UrthTech LLC v. Gojo Industries, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMay 21, 2024
Docket1:22-cv-06727
StatusUnknown

This text of UrthTech LLC v. Gojo Industries, Inc. (UrthTech LLC v. Gojo Industries, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
UrthTech LLC v. Gojo Industries, Inc., (S.D.N.Y. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK URTHTECH LLC, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) Case No. 1:22-cv-06727-PKC v. ) ) GOJO INDUSTRIES, INC., ) ) Defendant. ) JOINT STIPULATED PROTECTIVE ORDER The parties to this Protective Order have agreed to the terms of this Order; accordingly, the Court enters the following protective order pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(c)(1): 1. Findings: The Court finds that the parties to this case may request or produce information involving trade secrets or confidential research and development or commercial information, the disclosure of which is likely to cause harm to the party producing such information. 2. Definitions: a. “Party” means a named party in this case. “Person” means an individual or an entity. “Producer” means a person who produces information via the discovery process in this case. “Recipient” means a person who receives information via the discovery process in this case. b. “Confidential” information is information concerning a person’s business operations, processes, and/or technical and development information within the scope of Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(c)(1)(G), the disclosure of which is likely to harm that person’s competitive position, or the disclosure of which would contravene an obligation of confidentiality to a third person or to a Court. c. “Attorneys’ Eyes Only” information is information within the scope of Rule 26(c)(1)(G) that is business or technical information, trade secrets and/or plans more sensitive or strategic than Confidential information, the disclosure of which is likely to significantly harm

that person’s competitive position, or the disclosure of which would contravene an obligation of confidentiality to a third person or to a Court. d. Information is not Confidential or Attorneys’ Eyes Only if it is disclosed in a printed publication, is known to the public, was known to the recipient without obligation of confidentiality before the producer disclosed it, or is or becomes known to the recipient by means not constituting a breach of this Order. Information is likewise not Confidential or Attorneys’ Eyes Only if a person lawfully obtained it independently of this litigation. 3. Designation of information as Confidential or Attorneys’ Eyes Only: a. A person’s designation of information as Confidential or Attorneys’ Eyes Only

means that the person believes in good faith, upon reasonable inquiry, that the information qualifies as such. b. A person designates information in a document or thing as Confidential or Attorneys’ Eyes Only by clearly and prominently marking it on its face as “CONFIDENTIAL” or “HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL—ATTORNEYS’ EYES ONLY.” A producer may make documents or things containing Confidential or Attorneys’ Eyes Only information available for inspection and copying without marking them as confidential without forfeiting a claim of confidentiality, so long as the producer causes copies of the documents or things to be marked as Confidential or Attorneys’ Eyes Only before providing them to the recipient. c. A person designates information in deposition testimony as Confidential or Attorneys’ Eyes Only by stating on the record at the deposition that the information is Confidential or Attorneys’ Eyes Only. The parties agree that if such designation is made during the deposition, the deposition testimony and exhibits shall temporarily be designated Confidential or Attorneys’ Eyes Only under this Order pending receipt and review of the

transcript. The parties shall review the transcript within thirty (30) days of the receipt thereof and specifically designate the testimony and exhibits to be protected pursuant to the terms of this Order. Thereafter only the specifically designated testimony and exhibits shall be protected under the terms of this Order. d. A person’s failure to designate a document, thing, or testimony as Confidential or Attorneys’ Eyes Only does not constitute forfeiture of a claim of confidentiality as to any other document, thing, or testimony. e. A person who has designated information as Confidential or Attorneys’ Eyes Only may withdraw the designation by written notification to all parties in the case.

f. If a party disputes a producer’s designation of information as Confidential or Attorneys’ Eyes Only, the party shall notify the producer in writing of the basis for the dispute, identifying the specific document[s] or thing[s] as to which the designation is disputed and proposing a new designation for such materials. The party and the producer shall then meet and confer to attempt to resolve the dispute without involvement of the Court. If they cannot resolve the dispute, the proposed new designation shall be applied fourteen (14) days after notice of the dispute unless within that fourteen-day period the producer files a motion with the Court to maintain the producer’s designation. The producer bears the burden of proving that the information is properly designated as Confidential or Attorneys’ Eyes Only. The information shall remain subject to the producer’s Confidential or Attorneys’ Eyes Only designation until the Court rules on the dispute. A party’s failure to contest a designation of information as Confidential or Attorneys’ Eyes Only is not an admission that the information was properly designated as such. 4. Use and disclosure of Confidential or Attorneys’ Eyes Only information: a. Confidential and Attorneys’ Eyes Only information may be used exclusively for

purposes of this litigation, subject to the restrictions of this order. b. Absent written permission from the producer or further order by the Court, the recipient may not disclose Confidential information to any person other than the following: (i) a party’s outside counsel of record and their law firms, including necessary paralegal, secretarial and clerical personnel assisting such counsel; (ii) a party’s in‐house counsel; (iii) a party’s officers and employees directly involved in this case whose access to the information is reasonably required to supervise, manage, or participate in this case; (iv) a stenographer and videographer recording testimony concerning the information; (v) subject to the provisions of paragraph 4(d) of this order, experts and consultants and their staff whom a party employs for

purposes of this litigation only, including electronic discovery vendors; and (vi) the Court and personnel assisting the Court. c. Absent written permission from the producer or further order by the Court, the recipient may not disclose Attorneys’ Eyes Only information to any person other than those identified in paragraph 4(b)( i), (ii), (iv), (v), and (vi), or (i) any employee or author of the producer; (ii) any person, no longer affiliated with the producer, who authored the information in whole or in part; and (iii) any person who received the information before this case was filed. d. A party may not disclose Confidential or Attorneys’ Eyes Only information to an expert or consultant pursuant to paragraph 4(b) or 4(d) of this order until after the expert or consultant has signed an undertaking in the form of Appendix 1 to this Order. e. A party who wishes to disclose Confidential or Attorneys’ Eyes Only information to a person not authorized under paragraphs 4(b)–(d) must first make a reasonable attempt to

obtain the producer’s permission. If the party is unable to obtain permission, it may move the Court to obtain permission. f.

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Bluebook (online)
UrthTech LLC v. Gojo Industries, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/urthtech-llc-v-gojo-industries-inc-nysd-2024.