Dionne v. Southeast Foam Converting & Packaging, Inc., 891541

Decision Date21 September 1990
Docket NumberNo. 891541,891541
Citation240 Va. 297,397 S.E.2d 110
CourtVirginia Supreme Court
Parties, 17 U.S.P.Q.2d 1565 Pierre DIONNE v. SOUTHEAST FOAM CONVERTING & PACKAGING, INC. Record

William F. Stone, Jr., Martinsville, for appellant.

John W. Swezey (Swezey & Gautsch, Martinsville, on brief), for appellee.

Present: CARRICO, C.J., COMPTON, RUSSELL, WHITING, LACY, HASSELL, JJ., and POFF, Senior Justice.

POFF, Senior Justice.

Alleging misappropriation of trade secrets and breach of a written agreement not to disclose confidential information, Southeast Foam Converting & Packaging, Inc. (Sefco), filed suit in equity asking the chancellor to enjoin Pierre Dionne (Pierre), a former employee, from "using the processes, techniques, and other secrets learned while an officer of [Sefco] and in violation of his pledge of confidentiality". Pierre filed a motion to dismiss on the grounds that the "Confidential Information Agreement is unenforceable" and that "[t]here is no evidence that there was any trade secret or other confidential information disclosed to Pierre Dionne after the date of the Agreement." Having heard the evidence ore tenus, the chancellor entered a decree granting the injunction "until further order of this Court". Reviewing the facts in the light most favorable to Sefco, we will uphold the chancellor's findings of fact and conclusions of law as stated in his letter opinion.

Robert Dionne, while employed by a corrugated box manufacturer, had developed several new products for use in packaging commodities shipped in commerce. In 1983, Robert created and incorporated Sefco as a family company producing foam products for that purpose. In the company's parking lot one day, he found a board of expanded polystyrene (EPS) which had been crushed beneath the wheels of a truck. Upon examination of the board, brittle in its original form, Robert discovered that the compressed material had become resilient, pliable, and shock-absorbing. Recognizing the potential demand for such a material for packing inside cartons in which furniture and other commodities are transported, he and members of his family began conducting experiments on means and methods of compressing EPS for use in the "inner packaging industry".

Encouraged by what he learned, Robert prepared and forwarded to a patent attorney a description of the process, the product, and its function. A search of the patent records revealed that patents had been issued for 17 foam products made of EPS compressed in different ways for different uses. One of the patents, that for an egg carton, had expired in 1980.

Relying upon the attorney's opinion that Sefco's product did not satisfy the novelty requirement of the patent law, the Dionne family began to focus upon new techniques in the manufacturing process. Two of Robert's sons, Pierre, who had become a full-time Sefco salesman in 1984, and Paul, engaged Mike Harris, a machine shop operator, to build a number of machines designed to facilitate the process and improve the quality of the end product. The brothers required Harris to sign a "non-disclosure" agreement in which he covenanted not to reveal any information about the machines, the manufacturing process, or the product. Employing the new Harris machines and larger hydraulic presses acquired from another source, Sefco made its first sale of compressed EPS to furniture manufacturers in September 1985. The product was sold under the trade name "Durofoam" or "Dur-o-foam".

Robert became terminally ill in 1987, and his wife, Pauline, and their three sons, Paul, Pierre, and Jacques, assumed control and operation of the family business. Robert died in May 1987, and Paul and Pierre renewed their efforts, begun earlier that year, to investigate the possibility of further refinements in the manufacturing process. With the use of a new press designed to create uniform products in mass quantities, they conducted experiments to determine the effects of different levels of pressure applied to blocks of EPS for different periods of time.

Based upon the results of these experiments, Sefco applied for a patent in June 1987. The application identified the product as "Durafoam" and the inventor as Robert Dionne. In a letter she addressed to the patent attorney, Pauline Dionne, who had acquired title to Sefco at Robert's death, asked the attorney "to include Pierre and Paul as co-inventors" because, she wrote, "they discovered a new and improved process of treating EPS for resiliency and enhanced cushioning qualities". Shortly after filing the Durafoam patent application, Sefco, at Pierre's urging, addressed letters to several companies advising them of the pendency of the application and directing them to "cease and desist" selling any product similar to Durafoam.

