Wexler v. Greenberg

160 A.2d 430, 399 Pa. 569, 125 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 471, 1960 Pa. LEXIS 491
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 4, 1960
DocketAppeals, 308, 309, 310 and 311
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 160 A.2d 430 (Wexler v. Greenberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wexler v. Greenberg, 160 A.2d 430, 399 Pa. 569, 125 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 471, 1960 Pa. LEXIS 491 (Pa. 1960).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Cohen,

Appellees, trading as Buckingham Wax Company, filed a complaint in equity to enjoin Brite Products Co., Iñc., and its officers, Greenberg, Dickler and Ford, appellants, from disclosing and using certain formulas and processes pertaining to the manufacture of certain sanitation and maintenance chemicals, allegedly trade secrets. After holding lengthy hearings, the chancellor concluded that the four formulas involved are trade secrets which appellant Greenberg disclosed in contravention of his duty of nondisclosure arising from his confidential relationship with Buckingham. He decreed that appellants, jointly and severally, be enjoined permanently from disclosing the formulas or processes or any substantially similar formulas and from making or selling the resulting products. He also ordered an accounting for losses. After the dismissal by the court en banc of appellants’ exceptions to the chancellor’s findings of fact and conclusions of law, the chancellor’s decree was made final and this appeal followed.

Buckingham Wax Company is engaged in the manufacture, compounding and blending of sanitation and *572 maintenance chemicals. In March, 1949, appellant Greenberg, a qualified chemist in the sanitation and maintenance field, 1 entered the employ of Buckingham as its chief chemist and continued there until April 28, 1957. In the performance of his duties, Greenberg consumed half of his working time in Buckingham’s laboratory where he would analyze and duplicate competitors’ products and then use the resulting information to develop various new formulas. He would change or modify these formulas for color, odor or viscosity in order that greater commercial use could be made of Buckingham’s products. The remainder of his time was spent in ordering necessary materials and interviewing chemical salesmen concerning new, better or cheaper ingredients for the multitude of products produced by Buckingham so that costs could be lowered and quality increased. As a result of his activities Greenberg was not only familiar with Buckingham’s formulas, he was also fully conversant with the costs of the products and the most efficient method of producing them.

Appellant Brite Products Co., Inc., is a Pennsylvania corporation organized on or about August 1, *573 1956, when it succeeded to the business, formerly operated by appellant Dickler, known as “Gem Shine Sales Co.” From October, 1952, to August, 1956, Dickler and Brite, in unbroken succession, did most of their purchasing from Buckingham; and from August, 1956, until August 20, 1957, the date of Brite’s last order, Brite exclusively purchased Buckingham’s manufactured products. These products were in turn distributed by Brite to its customers, mostly industrial users, marked with labels which identified said products as products of Brite. Brite’s purchases of sanitation and maintenance products from Buckingham amounted annually to approximately $35,000.

Dickler, president of Brite, met Greenberg in 1952 as a result of his business transactions with Buckingham, and had contact with Greenberg over the years in connection with the special products which were being made by Buckingham, first for Gem Shine Sales Co. and then for Brite. In June, 1957, Greenberg first approached Dickler in reference to employment; and negotiations began for Greenberg to associate himself with Brite. An agreement between them was reached whereby Greenberg became a director, the treasurer and chief chemist of Brite and, as a further consideration, received 25% of Brite’s outstanding and issued capital stock. In August, 1957, Greenberg left Buckingham and went to work for Brite. At no time during Greenberg’s employment with Buckingham did there exist between them a written or oral contract of employment or any restrictive agreement.

Prior to Greenberg’s association with Brite, the corporation’s business consisted solely of selling a complete line of maintenance and sanitation chemicals, including liquid soap cleaners, wax base cleaners, disinfectants and floor finishes. Upon Greenberg’s arrival, however, the corporation purchased equipment and machinery and, under the guidance and supervision of Greenberg, *574 embarked on a full-scale program for the manufacture of a cleaner, floor finish and disinfectant, products previously purchased from Buckingham. The formulas in issue in this litigation are the formulas for - each of these respective products. 2 The appellant's dispute the chancellor’s findings as to the identity of their formulas with those of Buckingham, but there was evidence that a speetrophometer examination of the respective products of the parties revealed that the formulas used in making these products are substantially identical. Appellants cannot deny that they thought the products sufficiently similar as to continue delivery of their own products to their customers in the same cans and drums and with the same labels attached which they had previously used in distributing the products manufactured by Buckingham, and to continue using the identical promotional advertising material. Appellees’ formulas had been developed dur *575 ing tbe tenure of Greenberg as chief chemist and are unquestionably known to him.

The chancellor' found that Greenberg did not develop the formulas for Brite’s products after he left Buckingham, but rather that he had appropriated them by carrying over the knowledge of them which he had acquired in Buckingham’s employ. The chancellor went on to find that the formulas ' constituted trade secrets and that their appropriation was in violation of the duty that Greenberg owed to Buckingham by virtue of his employment and the trust reposed in him. Accordingly, the relief outlined above was ordered.

We are initially concerned with the fact that the final formulations claimed to be trade secrets were not disclosed to Greenberg by the appellees during his service or because of his position. Rather, the fact is that these formulas had been developed by Greenberg himself, while in the pursuit of his duties as Buckingham’s chief chemist, or under Greenberg’s direct supervision. 3 We are thus faced with the problem of deter *576 mining the extent to which a former employer, without the aid of any express covenant, can restrict his ex-employee, a highly skilled chemist, in the uses to which this employee can put his knowledge of formulas and methods he himself developed during the course of his former employment because this employer claims these same formulas, as against the rest of the world, as his trade secrets. This problem becomes particularly significant when one recognizes that Greenberg’s situation is not uncommon. In this era of electronic, chemical, missile and atomic development, many skilled technicians and expert employees are currently in the process of developing potential trade secrets. Competition for personnel of this caliber is exceptionally keen, and the interchange of employment is commonplace. One has but to reach for his daily newspaper to appreciate the current market for such skilled employees.

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Bluebook (online)
160 A.2d 430, 399 Pa. 569, 125 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 471, 1960 Pa. LEXIS 491, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wexler-v-greenberg-pa-1960.