Opinion
KATZ J.
The defendants, Mark Federico and Lomar Foods, Inc. (Lomar), appeal from a judgment enjoining them for a period of three years from disclosing, using or selling information found by the trial court to be a trade secret, which Federico learned throughout his association with the named plaintiff, Elm City Cheese Company, Inc. (Elm City),1 and its owners, Richard and Suzanne Weinstein.2 The principal issue before us is whether the facts found establish a trade secret as that [61]*61term is defined in General Statutes § 35-51 (d).3 We conclude that they do.
The trial court found the following facts, which are largely undisputed. The Weinsteins own Elm City, which has been manufacturing cheese since 1896, but has been making primarily grated cheese since the late 1950s. Elm City does not sell its products to the public; rather, it sells its Italian style grated cheese to three major customers that use Elm City’s cheese as a “filler” to blend into their cheeses.4
Federico has known Richard Weinstein (Weinstein) since Federico was seven years old, and over the years, he developed a close social relationship with the Weinsteins. According to the trial court’s findings, Federico “became [the Weinsteins’] most trusted adviser and confidant. Federico effectively became a member of the family, virtually the ‘number one son.’ ” When Federico, a certified public accountant, was not given a partnership in the firm for which he was working, Weinstein encouraged him to start his own firm and Elm City became one of his first clients. From 1982 to 1994, Federico served as both Elm City’s accountant and the Weinsteins’ personal accountant. When, in 1988, Weinstein learned that he had chronic lymphocytic leukemia, Federico became increasingly more involved in [62]*62the operation of the business. He was also named executor of Weinstein’s will.
The trial court found, further, that Federico’s duties went beyond typical accounting work. For example, in the early 1980s, he was involved in efforts to solve an odor control problem in the plant. An engineer who was not an employee of Elm City eventually solved this problem by installing certain dehumidification equipment. This solution provided the additional and unexpected benefit of decreasing the time required to remove moisture from Elm City’s cheese, thereby allowing Elm City to produce its product more quickly.
The trial court found that, eventually, Federico was given keys to the building and access to the alarm system. When the Weinsteins were away, Federico was placed in charge of operations and was given the authority to make decisions. In February, 1992, Federico was made a vice president of the company and was given signatory power over the company checkbook. Although he was involved in projects for Elm City that were outside of the accounting area, even after he became vice president, he nevertheless spent four days each week at his accounting firm. In October, 1993, he became a full-time employee of Elm City and was placed in charge of the day-to-day operations of the plant. He continued to serve as Elm City’s accountant, however, and also serviced other clients of his accounting firm.
The trial court also found that Federico learned the different aspects of Elm City’s operation at various times during his association with Weinstein. For example, he first learned the identity of Elm City’s biggest customer when he was a young boy. Later, in the late 1970s, before he became a certified public accountant, he did some payroll work for the company. He and Weinstein would talk about the business. During this [63]*63time, Federico learned that Elm City used “return milk”5 as its principal raw material for cheese production. According to the trial court, “Federico had learned long before he became [a full-time] employee ... all aspects of Elm City’s business including its method of cheese production, its customers and suppliers, its methods for drying cheese, and the prices it paid for supplies and charged for finished product.” The court found: “Because of his role as Elm City’s ‘right hand man,’ which grew out of his role as [accountant], Federico learned every financial aspect of Elm City’s business. He knew, for example, what [Elm City] paid [its suppliers] for return[ed] milk and what [Elm City] charged its three customers . . . for Italian style grated cheese. He also became involved in every aspect of Elm City’s business, including, but not limited to: its unique processes and techniques in making grated cheese; its pricing and cost structures; and its suppliers and customer relationships. He did financial projections, he kept journals on the milk suppliers and tracked the amount of milk [Elm City] ordered (and the price it paid) in Elm City’s milk logs and accounts payable journal. Before Federico assumed these responsibilities, only the Weinsteins themselves were privy to these financial aspects of the business, as the financial record-keeping was primarily [Suzanne Weinstein’s] job, with some assistance from Weinstein.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) The court noted that “[although Federico may have learned some aspects of Elm City’s methods of production, etc., while an employee, all the important intricate components of Elm City’s business [64]*64became fully known to Federico when he served as [an accountant] for Elm City and the Weinsteins.” Federico prepared monthly statements for Elm City from 1982 to 1994. According to the trial court, these statements, which Federico prepared both before and after he had become an employee of Elm City in October, 1993, contained the type of information that a client would expect an accountant to keep confidential, particularly from potential competitors of Elm City.
The trial court found that, by 1994, the relationship between Federico and Weinstein had started to deteriorate. Weinstein became increasingly unhappy with Federico’s indulgence of his family, several members of which Elm City employed at Federico’s request.6 Federico, by contrast, claimed that his ultimate decision to leave Elm City was because Weinstein had reneged on an agreement to sell Elm City to Federico. Weinstein denied that they ever had a contract for the sale of the business.
The trial court found further that, in mid-December, 1994, Weinstein told Federico that he would divide Elm City’s profits evenly with Federico, as Weinstein’s father had done with him. Shortly thereafter, in late December, Federico assured Weinstein that he intended to stay in the business. Nevertheless, on January 3, 1995, shortly after profits had been distributed, Federico gave Weinstein two letters of resignation, one as his employee and the other as his accountant.
