Title: Intellectual Property Survey: Trade Secrets and Related Agreements
1Intellectual Property SurveyTrade Secrets and
Related Agreements
2Reverse Engineering
- Its a good thing.
- Background norm of competition
- Considered proper means of obtaining a trade
secret - May be times when we chose to prohibit use of
information obtained from reverse engineering - i.e. if the information is covered by a patent
- Related, it is important that TS protection by
more leaky (than patent)
3Departing Employees
Employer invests Salary/Pay Training Experience E
quipment Etc.
- Employee gains
- General Knowledge
- Particularized Knowledge
- Trade Secrets
Protection levels may affect employers
willingness to invest in employees
4Departing Employees
5Wexler v. Greenberg (Pa. 1960)
- Pennsylvania law Rest. Torts
- Tech Cleaning products
- Parties
- Buckingham Wax Makes cleaning products
- Greenberg Chief chemist at BW for eight years
- Brite Cleaning products re-seller, BW customer
- No question that Brites products are the same
formulae as Buckingham Wax products
6Wexler v. Greenbergtrying to find a duty
- Any explicit agreement with Greenberg ?
- Where else might we look to establish a duty?
- Do we infer duty of secrecy when
- Employer tells Employee a pre-existing secret ?
- Employee tells Employer a new-found secret ?
- Why allow Greenberg to give formulae to Brite?
Isnt there an implied duty in the nature of the
employment relationship? - What agreements would stop Greenberg ?
7Wexler v. Greenbergtrying to find a duty
- Employee created the formulas
- Employer did not disclose the formulas with the
employee - No (implied) promise extracted upon such
disclosure - Is there an implied duty in the nature of the
employment relationship?
8Employer alternatives?
- Have employees sign contracts!
- Invention/discovery assignments
- Argue against Wexler (it is not uniformly
followed, by any means!)
9Departing Employees
- Should we let firms and prospective employees
bargain over restraints on future employment ? - Should we allow agreements not to
- Use information that cannot qualify for trade
secret protection ? - Contact any former customers ?
- Offer jobs to former co-workers ?
- Compete, at any time ?
- Compete, anywhere in the U.S. ?
10Problem 2-13 (p. 90)
- Is this agreement enforceable?
- Identify the elements of the agreement
- Duty to keep confidential information secret
- Invention assignment
- With a trailer clause
- Non-competition agreement
- Agreement to return company documents
- Consent to notification of new employer
- Non-solicitation agreement
11Duty to keep confidential information secret
- Why have such a provision?
- Defines the kinds of information that employee
must keep secret - Puts employee on notice
- Part of reasonable efforts
- Makes duty express
- Risks (negotiating/drafting tips)
- Definition must be reasonable
- e.g. exclude information once publicly known
- Categories of employees who must sign must be
reasonable - Provision for injunctive relief?
- Consideration for the promise?
12Invention assignment
- Is this necessary? What result without it?
- Employee hired to invent
- Common law employer ownership of inventions
- Employee who uses employer equip. to invent
- Common law shop right in inventions
- Employee independently invents during the time
period of employment - Common law employee owns
- Negotiating/drafting tip
- Include the full language you see here
- Do not try to obtain assignment of independent
inventions - Provide for a duty to disclose, as well as to
assign
13Invention Assignment Trailer Clause
- Enforceable?
- Must be reasonable
- Duration
- Subject matter
- Risk?
- Employee simply waits out the trailer period
14Non-competition agreement
- Enforceable?
- Reasonable
- Duration
- Geographic scope
- Industry scope
- Policy reasons for enforcing such agreements?
- Some states reject employee non-competes
- Negotiating/drafting tips
- Be reasonable!
- Suggest paying employee for duration of
non-compete - Suggest liquidated damages for violations
15Non-competition Agreements
- Why use them?
- Inevitable disclosure theory has had limited
success - Unrealistic for employees compartmentalizing
knowledge
16Agreement to return company documents
- Is this really necessary?
- Clarifies employee possessions v. employer
possessions
17Consent to notification of new employer
- Is this really necessary?
- Avoid a claim of interference with contractual
relationships
18Non-solicitation agreement
- Non-solicitation of
- Employees
- Customers
- Who owns the personal relationship built up
between an agent of the employer and the
customer? - Recall definition of confidential information
in the contract
19Agreements to Keep Secret
- Contract as intellectual property protection
- Creating markets for intangibles is difficult
- Market failure problems
- But, if a market results in a bargained-for
exchange, should courts enforce that bargain? - Policy of free flow of information
- Policy of freedom of contract
20Listerine
- Named after Sir Joseph Lister, an Englishman who
performed the first antiseptic surgery in 1865
(using carbolic acid (phenol in water)) - First marketed as a general antiseptic
- Starting in about 1895, marketed to dentists as
an especially effective oral antiseptic
21Warner-Lambert Pharma v. JJ Reynolds(S.D.N.Y.
1959), affd (2d Cir. 1960)
- Trade secret licensee, Warner-Lambert, sues trade
secret owner, JJ Reynolds - Tech Antiseptic formula
- Terms of the license . . .
- for Dr. Lawrence, owner ?
- for Jordan Lambert, licensee ?
- Expiration ?
- What economic sense for the licensee ?
22Agreements to pay, even if not secret
- What drives the choice between . . .
- lump sum payment versus running royalty ?
- expiration date versus until secret gets out ?
- Is it ever rational for licensee to agree to
royalty in perpetuity?
23www.warnerlambert.com.au/products/listerine (2002)
- Warner-Lambert's LISTERINE is the undisputed
leader in the Australian mouthwash market. Warner
Lambert boasts a staggering two-thirds market
share and an incredible 85 brand loyalty rating.
That's one of the highest brand loyalties across
any category. The nearest competition languishes
behind with a mere fifth of Warner-Lambert sales.