Minnesota Mining & Manufacturing Co. v. Technical Tape Corp.

23 Misc. 2d 671, 192 N.Y.S.2d 102, 1959 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3044
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 11, 1959
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 23 Misc. 2d 671 (Minnesota Mining & Manufacturing Co. v. Technical Tape Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Minnesota Mining & Manufacturing Co. v. Technical Tape Corp., 23 Misc. 2d 671, 192 N.Y.S.2d 102, 1959 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3044 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1959).

Opinion

Arthur D. Brennan, J,

This action was instituted by the plaintiff for injunctive relief and damages upon the ground that the defendants allegedly misappropriated and utilized processing methods of the plaintiff. The plaintiff contends that the defendants, Shalita and Cohen, acting on behalf of themselves as well as the defendant corporations, inveigled the defendant, Beyer, a former employee of the plaintiff, to breach his contract with the plaintiff and to disclose its trade secrets.

The plaintiff, hereinafter also referred to as “ 3M ”, is a Delaware corporation licensed to do business in the State of New York, and for the past 30 years has conducted a substantial and profitable business of manufacturing and selling, among other things, pressure-sensitive adhesive tape under the trade[672]*672mark, “Scotch”. Insofar as this action is concerned, there are two types of tape involved — one known as the crepe paper-backed pressure-sensitive masking tape which will hereinafter he referred to as “ masking tape ”, and the other is a transparent cellophane-backed pressure-sensitive adhesive tape, hereinafter referred to as “ cellophane tape 5 ’.

The defendant, Technical Tape Corp., hereinafter referred to as “ Technical Tape ”, is a New York corporation and since 1948 has been manufacturing and selling a masking tape; since the Fall of 1951 it also has been manufacturing and selling a cellophane tape. Both tapes have been sold under the trade name of “ Tuck”. The defendant, Vernon Chemical & Manufacturing Corp., hereinafter referred to as “Vernon”, is a New York corporation engaged since 1951 solely in the business of selling masking tape and cellophane tape manufactured by Technical Tape, and which tapes it has sold under the trade name, “ Black Wizzard ”. The fair inference to be drawn from the testimony is that “ Vernon ” was dominated by the defendant, Cohen. Said defendant, Cohen, founded Technical Tape in 1947 and since that time he has been the principal stockholder, a director, and the chief executive thereof. The defendant, Shalita, was the first employee of Technical Tape and since 1951 he has been and still is a vice-president of that company. From approximately 1943 through 1947, he was associated, as technical director, with a firm known as the Cofax Company which manufactured and sold pressure-sensitive adhesive cellophane tape.

The defendant, Beyer, was employed by the plaintiff from June 25, 1945 to May 25, 1951, first at the manufacturing plant of the plaintiff in St. Paul, Minnesota, and thereafter at its plant in Bristol, Pennsylvania. In 1930 this defendant was graduated from the University of Minnesota with the degree of Bachelor of Science in chemical engineering and two years later he received his Master’s Degree. Thereafter he was employed, as a chemist, by the Minnesota & Ontario Paper Company and by the Insulite Company, until the Spring of 1945 when he entered the employ of the plaintiff. At both of the plaintiff’s aforesaid plants Beyer’s duties included research in and development of particular kinds of pressure-sensitive adhesive tape (including especially masking tape) as well as quality control of the production of cellophane tape and masking tape.

As the result of the work of one Richard Gurley Drew, who entered the employ of the plaintiff in 1921, the basic masking tape patent (U. S. Pat. No. 1,760,820) was issued to the plaintiff [673]*673on Drew’s application on May 27,1930 and the basic cellophane tape patent (U. S. Pat. No. 2,177,627) was issued to the plaintiff on Drew’s application on October 31, 1939. Since the beginning of the plaintiff’s operations in the pressure-sensitive tape field, it has expended large sums in research and development for the purposes of enhancing the quality, life and performance characteristics of its tapes; and in the years from 1934 to 1945 the plaintiff expended for such purposes approximately $3,500,000, most of which was for the improvement of cellophane and masking tape.

From the beginning of the plaintiff’s operations in the pressure-sensitive tape field, to and including May 25, 1951, the plaintiff developed certain manufacturing standards, formulations, techniques and processes, and special machinery and equipment used in connection therewith (with respect to masking tape and cellophane tape) which, during said period, were not disclosed to the public by plaintiff in patents or otherwise, and which were of value to the plaintiff. Every reasonable precaution was taken by plaintiff to insure that the said manufacturing standards, formulations, techniques, processes, and the special machinery and equipment used in connection therewith, would not be disclosed or described to any person who, by virtue of the nature of his employment with the plaintiff, was not entitled to have knowledge thereof; and one of said precautionary means was to require all technical employees whose duties would require them to have knowledge of some or all of plaintiff’s processes to execute a form of agreement, hereinafter referred to as the “ Technical Agreement ”, which, among other things, bound said employees not to disclose or divulge any of plaintiff’s processes to anyone without plaintiff’s prior written consent. This “ Technical Agreement” also provided that any such employee, upon leaving the employ of the plaintiff, would not enter the employment of any competitor for a period of one year. The defendant, Beyer, signed such an agreement. The plaintiff maintained its secret processes in so-called Standard Books ”, the distribution and use of which was limited to employees whose duties required them to have knowledge of plaintiff’s processes; said books were so constructed and written (by the use of code symbols and otherwise) as not to be intelligible and comprehensible, in particular portions thereof, to a person not having access to an entire set of the standards, and it was plaintiff’s general policy and practice not to disclose its manufacturing processes and formulations or its technological “ know-how ” to other persons or companies, even companies holding licenses under plaintiff’s tape patents.

[674]*674The defendant, Beyer, who was a trained and qualified chemist while working at plaintiff’s tape laboratory in St. Paul, had access to a complete set of manufacturing standards of the plaintiff as well as to those production areas in plaintiff’s factory where the manufacture of masking tape and cellophane tape was carried out. Said defendant’s duties, while working in the tape laboratory in St. Paul, included experiments on, among other things, various types of saturants used on masking tape as well as the so-called alkabize backsize process ” for masking tape. Prior to his transfer to the plaintiff’s plant in Bristol, Pennsylvania, said defendant was well instructed in the plaintiff’s quality control procedures with respect to the manufacture of both masking tape and cellophane tape. In early 1949 the plaintiff promoted the defendant, Beyer, to the position of assistant supervisor of quality control at the plaintiff’s Bristol plant wherein masking tape and cellophane tape were being manufactured and it was his responsibility as well as the responsibility of other supervisors to insure against the improper disclosure of any of the manufacturing information set forth in plaintiff’s standards books. Beyer’s duties required him to have a familiarity with all of plaintiff’s manufacturing standards and each phase of the manufacturing operation pertaining to the aforesaid tapes.

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Bluebook (online)
23 Misc. 2d 671, 192 N.Y.S.2d 102, 1959 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3044, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/minnesota-mining-manufacturing-co-v-technical-tape-corp-nysupct-1959.