Red Valve, Inc. v. Titan Valve, Inc., 2018 NCBC 31A (Corrected 04-17-2018)
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION COUNTY OF GASTON 18CVS1064
RED VALVE, INC. AND ) HILLENBRAND, INC., ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) ORDER AND OPINION ON vs. ) PLAINTIFFS’ MOTION FOR ) PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION TITAN VALVE, INC.; BEN PAYNE; ) [CORRECTED] FABIAN AEDO ORTIZ; GREG ) FARRIS; JOHN DOES 1-10, ) ) Defendants.
1. THIS MATTER is before the Court upon Plaintiffs Red Valve, Inc. (“Red
Valve”) and Hillenbrand, Inc.’s (“Hillenbrand”) (collectively, “Plaintiffs” or “Red
Valve” or the “Company”) Motion for Preliminary Injunction (“Motion”) pursuant to
Rule 65 of the North Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure in the above-captioned case.
Having considered the Motion, the briefs, exhibits, affidavits in support of and in
opposition to the Motion, the arguments of counsel at a hearing held on the Motion
on April 5, 2018, and the other appropriate documents of record, the Court hereby
GRANTS in part and DENIES in part the Motion as set forth herein.
Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough LLP, by David N. Allen and Benjamin S. Chesson, for Plaintiffs Red Valve, Inc. and Hillenbrand, Inc.
Gray, Layton, Kersh, Solomon, Furr & Smith, P.A., by Michael L. Carpenter, Marshall P. Walker, and Christopher L. Welchel, for Defendants Titan Valve, Inc, Ben Payne, Fabian Aedo Ortiz, and Greg Farris.
Bledsoe, Judge. I.
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
2. Red Valve filed a Verified Complaint initiating this action on March 14,
2018, asserting claims against Titan Valve, Inc. (“Titan”), Ben Payne (“Payne”),
Fabian Aedo Ortiz (“Aedo”), and Greg Farris (“Farris”) (collectively, “Defendants”)
arising out of Defendants’ alleged wrongful conduct in acquiring, possessing, and
using Red Valve’s alleged confidential and proprietary information in a competing
valve manufacturing company they created shortly before Payne and Aedo were
terminated from Red Valve on March 14, 2018.
3. At the same time Plaintiffs filed their Verified Complaint, Plaintiffs also
filed a Motion for a Temporary Restraining Order (the “TRO Motion”) and
Preliminary Injunction (the “P.I. Motion”), seeking injunctive relief against
Defendants. The TRO and P.I. Motions seek relief based solely on Plaintiffs’ claims
for alleged misappropriation of trade secrets against all Defendants under N.C. Gen.
Stat. § 66-152, et seq., and for breach of contract against Aedo.1
4. Later that same day, the matter was designated a mandatory complex
business case by the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of North Carolina and
assigned by Chief Business Court Judge James L. Gale to the undersigned.
5. After designation, and also on March 14, 2018, the Court held a hearing on
the TRO Motion, ex parte, at which Plaintiffs’ counsel was present. At the conclusion
1Plaintiffs also assert claims against all Defendants for unfair and deceptive trade practices under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 75-1.1, conversion, and civil conspiracy, and against Defendants Payne and Aedo for breach of fiduciary duty. of the hearing, the Court entered a temporary restraining order (the “TRO”), which
became effective immediately and was scheduled to expire at 2:00 PM on March 24,
2018. In the TRO, the Court noticed a hearing on the P.I. Motion for 9:00 AM on
March 23, 2018.
6. On March 22, 2018, the Court granted the parties’ joint motion to extend
the TRO and rescheduled the hearing on the P.I. Motion for 2:00 PM on April 5, 2018.
7. On March 28, 2018, Plaintiffs filed a motion for expedited discovery (the
“Expedited Discovery Motion”) in preparation for the hearing on the P.I. Motion. The
Court held a telephone hearing on the Expedited Discovery Motion on the following
day, March 29, 2018. The Court memorialized its oral ruling at the telephone
hearing, granting in part and denying in part the Expedited Discovery Motion in an
Order dated March 30, 2018 (“March 30 Order”). The Court’s March 30 Order
required Defendants to produce limited document discovery to Plaintiffs by 3:00 PM
on April 3, 2018 and permitted Plaintiffs to take a Rule 30(b)(6) deposition of Titan
on a narrow range of topics at 9:00 AM on April 4, 2018.
8. On April 4, 2018, Plaintiffs advised the Court and Defendants that it
intended to offer live testimony from a forensic analyst, Clark Walton, at the P.I.
Hearing. By Order dated that same date, the Court ruled that Plaintiffs would not
be permitted to offer live testimony at the P.I. Hearing due to their failure to comply
with Business Court Rule 7.12. The Court, however, for good cause shown in the
circumstances, permitted Plaintiffs to offer limited affidavit testimony from Walton attesting to certain facts Plaintiffs attributed to Walton in their filings in support of
the P.I. Motion.
9. After the completion of full briefing and the permitted expedited discovery,
the Court held a hearing on the P.I. Motion on April 5, 2018 as scheduled. All parties
were represented by counsel at the hearing. With the parties’ consent and for good
cause shown, the Court entered an Order on April 5, 2018 extending the TRO until
5:00 PM on April 10, 2018.
10. The Motion is now ripe for resolution.
II.
FINDINGS OF FACT
11. The Court makes the following findings of fact for the limited purpose of
resolving the P.I. Motion. These findings are not binding on the Court in later
proceedings in this action. E.g., Lohrmann v. Iredell Mem’l Hosp., Inc., 174 N.C. App.
63, 75, 620 S.E.2d 258, 265 (2005) (“It is well settled that findings of fact made during
a preliminary injunction proceeding are not binding upon a court at a trial on the
merits.”).
12. Hillenbrand is a publicly traded company organized under the laws of the
State of Indiana with its principal place of business in Batesville, Indiana.
Hillenbrand is a diversified industrial company with multiple market-leading brands
that serve a wide variety of industries around the world.
13. Red Valve is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Hillenbrand and a corporation
organized under the laws of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania with its principal place of business in Carnegie, Pennsylvania. Red Valve owns and operates a large
manufacturing plant in Gaston County, North Carolina, where it manufactures a
variety of valve products, including, in particular, pinch valve sleeves.
14. Payne is a citizen and resident of Gaston County, North Carolina. Payne
worked for Red Valve for approximately twenty years. Until March 14, 2018, Payne
was Red Valve’s Vice President of Operations with responsibility for managing and
overseeing all of Red Valve’s global manufacturing operations, including oversight of
design, procurement, manufacturing, sales support, and business development.