The research conducted by the family prompted an application for another patent. As explained by Paul, "at about the time we were developing Durafoam we were developing the angle packaging material". This product, he said, was "a paper backing material laminated to the Durafoam" and cut into shapes needed to "wrap around corners or ... edges of tables, dressers, and nightstands". In January 1988, Pierre applied (in his own name as inventor) for a design patent on this product.

Thereafter, a bitter family quarrel developed. In efforts to restore harmony, the parties agreed that Pierre would assign 90% of his interest in the patent pending on the angle-packaging product to Sefco; that Pauline would give each of the three brothers a 10% share of Sefco; and that all Sefco owners would sign a "Confidential Information Agreement" similar to those Sefco consistently had required all its employees, suppliers, customers, contractors, and other plant visitors to execute. In pertinent part, the agreement Pierre signed provided that

"[i]n consideration of being employed by SEFCO [the subscriber] shall not during, or at any time after the termination of my employment with the Company, use for myself or others, or disclose or divulge to others any trade secrets, confidential information, or any other data of the Company in violation of this agreement."

Consummation of these agreements failed to resolve the family dispute, and Pierre's employment was terminated in June 1988. Paul testified that, on the day his brother left, Pierre was carrying a brief case. In the presence of state and county police officers, Paul asked him to open it. "He at first did not want to," Paul said, "but then he complied and we opened the brief case and we did find some company documents...." Later, Pauline discovered that the confidentiality agreement signed by Kenneth Clark, a Sefco employee, was missing from his personnel file and that the non-disclosure agreement signed by the machine contractor, Mike Harris, had been removed from the company's safe. Clark testified that, in June 1988, Pierre "told me he tore it up." Mike Harris said that, sometime after Pauline had notified him that he would have to sign a new agreement because the old one was missing, Pierre had paid him a visit and told him that he "didn't have to worry about it" because he, Pierre, "had this confidential agreement in his possession". Pierre acknowledged at trial that he had destroyed those papers.

Witnesses representing several of Sefco's suppliers and customers testified that Pierre had advised them that he planned to commence a new business manufacturing a foam material for use in the inner packaging industry. The new product, he explained, would be named "Flexfoam", and, while it would be similar in quality to Durafoam, it would be manufactured in a "more cost effective" way.

All these witnesses agreed that Durafoam is a product unique in its market area. Even the witness called by Pierre testified, on cross examination, that he knew of no company other than Sefco that had produced a marketable product with the functional qualities of Durafoam.

When the Dionne family learned of Pierre's plans, Sefco filed its bill of complaint. In a letter opinion, the chancellor held that "the manufacture of Durafoam is a trade secret" within the definition of the Uniform Trade Secrets Act, Code §§ 59.1-336 through -343, and that Pierre's conduct constituted a misappropriation within the meaning of the Act. 1 Applying Code § 59.1-337(A) which provides that "[a]ctual or threatened misappropriation may be enjoined", the chancellor entered the injunction Pierre challenges on appeal.

Pierre contends that this two-fold holding is twice flawed. First, pointing to the issuance and expiration of the egg-carton patent as an example, he argues that what is involved is merely an "adaptation of previously known technology to a new product line in a different market" and this, he says, is not a trade secret. That term is defined in the Act, adopted by the General Assembly by Acts 1986, c. 210, in the following language "Trade secret" means information, including but not limited to, a formula, pattern, compilation, program, device, method, technique, or process, that:

(1) Derives...

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  • Kun v. Shuman
    • United States
    • U.S. District Court — Western District of Virginia
    • June 16, 2015
    ...315 (1974). "The crucial characteristic of a trade secret is secrecy rather than novelty." Dionne v. Southeast Foam Converting & Packaging, Inc., 240 Va. 297, 302, 397 S.E.2d 110, 113 (1990). MicroStrategy Inc. v. Li, 268 Va. 249, 262, 601 S.E.2d 580, 588 (2004). Absolute secrecy is not req......
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