MMR Constructors, Inc. v. JB Group of LA, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Louisiana
DecidedApril 26, 2022
Docket3:22-cv-00267
StatusUnknown

This text of MMR Constructors, Inc. v. JB Group of LA, LLC (MMR Constructors, Inc. v. JB Group of LA, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MMR Constructors, Inc. v. JB Group of LA, LLC, (M.D. La. 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

MIDDLE DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA

MMR CONSTRUCTORS, INC. CIVIL ACTION VERSUS JB GROUP OF LA, LLC, ET AL. NO. 22-00267-BAJ-RLB

RULING AND ORDER GRANTING MOTION FOR TEMPORARY RESTRAINING ORDER AND SETTING STATUS CONFERENCE TO DETERMINE DATE OF PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION HEARING In this action, Plaintiff MMR Constructors, Inc. (“MMR”) seeks damages and injunctive relief against JB Group of LA, LLC d/b/a Infrastructure Solutions Group CISG”) and former MMR employee David Heroman. (Doc. 1). Now before the Court is MMR’s Motion For Temporary Restraining Order And To Set Preliminary Injunction Hearing (Doc. 2), seeking immediate injunctive relief prohibiting Defendants from accessing, using, disclosing, or disseminating MMR’s trade secrets and confidential business information. For reasons to follow, MMR’s Motion will be granted and a temporary restraining order (TRO) will be issued. Further, the Court will set a telephone status conference for Wednesday, April 27, 2022 at 3:30 p.m. to determine a date for a preliminary injunction hearing and to discuss what discovery will be allowed prior to any such hearing. I. BACKGROUND A. Allegations For present purposes the Court accepts as true the following allegations set forth in MMR’s verified Complaint (Doc. 1):

MMR and ISG are competitors in the telecommunications market. (Doc. 1 at {| 15, 25). Each provides electrical and instrumentation services to clients in Louisiana and further afield. (See id.). MMR is based in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and is now one of the largest electrical and instrumentation contractors in the United States, providing services to public and private customers. Ud. at § 1). To develop and maintain customer relationships, MMR researches customer needs, develops marketing strategies, creates financial forecasts and business forecasts, and develops proprietary pricing structures and estimating tools. Ud. at { 16). These efforts, which are dependent on the accumulation, application, and secrecy of MMR’s confidential business information, are crucial to MMR’s success in the competitive market. ([d.). Thus, MMBR’s confidential information—and particularly its customer lists and customer pricing information (including costs and labor rates)——has substantial value to MMR. MMR’s competitive position depends on protecting its confidential business information, and MMR takes various steps to keep its information out of its competitors’ hands. (/d. at § 17). Among other things, MMR requires its employees to sign and agree to various employment policies and procedures designed to protect the confidentiality of its information. Ud. at { 18). MMR requires employees to sign and acknowledge its Business Code of Ethics, which requires employees to “protect not only the assets of MMR, but also its clients, vendors, suppliers and other third parties[,|” including “tangible assets and intangible assets, such as confidential and proprietary information.” (/d.). MMR also requires employees to sign and

acknowledge its Rules of Conduct, which prohibits employees from “Theft or unauthorized removal of any property belonging to @) MMR, (ii) the workplace, (iii) the job site, Gv) fellow employees, or (v) clients, contractors, suppliers, or vendors of MMR.” Gd.). Further, MMR requires employees to sign and abide by its “Employer Loyalty/Confidentiality/Trade Secrets/Conflict of Interest Agreement.” (/d.). Through this agreement, employees agree that: [djuring and after the term of his employment, the EMPLOYEE agrees to hold as confidential all knowledge and information he has acquired in connection with his/her employment with MMR, and which is not otherwise generally available to the public or third parties, including but not limited to customer lists, financial information, pricing information, marketing material, technical data, drawings, memoranda, notes, programs, electronic gear, personnel records, policies, other items, and papers and reproductions (all of which is deemed “Confidential” and a trade secret) thereof relating the business of MMR. (Id.). Defendant ISG is based in Gonzalez, Louisiana, and also provides industrial electrical and instrumentation services to public and private customers. (Id. at 4 24). ISG was not always a direct competitor of MMR, but that changed in July 2021 when ISG recruited long-term MMR Project Manager Jason Yates away from MMR to join ISG in a “key management role, with an ownership stake in the company [ISG].” Ud. at 26). Since landing Yates, ISG has successfully recruited five additional employees away from MMR: Travis Dardenne, Walter Huffman, Tiffany Medine, Kasey Kraft, and, most recently, Defendant David Heroman. (id. at 4] 27-28). In addition to targeting MMR’s personnel, ISG has endeavored to obtain MMR’s confidential and proprietary information. MMR first learned of these efforts in late March 2022, when it caught former MMR Project Engineer (and current ISG

employee) Kasey Kraft transferring documents from his MMR work computer to an external storage device. Ud. at {[ 32). When confronted about the file transfer, Kraft initially claimed that he was merely transferring personal information, not MMR’s trade secrets and confidential business information. (/d.). MMR’s own review of the external storage device showed otherwise: “Kraft had attempted to steal trade secrets but was thwarted when caught in the act.” (Id.). Unfortunately for MMR, it was not so lucky when former MMR Project Manager (and current ISG employee) David Heroman abruptly resigned just days later, on April 8, 2022. Following his resignation, MMR engaged a third-party computer forensics firm to determine what, if any, trade secrets Defendant Heroman took with him. (Ud. at § 36). 38. The forensic analysis revealed that in the month before his resignation, Heroman downloaded over 1,500 files from MMR’s systems to several electronic storage devices and personal Google Drive account. (/d. at § 38).1 Included among these are hundreds of files believed to contain MMR’s trade secrets and confidential business information, specifically including MMR’s “confidential bids, pricing, and estimating tools.” Ud. at | 43; see generally id. at [9 40-58). “Taken together, the misappropriated information essentially provides [ISG] with the blueprints to replicate MMR’s business, without investing any of the substantial time, money, effort, and manpower needed to create the information,” with potentially “devastating” consequences to MMR. (/d. at 59).

1Tn total, the initial forensic analysis identified 14 external storage devices that were plugged into Heroman’s work computer during the March-April, 2022 timeframe. Among these, only 4 external storage devices have since been returned to MMR. (/d. at J 39).

B. Procedural History On April 25, 2022, MMR initiated this action against ISG and Heroman, seeking damages and temporary and permanent injunctive relief prohibiting Defendants from accessing, using, disclosing, or disseminating MMR’s trade secrets and confidential business information. (Doc. 1). Most relevant here, MMR’s verified Complaint alleges that Defendants’ usurpation of its trade secrets and confidential business information violates the Defend Trade Secrets Act, 18 U.S.C. § 1836, et seg. (“DTSA”), and its Louisiana counterpart, the Louisiana Uniform Trade Secrets Act, La. B.S. § 51:1431, et seg. “LUTSA”). Minutes after filing its verified Complaint, MMR filed the instant Motion For Temporary Restraining Order And To Set Preliminary Injunction Hearing (Doc. 2). MMR also filed a Motion for Expedited Discovery (Doc.

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MMR Constructors, Inc. v. JB Group of LA, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mmr-constructors-inc-v-jb-group-of-la-llc-lamd-2022.