15. Aedo is a citizen of Chile who resides in Pennsylvania and regularly
conducts business in North Carolina. Red Valve hired Aedo in December 2009, and
from October 2016 until March 14, 2018, Aedo was Red Valve’s International Sales
Manager for global operations.
16. Farris is a citizen and resident of Gaston County, North Carolina. Farris is
the President of Farris Conveyors, which for many years, including through March
2018, served as a manufacturer of component parts for Red Valve.
17. Titan is a corporation organized under the laws of the State of North
Carolina with its principal place of business in Gaston County, North Carolina.
Farris executed Titan’s articles of incorporation on January 25, 2018, and Titan was
formed on February 6, 2018 with Farris as Titan’s registered agent.
18. Since 1953, Red Valve has designed, manufactured, marketed, and sold
tailored engineered elastomer products, including valves, to meet a variety of flow
control applications for its global customer base. The products include sleeves, expansion joints, pinch valves, check valves, and valves utilizing Tideflex technology.
Red Valve sells not only “stock” valves, but it also works with customers across the
globe to design, market, manufacture, and sell products specifically tailored to meet
a variety of flow control applications.
19. In his role as Red Valve’s Vice President of Operations, Payne reported
directly to Red Valve’s President, Glenn Ritzi, and had access to Red Valve’s
confidential and proprietary information, including Red Valve’s business strategies,
employee information, financial data, design documents, and manufacturing
processes. He was also required to communicate directly with Red Valve’s existing
and prospective vendors and customers, independent representatives, distributors,
and the Company’s sales personnel in Carnegie, Pennsylvania. Red Valve terminated
Payne’s employment on March 14, 2018.
20. In his role as International Sales Manager, Defendant Aedo was responsible
for processing orders for existing and new customers, securing new sales
representatives and new customers, developing new accounts, building strong
relationships with key accounts, and increasing the international sales of the Red
Valve product lines. Like Payne, Aedo had access to Red Valve’s confidential,
proprietary, and trade secret information.
21. As part of his employment with Red Valve, Aedo signed an “Inventions,
Improvements, Copyrights and Trade Secrets Agreement” with Hillenbrand (“Trade
Secret Agreement”), dated September 18, 2017, which provides at paragraph 2 as
follows: I will carefully guard the trade secrets or confidential information of Company [defined as Hillenbrand or one its direct or remote subsidiaries], and I will not, while in the employ of Company or at any other time thereafter, disclose to anyone, directly or indirectly, nor use the benefit of for myself or third parties, any of Company’s trade secrets or confidential information without the written consent of the Company.
(Pls.’ Exs. Supp. Mot. Prelim. Inj. Ex. S [hereinafter “Trade Secrets Agmnt.”] ¶ 2, ECF
No. 28.)
22. Aedo further agreed in the Trade Secrets Agreement that:
Upon leaving the employ of Company, I will not take with me, without written consent of the Company, any property of Company in any form or media whatsoever, including electronic information or data in or on any media or at any location, including in the term “property” but not limited to any engineering or manufacturing drawing, blueprint or other reproduction, technical or manufacturing data, tables and calculations, letters, ledgers, customer lists, bills of material, or copies thereof, or any papers, records, discs, or other media containing confidential information pertaining to the business, operations or financial affairs of Company and I will return to Company any of the same then in my possession. I will hold all such property in my possession in trust and will make no use of such property for the benefit of others in violation of the trust.
(Trade Secrets Agmnt. § 3.)
23. Both Payne and Aedo agreed to “follow the policies” contained in the Red
Valve Employee Handbook, including the Handbook’s non-disclosure provision—
which forbids the improper use or disclosure of Red Valve’s confidential or trade
secret information because “[t]he protection of confidential business information and
trade secrets is vital to the interests and the success of Red Valve.” (See Pls.’ Exs.
Supp. Mot. Prelim. Inj. Ex. A [hereinafter “Ritzi Aff.”] ¶ 35.) Both Payne and Aedo
completed mandatory ethics training concerning, among other things, the
unauthorized use and disclosure of trade secrets. 24. In late 2017, Payne, Aedo, and Farris began discussing the formation of a
competing valve manufacturing company, which became Titan. Aedo worked to
develop sales and marketing plans for the new venture, Farris looked for a building
to house the Titan manufacturing facility and tools for making products, and Payne
focused on the manufacturing and operations of the new enterprise.
25. Payne, Aedo, and Farris met in Gastonia on January 7, 2018 to discuss
Titan. They decided that Titan would manufacture, market, and sell open frame,
standard frame, and close frame pinch valves. They also toured property located at
1413 Bessemer City Kings Mountain Highway in Bessemer City, North Carolina on
January 11, 2018. That same month, Titan paid to create Titan business cards, a
website, Titan-Valve.com email accounts, letterhead, and email signatures.
26. Also in January 2018, Defendants Payne and Aedo began storing and/or
using Red Valve’s confidential and proprietary information for use in Titan’s
business.
27. On January 19, 2018 and January 28, 2018, Payne utilized a program called
PC Mover Professional, which was created by Laplink Software, on his Red Valve
computer. This program moves or restores selected files, settings, user profiles, and
programs from an old computer to a new one. Red Valve did not authorize the use of
this program and was not otherwise aware that Payne was using it on his Red Valve
computer. Starting in October 2017, Payne also began attaching flash drives to his
Red Valve computer with increasing frequency compared to his historical use of such
devices. Payne stored a large quantity of Red Valve documents, including Red Valve build sheets, to these flash drives and his personal computer. To date, as many as
eleven devices to which Red Valve documents were transferred have not been
produced or accounted for.
28. On January 21, 2018, Aedo emailed Payne from his Titan email account to
direct him to set up a Dropbox account with his Titan-Valve.com email so they could
collaborate on the Titan “work environment.” (Pls.’ Exs. Supp. Mot. Prelim. Inj. Ex.
G.) Aedo had been using a Dropbox account connected to his Red Valve email address
to store thousands of files, many of them containing Red Valve’s confidential and
proprietary information, some of which Aedo altered. Much of the confidential and
propriety information stored in the Red Valve Dropbox account was contained in a
subfolder labeled “Titan.”
29. Based on the evidence of record, at the time of Aedo’s termination on March
14, 2018, Aedo’s Dropbox account contained at least the following:
a. in the Titan subfolder, information pertaining to Red Valve’s current
and prospective customers;
b. Red Valve price factor sheets and Price Books used to price Red Valve
products;
c. in the Titan subfolder, numerous Red Valve design drawings, as well
as (i) a CAD drawing not prepared by Red Valve that exactly
duplicates the dimensions, labels, and notes of a Red Valve design
drawing, and (ii) six Red Valve design drawings reflecting
modifications made by Defendants in February or March 2018; d. information related to in-house and propriety manufacturing
processes that are not in the public domain, including programs
involving size bevel gears, calculation of rim pulls, and Checkmate
rubber strip calculators;
e. documents revealing that Defendants ordered actuators and
animations under the Titan brand from Cowan Dynamics, Red
Valve’s actuator supplier, and Marthon, a company Red Valve uses
to create animations of Red Valve products.