[65]*65The trial court found that Federico then returned to his accounting practice for a brief period. In October, 1995, he attended a four day course in cheesemaking. In November of that same year, he attended a conference in Chicago that was attended by two of Elm City’s three largest customers. Soon thereafter, Federico applied to a bank for a loan to start Lomar, the other defendant in this appeal. The business plan submitted to the bank by Federico, developed in November, 1995, duplicated Elm City’s business, including the process for making the cheese, which Weinstein had developed over several years. According to the trial court, Lomax intended to manufacture the same product that Elm City manufactures, by the same process, and sell it to Elm City’s customers.
In November, 1996, Lomar began operations at the site of a former dairy located in Providence, Rhode Island. At trial, Federico admitted that Lomar followed the basic production method used by Elm City. It bought its supplies from some of the same suppliers used by Elm City, and it sold its finished products to the same customers that Elm City did. Additional facts will be set forth as needed.
On December 20, 1996, Elm City brought an action seeking temporary and permanent injunctions, as well as damages.7 At trial, Elm City alleged five causes of action: (1) breach of fiduciary duty; (2) misappropriation of trade secrets;8 (3) violation of the Connecticut [66]*66Unfair Trade Practices Act (CUTPA);9 (4) misrepresentation; and (5) conversion. The trial court found for Elm City on the first, second and third counts, and for the defendants on the two remaining counts. The court concluded, however, that Elm City’s claims were governed by General Statutes § 35-57 (a), which provides in relevant part that, “[u]nless otherwise agreed by the parties, the provisions of [the Uniform Trade Secrets Act (trade secrets act); General Statutes § 35-50 et seq.] supersede any conflicting tort, restitutionary, or other law of this state pertaining to civil liability for misappropriation of a trade secret.”10 Therefore, the court enjoined the defendants, under the second count — the trade secret count — for a period of three years, “from disclosing, using or selling any of [Elm City’s] confidential customer information, trade secrets, procedures, [67]*67technical data or know-how relating to the products, processes, methods, research and development plans, equipment or business operations of [Elm City].”
In addition to the injunctive relief, the trial court awarded Elm City compensatory damages in the amount of $461,239, and, based upon its finding that the defendants had wilfully and maliciously misappropriated Elm City’s trade secrets, the court awarded Elm City $300,000 in punitive damages, pursuant to General Statutes § 35-53 (b).11 Subsequently, the trial court, in a second memorandum of decision, awarded Elm City $100,000 in attorney’s fees, pursuant to General Statutes § 35-54.12 The defendants appealed to the Appellate Court from the judgment of the trial court and, pursuant to Practice Book § 65-1 and General Statutes § 51-199 (c), we transferred the appeal to this court.
On appeal, the defendants make several claims. First, they claim that the trial court improperly concluded that Elm City’s process for making cheese was a trade secret entitled to protection under the trade secrets act. Second, they argue that the trial court improperly found the defendants’ conduct wilful and malicious and, accordingly, improperly awarded punitive damages and attorney’s fees. Finally, they argue that the injunction fashioned by the trial court should be vacated on the grounds that it is not narrowly tailored to protect Elm City’s trade secrets, and it does not adequately inform the defendants as to the restrictions on their conduct. We are not persuaded by the defendants’ arguments and, therefore, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.13
[68]*68I
Before we address the parties’ arguments, we set forth the standard of review applicable to this appeal. The question of whether information sought to be protected by the trade secrets act rises to the level of a trade secret is “one of fact for the trial court.”14 Allen Mfg. Co. v. Loika, 145 Conn. 509, 516, 144 A.2d 306 (1958).15 “[W]here the factual basis of the court’s decision is challenged we must determine whether the facts set out in the memorandum of decision are supported by the evidence or whether, in light of the evidence and the pleadings in the whole record, those facts are clearly erroneous. . . . Pandolphe’s Auto Parts, Inc. v. Manchester, 181 Conn. 217, 221-22, 435 A.2d 24 (1980). ... In other words, to the extent that the trial court has made findings of fact, our review is limited to deciding whether those findings were clearly erroneous.” (Citation omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) State v. Velasco, 248 Conn. 183, 188-89, 728 A.2d 493 (1999); see also Robert W. Weiss & Associates, Inc. [69]*69v. Wiederlight, 208 Conn. 525, 539, 546 A.2d 216 (1988) (applying clearly erroneous standard in upholding trial court’s conclusion that customer list and related insurance information were not trade secrets).16
II
We begin our analysis by restating some basic principles of the law governing trade secrets. Generally speaking, in the absence of a restrictive covenant, a former employee may compete with his or her former employer upon termination of employment. Town & Country House & Home Service, Inc. v. Evans, 150 Conn. 314, 317, 189 A.2d 390 (1963). Even after the employment has ceased, however, “the employee remains subject to a duty not to use trade secrets, or other confidential information, which he has acquired in the course of his employment, for his own benefit or that of a competitor to the detriment of his former employer.” Allen Mfg. Co. v. Loika, supra, 145 Conn. 514.
According to § 35-51 (d), a trade secret is “information, including a formula, pattern, compilation, program, device, method, technique, process, drawing, cost data or customer list that: (1) Derives independent economic value, actual or potential, from not being generally known to, and not being readily ascertainable by [70]*70proper means by, other persons who can obtain economic value from its disclosure or use, and (2) is the subject of efforts that are reasonable under the circumstances to maintain its secrecy.”
