Epic Communications, Inc. v. Richwave Technology, Inc.

179 Cal. App. 4th 314, 101 Cal. Rptr. 3d 572, 2009 Cal. App. LEXIS 1834
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 17, 2009
DocketH032378
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 179 Cal. App. 4th 314 (Epic Communications, Inc. v. Richwave Technology, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Epic Communications, Inc. v. Richwave Technology, Inc., 179 Cal. App. 4th 314, 101 Cal. Rptr. 3d 572, 2009 Cal. App. LEXIS 1834 (Cal. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

Opinion

RUSHING, P. J.

This is an action by a Taiwanese corporation and its California subsidiary seeking damages for an alleged misappropriation of intellectual property originally transferred by their predecessor in interest, a California corporation, to a corporation in Taiwan. The transfer took place pursuant to a joint development agreement negotiated in substantial part by a Taiwanese engineer then employed by the transferee corporation. Three defendants are named: the transferee corporation, the engineer who negotiated the development agreement, and a second Taiwanese corporation formed by her as a “spin-off” of the transferee. The trial court granted a motion by the engineer and the “spin-off’ corporation to quash service of process, reasoning that even if those defendants had sufficient contact with California to otherwise be subject to the jurisdiction of its courts, the Taiwanese residence of the principal plaintiff corporation made it unreasonable to exercise jurisdiction in California. We reject this conclusion. A refusal by California courts to exercise jurisdiction cannot be justified by the mere fact *318 that a claim arising from California contacts is prosecuted by a nonresident. While the foreign status of an assignee might in some cases reduce the state’s interest in adjudicating a dispute, that is at most a subsidiary consideration that cannot by itself justify a denial of access to our courts. The principal inquiry remains whether subjecting defendant to local jurisdiction comports with fair play and substantial justice. The residence of the current owner of the claim has little if any bearing on that inquiry. Here the two Taiwan defendants engaged in conduct in California, and caused effects in California, that made it readily foreseeable that they would be haled into court here in the event of a dispute of the present type. We will therefore reverse the order quashing service of summons.

Background

A. Design Services Agreement

The intellectual property at issue was transferred under a joint development agreement between OEpic, Inc. (OEpic), a Delaware corporation registered to do business in California, and defendant ALi Corporation (ALi), a Taiwanese corporation, also apparently sometimes known as Acer Laboratories, Inc., or some variant thereon. OEpic, which plaintiffs describe as “defunct,” was in the business, among others, of “developing and marketing high speed and optical communication semiconductor devices and integrated circuits, including power amplifiers.” Toward that end it employed a team of engineers at offices in Sunnyvale. ALi in turn employed a team of engineers in Taiwan, headed by defendant Shyh-Chyi Wong, a resident of Taiwan.

It is unclear which of the coventurers initiated the discussions leading to the joint development project. Wong declared that “OEpic contacted ALi” in the summer of 2002 and “expressed interest in working together.” Yi-Ching Pao declared that on an unspecified date in 2002, Wong “visited me at OEpic’s office in Sunnyvale to initiate a talk on potential design collaborations with OEpic.” 1 Cindy Yuen, OEpic’s vice-president of high-speed electronics, declared that in early August of 2002, ALi “contacted me, inquiring [into] the possibility of arranging a meeting between myself and . . . Wong.” 2

*319 That ALi was in the relative position of supplicant, or at least initiator of contact, may be suggested by the fact that it was OEpic which required ALi to execute a nondisclosure agreement, and not vice versa, as a condition of participating in exploratory discussions. The agreement contemplated exchanges of confidential information in the course of discussions concerning a “business opportunity of mutual interest. . . .” Although the agreement does not specify the nature of the opportunity, it is undisputed that it concerned development of a silicon-germanium (SiGe) power amplifier (PA) or linear power amplifier (LPA) for use in wireless networking devices. Both parties agreed not to use or further disclose information exchanged under the agreement for purposes beyond the discussions and each party’s evaluation of the opportunity. Wong signed the agreement on or about August 15, 2002, on behalf of ALi as its “AVP” (associate vice-president) of “RF/Communications.” OEpic’s president and CEO, Yi-Ching Pao, signed the agreement for OEpic. 3

Yuen declared that, about a week after signing the nondisclosure agreement, Wong met with her at OEpic’s Sunnyvale offices to discuss the proposed project. They mainly discussed “radio frequency . . . front-end integrated circuit . . . designs.” Wong told Yuen that although her RF (radio frequency) design group in Taiwan was “highly qualified and motivated,” it “lacked the [sic] experience in high frequency RC [¿re][ 4 ] designs.” For that reason, she said, “ALi was looking for a partner in ‘RF front-end IC designs.’ ” Wong “proposed that OEpic help ALi with its SiGe power amplifier design in a co-design project.” The meeting concluded with a decision that Wong would “contact [OEpic president] Pao to talk about further details of the business arrangement.”

Yuen declared that over the next six months or so, “Wong visited OEpic a few times to further discuss the potential collaboration between OEpic and ALi.” These included a “lengthy meeting” between Yuen and Wong at *320 OEpic’s Sunnyvale office on November 13, 2002. Wong was “very specific about ALi’s goal,” which was “to find a partner to develop 2.4G[Hz] and 5.3G[Hz] power amplifiers using SiGe HBT technology of TSMC foundry.” 5 ALi had evaluated products from other vendors but found them unsatisfactory. Wong “made it clear that ALi would like OEpic to develop power amplifiers ... or linear power amplifiers . . . based on [the] OEpic team’s extensive experience in [PA] and [LPA] product[s].” By the conclusion of this meeting, Yuen declared, she and Wong had “reached the agreement on most items in this partnership, which eventually became the framework” of the parties’ agreement to collaborate.

Wong acknowledged that she made “personal visits to the California facilities of the dissolved OEpic” but declared that she did so “while [she] was an employee of co-defendant ALi, not Richwave. My last visit to the California facilities of OEpic occurred before Richwave even existed.” She went on to declare, “I only visited OEpic’s California facilities twice for a few hours each time while on trips to the United States visiting other companies as well (I visited as an ALi employee both times, with the last visit in January 2003, and I never visited again OEpic California during the execution of the Design Services Agreement). My two brief physical visits were limited to the possibility of collaboration between OEpic and my employer at the time ALi.” (Original underscoring, punctuation corrected.) 6

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
179 Cal. App. 4th 314, 101 Cal. Rptr. 3d 572, 2009 Cal. App. LEXIS 1834, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/epic-communications-inc-v-richwave-technology-inc-calctapp-2009.