30. In February 2018, Payne instructed Red Valve builders Jessica Messer and
Doris Spencer to build a 6” 75 Buna POT (a Red Valve sleeve) without an order
number. Red Valve parts are not typically built without an order number. Payne
instructed Messer to bypass shipping and deliver the part to Payne when it was
completed. Payne removed the part from the Red Valve premises.
31. Between March 7, 2018 and March 10, 2018, Cruzito “Zeke” Valentin of
Patch Rubber Co., one of Red Valve’s rubber and fabric vendors, and Payne exchanged
emails about providing Valentin with a sample of “Orange Neo” (i.e., orange
neoprene), a synthetic rubber. Red Valve’s standard neoprene is black. In the
applicable time period, Red Valve did not receive any inquiries or orders that required
the production of orange neoprene.
32. On March 12, 2018, Aedo emailed Alan Black of Upwey Valve & Engineering
renderings of a Titan valve called the PLT Platinum pinch valve. Aedo stated that
the “[l]iterature and operation animation and [installation & operation manual] are under revision in marketing, so we should have it within 5-7 days.” (Pls.’ Exs. Supp.
Mot. Prelim. Inj. Ex. P.)
33. Defendants had planned to attend a mining show in Santiago, Chile,
scheduled for April 23–27, 2018, to market Titan and use the event as Titan’s official
launch. Defendants intended to have two valves by that time for display, one manual
and one with a pneumatic actuator. On January 24, 2018, Fabian stated he would
send an “email blast to customer data base [sic] I am obtaining now” regarding the
Santiago event. (Pls.’ Exs. Supp. Mot. Prelim. Inj. Ex. Q.)
34. In their Verified Complaint, P.I. Motion, and supporting briefs and
affidavits, Plaintiffs contend that trade secret protection under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 66-
152, et seq., is specifically warranted for the following Red Valve information:
(1) the prices Red Valve charges for its products and the formula it uses to price products (“Price Data”);
(2) information about Red Valve’s current and prospective customers, customer purchasing preferences, payment amount, ordering history, and common customer requests and/or complaints (“Customer Database”);
(3) documents that aid Red Valve in manufacturing products, including engineering drawings, build sheets, and design drawings for creating castings and polymer products (“Design Documents”);
(4) confidential and proprietary formulas, programs, devices, compilations of information, methods, techniques, and processes Red Valve uses to design and manufacture superior flow control products as outlined in meticulous detail in the affidavit of Mike Duer . . . [(“Manufacturing Processes”)]; and
(5) information Red Valve maintains about the suppliers it purchases component parts from, which are used to manufacture its products, and the prices charged by each vendor (“Vendor Lists”; collectively “Red Valve’s Alleged Trade Secrets,” all of which are included in Red Valve’s “confidential and proprietary information”). (Pls.’ Mem. Law Supp. Mot. Prelim. Inj. 4, ECF No. 27.)
35. Red Valve’s Price Data consists of material, labor, and other costs used to
create its products which is then imported into formulas used to price its products.
Red Valve has developed and refined its Price Data over many years. Because many
of the products Red Valve makes are specialized, utilization of its Price Data to quote
a competitive price to a customer is critical to Red Valve’s business.
36. Red Valve’s Price Data is stored in a database maintained by Red Valve and
summarized in a Price Book. The Price Book is regularly and frequently used by Red
Valve in its sales activities. Red Valve Price Data, including a Red Valve Price Book,
was found in the Dropbox account maintained by Defendant Aedo on March 14, 2018.
Red Valve sells its finished products directly to customers or through sales
representatives, who are required to sign confidentiality and non-disclosure
agreements and must agree not to distribute Red Valve’s Price Book.
37. Red Valve’s Customer Database contains information collected over many
years concerning customers’ names, contact information, purchasing preferences,
prices paid for orders, order history, and requests and complaints about Red Valve
products. Information concerning Red Valve’s customers was found in a Dropbox
account maintained by Defendant Aedo on March 14, 2018. Red Valve requires its
customers to agree not to disclose the price or terms of a transaction with Red Valve.
Red Valve’s sales representatives also must agree not to distribute to third parties
Red Valve’s customer lists, customer preferences, or other customer-specific
information without Red Valve’s consent. 38. Red Valve’s Design Documents have been created so that Red Valve can
readily create and reproduce products it has developed over the span of many years.
The Design Documents include material specifications and quantities, descriptive
notes, and drafting dimensions, and notations such as length, angle, diameter,
tolerance, weld details, and surface finish specifications. Of particular relevance
here, Red Valve’s Design Documents include the technical and proprietary designs of
the rubber sleeves that Red Valve manufactures.
39. Red Valve’s Design Documents also include build sheets, which are
documents containing a comprehensive listing of the quantity and dimensions of each
elastomeric and fabric material used in the hand-fabrication of rubber sleeves and
the detailed sequence in which each material is placed on the mandrel and
intermediate layers until the final elastomer/fabric matrix is complete. Numerous
drawings, including CAD drawings involving the design of rubber sleeves, were found
in the Titan folder of Aedo’s Dropbox account, and many build sheets were found in
external devices and personal folders used by Payne. Red Valve labels its proprietary
Design Documents with restrictive confidentiality language prohibiting disclosure by
those to whom it provides its Design Documents.
40. Red Valve’s Manufacturing Processes include many of the critical processes
and procedures that are involved in transforming raw materials into finished Red
Valve products. Not all of Red Valve’s Manufacturing Processes are written down,
but they are learned through experience in manufacturing and testing products at
Red Valve. The Manufacturing Processes result from the extensive research and development conducted by Red Valve for the purpose of saving time, money, and
resources in the design and manufacture of Red Valve’s products.
41. The Manufacturing Processes include formulas, programs, devices,
compilations of information, techniques, and processes that Red Valve uses to create
the end product based on a customer’s requirements. Although Red Valve has offered
lengthy descriptions of its Manufacturing Processes from its chief engineer, Mike
Duer, the Company has identified only the following Manufacturing Processes as
proprietary and unique to Red Valve: (i) “programs to size bevel gears and calculate
rim pull, and a Checkmate rubber strip calculator[;]” (ii) “the temperature and time
required for the various sizes and geometrics of uncured fabric-reinforced
elastometric parts to spend in the vulcanizer/autoclave that results in all layers being
chemically fused together thereby producing a product that can withstand a wide
range of pressure and thrust forces and provide a long life without premature
failure[;]” and (iii) “[f]or knife gates, proprietary manufacturing process technology
and controls [that] are needed to consistently produce a seat that provides a reliable
seal, that doesn’t leak, and assures the valve will close with the minimum thrust.”
