SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK
Appellate Division, Fourth Judicial Department
761.2
CA 11-00440
PRESENT: SCUDDER, P.J., PERADOTTO, LINDLEY, GREEN, AND GORSKI, JJ.
MARCONE APW, LLC,
PLAINTIFF-RESPONDENT-APPELLANT,
V MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
SERVALL COMPANY, KARL P. ROSENHAHN AND
MARK J. CREIGHTON,
DEFENDANTS-APPELLANTS-RESPONDENTS.
ZDARSKY, SAWICKI & AGOSTINELLI LLP, BUFFALO, JAECKLE FLEISCHMANN &
MUGEL, LLP (B. KEVIN BURKE, JR., OF COUNSEL), FOR
DEFENDANTS-APPELLANTS-RESPONDENTS.
PHILLIPS LYTLE LLP, BUFFALO (JAMES D. DONATHEN OF COUNSEL), FOR
PLAINTIFF-RESPONDENT-APPELLANT.
Appeal and cross appeal from an order of the Supreme Court, Erie
County (John A. Michalek, J.), entered February 8, 2011. The order
granted in part plaintiff’s motion for an expanded preliminary
injunction.
It is hereby ORDERED that the order so appealed from is
unanimously affirmed without costs.
Memorandum: Plaintiff commenced this action against, inter alia,
defendant Servall Company (Servall), its competitor in the wholesale
appliance parts distribution business, seeking damages and a permanent
injunction for, inter alia, defendants’ alleged misappropriation of
its confidential and proprietary information. Plaintiff alleges that
its former employees, the two individual defendants, “copied and/or
transferred [plaintiff]’s confidential and proprietary information”
while they were still employed by plaintiff, and then used that
information to solicit plaintiff’s customers on behalf of Servall.
Plaintiff moved for a temporary restraining order and preliminary
injunction prohibiting defendants from, among other things, using its
confidential and proprietary information, soliciting its customers,
and further misappropriating plaintiff’s information. Supreme Court
issued an order (hereafter, initial order) that granted plaintiff’s
motion in part, enjoining defendants from using any information
illegally obtained from plaintiff; enjoining them from further
attempts to misappropriate plaintiff’s information; directing them to
return plaintiff’s information; directing them to preserve the first
set of daily backup tapes from its computer file servers that were
created after this action was commenced; directing the individual
-2- 761.2
CA 11-00440
defendants to turn over their personal computers and associated
storage devices to plaintiff’s agents and to discontinue their use of
any of Servall’s computers and associated storage devices, with the
option of an in camera review by the court in the event of a dispute
concerning privileged documents; and directing defendants to preserve
all documents related to this action. The court, however, denied that
part of plaintiff’s motion seeking to enjoin solicitation of customers
“without prejudice to renew[] if and when [plaintiff] obtains direct
evidence that [its] information has been unfairly used.”
Thereafter, defendant Karl P. Rosenhahn and another former
employee of plaintiff recanted certain statements contained in their
sworn affidavits submitted in opposition to plaintiff’s motion,
thereby in effect admitting that Rosenhahn and other former employees
of plaintiff used customer information obtained from plaintiff in the
course of their employment with Servall. In addition, a forensic
examination of the individual defendants’ computers conducted pursuant
to the initial order revealed that the individual defendants were in
possession of, or had possessed and subsequently destroyed, numerous
files and documents belonging to plaintiff. The files contained,
inter alia, customer names and contact information, credit terms,
sales data and rankings, pricing information, profit margins, accounts
receivable information, sales notes, and warranty records. After that
information came to light, plaintiff moved to expand the preliminary
injunction in the initial order to enjoin defendants from soliciting
or selling to any of plaintiff’s “active customers,” defined as the
more than 3,000 customers to whom plaintiff made sales during the
preceding year. By the order on appeal, the court granted plaintiff’s
motion only in part, enjoining Servall from soliciting 640 customers
identified on a list that Servall had returned to plaintiff pursuant
to the initial order. The court also enjoined Servall from making
sales to customers it obtained between April 1, 2010 and August 31,
2010 “unless it can prove that it obtained th[ose] accounts without
the use of plaintiff’s [i]nformation.” We affirm.
Addressing first defendants’ appeal, we note the well-settled
proposition that “[a] motion for a preliminary injunction is addressed
to the sound discretion of the trial court[,] and the decision of the
trial court on such a motion will not be disturbed on appeal, unless
there is a showing of an abuse of discretion” (Destiny USA Holdings,
LLC v Citigroup Global Mkts. Realty Corp., 69 AD3d 212, 216 [internal
quotation marks omitted]; see Doe v Axelrod, 73 NY2d 748, 750). The
party seeking the preliminary injunction must establish by clear and
convincing evidence “(1) a likelihood of success on the merits, (2)
irreparable injury in the absence of injunctive relief, and (3) a
balance of equities in its favor” (Eastman Kodak Co. v Carmosino, 77
AD3d 1434, 1435; see Nobu Next Door, LLC v Fine Arts Hous., Inc., 4
NY3d 839).
