Heraeus Kulzer GmbH v. Esschem, Inc.

390 F. App'x 88
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJuly 28, 2010
Docket09-3982
StatusUnpublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 390 F. App'x 88 (Heraeus Kulzer GmbH v. Esschem, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heraeus Kulzer GmbH v. Esschem, Inc., 390 F. App'x 88 (3d Cir. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION

HAYDEN, District Judge.

Under 28 U.S.C. § 1782, foreign litigants may request production of documents that are located in a particular U.S. judicial district for use in foreign litigation. Accordingly, Heraeus Kulzer GmbH (“Heraeus”), a German company that has instituted suit for misappropriation of trade secrets (“the German litigation”) against a direct competitor, the Biomet Group, 1 petitioned the District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania for discovery from a non-litigant, Esschem, Inc. The Court denied the petition and granted Esschem’s motion to quash under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure (“Fed. R. Civ.P.”) 45. Based on events that have occurred since this appeal was argued, we will remand to the District Court with directions to grant Heraeus’s discovery requests as modified.

I.

Heraeus manufactures bone cement, which, along with other medical applications, is used extensively in hip joint endo-prosthetics. In the early 1970s, Heraeus entered into a distribution agreement with another German company, Merck KGaA (“Merck”), which gave Merck confidential information about Heraeus’s product. When Merck entered into a joint venture in 1997 with Biomet, Heraeus, while concerned about the confidentiality of its information, still agreed to supply bone cement to the joint venture because Merck was contractually bound not to disclose its trade, secrets to Biomet.

But in 2004, without notice to Heraeus, Merck sold its joint venture shares to Biomet. When Heraeus learned of the sale, it informed Biomet that it would cease delivery of its products. Near the end of August, 2005, Biomet introduced its own bone cements in Europe. According to Heraeus, its product had never been replicated by a competitor. An expert Heraeus hired to analyze Biomet’s product ruled out the possibility that the product could have been lawfully reproduced by reverse engineering. The German litigation followed, in which Heraeus is suing Biomet and Merck,' among other defendants, for misappropriation of its trade secrets.

Heraeus filed two contemporaneous § 1782 petitions in United States federal courts — the first in the Northern District of Indiana against two Biomet subsidiaries; and the second in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania against Esschem, a specialty chemical company that supplied materials to Biomet for use in manufacturing its bone cement. Both petitions seek discovery of information allegedly crucial to Her-aeus’s success in the German litigation.

The magistrate judge in Indiana initially granted Heraeus’s ex parte petition, but later granted Biomet’s motion to quash the subpoena and vacate the order. Kulzer v. Biomet, Inc., 09-MC-08, 2009 WL 961229 (N.D.Ind. April 8, 2009). The Indiana district court affirmed. Kulzer v. Biomet, Inc., 09-CV-183, 2009 WL 2058718 (N.D.Ind. July 9, 2009). Heraeus filed an interlocutory appeal in the Seventh Circuit, and also filed another petition with the Indiana magistrate judge modifying the scope of discovery. Heraeus’s second petition, which the magistrate judge de *90 scribed as “nearly identical to [the] first application[,]” was denied. Kulzer v. Biomet, 09-MC-275, 2009 WL 3642746 (N.D.Ind. October 29, 2009).

In its § 1782 petition filed ex parte against Esschem in Pennsylvania, Heraeus alleged that Biomet instructed Esschem to manufacture bone cement materials using Heraeus’s confidential information and trade secrets. The discovery sought consists of information about the specifications in Esschem’s files and any communications between Esschem and Biomet about the materials supplied. The petition included a draft subpoena and limited the scope of disclosure through a proposed protective order barring access to any confidential information produced by Esschem.

Initially, the District Court granted the petition. Then Esschem, whose legal representation was being paid by Biomet, filed a motion to quash the subpoena, arguing that compliance would be overly burdensome and would require Esschem to disclose its confidential information and trade secrets. Heraeus revised the subpoena in advance of oral argument, and at argument Heraeus offered to impose additional protections, specifically that discovery would be accepted on an outside counsel’s eyes only basis, with access denied to experts or legal support personnel; Her-aeus proposed as well that before it made any use of the information, it would return to court for leave to use the information overseas.

Heraeus argued that Esschem was “uniquely” in possession of the documents it sought. It represents that German civil procedure does not contain discovery procedures like § 1782, and so the mere allegation of the existence of a document would not be sufficient to convince a German court to issue a subpoena. And even if Heraeus could pinpoint the documents it needed, they are located in the United States and outside Germany’s jurisdictional reach. So even a sympathetic German court could not order Esschem, a third party, to produce them. In ruling against Heraeus and granting the motion to quash, the District Court found that the discovery request was “plainly proper” under § 1782, and was not unduly burdensome within the meaning of Rule 45. Nonetheless, in its written opinion the Court reasoned that Heraeus failed to meet the “substantial need” test under Rule 45. The factual underpinning for this analysis was the existing status of Heraeus’s efforts in the Northern District of Indiana to get discovery from Biomet — the litigant itself — which was pending on two levels: before the Seventh Circuit Heraeus was appealing the district court’s affirmance of the magistrate judge’s ruling against Her-aeus on its § 1782 petition for discovery as originally framed; and before the Indiana district court Heraeus had filed objections to a subsequent ruling of the magistrate judge denying a narrower discovery request.

These procedural facts had not changed when Heraeus argued before us. Its argument on appeal was that the District Court improperly read into § 1782 a requirement that Heraeus exhaust all possible avenues before it would be granted discovery from Esschem, and that the District Court erroneously imposed an inflated “substantial need” standard in its analysis under Rule 45. As such, Heraeus argued that the strong policy considerations that favor granting § 1782 discovery, and the adequacy of the order protecting Esschem’s confidential information, required reversal. The legal analysis required to decide the appeal was nuanced: even assuming the information was unavailable through action by the German courts, how critical to the success of Heraeus’s showing under § 1782 was the pendency of its requests to *91 the federal court with jurisdiction over Biomet, which is, after all, the litigant and in possession of much of the same information?

Very soon after the argument before us, the landscape shifted: the district court in Indiana ruled against Heraeus on its objections and affirmed the magistate judge.

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Bluebook (online)
390 F. App'x 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heraeus-kulzer-gmbh-v-esschem-inc-ca3-2010.