Abstract

In legal disputes where one party claims that it submitted an idea to another party and alleges that the latter used that idea without permission or compensation, two categories of California intellectual property law have increasingly come to resemble one another: (1) trade secret law, most often applied in business or technical contexts; and (2) idea submission law, primarily applied in cases involving film scripts and other media productions. Over the decades, these regimes have developed separately, within distinct business and legal cultures. But recent developments in California trade secret law have brought the two closer together; in some areas, they may even be approaching a unified body of law. This Article explores that possibility. It concludes that although a partial merger is inevitable, the two core causes of action—for asserted trade secrets, a misappropriation claim; for idea submissions, a so-called Desny claim for breach of implied-in-fact contract—will and should remain distinct. A partial merger, however, would lead to beneficial exchanges in areas where their doctrines already overlap: (1) idea submission’s “independent development” and trade secret’s “independent derivation” defenses; and (2) statutory preemption under California’s Uniform Trade Secrets Act (CUTSA).
 California’s idea submission cases have developed sophisticated and robust means to adjudicate the concept of “independent development”—that is, a defendant’s assertion that despite receiving the plaintiff’s idea, it nonetheless came up with the disputed film, television show, or other concept on its own. By contrast, the important and analogous defense of “independent derivation” in California trade secret law remains underdeveloped. This Article argues that the idea submission cases offer a far more rigorous analysis of the defense and could inform similar decisions under trade secret law. In particular, it proposes a methodology that courts can use to adjudicate the independent derivation defense, inspired by the idea submission cases.
 The idea submission cases largely survived copyright preemption challenges in the 1990s and 2000s after Ninth Circuit rulings preserved the viability of some idea submission causes of action under state law. But surviving copyright preemption is not the same thing as surviving CUTSA trade secret preemption. This more recent form of IP preemption is broad, and it subsumes tort claims seeking to protect information said to be confidential. This Article argues that the CUTSA preempts peripheral idea submission tort claims such as breach of confidence, but it does not preempt the core claim at the heart of California’s idea submission regime—the Desny claim for breach of implied-in-fact contract.
 The proposed partial merger recognizes the public policy ends of each regime: protecting weaker parties who submit ideas to film and media studios (in narrowlydefined circumstances), and ensuring that litigants cannot use tort claims to subvert the protections the CUTSA and related employee mobility rules provide for the free use of publicly available information that does not meet the statutory definition of a trade secret.

Highlights

  • If someone discloses an idea to a company in the hopes of effectuating a transaction, and the company uses that idea for its own benefit without permission or compensation, does that person have a claim under California law? And assuming they do, which legal regime will be most effective: trade secret law or idea submission law? If the former, the claim would arise under California’s Uniform Trade Secret Act (CUTSA), which has become one of the major regimes through which technology disputes in Silicon Valley and elsewhere are adjudicated

  • If California’s Uniform Trade Secrets Act is found to preempt tort claims often seen in idea submission cases, must the same hold true for Desny claims, where the plaintiff alleges breach of an implied-in-fact contract?

  • California courts can and should bring the state’s idea submission and trade secret regimes closer together, to better develop the defense of independent derivation in trade secret law, and to preempt nebulous tort claims in idea submission law that are premised on allegedly nonpublic information

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

If someone discloses an idea to a company in the hopes of effectuating a transaction, and the company uses that idea for its own benefit without permission or compensation, does that person have a claim under California law? And assuming they do, which legal regime will be most effective: trade secret law or idea submission law? If the former, the claim would arise under California’s Uniform Trade Secret Act (CUTSA), which has become one of the major regimes through which technology disputes in Silicon Valley and elsewhere are adjudicated. It protects the right to use publicly available information without fear of liability under some unpredictable, made-for-litigation tort theory In this manner, applying CUTSA preemption to the idea submission context would result in a partial, but not a complete, merger of California’s trade secret and idea submission regimes. This would still leave litigants with several options: a cause of action for misappropriation of trade secrets, a claim for breach of a written contract (if one exists), or the Desny claim (in a narrow context defined by that landmark case). Why that means tort claims—but not contract claims—asserted in the idea submission context are preempted by the statute.[8]

OVERLAPPING NARRATIVES AND FUZZY BOUNDARIES
SHOULD CALIFORNIA’S TRADE SECRET AND IDEA SUBMISSION REGIMES BE MERGED?
Independent Derivation in California Trade Secret Law
Independent Development in California Idea Submission Law
PREEMPTION OF COMMON LAW INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY TORT CLAIMS
California Idea Submission Claims and Partial Copyright Preemption
Trade Secret Preemption of California Idea Submission Claims
CONCLUSION
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