Turning to the appeal before us, “[a] primary issue to be determined ... is whether there is a trade secret existing which is to be protected.” Plastic & Metal Fabricators, Inc. v. Roy, 163 Conn. 257, 267, 303 A.2d 725 (1972). Essentially, according to § 35-51 (d), in addition to the two enumerated requirements, to constitute a trade secret, information must be of the kind included in the nonexhaustive list contained in the statute. The first step in our analysis, therefore, is a determination of whether the information at issue satisfies this threshold requirement. To do so, we must first identify the information that the trial court found to be a trade secret.
A
The defendants claim that the trial court improperly found that Elm City’s process for making cheese is a protectable trade secret. We note, however, that although the defendant focuses on the reasons the process may or may not be a trade secret, we believe that the trial court’s findings warrant a broader reading. Our reading of the trial court’s memorandum of decision leads us to conclude that, in addition to Elm City’s cheesemaking process, the trade secret, as found by the trial court, encompasses Elm City’s customer list and certain financial information — -including its product pricing structure, and list of suppliers and the prices paid for its supplies.
It is true that the trial court stated that “this court . . . finds that the overall way that Elm City makes its type of ‘Italian Style Grated Cheese,’ i.e., the quick drying and the use of return milk, gives it an economic advantage [and] is a trade secret.” Additionally, the trial court stated that “Elm City had a unique way to produce [71]*71its cheese product and the combination of factors that produce its cheese is a trade secret.” A careful examination of the trial court’s memorandum of decision compels us to conclude that the trial court’s findings regarding the scope of Elm City’s trade secret go well beyond the cheesemaking process.
Recognizing that § 35-51 (d) (2) requires that the party seeking trade secret protection must have taken efforts to maintain the secrecy of the information sought to be protected that are reasonable under the circumstances, the trial court found that Elm City took such efforts “to maintain the secrecy of its production.” Rather than merely list the steps that Elm City took to protect the secrecy of its cheesemaking process, however, the trial court also stated that “there is no evidence that the formula, methods of production, sales to selected customers or other business related information was open to the public, or generally known by other employees [other than Federico].” Additionally, two paragraphs later in its memorandum of decision, noting that Elm City had argued that what should be considered “reasonable efforts” for a family operation differs from what should be so considered for a large, sophisticated corporation, the trial court discussed the fact that “all information was kept confidential and shared only by family members and one other, Federico, who was more than a family member in the eyes of the Weinsteins and [was] their personal accountant.” The trial court immediately followed this statement with a discussion of the financial information that Federico, as an accountant, was bound, by both statute and the ethical code of his profession, not to disclose. The court noted that “all the information as regards customers, pricing, suppliers, costs and everything intended to be held confidential was learned by Federico . . . .” Finally, we note that the trial court enjoined the defendants from “disclosing, using or selling any of Elm City Cheeses, [72]*72confidential customer information, trade secrets, procedures, technical data or know-how relating to the products, processes, methods, research and development plans, equipment or business operations of [Elm City].”17
Although the defendants sought an articulation of the trial court’s findings with respect to “the scope of the court’s trade secret ruling,” they failed to seek a review of the denial of their motion for articulation. “In the absence of [a more complete] record, we presume that the trial court, in rendering its judgment in favor of the plaintiffs, undertook the proper analysis of the law and the facts. DiBella v. Widlitz, [207 Conn. 194, 203, 541 A.2d 91 (1988)]; Timm v. Timm, 195 Conn. 202, 206, 487 A.2d 191 (1985).” S & S Tobacco & Candy Co. v. Greater New York Mutual Ins. Co., 224 Conn. 313, 321-22, 617 A.2d 1388 (1992). Moreover, the trial court’s memorandum of decision as a whole demonstrates an understanding of § 35-51 (d). We can conceive of no reason, therefore, for the trial court to have discussed financial information — including pricing data, supply information and customer lists — with respect to reasonable efforts to maintain the secrecy of information [73]*73sought to be protected as a trade secret, absent the court’s belief that such information is part of the trade secret.
The foregoing leads us to conclude that the trial court found Elm City’s business operations — from the specific sources and costs of its supplies, through the production of its cheese, to the distribution of its product to three specific customers and the prices charged them — to be a protectable trade secret.18 We are not saying, however, that each and every component is necessarily a trade secret in and of itself — although the trial court specifically found that the cheesemaking process is a trade secret. In other words, we are not finding, for example, the customer list, the list of suppliers or the pricing data to be trade secrets. Such factual findings are not ours to make; rather, they fall within the province of the trial court. See, e.g., Bornemann v. Bornemann, 245 Conn. 508, 527, 752 A.2d 978 (1998); Herbert S. Newman & Partners, P.C. v. CPC Construction Ltd. Partnership, 236 Conn. 750, 762, 674 A.2d 1313 (1996); Commissioner of Health Services v. Youth Challenge of Greater Hartford, Inc., 219 Conn. 657, 666, 594 A.2d 958 (1991). In this case, we are merely interpreting the trial court’s findings to include such components within the scope of Elm City’s trade secret.