(Pls.’ Exs. Supp. Mot. Prelim. Inj. Ex. B [hereinafter “Duer Aff.”] ¶¶ 37–39.) A
number of documents pertaining to these “in-house and proprietary programs that
are not in the public domain” were found in the Aedo Dropbox account. (Duer Aff. ¶
37.)
42. The Manufacturing Processes Red Valve uses cannot be determined by
examining finished products. In particular, the Manufacturing Processes used to make a Red Valve valve, including the specifications utilized in making the rubber
sleeve, cannot be discerned or replicated by reverse engineering.
43. Red Valve’s Vendor Lists consist of information Red Valve maintains about
the suppliers from which it purchases component parts, including the most favorable
prices it has been able to negotiate with each vendor for the products Red Valve uses
in its business. Because these prices have been developed through many years of
relationship building with these vendors, Red Valve does not share this information
to persons outside Red Valve.
44. Red Valve has made a substantial investment of time and money to research
and develop the confidential and proprietary information it uses in the design,
manufacture, marketing, and sale of its products. Through its investment, Red Valve
has gained a competitive advantage, which would be lost or substantially impaired
should its competitors have access to or use Red Valve’s confidential and proprietary
information.
45. Red Valve requires all of its employees to agree to policies preventing
disclosure or misuse of Red Valve’s confidential and proprietary information. Red
Valve employees must certify that they have read the Red Valve Employee handbook
and agree to “follow the policies,” including the Company’s “non-disclosure” policy,
which forbids the improper use or disclosure of Red Valve’s confidential and
proprietary information. Red Valve requires annual ethics training for all of its
employees to learn about the unauthorized use and disclosure of Red Valve’s
confidential and proprietary information. At the end of the training, employees must certify that they have read and understand Red Valve’s ethics code, including the
provisions concerning the prohibition on disclosure of Red Valve’s confidential and
proprietary information.
46. Red Valve implements a “Separation of Duties” policy and role-based
security, which restricts access to Red Valve’s confidential and proprietary
information to employees who need access to the specific information to complete
their individual job duties. Red Valve keeps databases that track the level of access
of each employee and the information the employee may access in the performance of
his job duties. Red Valve makes each access determination on an individual basis.
47. To help protect its Design Documents and Manufacturing Processes, Red
Valve prohibits entry at its manufacturing plant to any person without a secured
access card. To protect its Customer Database and Price Data from disclosure to
outsiders, Red Valve sells its finished products directly to customers or through sales
representatives, who are required to sign confidentiality and non-disclosure
agreements. The sales representatives must agree that they will not distribute Red
Valve’s customer or pricing information.
48. Red Valve has implemented a number of other measures to protect its
confidential and proprietary information, including upgrading its business process
management software, EPICOR, physically relocating the EPICOR system to a more
secure location, and inactivating and deleting user IDs for employees that no longer
work at Red Valve. Departing employees are also required to return any and all
confidential and proprietary information of Red Valve in the employee’s possession at the end of their employment. This includes removing any Red Valve confidential
and proprietary information on the employee’s cell phone or laptop.
III.
CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
49. Based upon the foregoing findings of fact, the Court makes the following
conclusions of law:
50. The Court has jurisdiction over the parties and subject matter of this action.
51. Pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 7A-45.4, this case has been properly
designated as a complex business case.
52. The purpose of an injunction “is ordinarily to preserve the status quo . . .
[and i]ts issuance is a matter of discretion to be exercised by the hearing judge after
a careful balancing of the equities.” A.E.P. Indus., Inc. v. McClure, 308 N.C. 393, 400,
302 S.E.2d 754, 759 (1983) (quoting State v. School, 299 N.C. 351, 357–58, 261 S.E.2d
908, 913 (1980)). A plaintiff seeking an injunction must show (i) likelihood of success
on the merits and (ii) that the plaintiff is likely to sustain irreparable loss absent an
injunction, or that an injunction is necessary to protect the plaintiff’s rights during
the litigation. Id. at 401, 302 S.E.2d at 759–60; see also N.C. R. Civ. P. 65; N.C. Gen.
Stat. § 1-485.
53. The North Carolina Trade Secrets Protection Act (“TSPA”) expressly
authorizes a court to preliminarily enjoin “actual or threatened misappropriation of
a trade secret.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 66-154(a). Under North Carolina law, “[i]t is well
settled that an injunction will issue to prevent unauthorized disclosure and use of trade secrets and confidential information.” Barr-Mullin, Inc. v. Browning, 108 N.C.
App. 590, 594, 424 S.E.2d 226, 229 (1993). The burden is on Plaintiffs to establish
their right to a preliminary injunction. Pruitt v. Williams, 288 N.C. 368, 372, 218
S.E.2d 348, 351 (1975).
54. Our Supreme Court has defined “irreparable injury” as not necessarily
“beyond the possibility of repair or possible compensation in damages, but that the
injury is one to which the complainant should not be required to submit or the other
party permitted to inflict, and is of such continuous and frequent recurrence that no
reasonable redress can be had in a court of law.” Barrier v. Troutman, 231 N.C. 47,
50, 55 S.E.2d 923, 925 (1949). If irreparable injury is not shown, the preliminary
injunction will be denied. United Tel. Co. of Carolinas, Inc. v. Universal Plastics, Inc.,
287 N.C. 232, 236, 214 S.E.2d 49, 52 (1975); see Coble Dairy Products Coop., Inc. v.
State ex rel. N.C. Milk Comm’n, 58 N.C. App. 213, 214, 292 S.E.2d 750, 751 (1982).
55. Moreover, “[a] court of equity must weigh all relevant facts before resorting
to the extraordinary remedy of an injunction.” Travenol Labs., Inc. v. Turner, 30 N.C.
App. 686, 694, 228 S.E.2d 478, 484 (1976). The burden is on the moving party to
establish its right to a preliminary injunction, but the remedy “should not be lightly
granted.” GoRhinoGo, LLC v. Lewis, 2011 NCBC LEXIS 39, at *17 (N.C. Super. Ct.
Sept. 29, 2011); see Travenol Labs., 30 N.C. App. at 692, 228 S.E.2d at 483. A trial
court generally “should engage in a balancing process, weighing potential harm to
the plaintiff if the injunction is not issued against the potential harm to the defendant
if injunctive relief is granted.” Kaplan v. Prolife Action League of Greensboro, 111 N.C. App. 1, 16, 431 S.E.2d 828, 835 (1993), overruled on other grounds by Sharpe v.
