Masonite Corp. v. County of Mendocino Air Quality Management District

42 Cal. App. 4th 436, 49 Cal. Rptr. 2d 639, 96 Daily Journal DAR 1153, 96 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 766, 1996 Cal. App. LEXIS 84
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 1, 1996
DocketA070403
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 42 Cal. App. 4th 436 (Masonite Corp. v. County of Mendocino Air Quality Management District) 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
Masonite Corp. v. County of Mendocino Air Quality Management District, 42 Cal. App. 4th 436, 49 Cal. Rptr. 2d 639, 96 Daily Journal DAR 1153, 96 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 766, 1996 Cal. App. LEXIS 84 (Cal. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

Opinion

SWAGER, J.

The trial court granted in part and denied in greater part the

motion for preliminary injunction of appellant Masonite Corporation (hereafter Masonite or appellant) to enjoin respondent County of Mendocino Air Quality Management District (hereafter the District) from disclosing to the real party in interest, Citizens for a Healthy Ukiah (hereafter CHU), information contained in reports filed pursuant to the Air Toxics “Hot Spots” Information and Assessment Act of 1987 (Health & Saf. Code, § 44300 et *441 seq.) 1 claimed by Masonite to be protected “trade secrets” under section 44346. In this appeal, Masonite challenges the trial court’s denial of trade secret status to information classified as “emission factors,” and the findings that Masonite waived any trade secret privilege for material in the reports disclosed to the public by either Masonite or public agencies and designated as “Category 2, 3 and 4” information. Masonite also claims that the trial court improperly required an undertaking of $100,000 to be filed as a condition of the injunctive relief granted.

We conclude that emission factors qualify as protected trade secrets under the Act, and find that Masonite waived the trade secret privilege only for “Category 2” information—that is, information publicly and intially disclosed by Masonite rather than by public agencies. We further find that the trial court did not err by requiring Masonite to file a $100,000 undertaking under Code of Civil Procedure section 529. We accordingly affirm the judgment in part and reverse in part.

Statement of Facts and Procedural History

As a facility operator defined by the Act (§§ 44304, 44307), in September of 1992 and April of 1993 Masonite submitted to the District the requisite emissions inventory reports (§ 44341) and health risk assessments (§ 44360) in both censored and uncensored versions, with the former redacting information designated by Masonite as trade secrets. 2 The District was asked by Masonite to maintain the confidentiality of the trade secrets contained in the reports. (§ 44346). This complex and protracted litigation was triggered when, in August of 1993, CHU filed a request with the District for the uncensored copies of the reports. Masonite then filed the present action for declaratory and injunctive relief to prevent the District from releasing information identified in the reports as trade secrets (§ 44346). CHU intervened in the action.

A temporary restraining order was issued by the trial court which enjoined disclosure by the District of the information identified by Masonite as trade *442 secrets, but it was subsequently dissolved following a hearing and denial of Masonite’s motion for a preliminary injunction. The trial court decided that Masonite waived all claims of trade secrets by failing to properly specify them on facility diagrams as required by Regulations, sections 93312 and 93321. Masonite subsequently filed a petition for writ of mandate with this court, and we ruled that section 93321, subdivision (c) of the Regulations upon which the trial court relied to find a waiver, “must be declared void as inconsistent with the enabling legislation.” (Masonite Corp. v. Superior Court (1994) 25 Cal.App.4th 1045, 1054 [31 Cal.Rptr.2d 173], hereafter Masonite I.) We concluded that under section 44346, subdivision (a), “Masonite properly asserted trade secrets in writing in the report, defeating any claim of waiver on that ground,” and directed the trial court “to reinstate its prior temporary restraining order and its sealing order, and to proceed with any unresolved issues in the case . . . .” (25 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1054, 1058.)

Upon receipt of the remittitur, the trial court received additional evidence and argument on Masonite’s motion for preliminary injunction. Based upon the evidence presented and with the approval of the parties, the trial court categorized the information for which Masonite sought trade secret protection as follows: category 1 is information, including emission factors, not previously disclosed except to the District in the censored reports; category 2 is information Masonite initially disclosed to the District in uncensored reports, but subsequently identified as trade secrets; category 3 is information for which Masonite claimed trade secret protection in the reports filed with the District, but which was disclosed to “an environmental law organization” by the state Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment (hereafter the OEHHA); and category 4 is information for which Masonite claimed trade secret protection in the reports filed with the District, but which was disclosed to an environmental organization by the United States Environmental Protection Agency (hereafter the EPA).

In an interim ruling issued on September 6, 1994, the trial court found that Masonite’s failure to assert trade secret claims in the reports for category 2 information was “inadvertent,” but nevertheless constituted a waiver of “trade secret protection as to all of it” under section 44346, subdivision (a). Masonite was ordered to lodge with the court a “new redacted version” of its reports “with all the Category 2 information disclosed,” and to provide copies thereof to both the District and CHU. As to the category 3 and 4 information, the court found that the disclosure by the OEHHA and the EPA was inadvertent and did not “transform any legitimate non-public record, trade secret information into a public record” as defined by Government *443 Code section 6254.5. An in camera review of the category 1, 3 and 4 information was scheduled, and the parties were ordered to submit “separate statements” which enumerate the specific “redacted facts” for which trade secret protection has been claimed and contested, along with supporting reasons and evidence. A final ruling on the motion for preliminary injunction was deferred pending receipt by the court of the separate statements 3 and additional argument.

In June of 1995, following further hearings, the trial court issued a tentative statement of decision. In it, the court clarified the interim ruling by reiterating that Masonite must disclose “all the Category 2 information,” wherever previously stated, in the new redacted versions of the reports, not just the references “in those locations in the documents where the information had previously been disclosed and then covered up.” Findings were also made as to the other categories of information still at issue. In a change from its earlier interim ruling, the court declared that the category 3 and 4 information which had been inadvertently and mistakenly disclosed by public agencies to environmental organizations is no longer “known only to certain individuals within a commercial concern,” and thus is a “public record” rather than a protected “trade secret” as defined in subdivision (d) of Government Code section 6254.7. No “significant harm” to Masonite from “disclosure ... of information that has already been disclosed” was found.

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Bluebook (online)
42 Cal. App. 4th 436, 49 Cal. Rptr. 2d 639, 96 Daily Journal DAR 1153, 96 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 766, 1996 Cal. App. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/masonite-corp-v-county-of-mendocino-air-quality-management-district-calctapp-1996.