[74]*74Having identified the information that constitutes the trade secret at issue, we must now determine whether that information is of the kind that, assuming the requirements § 35-51 (d) (1) and (2) are met, can be considered a trade secret under the trade secrets act. Section 35-51 (d) provides in part that “ ‘trade secret’ means information, including a formula, pattern, compilation, program, device, method, technique, process, drawing, cost data or customer list . . . .” (Emphasis added.) Therefore, if we read broadly the term “method,” so as to include Elm City’s method of doing business, we find the trial court’s finding supported by the statute. We need not rest, however, solely on this broad reading.
As noted above, the nonexhaustive list contained in § 35-51 (d), in addition to “method,” includes “technique, process . . . cost data [and] customer list . . . .’’Therefore, the statute clearly provides that virtually every one of the individual components of Elm City’s trade secret, under the appropriate circumstances, could be considered a trade secret in and of itself. Moreover, this proposition finds support in this court’s case law. For example, Elm City’s list of suppliers and the costs it paid for its supplies could be found to be trade secrets. See Triangle Sheet Metal Works, Inc. v. Silver, 154 Conn. 116, 126, 222 A.2d 220 (1966) (“financial details of [the plaintiffs] costs, pricing and bidding” axe trade secrets); see also 1 R. Milgrim, Trade Secrets (1999) § 1.09 [8] [b], pp. 1-461 through 1-468. As for the manufacturing process itself, the trial court expressly found that it was entitled to trade secret protection. In so doing, the court relied on this court’s opinion in Allen Mfg. Co. v. Loika, supra, 145 Conn. 515, in which we concluded that, despite the fact that the specific materials used in the plaintiffs manufacture of screws were common, commercially available components, the “plaintiffs ability to combine these elements into a successful . . . process, like the creation [75]*75of a recipe from common cooking ingredients, is a trade secret entitled to protection.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) In Allen Mfg. Co., we noted that “[t]he fact that every ingredient is known to the industry is not controlling for the secret may consist of the method of combining them which produces a product superior to that of competitors.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id. Finally, we note that customer lists can also be found to be trade secrets. See, e.g., Town & Country House & Homes Service, Inc. v. Evans, supra, 150 Conn. 319 (“[a] list of customers, if their trade and patronage have been secured by years of business effort and advertising and the expenditure of time and money, constitutes an important part of a business and is in the nature of a trade secret”). The foregoing supports the trial court’s finding that the business plan as a whole merits trade secret protection.
Although our conclusion as to the breadth of the trial court’s identification of Elm City’s trade secret can be supported by a broad reading of the term “method” in § 35-51 (d), and, according to both § 35-51 (d) and ornease law, each essential component of Elm City’s trade secret could itself be considered a trade secret under the appropriate circumstances, we have found very little other authority, either from our state or from foreign jurisdictions, for the proposition that such individual components, together, can constitute a trade secret.19 [76]*76Significantly, however, we have found even less authority contrary to this proposition.20 We conclude, therefore, in light of the unique combination of the components at issue, that the aforementioned individual components, viewed in conjunction with each other, can be considered a trade secret under the specific circumstances of this case.
Central to the trial court’s ultimate finding that Elm City’s business plan constitutes a trade secret, is the [77]*77court’s finding that Elm City’s business is unique.21 If the business were not unique — that is, if both the individual components of Elm City’s business plan, and the way in which those components are combined, were generally known — Elm City arguably would not be entitled to trade secret protection because its information would not meet the statutory requirements of § 35-51 (d). Federico himself testified, however, that Elm City occupied a specialized niche in the cheesemaking industry. As [78]*78the trial court found, Elm City’s operation “was a tailor-made business for three customers who took all their product.” Elm City does not sell directly to the public. Rather, its cheese is used as a filler in other cheesemakers’ products. In light of the fact that each component of Elm City’s business method, under the appropriate circumstances, could be considered a trade secret, and, more importantly, in consideration of the unique relationship between Elm City and its suppliers and customers, we conclude that it was appropriate for the trial court to consider Elm City’s business method, as a whole — that is, its purchase of returned milk from a very limited number of suppliers, its production from that milk of exclusively hard grated cheese through a unique process, and its sale of its product exclusively to three cheesemakers to blend into their cheeses — to be entitled to trade secret protection, provided that the requirements of subdivisions (1) and (2) of § 35-51 (d) are met.
Relying on those subdivisions, the defendants correctly state that “even if the information at issue falls into the category of possible trade secrets,” the party claiming trade secret protection must prove that the information: (1) is of independent economic value; and (2) was the subject of reasonable efforts to maintain its secrecy. According to the defendants, Elm City’s trade secret fails to meet these requirements. Because the defendants address subdivision (2) of § 35-51 (d) first, and devote significantly more attention to it, we consider that subdivision first as well.
B
Section 35-51 (d) (2) requires that information sought to be protected be “the subject of efforts that are reasonable under the circumstances to maintain its secrecy.” The defendants argue that there is no evidence that the plaintiff “had taken any of the measures commonly [79]*79required to preserve the secret status of a business operation.” We conclude that the trial court’s finding that Elm City’s efforts to maintain the secrecy of its trade secret were reasonable under the circumstances was not clearly erroneous. See Pandolphe’s Auto Parts, Inc. v. Manchester, supra, 181 Conn. 221-22.