Worland, 351 N.C. 159, 166, 522 S.E.2d 577, 581 (1999).
56. Under the TSPA, “actual or threatened misappropriation of a trade secret
may be preliminarily enjoined during the pendency of the action and shall be
permanently enjoined upon judgment finding misappropriation[.]” N.C. Gen. Stat.
§ 66-154(a). Actual or threatened misappropriation may be established by the
introduction of “substantial evidence” that a person against whom relief is sought
“[k]nows or should have known of the trade secret; and [h]as had a specific
opportunity to acquire it for disclosure or use or has acquired, disclosed, or used it
without the express or implied consent or authority of the owner [of the trade secret].”
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 66-155. A defendant may rebut an owner’s claim of
misappropriation by proving that the defendant acquired the owner’s trade secret
information through independent development or reverse engineering, or by proving
that the owner’s “trade secret” information was received from another person with a
right to disclose the information or is generally known in the industry. N.C. Gen.
Stat. §§ 66-155, 66-152.
57. A trade secret is defined under the NCTSPA as:
business or technical information, including but not limited to a formula, pattern, program, device, compilation of information, method, technique, or process that
a. [d]erives independent actual or potential commercial value from not being generally known or readily ascertainable through independent development or reverse engineering by persons who can obtain economic value from its disclosure or use; and b. [i]s the subject of efforts that are reasonable under the circumstances to maintain its secrecy.
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 66-152(3). A plaintiff, therefore, must demonstrate that the alleged
trade secret information is of actual or commercial value, is not generally known or
readily ascertainable, and is subject to reasonable efforts to maintain its secrecy.
Safety Test & Equip. Co. v. Am. Safety Util. Corp., 2015 NCBC LEXIS 40, at *25–26
(N.C. Super. Ct. Apr. 23, 2015).
58. In determining whether the processes or information are trade secrets,
North Carolina courts generally consider six factors:
(1) the extent to which information is known outside the business; (2) the extent to which it is known to employees and others involved in the business; (3) the extent of measures taken to guard secrecy of the information; (4) the value of information to the business and its competitors; (5) the amount of effort or money expended in developing the information; and (6) the ease or difficulty with which the information could properly be acquired or duplicated by others.
Wilmington Star-News v. New Hanover Regional Medical Ctr., 125 N.C. App. 174,
180–81, 480 S.E.2d 53, 56 (1997). These factors overlap, and courts considering these
factors do not always examine them separately and individually. SCR-Tech LLC v.
Evonik Energy Servs. LLC, 2011 NCBC LEXIS 27, at *34 (N.C. Super. Ct. July 22,
2011). Further, a successful trade secrets claim requires “a plaintiff [to] identify a
trade secret with sufficient particularity so as to enable a defendant to delineate that
which he is accused of misappropriating and a court to determine whether
misappropriation has or is threatened to occur.” Krawiec v. Manly, No. 252A16, 2018
N.C. LEXIS 222, at *10–11 (N.C. Apr. 6, 2018) (quoting VisionAir, Inc. v. James, 167
N.C. App. 504, 510–11, 606 S.E.2d 359, 364 (2004)). 59. Red Valve’s Price Data, Customer Database, and Vendor Lists each consist
of information that generally has been recognized to constitute trade secrets under
North Carolina law. See, e.g., Id. at *12 (recognizing that “information regarding
customer lists, pricing formulas and bidding formulas can qualify as a trade secret”);
Ge Betz, Inc. v. Conrad, 231 N.C. App. 214, 234, 752 S.E.2d 634, 649 (2013) (holding
“pricing information, customer proposals, historical costs, and sales data” may
constitute trade secrets); Drouillard v. Keister Williams Newspaper Servs., Inc., 108
N.C. App. 169, 174, 423 S.E.2d 324, 327 (1992) (holding customer lists and pricing
and bidding formulas may constitute trade secrets under TSPA); Koch Measurement
Devices, Inc. v. Armke, 2013 NCBC LEXIS 45, at *8 (N.C. Super. Ct. Oct. 14, 2013)
(holding “customer lists, including names, contact persons, addresses and phone
number[s] . . . [customer] ordering habits, history . . . [and company] pricing and
inventory management strategies” may constitute trade secrets). In particular,
“where an individual maintains a compilation of detailed records over a significant
period of time,” such that they have particular value as a compilation or manipulation
of information, “those records could constitute a trade secret even if ‘similar
information may have been ascertainable by anyone in the . . . business.’” Koch
Measurement Devices, Inc. v. Armke, 2015 NCBC LEXIS 45, at *13–14 (N.C. Super.
Ct. May 1, 2015) (quoting Byrd’s Lawn & Landscaping, Inc. v. Smith, 142 N.C. App.
371, 376, 542 S.E.2d 689, 692 (2001)); see also RoundPoint Mortg. Co. v. Florez, 2016
NCBC LEXIS 18, at *32 (N.C. Super. Ct. Feb. 18, 2016). 60. The evidence of record shows that the Customer Database, Price Data, and
Vendor Lists contain more than basic information readily ascertainable from public
sources, see, e.g., Bldg. Ctr., Inc. v. Carter Lumber of the North, Inc., 2017 NCBC
LEXIS 85, at *20 (N.C. Super. Ct. Sept. 21, 2017) (North Carolina law “does not
consider a customer list containing only information that is easily accessible through
a telephone book or other readily available sources to be a trade secret”); Koch, 2015
NCBC LEXIS 45, at *13 (“information collected in the routine course of business,
without any efforts to compile, develop, or maintain the information, d[oes] not
constitute a trade secret”), and instead are compilations of confidential information
that have great competitive value to Plaintiffs.
61. The Customer Database contains a compilation of purchasing preferences
and order histories as well as customer requests and complaints that Red Valve has
received over many years. See, e.g., Fastening Sys. v. Grabber Const. Prods., Inc.,
2015 NCBC LEXIS 42, at *11 (N.C. Super. Ct. Apr. 25, 2015) (“confidential customer
information and customer buying preferences and history” may constitute trade
secrets). This information has actual or commercial value and is not generally known
or readily ascertainable. Red Valve has engaged in reasonable efforts to maintain
the secrecy of this information and uses its Customer Database to gain a competitive
advantage in marketing to existing customers and prospective customers. Plaintiffs
have described this information with particularity, and the evidence of record shows
that Defendants have acquired and possessed this information either in preparation
for or after launching Titan. (See Ritzi Aff. Exs. A–C.) 62. Red Valve’s Price Data contains both a compilation of information that
includes Red Valve’s pricing history for each of its products and Red Valve’s formula
for preparing price quotes, which is summarized in Red Valve’s Price Book. The
disclosure of such information would be very advantageous to Red Valve’s competitors
and harmful to Red Valve’s competitive position. North Carolina courts have long
recognized that this sort of information constitutes a protectable trade secret under
the TSPA. See, e.g., Sunbelt Rentals, Inc. v. Head & Engquist Equip., LLC, 174 N.C.
