-Tech by a third party, without restriction as to use or disclosure; (iv) is required to be disclosed pursuant to law, provided the Pro-Tech uses reasonable efforts to give EJM reasonable notice of such required disclosure; (v) is independently developed by the Pro-Tech without the use of or reference to Confidential Information; or (vi) is disclosed with the prior written consent of EJM.

Next, the Agreement described the “Project” as follows:

Pro-Tech and EJM have entered into discussions with each other in connection with prospective business arrangements and/or opportunities involving the following commercial project: conversion of trucks, including without limitation, trucks owned by EJM/its related companies, from diesel powered operation to dual CNG [compressed natural gas] /Diesel powered operation (the ‘Project’).

Warren testified that he anticipated that, by installing the conversion kits, Pro-Tech would

develop an expertise in the duel fuel technology that would benefit Pro-Tech’s business. He

further testified that the Agreement was necessary to protect Madison’s intellectual property as

well as its relationships with different potential customers or contracts involving the technology.

At the time that Rivera signed the Agreement, he believed it applied only to the natural gas

conversion kit project, and that it did not encompass the general maintenance and repair services

that Pro-Tech had long been providing to Madison. Rivera testified that if the Agreement had

applied to general maintenance and repair services, Pro-Tech would not have entered into the

Agreement. After Rivera signed the Agreement, Pro-Tech installed the conversion kits that were

developed by Madison on Madison’s trucks.

On August 22, 2013, Madison and EL Hollingsworth & Company, Inc. signed a separate

Confidentiality and Non-Disclosure agreement, which indicated the parties were in the process of

3 “evaluat[ing] a proposal, negotiat[ing] an agreement, and/or perform[ing] an agreement.”

According to Warren, EL Hollingsworth, which is another trucking company, was originally

interested in acquiring conversion kits for its own trucks. However, after Madison disclosed what

they were doing, instead of purchasing and installing the conversion kits for EL Hollingsworth’s

own trucks, it became a financial partner with Madison by investing in the company and

committing to purchasing conversion kits in the future. But EL Hollingsworth never honored that

commitment.

In addition, by July 2014, EL Hollingsworth assumed operation of Madison’s trucking

company, including the trucks that were converted to the dual fuel system. According to Warren

“it was basically decided that [EL Hollingsworth] would – you know, they would run the fleet of

the trucks. We would take care of the technology. We were just doing what everybody was best

suited to do.” According to Rivera, Warren wanted to “step out of the – out of the trucking

company” so he could focus on the technology. So, Warren approached Rivera to discuss the

idea of Pro-Tech continuing the maintenance program once EL Hollingsworth assumed operation

of Madison’s trucks. In this regard, Rivera testified as follows:

The Court: But how was it communicated or what was the agreement, if there was one, that Pro-Tech would continue to do the maintenance as a means of just—of, you know, continuing the business?

[Rivera]: There was---it was a verbal agreement, ma’am. There was no really -- like I said, we were all partners.

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EJ Madison, LLC., a Texas Limited Liability Company v. Pro-Tech Diesel, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ej-madison-llc-a-texas-limited-liability-company-v-pro-tech-diesel-texapp-2019.