Citing a leading commentator on trade secret law, the defendants note that reasonable efforts to maintain secrecy “often include some of the following techniques: requiring employees to sign confidentiality agreements or otherwise advising them of the confidential nature of the process; posting of warning or cautionary signs, or placing legends on documents; taking precautions regarding visitors, by requiring them to sign confidentiality agreements, having them sign in, and shielding the process from their view; segregating information, so that no one person or written source discloses the entire manufacturing process; and using unnamed or coded ingredients.”22 See 1 R. Milgrim, supra, § 1.04, pp. 1-178 through 1-189. Additionally, the defendants cite four cases from other jurisdictions, including one from the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut, in which courts found that reasonable efforts had been taken to maintain the secrecy of the trade secrets at issue because the parties seeking trade secret protection had employed some of the aforementioned measures.23
[80]*80It is important to note, however, that the measures cited in the Milgrim treatise are merely examples of the types of actions that may be considered, under the appropriate circumstances, to be reasonable efforts to maintain secrecy. They do not provide a standard that we must observe. Likewise, the cases cited by the defendants merely demonstrate how, in specific circumstances, a party has protected the secrecy of its trade secrets. The courts in those cases did not attempt to delineate precisely what minimum amount of effort they deemed sufficient to invoke the protection of the relevant trade secret statutes.
The question of whether, in a specific case, a party has made reasonable efforts to maintain the secrecy of a purported trade secret is by nature a highly fact-specific inquiry. Nationwide Mutual Ins. Co. v. Stenger, 695 F. Sup. 688, 691 (D. Conn. 1988). What may be adequate under the peculiar facts of one case might be considered inadequate under the facts of another. According to § 35-51 (d) (2), the efforts need only be “reasonable under the circumstances . . . .” (Emphasis added.)
The defendants assert that Elm City had no confidentiality agreements with their employees; its written employee manual makes no mention of confidentiality or nondisclosure policies or guidelines; most employees of the company have become familiar with all aspects [81]*81of the cheesemaking process;24 the cheese production equipment was in plain view of anyone inside the plant;25 the thermostat displaying the temperature in the drying rooms was also in plain view; and Elm City made no effort to conceal from its employees the identity of its milk suppliers or cheese customers.
Having concluded that the trade secret at issue is Elm City’s entire business plan, from the purchase of supplies to the sale of its cheese, we need not determine whether the cheesemaking process itself was subject to adequate efforts to maintain secrecy so as to satisfy § 35-51 (d) (2). We conclude that so long as Elm City [82]*82kept confidential enough information to make it virtually impossible for its employees to use the rest of the information constituting its trade secret, a trier of fact reasonably could find that, under the circumstances, its methods of maintaining secrecy complied with the demands of the statute.
The trial court found that all sensitive financial information “was kept confidential and shared only by family members and one other, Federico, who was more than a family member in the eyes of the Weinsteins and [was] their personal accountant.” Weinstein testified that the books and records pertaining to Elm City’s business were kept in a locked safe in a locked office with a monitored burglar alarm system, until the company was burglarized and the safe destroyed. Thereafter, the records were kept in an alarmed office in a separate building from Elm City’s physical plant, in locked cabinets, to which only the Weinsteins, Federico, and Federico’s father, whom Federico had hired, had access.
Accordingly, the trial court found that all employees other than Federico “did not have sufficient exposure to all the integral parts of Elm City’s business to go out and compete. . . . [T]here is no evidence that the formula, methods of production, sales to selected customers or other business related information was open to the public, or generally known by other employees.” According to the trial court, therefore, no one but Federico had access to enough information, in conjunction with the cheesemaking process, to be able to compete with Elm City.
As noted previously, Elm City created a unique niche for itself in the cheesemaking industry. It tailored its operation to please primarily three customers and, therefore, its success depended on its relationship with those customers. Without access to certain information, such as the costs of supplies and the prices charged [83]*83to customers, one would be unable to profit from the knowledge of the cheesemaking process. As discussed above, that information was unavailable to employees other than Federico. Therefore, we conclude that the trial court was justified in finding that, by keeping secret from those employees its confidential business related information, Elm City made efforts that were reasonable under the circumstances to maintain the secrecy of its trade secret.
Having noted that most of Elm City’s employees did not have knowledge of the confidential financial aspects of Elm City’s business necessary to compete with Elm City, we also note that Federico, by contrast, did have such knowledge. As the trial court stated, Federico had learned “all the information as regards customers, pricing, suppliers, costs and everything intended to be held confidential . . . .” In his role as Weinstein’s confidant and, more importantly, in his capacity as the Weinsteins’ and Elm City’s accountant, Federico had access to the company’s business records. According to Federico’s own testimony, he prepared balance sheets, income statements, statements of cash flow, monthly reports and year-end statements. He also testified that he had access to information regarding the prices Elm City charged for its goods sold, the cost of its materials, the prices it paid for the returned milk it purchased, and from whom Elm City purchased its supplies, as well as Elm City’s overhead costs, administrative costs, advertising costs, promotional costs and operational costs for a thirteen or fourteen year period. In fact, Federico testified that, by the time he resigned from Elm City, he knew every financial aspect of Elm City’s business. Weinstein testified that not only did Federico have access to “every financial piece of information that was at [Elm City],” but he also “had possession of voluminous records at his own office that belonged to Elm City . . . .”
[84]*84In light of the fact that Federico knew every aspect of Elm City’s business and would, therefore, possess the knowledge necessary to compete with Elm City if he so chose, one question remains. The question is whether, to be entitled to rely upon the protection of the trade secrets act, Elm City was required to take affirmative steps to protect the secrecy of its information with respect to Federico.