App. 49, 53, 620 S.E.2d 222, 226 (2005) (holding trade secrets may include “cost
history information; price lists; and confidential customer lists, pricing formulas and
bidding formulas”); Byrd’s Lawn & Landscaping, 142 N.C. App. at 375, 542 S.E.2d at
692 (“Confidential data regarding operating and pricing policies can also qualify as
trade secrets. It is apparent that the ability to predict a competitor’s bid with
reasonable accuracy would give a distinct advantage to the possessor of that
information[.]”); see also Krawiec, 2018 NCBC LEXIS 222, at *12 (to similar effect).
This information has actual or commercial value and is not generally known or
readily ascertainable. Plaintiffs have engaged in reasonable efforts to maintain the
secrecy of this information, and the evidence shows that Payne or Aedo acquired
and/or possessed numerous documents containing Red Valve’s Price Data, including
Red Valve’s Price Book, at or about the time they formed Titan. (See Ritzi Aff. Exs.
D–G.)
63. Red Valve’s Vendor Lists contain a compilation of information over the span
of many years regarding the suppliers from which it has purchased component parts. The identification and compilation of this information, including the specification of
the favorable pricing that Red Valve has negotiated with its vendors, provides Red
Valve a significant advantage over its competitors. This information has actual or
commercial value and is not generally known or readily ascertainable. Plaintiffs have
engaged in reasonable efforts to maintain the secrecy of this information. The North
Carolina courts have concluded that such information constitutes a trade secret
under Chapter 66. See, e.g., Koch Measurement Devices, Inc., 2015 NCBC LEXIS 45,
at *13 (“[W]here an individual maintains a compilation of detailed records over a
significant period of time, those records could constitute a trade secret even if ‘similar
information may have been ascertainable by anyone in the . . . business.’” (quoting
Byrd’s Lawn & Landscaping, 142 N.C. App. at 376, 542 S.E.2d at 692)).
64. Red Valve’s Design Documents consist of engineering and design drawings
that are typically recognized as trade secrets under North Carolina law. See, e.g.,
DSM Dyneema, LLC v. Thagard, 2015 NCBC LEXIS 50, at *16–18 (N.C. Super. Ct.
May 12, 2015) (product designs may constitute trade secrets). This information has
actual or commercial value and is not generally known or readily ascertainable.
Plaintiffs have engaged in reasonable efforts to maintain the secrecy of this
information. Red Valve has identified the Design Documents with specificity and the
evidence of record shows that Defendants have acquired and used certain Design
Documents without Red Valve’s consent in furtherance of Titan’s business. (See Duer
Aff. Exs. A–K.)2
2 Defendants argue that the evidence Red Valve offers to support its contention that Defendants have misappropriated its sleeve Design Documents is readily found on Red 65. Red Valve’s Manufacturing Processes consist of information typically found
by North Carolina courts to constitute trade secrets. See Horner Int’l Co. v. McKoy,
232 N.C. App. 559, 568, 754 S.E.2d 852, 859 (2014) (holding that manufacturing
processes may constitute trade secrets and entering preliminary injunction based on
identification of trade secrets as “various raw materials and raw material treatments;
extraction, filtration, separation, and distillation techniques; and methods for
compounding of flavors, packaging, and plant utility . . . used in the production of
flavor materials derived from seven specifically identified substances, such as cocoa,
ginseng, and chamomile”); TSG Finishing, LLC v. Bollinger, 238 N.C. App. 586, 594,
767 S.E.2d 870, 877 (2014) (recognizing that specific steps and refinements in a
process may constitute trade secrets); see also, e.g., PepsiCo, Inc. v. Redmond, 54 F.3d
1262, 1269 (7th Cir. 1995) (“particularized plans or processes developed by [the
plaintiff] and disclosed to [the defendant] . . . which are unknown to others in the
industry and which give the [defendant] an advantage over [its] competitors” were
trade secrets under Illinois’ similar trade secrets protection statute).
66. Such processes, however, must be unique to Plaintiffs or modified by
Plaintiffs in unique ways to qualify for trade secret protection under the TSPA. See,
e.g., Unimin Corp. v. Gallo, 2014 NCBC LEXIS 44, at *23 (N.C. Super. Ct. Sept. 4,
2014) (dismissing trade secrets claim where plaintiff failed to allege manufacturing
processes were unique or had been modified by plaintiff in unique ways); see also,
Valve’s website (https://www.redvalve.com/products/pinch-valve-sleeves). The information on the website, however, does not contain the technical detail contained in Red Valve’s Design Documents. e.g., FMC Corp. v. Cyprus Foote Mineral Co., 899 F. Supp. 1477, 1481 (W.D.N.C.
1995) (denying preliminary injunction for violation of TSPA where plaintiff failed to
“come forward with evidence establishing the precise nature of its trade
secrets”); Patch Rubber Co. v. Toelke, No. 5:13-CV-379-BO, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS
84104, at *13 (E.D.N.C. June 14, 2013) (denying preliminary injunction where
plaintiff failed to demonstrate “what, if anything, in its strategic plan, formula or
customer cost information is deserving of trade secret protection”).
67. Applying these standards here, the Manufacturing Processes described in
paragraph 41 above are the only Manufacturing Processes Red Valve has identified
as unique to Red Valve and that otherwise qualify for protection as trade secrets
under the TSPA (“Protectable Manufacturing Processes” or the “Processes”). This
information has actual or commercial value and is not generally known or readily
ascertainable. Plaintiffs have engaged in reasonable efforts to maintain the secrecy
of this information. The evidence of record shows that Defendants knew, or should
have known, of Red Valve’s Protectable Manufacturing Processes from their long
involvement with Red Valve’s manufacturing operations and have had a specific
opportunity to acquire these Processes for disclosure or use, or have acquired,
disclosed, or used these Processes, without the express or implied consent of Plaintiffs
as the owner of the Processes. See N.C. Gen. Stat § 66-155; Horner, 232 N.C. App. at
568–69, 754 S.E.2d at 859–61 (finding plaintiff’s trade secret identification sufficient
for defendant to “delineate that which he was accused of misappropriating” in light of defendant’s knowledge of alleged trade secret (citing VisionAIR, Inc., 167 N.C. App.
at 510–11, 606 S.E.2d at 364).
