Wilbur-Ellis Company v. Josh Gompert

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJuly 7, 2026
Docket25-1577, 25-1682
StatusPublished

This text of Wilbur-Ellis Company v. Josh Gompert (Wilbur-Ellis Company v. Josh Gompert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilbur-Ellis Company v. Josh Gompert, (8th Cir. 2026).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals For the Eighth Circuit ___________________________

No. 25-1577 ___________________________

Wilbur-Ellis Company

Plaintiff - Appellant

v.

Josh Gompert; Aaron Petersen; James Kunzman; Chad Mueller

Defendants - Appellees ___________________________

No. 25-1682 ___________________________

Plaintiff - Appellee

Defendants - Appellants ____________

Appeals from United States District Court for the District of Nebraska - Omaha ____________ Submitted: March 17, 2026 Filed: July 7, 2026 ____________

Before SHEPHERD, ERICKSON, and GRASZ, Circuit Judges. ____________

SHEPHERD, Circuit Judge.

Wilbur-Ellis Company (Wilbur-Ellis) sued four of its former employees—Josh Gompert, Aaron Petersen, James Kunzman, and Chad Mueller (collectively, the Employees), alleging breach of the duty of loyalty, violations of state and federal trade secrets laws, and tortious interference with its business relationships. During discovery, the district court 1 denied several of Wilbur-Ellis’s discovery-related motions. Following discovery, the district court denied Wilbur-Ellis’s request to stay its summary judgment decision, and it granted summary judgment to the Employees on most of Wilbur-Ellis’s claims. Wilbur- Ellis now appeals the district court’s denials of its discovery-related motions and its request to stay summary judgment as well as the grant of partial summary judgment to the Employees. The Employees, on the other hand, cross-appeal the district court’s decision not to grant summary judgment in full. Having jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we affirm.

I.

Wilbur-Ellis is a company specializing in agricultural products, services, and technologies. On August 13, 2021, the Employees told Wilbur-Ellis they were resigning from the company. Wilbur-Ellis placed the Employees on inactive employment status shortly thereafter, but it paid them until their resignation was formalized two weeks later, on August 27th. Meanwhile, on or around August 16th, the Employees began working for J.R. Simplot Company (Simplot), Wilbur-Ellis’s

1 The Honorable Robert F. Rossiter, Jr., Chief Judge, United States District Court for the District of Nebraska. -2- competitor, thus receiving income from both companies until August 27th. At least 11 employees in total moved from Wilbur-Ellis to Simplot on or around August 2021.

Wilbur-Ellis sued Gompert and Petersen on September 1st—four days after they left the company—alleging breach of the duty of loyalty, misappropriation of trade secrets under the federal Defend Trade Secrets Act (DTSA) and the Nebraska Trade Secrets Act (NTSA), and tortious interference with its business relationships. On September 15th, Wilbur-Ellis filed an amended complaint that added Kunzman and Mueller as additional defendants.

This case’s procedural history is complex. Because Wilbur-Ellis appeals a number of orders issued during discovery as well as the district court’s summary judgment order, we list them here chronologically.

A.

Near the beginning of discovery, pursuant to the local rules, 2 Wilbur-Ellis gave the Employees notice of its intent to compel discovery from Simplot, the Employees’ new employer and a third party to this case. The Employees objected to Wilbur-Ellis’s notice of intent in May 2022. At a discovery conference later that month, the magistrate judge instructed Wilbur-Ellis to seek discovery from the Employees first instead of Simplot, noting that it was “backwards” to seek discovery from a third party first and that it seemed unfair for Simplot to face a “massive litigation issue just because [it] hired the [Employees].” Although Wilbur-Ellis initially stated it understood the magistrate judge’s instruction, it nevertheless filed

2 Under the Local Rules for the District of Nebraska, a party cannot issue a subpoena on a nonparty without first giving the adverse party notice. D. Neb. Civ. R. 45.1(a). The adverse party then has seven days to object in writing to the proposed subpoena. Id. at 45.1(b). “No subpoena may be issued for documents . . . whose inspection or production is contested under this rule until the parties resolve the objections.” Id. -3- a motion four months later asking the magistrate judge to overrule the Employees’ objection to its notice of intent to subpoena Simplot.

Before ruling on the motion, the magistrate judge issued a text order stating that the parties could not file a motion to compel “without first contacting the . . . magistrate judge to set a conference for discussing the parties’ dispute.” The magistrate judge also ordered Wilbur-Ellis to file a document “disclos[ing], with specificity, the trade secrets it alleges were misappropriated.” Wilbur-Ellis complied with the disclosure order without objection, producing a six-page document that described its alleged trade secrets with phrases like “[d]ocuments and information regarding Wilbur-Ellis’s business and market strategy,” “[d]ocuments and information relating to Wilbur-Ellis’s customers,” and “nonpublic customer proposals, pricing and rebate data.”

After reviewing Wilbur-Ellis’s disclosure, the magistrate judge denied Wilbur-Ellis’s motion to overrule the Employee’s objection to the proposed subpoena, citing numerous concerns. For one, the magistrate judge was concerned that Wilbur-Ellis was merely trying to conduct a “‘fishing expedition’ on a third-party competitor,” and it expressed skepticism towards Wilbur-Ellis’s disclosure document, which “apparently claim[ed] that everything [the Employees] encountered in their positions at Wilbur-Ellis was a trade secret.” Addressing a motion by the Employees to lift restrictions on the disclosure document, the magistrate judge observed that the document only contained “general categories of information and descriptions” and that “[w]ith the exception of three customer names, the filing does not contain material that implicates confidentiality to the extent necessary to overcome the strong presumption of public access to court documents.” The magistrate judge further noted that Wilbur-Ellis had not exhausted its efforts to obtain discovery. Ultimately finding that Wilbur-Ellis’s disclosure “[did] not identif[y] any specific characteristics of the allegedly misappropriated trade secrets,” the magistrate judge denied Wilbur-Ellis’s motion to overrule the Employees’ objection to the proposed subpoena.

-4- Wilbur-Ellis objected to the magistrate judge’s order before the district court, but the district court overruled its objection and affirmed the order. Echoing the magistrate judge’s observations, the district court agreed that “the categories of possible trade secrets known . . . are much too broad to warrant third-party discovery at this point.” The district court also noted that “the magistrate judge identified a ‘growing consensus’ of courts that require a party alleging misappropriation of trade secrets to identify those trade secrets with a[t] least some level of specificity before discovery.” While the district court clarified that it “need not definitively decide whether a plaintiff alleging misappropriation of trade secrets must always identify those trade secrets with reasonable particularity,” it concluded that, given the numerous concerns with Wilbur-Ellis’s instant discovery request, “it was reasonable for the magistrate judge to require it here.”

B.

After losing its initial bid to compel third-party discovery from Simplot, Wilbur-Ellis moved to compel discovery from the Employees themselves. However, the magistrate judge noted that Wilbur-Ellis did not abide by the court’s requirement of a conference with the magistrate judge before filing a motion to compel, so she denied its motion on that basis.

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Wilbur-Ellis Company v. Josh Gompert, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilbur-ellis-company-v-josh-gompert-ca8-2026.