IBP, Inc. v. Klumpe

101 S.W.3d 461, 2001 Tex. App. LEXIS 7729, 2001 WL 1456173
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 16, 2001
Docket07-00-0221-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 101 S.W.3d 461 (IBP, Inc. v. Klumpe) 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
IBP, Inc. v. Klumpe, 101 S.W.3d 461, 2001 Tex. App. LEXIS 7729, 2001 WL 1456173 (Tex. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

PHIL JOHNSON, Justice.

The Motion for Rehearing of appellees Klumpe and Blackburn is denied. Our opinion dated September 11, 2001, is withdrawn and the following opinion is issued in its place.

Appellant IBP, Inc., appeals from an adverse summary judgment in its suit based upon actions of appellee Steven M. Klumpe in obtaining and furnishing documents containing alleged trade secrets to Klumpe’s attorney, appellee Jeff Blackburn, who then provided them in discovery to attorneys who represented Klumpe’s stepson in a personal injury suit against IBP. IBP urges, as to the summary judgment in favor of Klumpe and Blackburn that the combined affirmative-evidence and no-evidence motions for summary judgment were erroneously granted because Klumpe and Blackburn did not seek summary judgment on all of the causes of action alleged by IBP, and because, as to the grounds Klumpe and Blackburn presented in seeking summary judgment, (1) IBP presented evidence creating genuine material fact issues on each element of its claims challenged by the no-evidence parts of the motions, including damages, (2) affidavits supporting the affirmative-evidence parts of Klumpe and Blackburn’s motions were defective, and (3) the actions of Klumpe and Blackburn were not privileged.

We affirm in part and reverse and remand in part.

I. BACKGROUND

In April, 1997, Klumpe and his stepson, Chris Escamilla, were employed by IBP at its Amarillo, Texas, meat processing facility. Escamilla was a laborer in the slaughter department; Klumpe was a superintendent in the department.

*466 On April 3, 1997, Escamilla suffered injuries to his hand while operating a meat cutting machine called the “hock-cutter machine.” Escamilla consulted Blackburn in regard to his injury. Blackburn referred Escamilla to attorneys at the law firm of Fadduol and Glasheen, P.C. (“Fad-duol & Glasheen,” or “the law firm”). 1 Fadduol & Glasheen filed suit for damages against IBP and Escamilla’s supervisor based on Escamilla’s injury (“the Escamil-la suit”). 2 Pleadings in the Escamilla suit included allegations of inadequate staffing and negligent production procedures on the part of IBP.

Before Escamilla’s injury, IBP had promulgated guidelines for various aspects of its production processes. The guidelines were incorporated into documents called “Crewing Guides.” The Crewing Guides (“the Guides”) were developed from time-motion studies of IBP’s production employees and processes. IBP spent considerable sums 3 to develop the Guides as part of attempts to reduce its costs of production. According to the affidavit of James Crow, the personnel manager of IBP’s Amarillo plant, the information contained in the Guides gave IBP a competitive advantage over competitors who had no knowledge of the Guides or did not use the Guides in their business. Crow’s affidavit set out that (1) IBP considered the Guides a trade secret and protected the Guides’ contents by way of various security procedures, such as limiting the number of hard copies of the Guides and by limiting the number of employees allowed access to the Guides; (2) all of IBP’s employees were required to sign agreements not to disclose IBP’s trade secrets and confidential and proprietary information; (3) part of the measures taken to prevent unauthorized disclosure was to limit access to the Guides; (4) employees signed non-disclosure agreements in regard to “trade secret, technical information or business information” of IBP not available to the public; and (5) Klumpe did not have authorization to remove the Guides from IBP’s facility. As a superintendent, Klumpe had access to the Guides and signed a nondisclosure agreement. Klumpe also signed Conflict of Interest commitments whereby he agreed that he would not, for his or anyone else’s gain, make use of or disclose confidential information learned as a result of his employment with IBP.

As part of the discovery process in the Escamilla suit, Fadduol & Glasheen 4 noticed the deposition of Klumpe. The deposition notice directed Klumpe to produce certain documents and tangible things at his deposition. One of the 13 itemized requests was “Any and all documents which show the crewing guidelines for ... ” the hock-cutter machine being operated by Escamilla at the time of his injury. The deposition notice was served on attorney Ken Muncy, counsel for IBP, and on Blackburn, who was Klumpe’s personal at *467 torney. Blackburn had previously notified Muncy that Blackburn represented Klumpe and that contacts with Klumpe about the Escamilla suit should include Blackburn. Muncy, therefore, advised Fadduol & Glasheen that Klumpe’s deposition should be arranged through Blackburn.

After service of the deposition notice, Klumpe delivered certain documents to Blackburn, including a copy of the Guides which Klumpe took from his office at IBP’s plant. The copy of the Guides furnished to Blackburn contained 18 pages of crewing information as to the job on which Escamilla was injured and other jobs at IBP’s plant.

IBP filed objections and a motion for protective order in regard to certain of the documents which Klumpe had been directed to produce at his deposition, including the Guides. A copy of the motion was faxed to Blackburn. Muncy advised Klumpe via telephone call that IBP considered certain of the documents requested by Fadduol & Glasheen to be confidential IBP materials. Attorneys Muncy and Blackburn scheduled a meeting for Monday, June 30th, to review documents Klumpe possessed which would be responsive to the deposition notice. On Sunday, June 29th, in response to a letter request from Faddoul & Glasheen for “informal discovery” of all documents provided to Blackburn by Klumpe, Blackburn faxed copies of documents, including all the Guides, to Fadduol & Glasheen. On June 30th, Muncy learned that Blackburn had faxed copies of documents including the Guides to Fadduol & Glasheen, and contacted Fadduol & Glasheen. A Rule 11 agreement was reached whereby the faxed documents were to be kept confidential by Fadduol & Glasheen until a hearing could be held to determine the privileged nature of the documents.

An amended motion for protective order was then filed by IBP seeking (1) determination by the trial court in the Escamilla suit that certain of the documents faxed by Blackburn, including the Guides, were privileged under Tex.R. Evid. 507 (trade secrets) and (2) an order protecting the confidential nature of the documents. Following hearing on IBP’s Motion for Protective Order, the trial court ordered that the Guides faxed by Blackburn to Fadduol & Glasheen were not to be disclosed to any third parties other than witnesses or consulting experts as necessary for prosecution of the Escamilla suit.

The Escamilla suit settled during trial. Final judgment was entered on May 21, 1998. The previously-entered protective order was not specifically addressed by the judgment, although the judgment provided that all relief “not expressly granted herein is denied.” 5

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Bluebook (online)
101 S.W.3d 461, 2001 Tex. App. LEXIS 7729, 2001 WL 1456173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ibp-inc-v-klumpe-texapp-2001.