68. In particular, the evidence shows, inter alia, that Aedo and Payne—while
still employed at Red Valve—downloaded copies of Red Valve’s confidential and
proprietary information to personal folders and external devices at the same time
they started collaborating with Farris to create Titan. Aedo labeled one of the folders
he created to house this information “Titan.” With Farris, Aedo and Payne actively
worked to launch Titan during their employment with Red Valve, and during that
time, they also actively acquired and stored information relating to and constituting
Red Valve’s Customer Database, Price Data, Design Documents, and Protectable
Manufacturing Processes.
69. The Court concludes that the evidence of record shows that Defendants have
engaged in the actual and threatened misappropriation of Plaintiffs’ Customer
Database, Price Data, Design Documents, and Protectable Manufacturing Processes
in violation of the TSPA. See, e.g., TSG Finishing, 238 N.C. App. at 595, 767 S.E.2d
at 878 (holding that continued access to trade secrets at a time when Defendants were
planning to leave the company and then compete against it “is precisely the type of
threatened misappropriation, if not actual misappropriation, that the TSPA aims to
prevent through issuance of a preliminary injunction”); Horner, 232 N.C. App. at 570,
754 S.E.2d at 860 (finding a “threat of misappropriation” where defendant
commenced work for a competitor immediately after resigning and shortly after
sending trade secret information to defendant’s personal email account); Byrd’s Lawn & Landscaping, 142 N.C. App. at 377, 542 S.E.2d at 693 (evidence of
misappropriation where defendant immediately started his own business in
competition with former employer after resigning and underbid former employer on
eleven of fourteen projects); Barr-Mullin, 108 N.C. App. at 596–97, 424 S.E.2d at 230–
31 (finding misappropriation supporting a preliminary injunction where defendant
helped develop software while working for plaintiff and began producing identical
software after leaving plaintiff’s employment).
70. The Court further concludes, however, that Plaintiffs have failed to offer
evidence demonstrating Defendants’ actual or threatened misappropriation of Red
Valve’s Vendor Lists at this stage of the litigation. The only evidence Plaintiffs offer
in support of Defendants’ alleged misappropriation of the Vendor Lists is Titan’s
order of parts from two vendors that Red Valve uses—Cowan Dynamics and
Marathon. Significantly, Plaintiffs have not pointed to any evidence showing
Defendants’ use or threatened use of information found in Red Valve’s Vendor Lists.
The most the evidence of record shows is that Titan potentially chose to use these two
vendors because of Aedo’s and Payne’s prior work at Red Valve, but the services these
two vendors provide is public knowledge and readily ascertainable. See Koch, 2015
NCBC LEXIS 45, at *13 (“information will not constitute a trade secret if that
information could be easily compiled by someone in the industry through public
listings, such as trade show and attendance lists, or through a telephone directory.”
(internal citations omitted)). Thus, the Court concludes that Plaintiffs have failed to
show a likelihood of success on their claim for misappropriation of Red Valve’s Vendor Lists at this time. See, e.g., Unimin Corp., 2014 NCBC LEXIS 44, at *39 (“Plaintiff
has not brought forward evidence of specific actions which indicate that Defendants
intend to disclose or use Plaintiff's alleged trade secret information sufficient to
justify the entry of preliminary injunctive relief based on a threat of
misappropriation.”).
71. Based on the evidence of record, the Court concludes that Plaintiffs have
demonstrated a likelihood of success on the merits of their claim for misappropriation
of trade secrets based on Defendants’ actual and threatened misappropriation of
Plaintiffs’ Customer Database, Price Data, Design Documents, and Protectable
Manufacturing Processes (the “Trade Secrets”).
72. The Court next turns to Plaintiffs’ breach of contract claim against Aedo.
Indiana law governs the Trade Secret Agreement. Under Indiana law, the essential
elements of a breach of contract action are the existence of a contract, the defendant’s
breach thereof, and damages. Rogier v. Am. Testing and Eng’g Corp., 734 N.E.2d 606,
614 (Ind. Ct. App. 2000). In contrast to North Carolina law, Indiana law provides
that continued employment constitutes due and adequate consideration in exchange
for agreeing to the terms of a restrictive covenant. See Rollins v. Am. State Bank, 487
N.E.2d 842, 843 (Ind. Ct. App. 1986) (citing Leatherman v. Mgmt. Advisors, Inc., 448
N.E.2d 1048, 1050 (Ind. 1983)); see also Licocci v. Cardinal Assocs., Inc., 445 N.E.2d
556, 565 (Ind. 1983). Based on the evidence of record, the Court concludes that
Plaintiffs have shown a likelihood of success on their claim that the Trade Secret
Agreement is an enforceable contract that restricts Aedo from disclosing or using Red Valve’s confidential and proprietary information, including Red Valve’s Trade
Secrets, and that Aedo has breached that Agreement.
73. North Carolina courts have long recognized that preliminary injunctive
relief is especially appropriate where a company’s trade secrets are at stake:
[M]isappropriation of a trade secret is an injury of such continuous and frequent recurrence that no reasonable redress can be had in a court of law. The very nature of a trade secret mandates that misappropriation will have significant and continuous long-term effects. The party wronged may forever lose its competitive business advantage or, at the least, a significant portion of its market share.
Barr-Mullin, 108 N.C. App. at 597, 424 S.E.2d at 230 (internal quotation marks
omitted). Accordingly, “in most instances, courts presume irreparable harm where a
trade secret has been misappropriated.” Merck & Co. v. Lyon, 941 F. Supp. 1443,
1455 (M.D.N.C. 1996). A preliminary injunction is especially warranted where
misappropriation threatens to deprive a business of its competitive advantage. Barr-
Mullin, 108 N.C. App. at 597, 424 S.E.2d at 230; see also TSG Finishing, 238 N.C.
App. at 602, 767 S.E.2d at 882 (irreparable injury shown where the plaintiff was at
risk of losing “whatever competitive advantage it may have had” in its industry).
74. To prove irreparable injury,
it is not essential that it be shown that the injury is beyond the possibility of repair or possible compensation in damages, but that the injury is one to which the complainant should not be required to submit or the other party permitted to inflict, and is of such continuous and frequent recurrence that no reasonable redress can be had in a court of law.
Barr-Mullin, 108 N.C. App. at 597, 424 S.E.2d at 230 (quoting Barrier v. Troutman,
231 N.C. 47, 50, 55 S.E.2d 923, 925 (1949)). Additionally, the Supreme Court of North Carolina has “consistently adhered to the proposition that where the principal relief
sought is a permanent injunction, it is particularly necessary that the preliminary
injunction issue.” A.E.P. Indus., 308 N.C. at 408, 302 S.E.2d at 763.
75. Plaintiffs have suffered, or will suffer, financial harm as a consequence of
Defendants’ use and disclosure of Plaintiffs’ Trade Secrets. However, the damages
Plaintiffs have suffered, or will suffer, are difficult to ascertain with certainty.
