Wearly v. Federal Trade Commission

462 F. Supp. 589, 27 Fed. R. Serv. 2d 64, 3 Fed. R. Serv. 1438, 1978 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14879
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedOctober 18, 1978
DocketCiv. 77-1860
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 462 F. Supp. 589 (Wearly v. Federal Trade Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wearly v. Federal Trade Commission, 462 F. Supp. 589, 27 Fed. R. Serv. 2d 64, 3 Fed. R. Serv. 1438, 1978 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14879 (D.N.J. 1978).

Opinion

OPINION

BIUNNO, District Judge.

This litigation grows out of an administrative subpoena issued to Wearly, who is chairman of Ingersoll-Rand (I-R), which in turn owns all the stock of its subsidiary, Torrington. The subpoena was issued in connection with a non-public investigation designed to look into the question of antitrust aspects of activities or arrangements conducted through joint ventures, stock acquisitions, and the like. The .specific subject matter deals with “needle roller bearings” (NRB) and “loose needle rollers” (LNR).

As everyone knows, there are many kinds of bearings for axles and shafts. The earliest form is the common journal, going back to the wheelbarrow and the wagon. The wheel is of immense value for the physical reason that rolling friction is much lower than sliding friction under most conditions, and since friction causes waste of energy, its reduction increases the efficiency of machines to do useful work.

Even with the development of Babbitt metal for journals, however, sliding friction remained between the shaft and the simple journals. The first important improvement, growing out of technological advances in metallurgy, was the ballbearing. Set between two “races” of hardened steel, *592 the smooth, round and hard steel balls made it possible to substitute rolling friction between shaft and journal.

It will be recalled that at the start of World War II, the nation’s railroads had just begun the process of replacing the simple journal box on freight cars with roller bearings, to eliminate breakdowns from “hot boxes” and sharply reduce maintenance.

After the ball bearing, there came roller bearings, tapered and double tapered roller bearings, thrust bearings, and eventually the needle roller bearing. Each of these forms of bearing are variations of the basic concept of substituting rolling friction for sliding friction. Each form is designed to deal with the wide range of loads and stresses encountered in all kinds of machines that have rotating axles or shafts. The list of applications is no doubt enormous, ranging from the bicycle, through the many devices with shafts in automobiles, refrigerators, washing machines, oil burners, attic fans, and other appliances, through manufacturing equipment such as turret lathes and milling machines, to sophisticated gyroscopes for space craft with rotational speeds of 10,000 r. p. m. or more. 1

The defendants, who are the Federal Trade Commission and its members, issued the subpoena involved not to I-R or Torrington, but to Mr. Wearly, chairman of I-R. Since the non-public investigation is directed to corporate activity, the reason for addressing Mr. Wearly is obscure. Various responses at the hearings suggest that the reason is “strategic”, whatever that may mean, but the only difference the court has been able to discern is that an individual who is subpoenaed and who resists the command after a judicial enforcement order is subject to the peril or jeopardy of imprisonment, which the corporation is not. Thus, the use of an individual subpoena is particularly strange in a case like this, where the subpoena is “duces tecum”, and the main object is to obtain specified categories of documents, and where the agency has made clear that it will accept the documents by mail along with a verifying affidavit, as compliance with the subpoena without the personal appearance of the witness being required. This practice for nonpublic investigations is essentially the same as the Grand Jury subpoena for corporate records. Such subpoenas are routinely satisfied through arrangements with the U.S. Attorney to turn over to him the requested documents without any witness appearing before the Grand Jury. 2

After the subpoena was issued and served, conferences followed. Such conferences are also commonplace and routine. Their object is to arrive at a clearer and sharper definition of the classes of documents called for. It is fairly usual for the subpoena duces tecum to have attached a list of categories of documents on a “boiler plate” format, that either does not match the particular records of the enterprise, or else calls for types of documents of such massive bulk and number as to be essentially useless to the agency and unreasonably burdensome on the supplier.

For most categories, these matters were resolved by negotiations, and as to those the court understands that the documents have been supplied.

The controversy here involves a number of categories of documents which, for lack *593 of a better term, the court has chosen to describe as documents containing “proprietary information”. This information includes not only trade secrets, secret processes and secret devices, but also a great mass of management data, evaluations, plans, production and production results of a kind that traditionally and historically is never disclosed outside the company, except on protected and privileged conditions usually established by contract, nor even within the company except to those persons who have a “need to know” the information in order to execute their functions. 3

In respect to these, an irresolvable impasse was reached. The position of plaintiffs was basically two-fold: one claim was that the request was unreasonable, excessive and beyond authority; the other was that defendants were either unable or unwilling to provide adequate security protection if the data were disclosed, or, if they did, that such arrangements could not be relied on.

The controversy is real, and it is specific. It is plaintiffs’ position that this proprietary information is absolutely vital and essential to its ability successfully to compete in the marketplace with all competitors, domestic and foreign, the largest worldwide competitor probably being SKF of Sweden. They assert that this is the kind of information which, in the shrouded world of industrial espionage, is precisely the kind that competitors would give their eye teeth for. If they must give it to FTC for the purposes of the non-public investigation, they will do so with the utmost reluctance and with their “heels dug in”. But, even then, they are unwilling to provide it unless effective means are provided to assure that the integrity and safety of the information will be fully protected against disclosure to competitors, either directly or by public dissemination. It is on this aspect that the controversy mainly centers. 4

Proprietary information, of course, is but one form of intangible personalty, in the same general category as stocks, bonds, mortgages, copyrights, letters patent, and the like. The major characteristic that distinguishes proprietary information from such other forms is that while the disclosure of A’s ownership of a particular security in no way affects his ownership thereof or his rights therein, the disclosure of the tenor and content of proprietary information destroys its value as well as the property interest in it. The value resides not in the pieces of paper on which the information is recorded, but in the information itself. Once that information becomes public, the property aspect is gone.

*594

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
462 F. Supp. 589, 27 Fed. R. Serv. 2d 64, 3 Fed. R. Serv. 1438, 1978 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14879, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wearly-v-federal-trade-commission-njd-1978.