The defendants argue that Elm City’s failure to require Federico to sign a confidentiality, nondisclosure or noncompetition agreement is fatal to Elm City’s claims. Elm City maintains that any such agreement was unnecessary in light of the nature of Federico’s relationship to both the Weinsteins and Elm City. The trial court concluded that Elm City had taken efforts to maintain the secrecy of the information constituting its trade secret that were reasonable under the circumstances. We agree.
In testifying that he had never asked Federico to sign a confidentiality agreement, Weinstein stated: “[Federico] was very sensitive to any time we talked about things of this [nature]. We had a very close relationship. It was a trusting kind of relationship. If you questioned it, he would be very upset over it. . . . I did not think it was necessary [to have Federico sign an agreement]. . . . I had trust in [him]. He was my certified public accountant.”
As the trial court stated: “It is a gross oversimplification of the facts merely to state that [Federico] was the accountant for [the Weinsteins and Elm City] .... He was also a close friend and confidant to [Weinstein], a business advisor, a part-time overseer of business operations, [and] the ‘heir apparent’ and intended future leader of the company . . . .”
According to the trial court, and the testimony of Conrad Kappel, who is an expert in ethical standards [85]*85for accountants and who conducts peer reviews of accounting firms, Federico violated both General Statutes § 20-281J, which provides in relevant part that an accountant “shall not voluntarily disclose information communicated to him by the client relating to and in connection with services rendered to the client by the [accountant] in the practice of public accountancy” and the professional standards of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants, particularly § 301, which provides in part that certified public accountants “shall not use to their own advantage or disclose any member’s client confidential information. ...” Therefore, based in part upon expert testimony, the trial court found that Federico had violated both state statute and his profession’s ethical code.26
We conclude that, in light of the close personal relationship enjoyed over the years by the Weinsteins and Federico, it was reasonable for Elm City to assume that it had nothing to fear from Federico in the way of misappropriation of its cheesemaking process or its business information and, therefore, Elm City’s decision not to take affirmative steps to ensure the secrecy of its information with respect to Federico constituted “reasonable efforts under the circumstances.” Moreover, we conclude that, in light of the confidential [86]*86nature of a certified public accountant’s relationship with his or her client, Elm City was not required to obtain from Federico a written statement on the order of an agreement pertaining to confidentiality, nondisclosure or noncompetition. Rather, such an agreement was implicit in the relationship between the parties, and Elm City was entitled to rely on it.
Therefore, in consideration of the foregoing, and in light of the deferential standard of review we apply to the many factual findings of the trial court, we conclude that Elm City has satisfied the secrecy requirement contained in subdivision (2) of § 35-51 (d). We acknowledge that Elm City’s efforts to maintain the secrecy of its trade secrets were not as extensive as prudence might have dictated. We reiterate, however, that “[Reasonable precautionary measures for maintaining the secrecy of the [information] were all that were required.” Allen Mfg. Co. v. Loika, supra, 145 Conn. 516. We emphasize that nothing in this opinion should be read to diminish the importance of taking precautionary measures — for example, requiring employees to sign confidentiality agreements, segregating duties, restricting visitor access, or other appropriate measures — in order to satisfy the statutorily mandated secrecy requirement of § 35-51 (d) (2), nor should our conclusion be construed as encouraging proprietors to be lax in their protection of the secrecy of information they want to be considered protectable trade secrets. Rather, our conclusion is merely a reflection of the unique factual circumstances that gave rise to this case.
C
Having considered the secrecy requirement of § 35-51 (d), we next consider the second requirement of the statute, contained in subdivision (1) — namely, that the information sought to be protected “[d]erives independent economic value, actual or potential, from not being [87]*87generally known to, and not being readily ascertainable by proper means by, other persons who can obtain economic value from its disclosure or use . . . .”
The defendants assert that, because the profitability of Elm City’s cheesemaking process depends upon the company’s access to, and use of, returned milk, it does not satisfy § 35-51 (d) (1). According to the defendants, “[Elm City’s] claims about the supposed uniqueness of its production process are a smokescreen to obscure the true motive of this litigation — to keep Lomar out of the retumfed] milk market, and eliminate price competition that increased [Elm City’s] costs.” The defendants seem to base their entire argument with respect to § 35-51 (d) (1) on the general availability of returned milk and the fact that Elm City had no exclusive contract with its suppliers for the purchase of the milk. The defendants’ argument, however, focuses on the production process as constituting Elm City’s trade secret. As we have concluded previously herein, the trade secret is broader than that, encompassing confidential business information, including pricing and cost data. We must determine, therefore, whether Elm City’s trade secret, as found by the trial court, satisfies § 35-51 (d) (1).
The trial court determined that “the use of return[ed] milk together with the method of production being unique does have economic advantage particularly as it is sold as a filler for just three customers now being taken away by Lomar.” The court concluded “that the combination of the use of the milk and the method of production was unique, and the combination has substantial economic advantage, meant to be kept confidential, which Federico saw over the years of compiling the profits of Elm City.”
