Stewart & Stevenson Services, Inc. v. Serv-Tech, Inc.

879 S.W.2d 89, 1994 Tex. App. LEXIS 933, 1994 WL 141231
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 21, 1994
DocketC14-92-01346-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by66 cases

This text of 879 S.W.2d 89 (Stewart & Stevenson Services, Inc. v. Serv-Tech, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stewart & Stevenson Services, Inc. v. Serv-Tech, Inc., 879 S.W.2d 89, 1994 Tex. App. LEXIS 933, 1994 WL 141231 (Tex. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

OPINION

ROBERTSON, Justice.

This appeal is from a judgment for appel-lee, plaintiff in the trial court, on its claim of “misappropriation of confidential, trade secret and/or technical information” for a total sum of $17,500,000 which included $5,000,000 in attorney fees awarded against Stewart and Stevenson only. Each appellant has filed it’s own brief; Stewart and Stevenson (S & S) brings a total of twelve points of error; Ohmstede, Inc. (Ohmstede) brings six points, and Ohmstede Mechanical Services, Inc. (OMSI) brings five points. The controlling issues are whether there is a cause of action for misappropriation of confidential information, whether global submission of separate damage claims was error, whether an award of attorneys fees based upon a percentage of the total recovery for causes of action for both breach of contract and tort was proper, sufficiency of evidence to support the finding of alter ego, and sufficiency of evidence to support trade secret misappropriation. We reverse.

Serv-Tech, Inc. (Serv-Tech) had been in the business of providing on-site heat exchanger cleaning services for refineries and petrochemical plants for a number of years. Ohmstede had been in the heat exchanger repair and cleaning business for years, but most of its work was done in their shops located in various places, rather than on-site. OMSI, as will be more fully developed later on, was a new-comer to the same field in 1989. A portion of S & S’s business includes the design, development and manufacturing of equipment for use in the oil, gas and petrochemical industry.

In 1984, Serv-Tech employed S & S to help build a “Fast Clean” machine, a revolutionary piece of machinery because it was totally integrated and the truck-mounted unit featured a remote-controlled cleaning boom-arm with an eight-lance cleaning device, which was used to clean the tube bundles in the heat exchangers in refineries and petrochemical plants. The first unit, a prototype, minus the cleaning boom arm was delivered to Serv-Tech in the first part of February 1985 and by early 1986, S & S built eight of these units for Serv-Tech.

On February 19, 1985, Serv-Tech Specialists, Inc., and S & S entered into a “Secrecy Agreement.” The agreement recited that Serv-Tech had “rights in certain apparatus and methods for cleaning tube bundles for shell and tube heat exchangers”; that S & S *92 desired “to receive proprietary information concerning such apparatus and methods (hereinafter ‘TECHNICAL INFORMATION’) for the purpose of evaluating same and budding of prototype equipment for testing and use by Serv-Teeh” and that the parties agreed that S & S would “not ... disclose said TECHNICAL INFORMATION to any third party and not ... use said TECHNICAL INFORMATION except for construction and test purposes....” The agreement did not identify the information that was to be protected. This forms the basis for most of the disagreement in this suit. Serv-Tech contended the secrecy agreement covered all components of the Fast Clean machine, while S & S contended the secrecy agreement covered only the cleaning boom arm and that all other components were already well-known in the heat exchanger cleaning business practiced by many companies.

Patent attorneys for Serv-Teeh were involved from the outset to develop patents. Patents were applied for in 1985 and were issued for the Fast Clean in February 1989. In accordance with federal patent law, numerous drawings and technical specifications were provided to the public in the patent application, which described, among other things, the cleaning boom-arm, the lance device, the high pressure water control system, the pump system, the remote control panel, the nozzle head, the hydraulic control system and the electrical controls.

In 1986 and 1987, respectively, Serv-Tech hired two engineers from Exxon, Robert Wetzel and Thomas Boisture. In 1989, Wet-zel and Boisture, along with two other employees of Serv-Tech, Gene Livingston and James Jeffrey, left the employ of Serv-Tech to form a company to compete in the heat exchanger cleaning business, which business became known as Ohmstede Mechanical Services, Inc. The primary funding for OMSI came from special distributions of approximately four million dollars Ohmstede Inc. voted to its individual (family member) shareholders, who in turn formed OMSI and elected Wetzel its president.

In September, 1989, OMSI entered into a confidentiality agreement with S & S and, based upon sketches of the machine it desired, S & S built for and delivered to OMSI four such machines. Through patent attorneys for OMSI, OMSI was issued five patents for the machine it developed. The design for the Serv-Tech was drastically different from the OMSI machine, was not totally integrated and did not incorporate the cleaning boom arm.

Serv-Tech filed suit against S & S, Ohms-tede, OMSI, Wetzel, Livingston, Jeffrey and Boisture on January 26,1990. Trial was had on Plaintiffs Sixth Amended Petition alleging that the defendants had misappropriated “confidential, trade secret and/or technical information of Serv-Tech.” Serv-Tech alleged the trade secret information and technical information “includes, but is not limited to, manufacturing practices, manufacturing drawings, worksheets, reports and other tangibles made in connection therewith, customer information, vendor information, bid information, employee information and budget information.” In response to special exceptions, Serv-Tech filed an amended designation listing sixty-four “Particular Items of Trade Secrets/Technical/Proprietary Information” which it contended “each and every Defendant is responsible for the wrongful misappropriation of’ as a co-conspirator. In the designation, 1 Serv-Teeh further delineated the technical information to be:

1. information relating to the hydroblast-ing Fast Clean method “with a high velocity comparatively low pressure, high volume shaped stream of water”
2. information on the use of “sub-sonic, comparatively low pressure, high volume shaped stream of water.” The benefits of using “a main nozzle pressure of approximately 5,000 6,000 psi and the use of flow rate parameters of 100 gallons per minute on the shell side”
*93 3. information that “the key to diesel pump efficiency is the design of the equipment permitting travel of water through the water delivery system with minimized loss of horsepower”
4. information “relating to the importance of mobility * * * to improve the efficiency of these applications”
5. information “regarding the use of flow parameters”
6. “the importance of considering pressure drop in fast clean operations”
7. “the proper placement and mounting of filters, hydraulic systems, hydraulic tank control valves, regulators and air lines for easier accessibility”
8. information on specific parts or components to be used in the construction of fast clean units
9. the design advantage of the system delivering maximum pressure and flow
10.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
879 S.W.2d 89, 1994 Tex. App. LEXIS 933, 1994 WL 141231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-stevenson-services-inc-v-serv-tech-inc-texapp-1994.