Pyromatics, Inc. v. Petruziello

454 N.E.2d 588, 7 Ohio App. 3d 131, 7 Ohio B. 165, 1983 Ohio App. LEXIS 10932
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 27, 1983
Docket44888
StatusPublished
Cited by64 cases

This text of 454 N.E.2d 588 (Pyromatics, Inc. v. Petruziello) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pyromatics, Inc. v. Petruziello, 454 N.E.2d 588, 7 Ohio App. 3d 131, 7 Ohio B. 165, 1983 Ohio App. LEXIS 10932 (Ohio Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

Parrino, J.

This appeal arises from a grant of injunctive relief and the award of money damages to plaintiff-appellee, Pyromatics, Inc., based on its verified complaint alleging unlawful use and disclosure of various trade secrets and other proprietary information by defendants-appellants, Michael J. Petruziello, Roman-eo, Inc., Glen A. Siders, William R. Erzen, Charles S. Blackwell and Raymond S. Woodcock. 1

Pyromatics, Inc. was incorporated in June 1975. At that time, it bought the entire quartz products division of Sherwood Refractories, Inc., a subsidiary of TRW, Inc., including patents, production technology, recorded technical information and data and equipment. The principal shareholders in Pyromatics were former employees of Sherwood. The business of Sherwood’s quartz division, and of Pyromatics since its inception, has been the manufacture of fused and powdered quartz products for industry. The fused quartz products, which are the focus of this lawsuit, are targeted to a limited market; investment costs for production are high. Fused quartz cores, as *132 used in investment casting, comprise a major portion of the production of fused quartz products. These cores are manufactured by use of a redraw machine. The trial court’s findings of fact may be quoted for a brief description:

“The redraw machine is a device in which quartz rods or tubes are fed at a controlled speed by means of wheels into a flame that maintains a regulated temperature on the surface of the quartz rod so that the quartz becomes viscous. The viscous quartz is cooled as it emerges from the heat center and by means of a second set of wheels is drawn-or extruded from the heat center so that it cools into a rod or tube of smaller but similar configuration to the feed item. The goal of this process is to produce a smaller rod or tube with very fine dimensional tolerances. That smaller rod or tube is then further cut, ground, bent, beaded and fused with other rods or tubes to fine tolerances for use in casts for metal products. The casts primarily produce metal products for the jet engine industry. The function of the small quartz rod or tube is to enable the.jet engine piece to have very small air passages that will facilitate cooling the engine.”

The particular designs of the redraw machine and the production techniques used are claimed by Pyromatics to be trade secrets and proprietary information.

Defendant-appellant Michael Petru-ziello also worked for Sherwood Refractories, Inc. at the time its quartz division was purchased by Pyromatics. He became one of the first employees of Pyromatics in 1975. Petruziello worked with the redraw machine and had access, over the years, to production costs, yield rates and other operating information. Petruziello held a number of positions with Pyro-matics during his tenure there and was familiar with all the equipment and production techniques used by Pyromatics in manufacturing fused quartz. He had also had contact with the major customers, particularly General Electric Company (“GE”).

In 1979, Petruziello left his employment with Pyromatics and caused Roman-eo, Inc. to be formed. Romanco’s only business has been the production of fused quartz products; Romaneo is in direct competition with Pyromatics for the limited target market for these products. 2 Romaneo manufactures its fused quartz cores by use of a redraw machine, built by Petruziello, and a production process which are indistinguishable in their essential components from those at Pyro- *133 matics. In 1980, Romaneo was able to successfully underbid Pyromatics on the GE CF6-50 core project. 3

Defendants-appellants Siders, Erzen, Blackwell and Woodcock are all former employees of Pyromatics and either current or former employees of Romaneo.

Following a two-week trial to the court, the court rendered its opinion and extensive findings of fact and conclusions of law. The findings of fact are described more fully under the appropriate assignment of error; the conclusions of law, in pertinent part, read:

“1. The unpatented design and details of Pyromatics redraw machine that was in use when the individual defendants worked for Pyromatics are trade secrets of Pyromatics.
“2. Operating costs, prices, and yields of Pyromatics in making and selling redrawn quartz rods and tubes are trade secrets of Pyromatics.
“3. Procedures utilized by Pyro-matics to cut, bend, bead, weld, and measure redrawn quartz cores and rods are in the public domain and their combination into a single process does not involve significant novelty to constitute a trade secret.
“4. By virtue of their employment relationship, all of the individual defendants owed a duty to Pyromatics not to disclose to outsiders or to use for personal advantage the trade secrets of Pyro-matics.
“5. By written employment contract, all individual defendants had a duty not to disclose to outsiders nor use at any time, even after leaving the employ of Py-romatics, the trade secrets of Pyromatics except on behalf of Pyromatics. Such duty, however, did not preclude any individual defendant except Charles Blackwell from initiating a competing business or working for a competitor of Pyro-matics so long as such defendant did not utilize trade secrets of Pyromatics.
“6. By written contract, Charles Blackwell had a duty not to engage any competing business to Pyromatics for a period of two years after he left the employ of Pyromatics.
“7. Michael Petruziello breached his duties under written contract to Pyro-matics by using confidential information as to yields, prices, and operating costs of Pyromatics to enable Romaneo to compete with Pyromatics.
“8. Charles Blackwell breached his duty not to engage in a competing business to Pyromatics by becoming an employee of Romaneo.
“9. Romaneo had a duty not to utilize information which it knew was obtained from another person in breach of a duty not to disclose that information. It violated that duty by using the information improperly obtained or disclosed by Petruziello.
“10. Romaneo and Petruziello, by breaching their duties not to use confidential information obtained through a trust relationship, caused Pyromatics to lose $25,060.00 in profits on sales to ICL and AETC, $9,408.00 as a reduced price on a CF6-50 contract of 4,800 sets of cores let in December 1980, and $18,182.50, representing the further profit Pyromatics would have earned if it gained 60% of that December, 1980, contract from General Electric.
“11. Pyromatics has not proven by a preponderance of the evidence that at any time after 1979, it would have been a sole source supplier for General Electric on CF6-50 parts, that expenditures for capital equipment were losses of any sort, and that overstocking would not have resulted with competition from Romaneo.
“12.

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Bluebook (online)
454 N.E.2d 588, 7 Ohio App. 3d 131, 7 Ohio B. 165, 1983 Ohio App. LEXIS 10932, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pyromatics-inc-v-petruziello-ohioctapp-1983.