General Insulation Company v. Daniel L. King

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 26, 2010
Docket14-08-00633-CV
StatusPublished

This text of General Insulation Company v. Daniel L. King (General Insulation Company v. Daniel L. King) 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
General Insulation Company v. Daniel L. King, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed January 26, 2010.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

____________

NO. 14-08-00633-CV

GENERAL INSULATION COMPANY, Appellant

V.

DANIEL L. KING, Appellee

On Appeal from the 234th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 2006-71028

M E M O R A N D U M   O P I N I O N

In this misappropriation-of-trade-secrets and breach-of-contract case, appellant General Insulation Company (AGeneral@) appeals from the trial court=s summary judgment in favor of appellee Daniel L. King.  Determining King conclusively negated at least one essential element of each of General=s causes of action, we affirm.

I


General sells insulation materials to mechanical and plumbing contractors.  King, after approximately ten years with Specialty Products and Insulation (ASPI@), began working for General in January 2005, first as the assistant branch manager then as branch manager in its Houston office.  At the beginning of his employment with General, King signed an AAgreement Concerning Propriety Information@ (Athe Agreement@).  The Agreement provided in part:

CONFIDENTIALITY

With respect to the information, projects, practices, customer contacts, potential customers, methodologies and management philosophy relating to COMPANY, and also with respect to all other information, whatever its nature and form and whether obtained orally, by observation, from graphic materials, or otherwise (except such as is generally available by publication) obtained by me during or as a result of my employment by the COMPANY and relating to any product, process, or apparatus or to any use of any of them, or to materials, tolerances, specifications, costs (including manufacturing costs), prices or to any plans of COMPANY or any subsidiary thereof, I agree:

A.      to hold all such information, projects, practices, customer contacts, potential customers, methodologies, process, apparatus, costs (including manufacturing costs), prices, plans and management philosophy in strict confidence and not in publish or otherwise disclose any thereof except with the prior consent of an authorized representative of the COMPANY;

. . . .

D.      . . . upon request of the COMPANY to deliver to it all graphic materials, reports, computer disks and the like containing or relating to any such information, projects, practices, customer contacts, potential customers, methodologies, process, apparatus, costs (including manufacturing costs), prices, plans and management philosophy . . . .

CONTINUING OBLIGATION

My obligations under this Agreement hereof shall remain in effect throughout my employment by the Company, and ever thereafter . . . .


On September 5, 2006, King informed General he was resigning.  At that time, King told General=s operations manager, Ann Shirey, that he had already packed, having retrieved his belongings the previous Saturday.  Shortly after King left the premises, Shirey inventoried King=s office. She observed that certain documents, such as the price book that had previously been in King=s office, were no longer there.  According to Shirey, there was Aquite a bit missing,@ including King=s telephone files and his customer-contact list.

Shortly after leaving General, King began working as division manager for Bay Insulation Systems of Texas, Inc. (ABay@), a competitor of General.  According to Shirey, General became aware King was providing quotes to General=s customers for insulation material from Bay.  Shirey testified General=s quotes and the quotes King made to clients on behalf of Bay were Awithin pennies of each other per item.@  She also testified that, before King=s departure from General, one of General=s customers, Houston Insulation, had not done any business with Bay.  After King left General, however, Bay began to do business with Houston Insulation, and General lost projects to Bay that it would otherwise have received from Houston Insulation.  Additionally, a number of General=s other customers that had not done any or much business with Bay before King=s departure to Bay, began doing business with Bay.

In November 2006, General sued King, seeking damages and injunctive relief for Awrongful use of confidential information under common law@ (misappropriation of trade secrets) and for breach of contract.  The confidential and proprietary information on which General based its claims included its customer-contact lists and its pricing formulas and schedules.

King moved for partial summary judgment on General=s claims.  King contended his proof conclusively established he did not take the information in question and that neither the customer lists nor the pricing information was confidential, proprietary, or a trade secret.  King=s summary-judgment proof consisted of his affidavit and the depositions of Shirey and another General regional manager, Mark Snodgrass.  General responded.  Its summary-judgment proof consisted of excerpts from Shirey=s and Snodgrass=s depositions and exhibits from King=s deposition.


The trial court granted King=s motion for partial summary judgment and ordered that General=s claims against King be dismissed with prejudice.  The court subsequently entered final judgment disposing of all claims.[1]

II

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General Insulation Company v. Daniel L. King, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-insulation-company-v-daniel-l-king-texapp-2010.