Here, we conclude that the court did not abuse its discretion in
granting in part plaintiff’s motion for an expanded preliminary
injunction (see generally Deloitte & Touche v Chiampou, 222 AD2d
1026). As the court properly determined, plaintiff established a
likelihood of success on the merits of its misappropriation and unfair
-3- 761.2
CA 11-00440
competition causes of action (see generally Eastern Bus. Sys. v
Specialty Bus. Solutions, 292 AD2d 336, 338; Laro Maintenance Corp. v
Culkin, 255 AD2d 560). Although defendants are correct that “customer
lists” are not entitled to trade secret protection if such lists are
“readily ascertainable from sources outside [plaintiff’s] business”
(Columbia Ribbon & Carbon Mfg. Co. v A-1-A Corp., 42 NY2d 496, 499;
see Riedman Corp. v Gallager, 48 AD3d 1188, 1189), here the documents
allegedly misappropriated by the individual defendants are not simply
compilations of customer names and addresses or phone numbers.
Rather, the documents contain detailed information about each
customer, including the names of individual contact persons, customer-
specific pricing information, credit terms and limits, and the
customers’ “class” rankings based upon their margin performance.
Plaintiff established that such “information was compiled through
considerable effort by [plaintiff] and its employees over several
years and was not available to the public. The information also
created a competitive advantage for [plaintiff] in servicing its
current clients and creating new business” (Eastern Bus. Sys., 292
AD2d at 337; see Stanley Tulchin Assoc. v Vignola, 186 AD2d 183, 185;
Giffords Oil Co. v Wild, 106 AD2d 610, 611).
In any event, even assuming, arguendo, that the misappropriated
information is not entitled to trade secret protection, we conclude
that the court properly determined that injunctive relief is warranted
on the alternative ground of breach of trust by the individual
defendants in misappropriating plaintiff’s proprietary information.
As the Court of Appeals stated in Leo Silfen, Inc. v Cream (29 NY2d
387, 391-392), “[i]f there has been a physical taking or studied
copying, the court may in a proper case enjoin solicitation, not
necessarily as a violation of a trade secret, but as an egregious
breach of trust and confidence while in plaintiffs’ service” (see
generally Eastern Bus. Sys., 292 AD2d at 338; Amana Express Intl. v
Pier-Air Intl., 211 AD2d 606, 606-607). Here, the record is replete
with evidence that the individual defendants stole and/or improperly
retained thousands of documents belonging to plaintiff and thereafter
used that information to compete against their former employer.
We further conclude that plaintiff established the requisite
irreparable harm in the absence of the expanded injunctive relief
granted by the court (see generally Ingenuit, Ltd. v Harriff, 33 AD3d
589, 590; Eastern Bus. Sys., 292 AD2d at 337-338; Stanley Tulchin
Assoc., 186 AD2d at 186). With respect to irreparable harm, the court
determined that defendants misappropriated “virtually all of
[plaintiff]’s customer information” and utilized that information to
establish a competing business in the northeastern United States.
While the loss of sales over a finite period of time can be calculated
and adequately remedied by an award of monetary damages (see Eastman
Kodak Co., 77 AD3d at 1436), the court properly determined that,
without the expanded preliminary injunction, “plaintiff ‘would likely
sustain a loss of business impossible, or very difficult, to
quantify’ ” (Invesco Inst. [N.A.], Inc. v Deutsche Inv. Mgt. Ams.,
Inc., 74 AD3d 696, 697; see generally Gundermann & Gundermann Ins. v
Brassill, 46 AD3d 615, 616-617; Alside Div. of Associated Materials v
-4- 761.2
CA 11-00440
Leclair, 295 AD2d 873, 874). In support of the motion, plaintiff’s
senior vice-president averred that, other than a few large national
customers, the core of plaintiff’s business is comprised of sales to
small businesses such as appliance installers and repair persons, and
that “[t]hese loyal customers take a great deal of time to develop.”
Indeed, defendants’ own expert opined that the “real value” to the
business is the relationship of a distributor with its customer, not a
list of names. The loss of goodwill and damage to customer
relationships, unlike the loss of specific sales, is not easily
quantified or remedied by monetary damages (see Gundermann, 46 AD3d at
617; Alside Div. of Associated Materials, 295 AD2d at 874; cf. Eastman
Kodak Co., 77 AD3d at 1436).
In addition, we conclude that the balance of the equities favor
granting the expanded preliminary injunction (see generally Destiny
USA Holdings, LLC., 69 AD3d at 216). Here, there is no record support
for Servall’s contention that the expanded preliminary injunction will
jeopardize its national operations. Notably, Servall’s chief
operating officer averred that “[o]ver 90% of Servall’s business has
nothing to do with the northeast region or customers there.” With
respect to its northeast operations, the expanded injunction only
prohibits Servall from soliciting 640 customers on a list of
prospective clients that defendants developed using plaintiff’s
proprietary information. Servall is thus free to solicit the
remaining 3,000-plus customers served by plaintiff, as well as
customers served by other competitors. With respect to that part of
the injunction enjoining sales to accounts obtained during the time
period that defendants possessed plaintiff’s confidential and
proprietary information, the order expressly allows Servall to make
sales to those customers that Servall can prove it obtained without
the use of plaintiff’s information. To the extent that the expanded
injunction may negatively impact Servall’s business in the northeast,
we note that defendants assumed such a risk by knowingly taking or
“retain[ing],” a term used by Servall in its brief on appeal,
plaintiff’s confidential and proprietary information and using that
information to its competitive advantage and plaintiff’s detriment.
Finally, we reject the contention of plaintiff on its cross
appeal that the injunction should be further expanded. In our view,
the court struck the appropriate balance between prohibiting
defendants from further exploiting the fruits of the misappropriated
information and permitting defendants to compete fairly for customers
in the northeast market.
Entered: June 17, 2011 Patricia L. Morgan
Clerk of the Court