Protecting Trade Secrets at Trial
January 10, 2003
Protecting your trade secrets is not simply a matter of
making sure your employees do not sneak off with your intellectual property in
their laptop computers or that your competitors are not stealing your assets.
If your products are challenged at trial and you must file documents that are
otherwise classified as trade secrets, you will have to engage in creative steps
to protect those secrets in the “open courtroom.”
Trade secrets generally consist of any formula, pattern,
device, or compilation of information used in business that gives the owner an
advantage, or the ability to gain an advantage, over competitors. A substantial
element of secrecy must exist for the information to be considered a trade
secret. However, a party may disclose trade secret information under certain
circumstances without destroying its trade secret status. For example,
disclosure in litigation pursuant to a protective order or disclosure to
employees pursuant to a confidentiality agreement generally will not destroy
trade secret status. As a practical matter, a party’s trade secrets and
confidential information are generally protected during discovery in product
liability cases through the use of protective orders that limit the method of
disclosure and to whom disclosure may be made.
A protective order or confidentiality agreement will not
adequately protect a party’s trade secrets at trial since trade secret
information is likely to be elicited in open court through testimony or the
introduction of trade secret documents. This most likely will result in the
waiver of trade secret status because the information will be available to the
public and will no longer contain the required element of secrecy. Thus, in
determining the measures to employ to protect a party’s trade secrets at trial,
the court must weigh the public’s right of access to judicial records against a
party’s right to protect its trade secrets.
The United States Supreme Court has recognized that the
right of public access to judicial records may be restricted to protect a
party’s trade secrets. There are several measures that a party can ask the
trial court to employ to protect its trade secrets at trial. These include
sealing parts of the record containing trade secret documents and testimony,
sealing the courtroom during testimony and argument concerning trade secrets,
and the use of spectator confidentiality agreements.
When evaluating how to adequately protect its trade secrets
at trial, a party must first determine whether there is a state statute that
sets forth a procedure for sealing judicial records. If the state in which the
case is pending has such a statute, the party should strictly follow the
statute’s requirements in order to properly seal court records.
In addition to sealing parts of the record, a party also
may endeavor to have the courtroom sealed during testimony or argument
concerning trade secrets. Several courts use a two-part test to determine
whether the courtroom should be sealed to protect a party’s trade secrets. The
test requires the court to first determine whether the trade secret owner would
be damaged if the courtroom is not sealed, and if so, whether there are any
reasonable alternatives to closing the courtroom.
A less restrictive measure that the parties should consider
is the use of a spectator confidentiality agreement in which the trial court
would enter a confidentiality order requiring any spectator who remained in the
courtroom during testimony or argument concerning trade secrets to sign a
confidentiality agreement promising not to disclose the trade secrets at issue.
If the spectator refuses to sign the confidentiality agreement, he or she would
not be permitted to enter or remain in the courtroom during testimony or
argument concerning the trade secrets. Another possible benefit of using the
spectator confidentiality agreement instead of moving to have the courtroom
sealed is that the use of a spectator confidentiality agreement could generate
less resistance from the media, and possibly less media exposure.
For more information, contact Kristi Wallace, toll free,
at 1-888-688-8500, or via e-mail at kristi.wallace@hklaw.com.