INEOS Group Ltd. v. Chevron Phillips Chemical Co., LP

312 S.W.3d 843, 2009 Tex. App. LEXIS 9604, 2009 WL 4854349
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 17, 2009
Docket01-09-00504-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 312 S.W.3d 843 (INEOS Group Ltd. v. Chevron Phillips Chemical Co., LP) 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
INEOS Group Ltd. v. Chevron Phillips Chemical Co., LP, 312 S.W.3d 843, 2009 Tex. App. LEXIS 9604, 2009 WL 4854349 (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION

LAURA CARTER HIGLEY, Justice.

INEOS 1 appeals the trial court’s issuance of a temporary injunction prohibiting it from soliciting, negotiating, or entering into technology licensing agreements for a particular grade of polyethylene plastic *846 made by using a certain manufacturing process. The temporary injunction is based on Chevron Phillips Chemical Company’s (“CPChem”) claim that the technology underlying this manufacturing process is derived from its trade secrets. In one issue, INEOS argues that the technology is no longer entitled to trade secret protection because, through a lack of vigilance, CPChem disclosed the technology to third parties, which are no longer required to keep the information confidential.

Because INEOS has not shown that the trial court abused its discretion by issuing the temporary injunction, we affirm.

Factual & Procedural Background

Beginning in the early 1950s, Phillips Petroleum Company, a corporate predecessor of CPChem, developed technology important to the manufacturing of polyethylene plastic. Phillips discovered that a chrome catalyst could be used to make high density polyethylene, a tough, durable plastic. In 1958, a Phillips engineer invented the loop slurry process for manufacturing high density polyethylene. This process had a number of advantages. It permitted high density polyethylene to be made more cheaply, more efficiently, more reliably, and in greater quantities than the previous process allowed.

In 2000, Chevron Chemical merged with Phillips to create CPChem. At that time, CPChem acquired the ownership rights to the loop slurry process. Since the 1950s, Phillips and CPChem have invested significant time and money to further develop the loop slurry technology.

Phillips provided the loop slurry technology to other chemical companies through licensing agreements. This enabled the licensee company to construct its own loop slurry plant to manufacture high density polyethylene. Under a licensing agreement, the licensee received a license package, which included the technical information necessary to construct a loop slurry plant. In the package, Phillips provided not only its most recent loop slurry technology to the licensee, but also provided its historical technical information reaching back to the 1950s. After a licensee had constructed its loop slurry plant, Phillips continued to share updated technical information with the licensee as the information was developed. Since 1958, Phillips and CPChem have entered into over 100 licensing agreements for the loop slurry technology. CPChem succeeded to the license interests of Phillips after the merger between Phillips Chemical and Chevron Chemical.

In the mid-1950s, Phillips entered into licensing agreements with Distillers Company Limited, Celanese Corporation, and an Italian company, Solvay. Under these agreements, Phillips provided technical information for the construction of polyethylene manufacturing plants. Each agreement contained a perpetual confidentiality provision, requiring the licensee to keep the technical information provided by Phillips confidential into perpetuity.

Phillips continued to share its technical information, including its loop slurry technology, with the licensees until 1974. Years later, the manufacturing plants constructed under the three licenses became part of a joint venture between Solvay and BP International Limited. In 2004, BP purchased Solva/s interest in the joint venture. BP then formed a separate company, Innovene, to hold the assets of the joint venture, including the plants constructed pursuant to the three licenses. The next year INEOS purchased Inno-vene. As a result, INEOS succeeded to the interests of the original licensees.

When it purchased Innovene, INEOS also acquired Innovene’s loop slurry pro *847 cess. INEOS soon began licensing the Innovene loop slurry technology to third parties. Pursuant to three separate licensing agreements, INEOS provided the Innovene loop slurry technology to three Chinese companies for the construction of polyethylene plants.

After learning of the licensing agreements, CPChem filed suit against INEOS for misappropriation of trade secrets and breach of contract. CPChem alleged that the loop slurry technology licensed by IN-EOS contained the loop slurry technology provided by Phillips to INEOS’s predecessors under the 1950s licenses. CPChem alleged that the loop slurry technology disclosed by INEOS to its licensees was CPChem’s trade secrets and confidential information. CPChem further claimed that INEOS’s licensing of the technology violated the perpetual confidentiality provisions of the three 1950s licensing agreements between Phillips and INEOS’s predecessors. CPChem sought permanent injunctive relief and damages.

After CPChem filed suit, INEOS continued to license the Innovene loop slurry technology to other companies. CPChem requested the trial court to grant a temporary injunction prohibiting INEOS from disclosing the Innovene loop slurry technology to any third party, including IN-EOS’s licensees, pending trial.

The trial court conducted an eight-day evidentiary hearing on CPChem’s application for temporary injunction. Among its grounds for opposition to the temporary injunction, INEOS argued that, over the years, CPChem failed to diligently maintain the secrecy of its loop slurry technology. INEOS cited agreements under which Phillips had disclosed its loop slurry technology without requiring the licensee to maintain the confidentiality of the teehnol-ogy into perpetuity. INEOS specifically relied on agreements signed by Phillips containing secrecy clauses that had expired years earlier.

CPChem responded that no evidence exists to show that the expiration of the confidentiality provisions resulted in the public disclosure of its loop slurry technology. CPChem offered evidence showing that the potential threat of disclosure of its trade secrets following the expiration of the confidentiality provisions had been ameliorated or neutralized with respect to each of the agreements cited by INEOS.

At the hearing’s conclusion, the trial court granted CPChem’s request for a temporary injunction. The trial court did not file findings of fact or conclusions of law, but determined in its order that CPChem “has established (a) viable causes of action against INEOS, (b) a probable right to the relief sought on those causes of action, and (c) a probable, imminent, and irreparable injury in the interim for which CPChem has no adequate remedy at law.”

In the order, the trial court narrowly tailored the injunctive relief granted to CPChem. Specifically, the trial court ordered that INEOS is

temporarily enjoined from soliciting, negotiating, or entering into licenses for monomodal high density polyethylene grade of 5502 having a melt index in the range of 0.3 to 0.4 and a density of 954-957 kilograms per cubic meter by whatever name made using a chrome catalyst in a loop slurry process.

INEOS appeals, challenging the temporary injunction in one issue. 2

*848

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
312 S.W.3d 843, 2009 Tex. App. LEXIS 9604, 2009 WL 4854349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ineos-group-ltd-v-chevron-phillips-chemical-co-lp-texapp-2009.