76. Nevertheless, it is clear that Defendants’ actual and threatened
misappropriation of Plaintiffs’ Trade Secrets, if not enjoined, will damage Plaintiffs’
business, adversely impact Red Valve’s market position, and dull its competitive
advantage. That injury is “not one to which [Red Valve] should be required to
submit[.]” Barr-Mullin, 108 N.C. App. at 597, 424 S.E.2d at 230. Its recurrence is
“continuous and frequent” as Defendants intend to actively compete against Red
Valve in certain of the markets in which Red Valve currently competes. Additionally,
Red Valve seeks a permanent injunction in this case, which also weighs in favor of its
request for a preliminary injunction to preserve its market share and competitive
advantage. A.E.P. Indus., 308 N.C. at 408, 302 S.E.2d at 763.
77. The issuance of a preliminary injunction “is a matter of discretion to be
exercised by the hearing judge after a careful balancing of the equities.” Id. at 400,
302 S.E.2d at 759 (quoting State v. School, 299 N.C. at 357, 261 S.E.2d at 913). The
Court, in exercising its discretion, “should engage in a balancing process, weighing
potential harm to the plaintiff if the injunction is not issued against the potential
harm to the defendant if injunctive relief is granted.” Williams v. Greene, 36 N.C. App. 80, 86, 243 S.E.2d 156, 160 (1978). “In effect, the harm alleged by the plaintiff
must satisfy a standard of relative substantiality as well as irreparability.” Id.
78. Defendants’ actions have resulted in irreparable harm to Plaintiffs, and if
not enjoined, will continue to result in irreparable harm to Plaintiffs because there is
no adequate remedy at law, there is substantial difficulty and uncertainty in
determining the amount of damages to be awarded for Defendants’ conduct, and the
injury Defendants have inflicted, and unless enjoined will continue to inflict, on
Plaintiffs is one to which Plaintiffs should not be required to submit or Defendants
permitted to inflict based on the record before the Court.
79. The Court has engaged in a balancing process, weighing the potential harm
to Plaintiffs if an injunction is not issued against the potential harm to Defendants if
injunctive relief is granted, and finds that the potential harm to Plaintiffs if the
preliminary injunction is not issued substantially outweighs the potential harm to
Defendants in the event the Court grants Plaintiffs’ requested injunctive relief.
80. The Court further concludes, in the exercise of its discretion, that the
issuance of a preliminary injunction is necessary for the protection of Plaintiff’s rights
during the course of this litigation. Accordingly, the Court concludes, in the exercise
of its discretion, that Plaintiff is entitled to a preliminary injunction restraining and
enjoining Defendants and all other persons in active concert or participation with any
Defendant from using or disclosing Plaintiffs’ Trade Secrets.
81. The Court has previously ordered Defendants to “return to Red Valve any
and all Red Valve property in their possession, including any property containing Red Valve’s Trade Secrets [as defined in the TRO] or any other confidential and
proprietary information of Red Valve” (the “Return Order”). (TRO ¶ 3 at p. 6, ECF
No. 7.) The Court’s Return Order is not restricted by Plaintiffs’ identification of their
trade secrets under the TSPA; rather, the Court’s Return Order requires Defendants
to return Plaintiffs’ property as a matter of contract and common law because it is
undisputed that Defendants have had Plaintiffs’ property in their possession and
acknowledge that they have no legal right to possess and retain Plaintiffs’ property.
82. Further, the Court’s Return Order intended that Defendants, who have no
right to retain Plaintiffs’ property, will not retain copies or originals of any Red Valve
property that they are required to return. Accordingly, Defendants are hereby
ordered to return within seven business days all Red Valve property in their
possession, including any copies thereof, and certify to the Court that they have
returned all such property to Red Valve and do not retain any Red Valve property in
their possession. Defendants’ failure to comply with this provision will be grounds
for the issuance of an order to show cause why Defendants should not be held in civil
or criminal contempt for such failure.
83. “[T]he trial court has power not only to set the amount of security but to
dispense with any security requirement whatsoever where the restraint will do the
defendant no material damage, and where the applicant for equitable relief has
considerable assets and is able to respond in damages if [the] defendant does suffer
damages by reason of a wrongful injunction.” Stevens v. Henry, 121 N.C. App. 150,
154, 464 S.E.2d 704, 707 (1995) (quoting Keith v. Day, 60 N.C. App. 559, 562, 299 S.E.2d 296, 298) (1983) (alterations and quotations omitted); see also Bolier & Co.,
LLC v. Decca Furniture (USA), Inc., 2015 NCBC LEXIS 55, at *32 (N.C. Super. Ct.
May 26, 2015).
84. Neither Plaintiffs nor Defendants have challenged or otherwise objected to
the amount of security the Court required as a condition of the TRO (i.e., $500). The
Court further concludes, based on publicly available information, that Plaintiffs have
considerable assets such that they will be able to respond in damages if Defendants
were to suffer by a wrongful injunction. The Court therefore concludes, in the
exercise of its discretion, that the security of $500 previously posted by Plaintiffs is
reasonable and appropriate in the circumstances as a condition of granting this
preliminary injunction.
IV.
CONCLUSION
85. WHEREFORE, based upon the foregoing FINDINGS of FACT and
CONCLUSIONS of LAW, it is hereby ORDERED, in the exercise of the Court’s
discretion, that pending final resolution of this civil action, and unless and until
otherwise ordered by this Court:
a. Defendants, and any persons or entities in active concert or
participation with any of them, are hereby RESTRAINED and
ENJOINED, during the pendency of this action, from using,
disclosing, or distributing Plaintiffs’ Customer Database, Price Data, Design Documents, and Protectable Manufacturing Processes (as
defined herein).
b. Within seven business days of the entry of this Order, each
Defendant shall (i) return to Plaintiffs all of Plaintiffs’ property,
including but not limited to Plaintiffs’ Trade Secrets, and (ii) certify
under oath in a written statement filed with the Court that
Defendant has returned to Plaintiffs all of Plaintiffs’ property in
Defendant’s possession and further that Defendant does not retain
or possess any Red Valve property.
c. The Court has considered, but will not require, the posting of
additional security in connection with the issuance of this Order.
The Court concludes, in the exercise of its discretion, that the $500
security previously posted is reasonable and appropriate as a
condition of granting this preliminary injunction. The Court’s order
concerning Plaintiffs’ posting of security is without prejudice to any
party’s right to move the Court to adjust the amount of the security
for good cause shown.
SO ORDERED, this 17th day of April, 2018.
/s/ Louis A. Bledsoe, III Louis A. Bledsoe, III Special Superior Court Judge for Complex Business Cases