As Elm City notes in its brief: “Prior to establishing Lomar, Federico’s only experience in the cheese business was with Elm City. . . . [He] had no independent [88]*88source of knowledge as to the particulars of ‘accommodating the special needs’ of [Elm City’s] three-customer market: the characteristics of the product; the way the product is manufactured; the costs involved in producing it; the prices charged; and the identities of the customers willing to purchase the product. Each particular piece of this information has value in connection with the related information; all are necessary to satisfy the specialized needs of the three customers; all contribute to the economic value of Elm City’s particular business niche. The economic value of the whole cannot be separated from its constituent parts.” We agree.
Federico testified that he endeavored to make the same product that Elm City was making to accommodate the special needs of the same private label packers to whom Elm City sells all of its product. He conceded that Elm City occupied a specialized niche business at the time he left the company. In fact, Federico testified that, as part of his efforts to secure a bank loan to establish Lomar, he submitted to Lafayette American Bank a business plan in which he stated that “ ‘[t]his specialized [niche] business can accommodate the special needs of the private label packers.’ ” In that same business plan, Federico suggested thatLomar’s marketing plan had an advantage in that large manufacturers of cheese are unable to fill the special needs of the private label packers.27
[89]*89Federico’s own testimony demonstrates, therefore, that: Elm City occupied a special niche in the cheese-making industry; Federico intended to duplicate Elm City’s product, using Elm City’s supply sources and its customers; and Lomar’s business plan, which essentially mirrored that of Elm City, gave Lomar an economic advantage over large cheesemakers. Indeed, the mere fact that Elm City’s plan served as the basis of Lomar’s plan for the purposes of securing loans to start Lomar supports the proposition that Elm City’s plan has substantial economic value.
Moreover, prior to Lomar’s entrance into the market, Elm City alone occupied its special place in the local cheesemaking industry. According to Federico, Lomar sells 90 to 95 percent of its product to the same three customers to which Elm City sells virtually all of its product.28 It is reasonable to conclude that, if Elm City’s customers purchase from Lomar the same product that Elm City sells to those customers, the customers would likely buy less product from Elm City. The foregoing demonstrates plainly that Elm City’s trade secret derived independent economic value from not being generally known to those who could profit from the knowledge of it, that is, in particular, the defendants.
[90]*90Therefore, on the basis of the evidence presented and the testimony elicited at trial, particularly that of Federico, we can conceive of no principled reason to disturb the trial court’s finding that Elm City’s business plan satisfies § 35-51 (d) (1). Having concluded that Elm City’s trade secret meets all the requirements of § 35-51 (d), we affirm the trial court’s judgment with respect to that court’s finding of a trade secret violation.29
Ill
We now consider whether the trial court properly awarded Elm City punitive damages and attorney’s fees. We conclude that the trial court’s awards were proper.
Before addressing the parties’ arguments, we note that “[t]he trial court has broad discretion in determining whether damages are appropriate. Buckman v. People Express, Inc., 205 Conn. 166, 175, 530 A.2d 596 (1987). Its decision will not be disturbed on appeal absent a clear abuse of discretion. Id .’’Robert S. Weiss & Associates, Inc. v. Wiederlight, supra, 208 Conn. 541.
Section 35-53 (b) provides in relevant part that, “if the court finds wilful and malicious misappropriation, the court may award punitive damages . . . and may award reasonable attorney’s fees to the prevailing party.”30 The trial court expressly found “that the defendants wilfully and maliciously caused the misappropriation of Elm City trade secrets and pursuant to § 35-53 [91]*91(b) awardfed] the sum of $300,000” in punitive damages. In a subsequent memorandum of decision, the trial court awarded attorney’s fees in the amount of $100,000.31
The defendants assert that “[t]he paucity of evidence that [Elm City] treated its manufacturing process as secret and proprietary over the years precludes a finding of wilful and malicious infringement.” We disagree.
We note first that, again, contrary to what we have concluded previously, the defendants narrowly define the trade secret at issue to Elm City’s cheesemaking process. Considering Elm City’s business plan as a whole, however, it is evident that Elm City took precautions to protect the secrecy of the crucial business related information from all employees except Federico, and that it reasonably believed it did not need to take affirmative steps to protect itself against Federico because he was under an obligation, as Elm City’s certified public accountant, to keep such information confidential. The defendants’ argument, therefore, lacks merit.
The defendants also argue that “[t]he trial record cannot support a finding that [Federico] wilfully or maliciously [mis] appropriated information from Elm City that he had reason to believe was a trade secret.” The defendants claim that “the evidence suggests the words [92]*92‘trade secret’ were never uttered at Elm City until Lomar opened as a competing business.”
The defendants’ argument, relying as it does on its belief that Elm City’s trade secret is limited to its manufacturing process, is, essentially, as follows. Because Federico did not know that the process was a trade secret, he could not have acted wilfully or maliciously in duplicating the process. This argument is unavailing.
We previously have noted that Federico used confidential business information that he was duty bound, by both statute and the ethics of his profession, to keep confidential. He cannot do so and then hide behind professed ignorance that the information he used improperly is part of Elm City’s trade secret.
According to § 35-51 (b), one of the definitions of “misappropriation” is: “(2) disclosure or use of a trade secret of another without express or implied consent by a person who . . . (B) at the time of disclosure or use, knew or had reason to know that his knowledge of the trade secret was . . . (ii) acquired under circumstances giving rise to a duty to maintain its secrecy or limit its use . . . .” We conclude that Federico should have known that he was using information that was a trade secret and that he was duty bound to keep confidential. We further conclude that the trial court’s finding of a wilful and malicious misappropriation was amply supported by the record.
