Elite Auto Body LLC v. Autocraft Bodywerks, Inc.

520 S.W.3d 191, 123 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1338, 2017 WL 1833495, 2017 Tex. App. LEXIS 4108
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 5, 2017
DocketNO. 03-15-00064-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by69 cases

This text of 520 S.W.3d 191 (Elite Auto Body LLC v. Autocraft Bodywerks, 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
Elite Auto Body LLC v. Autocraft Bodywerks, Inc., 520 S.W.3d 191, 123 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1338, 2017 WL 1833495, 2017 Tex. App. LEXIS 4108 (Tex. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

OPINION

Bob Pemberton, Justice

This case illustrates that the Texas Citizens Participation Act (TCPA),1 as written—and as the Texas Judiciary, therefore, is bound to apply it—can potentially be invoked successfully to defend against claims seeking to remedy alleged misappropriation or misuse of a business’s trade secrets or confidential information. This is so principally because the “communications” protected by the TCPA, and which [194]*194in turn can serve as the predicate for a motion to dismiss a “legal action” under that Act, are not confined solely to speech that enjoys constitutional protection. Any remaining doubts to the contrary were extinguished by the Texas Supreme Court’s recent opinion in ExxonMobil Pipeline Company v. Coleman.2

BACKGROUND

The underlying litigation was initiated by appellee Autocraft Bodywerks, Inc., which describes itself as an Austin-based “auto-repair shop that offers full-service, high-end collision restoration to all makes and models of vehicles.” The defendants (appellants here) consist principally of a competing auto-repair business, Elite Auto Body L.L.C. (d/b/a “Precision Auto Body”) (Precision); Rey R. Hernandez, a one-time Autocraft employee who founded Precision in 2008 or 2009; and David Damian, “a production manager who had been with Autocraft for six years” before leaving in 2014 to join Precision.3 An additional Auto-craft employee, Joyce Garcia, “Autocraft’s office manager of nine years,” also left that company to join Precision in 2014. Although not naming Garcia as a defendant, Autocraft accuses her and Damian of furnishing their new employer “confidential, proprietary, and trade secret information” they had acquired through their former “positions of trust and confidence” with Autocraft—including salary and other personnel information, financial information, “[pjroprietary compilation[s]” of “Technical Service Bulletins (‘TSBs’),” and “[p]ro-prietary client forms, such as payment sheets and vehicle check lists.” In turn, Autocraft complains, Precision and its employees have used the information to “obtain an unfair competitive advantage in the marketplace” and “to convince more employees to leave Autocraft and join [Precision].” Based on these allegations, Auto-craft, sought injunctive relief to restrain appellants’ alleged impending or ongoing use or disclosure of Autocraft’s “confidential and proprietary information and trade secrets,” plus actual and exemplary damages, founded on theories of trade-secret misappropriation and violation of the Texas Uniform Trade Secrets Act,4 unfair competition, breach of fiduciary duty, and civil conspiracy.

Alongside the more traditional litigation responses of a general denial, affirmative defenses, and a counterclaim seeking attorney’s fees for Autocraft’s alleged bad-faith claim of misappropriation,5 appellants invoked the TCPA, seeking dismissal of Autocraft’s suit on grounds that this “legal action” “is based on, relates to, or is in response to” appellants’ “exercise of the right of ... association” and the “exercise of the right of free speech”6 in their pursuit of Precision’s business. To meet their initial burden of establishing these grounds “by a preponderance of the evidence,”7 appellants relied on two basic [195]*195theories. First, citing Autocraft’s petition, appellants urged that each of Autocraft’s claims “is based on, relates to, or is in response to”—in the 'sense of arising from or being predicated upon factually—either or both the “exercise of the right of association” or the “exercise of the right of free speech,” as the TCPA defines those activities. Second, relying on affidavits from Hernandez and Damian that purport to negate any trade-secret or other protected status of the information at issue,8 appellants accused Autocraft of also bringing its suit as a groundless pretext calculated only to harass and chill their “association” and “speech”; i.e., with the motives characteristic of “SLAPP” litigation, as opposed to merely being subject to dismissal under the TCPA.9

Autocraft filed a response in opposition to the motion, attaching an affidavit from its founder and general manager.10 The chief thrust of the response and affidavit was to urge that the Autocraft information in question did in fact consist of trade secrets and other legally protected information. In turn, Autocraft urged that its claims for relief were “not a SLAPP suit” and were “no threat to [appellants’] rights to free speech [or] right of association.”

At the hearing on their motion, appellants sought to present live testimony from Hernandez and Damian to further contest the information’s protected status in reply to Autocraft’s affidavit. The' district court excluded the testimony, in the view that the TCPA confined the court’s inquiry solely to the “evidence” of pleadings or affidavits that the Act explicitly references.11 Without objection, however, appellants’ attorney was permitted to testify as to the attorney’s fees and expenses they had incurred in defending the action.

Following the hearing, the district court signed an order denying appellants’ motion. This appeal ensued.12

ANALYSIS

■ Appellants bring three issues, the first of which is the most pivotal for both this case and the larger jurisprudence. In it, appellants urge that the district court erred in holding that they failed to meet their initial burden on their dismissal motion. We agree in part.

[196]*196In the posture of their motion, appellants’ initial burden (also described in case law in terms of demonstrating the TCPA’s “applicability”13) consisted of “show[ing] by a preponderance of the evi-' dence” (1) that Autocraft had asserted a “legal action” (2) that “is based on, relates to, or is in response to” (3) either the “exercise of the right of association” by appellants or their “exercise of the right of free speech.”14 The precise meaning of the phrase “preponderance of the evidence” within the TCPA’s procedural framework remains unclear,15 as do the standards by which appellate courts are to review these “preponderance-of-the-evidence” determinations by trial courts.16 We can conclude [197]*197with certainty, however, that to the extent the evidence establishes material facts conclusively, our review would be limited to the de novo construction and application of the TCPA’s terms.17 That proves to be the situation here.

There is no question that Autocraft’s lawsuit seeking injunctive and monetary relief, or alternatively each of its component claims for such relief, is a “legal action,” a term that the TCPA defines to include “a lawsuit, cause of action, petition, ... or any other judicial pleading or filing that requests legal or equitable relief.”18 The remaining elements of appellants’ initial burden can be met if, as appellees urge on appeal, Autocraft’s claims are predicat-' ed factually on conduct that falls within either the “exercise of the right of association” by appellants or their “exercise of the right of free speech,” as the TCPA defines those terms.19

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Bluebook (online)
520 S.W.3d 191, 123 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1338, 2017 WL 1833495, 2017 Tex. App. LEXIS 4108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elite-auto-body-llc-v-autocraft-bodywerks-inc-texapp-2017.