The trial court found that Federico was “on a course for Elm City’s demise rather than to enter into fair competition.” The court noted that the defendants’ choice of location for Lomar, in Providence, Rhode Island, a location closer to the milk suppliers than Elm City’s location, would have the effect of “choking off Elm City’s supply of retumfed] milk.” Also, the court found that Federico “would be tapping the resources of Elm City’s suppliers of retum[ed] milk and choking [93]*93off further the distribution of Elm City’s life lines by getting the three major customers of Elm City’s product . . . .”
Moreover, although there was disagreement as to its cause, there was ample testimony regarding the animosity between Federico and Weinstein at the time Federico tendered his resignation.32 A review of the facts found by the trial court, as well as a review of the testimony of both Weinstein and Federico, compels us to conclude that the trial court’s finding of wilful and malicious animus on Federico’s part is amply supported by the record.33 Accordingly, we find no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s awards of punitive damages and attorney’s fees, and we therefore affirm the awards.
[94]*94IV
We turn now to the final issue raised on appeal. The defendants claim that the injunction fashioned by the trial court should be vacated on the grounds that it is not narrowly tailored to protect Elm City’s trade secret, and it does not adequately inform the defendants as to the restrictions on their conduct. We disagree.
As an initial matter, we note that a trial court is vested with broad authority to fashion equitable relief. See, e.g., Pamela B. v. Ment, 244 Conn. 296, 315, 709 A.2d 1089 (1998). In the present case, on December 5, 1997, the trial court rendered a judgment that, inter alia, enjoined the defendants “for a period of three years from disclosing, using or selling any of Elm City Cheeses, confidential customer information, trade secrets, procedures, technical data or know-how relating to the products, processes, methods, research and development plans, equipment or business operations of [Elm City].” The trial court also stated: “The defendants . . . are also enjoined for a period of three years from developing or utilizing any information as to the [procedure for making] the Italian Style Grated Cheese produced by Elm City. Federico is enjoined from using any records he used or prepared for Elm City while he was acting as Elm City’s accountant. The defendants are enjoined for a period of three years, including any persons or entities under their control, direction or in concert from developing or utilizing any information regarding the drying and odor control processes and [95]*95equipment used in Elm City’s manufacturing process. The defendants are enjoined from contracting or divulging the identity of Elm City’s customers, and the defendants are enjoined directly or indirectly from selling any cheese product made like Elm City for a period of three years. The foregoing injunction does not foreclose the defendants from manufacturing or selling other types of cheese to others or the named three customers.”
The defendants assert that this injunction is overly broad and unsupported by the evidence. They note that “[Elm City] alleged that its entire method of doing business constitutes a trade secret, and the trial court’s order does not parse the various elements of [Elm City’s] business to determine which are entitled to trade secret protection.” As we have stated numerous times in this opinion, however, Elm City’s method of doing business — that; is, the business plan — is its trade secret. Therefore, there was no need for the trial court to determine which aspects of the plan are protected under the trade secrets act, because each component, as part of the trade secret, is entitled to protection.
The defendants claim that the injunction is impermissibly broad and, therefore, it “do[es] not give [them] fair notice of what they can and cannot do.” Elm City maintains to the contrary, stating that “[t]he trial court fashioned an injunction only broad enough to [e]nsure protection of Elm City’s trade secrets.” A reading of the injunction reveals that what the defendants are prohibited from doing is merely what is encompassed within the trade secret. We therefore disagree with the defendants.
As Elm City notes, “[t]here should be no difficulty in understanding the injunction or following it. Elm City’s trade secrets have value only in relation to its very limited market. The defendants are precluded from [96]*96doing business in that market. For a period of three years, the defendants cannot make a parmesan-style cheese specially manufactured for sale to private label packers who purchase the product for blending in a grated cheese product. The more particular aspects of the trade secret protection — -the manufacturing processes and procedures, pricing, market and customer information — only have relevance in this very narrow market niche.” We agree with Elm City’s reading of the trial court’s injunction.
The injunction makes clear that the defendants are prohibited from using Elm City’s cheesemaking procedure, including the quick drying method Federico learned from Elm City, to manufacture cheese. They also may not use Elm City’s confidential business information. As the injunction makes equally clear, the defendants are not prohibited, however, from making other kinds of cheeses, using other cheesemaking processes. They may even sell such products to Elm City’s customers, provided the product is not a competitive substitute for Elm City’s product.34 As Elm City correctly notes, “[i]f the defendants choose to make a truly different cheese product, the trade secrets Federico learned at Elm City will have no value to him because everything from the production process to the market for the product will be sufficiently different as to avoid any possible misinteipretation of the order.” Put simply, [97]*97the injunction states plainly what actions the defendants are prohibited from taking and, even, certain actions they are not prohibited from taking.
In light of the foregoing, we cannot conclude that the injunction is impermissibly broad. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s injunction order.
V
In summary, we conclude that: (1) Elm City’s trade secret meets the requirements of § 35-51 (d); (2) the trial court did not abuse its discretion in awarding punitive damages and attorney’s fees; and (3) the injunction fashioned by the trial court is not impermissibly broad.
The judgment is affirmed.
In this opinion BORDEN and PETERS, Js., concurred.