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Full Opinion
In the
United States Court of Appeals
For the Seventh Circuit
____________________
No. 21â1649
LIFE SPINE, INC.,
PlaintiďŹâAppellee,
v.
AEGIS SPINE, INC.,
DefendantâAppellant.
____________________
Appeal from the United States District Court for the
Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division.
No. 19âcvâ7092 â Young B. Kim, Magistrate Judge.
____________________
ARGUED JULY 21, 2021 â DECIDED AUGUST 9, 2021
____________________
Before SCUDDER, ST. EVE, and KIRSCH, Circuit Judges.
ST. EVE, Circuit Judge. This trade secret case arises from a
shortâlived business relationship between two companies that
sell spinal implant devices. Life Spine, Inc. makes and sells a
spinal implant device called the ProLift Expandable Spacer
System. Aegis Spine, Inc. contracted with Life Spine to distribâ
ute the ProLift to hospitals and surgeons. In the distribution
agreement, Aegis promised to protect Life Spineâs confidenâ
tial information, act as a fiduciary for Life Spineâs property,
2 No. 21â1649
and refrain from reverse engineering the ProLift. Despite
these promises, Aegis funneled information about the ProLift
to its parent company, L&K Biomed, Inc., to help L&K deâ
velop a competing spinal implant device. Shortly after L&Kâs
competing product hit the market, Life Spine sued Aegis for
trade secret misappropriation and breach of the distribution
agreement. Following a nineâday evidentiary hearing, the disâ
trict court granted Life Spineâs motion for a preliminary inâ
junction barring Aegis and its business partners from marketâ
ing the competing product.
Aegis now appeals. It submits that the district courtâs inâ
junction rests on a flawed legal conclusionânamely, that a
company can have trade secret protection in a device that it
publicly discloses through patents, displays, and sales. We see
the issue diďŹerently, however. As a legal matter, we do not
disputeânor does Life Spineâthat information in the public
domain cannot be a trade secret. But the issue here is factual:
Did Life Spine publicly disclose the specific information that
it seeks to protect by patenting, displaying, and selling the
ProLift? The district court found that the answer was no, and
Aegis must show that its finding was clear error. It has not
done so. Finding no basis to upset the district courtâs meticuâ
lous analysis, we aďŹrm.
I. Background
A. Factual Background
PlaintiďŹ Life Spine is an Illinois company that makes and
sells surgically implanted medical devices that treat spine disâ
orders. Its bestâselling device is the ProLiftâan expandable
spinal implant that treats degenerative disc disease. The Proâ
Lift consists of an implant, or âcage,â and an installer. The
No. 21â1649 3
cage has five main components, shown in the drawing below:
an upper endplate, a lower endplate, a nose ramp, a base
ramp, and an expansion screw. Dovetailâshaped grooves conâ
nect the diďŹerent components. The installer is used to insert
the cage into a patientâs spine and expand it to restore spinal
disc height.
ProLift cage (exploded)
Expandable cages are intricate devices with many small
component parts. Precise engineering is necessary to ensure
that they can withstand decades of intense spinal pressure.
Life Spine spent more than three years designing and develâ
oping the ProLift. To do so, it studied publicly available inforâ
mation about other expandable cages, including patents, and
went through an exhaustive trialâandâerror process. During
the trialâandâerror process, Life Spine repeatedly redesigned
the device, sometimes by adjusting the size of its components
by fractions of a millimeter. In March 2016, the FDA approved
Life Spineâs application to market the ProLift. In October
2017, Life Spine obtained a patent for the ProLift. Life Spineâs
4 No. 21â1649
patent includes various drawings and figures (including the
drawing above), along with descriptions of the components
and their interaction.
Life Spine considers âthe precise dimensions and measâ
urements of the ProLift components and subcomponents and
their interconnectivityâ to be confidential trade secrets. A key
fact in dispute is whether third parties can access those preâ
cise specifications without first signing confidentiality agreeâ
ments. The district court found that the answer was no: Third
parties can only learn such information if they have unfetâ
tered access to the device and specialized measuring equipâ
ment, and Life Spine does not allow third parties such access
unless they first sign confidentiality agreements. The precise
specifications of the ProLift are not available from marketing
materials, which include only ârounded approximationsâ of
the components. Nor are they available from patent materials,
which disclose the components and their interaction but not
their precise measurements or dimensions. Life Spine disâ
plays the ProLift at industry conventions, but it supervises anâ
yone who handles the device. And while Life Spine sells the
ProLift to hospitals and surgeons, it is not available for the
public to purchase. Rather, Life Spine (through its distribuâ
tors) sells the device to hospitals and surgeons, who purchase
the device for use in scheduled surgeries. Moreover, Life
Spine requires its distributors to oversee each ProLift device
that they sell up until surgery.
Defendant Aegis is a Colorado company that sells medical
devices to treat spinal conditions. Aegis does not make mediâ
cal devices, but its parent company, L&K, does. Based in
South Korea, L&K is the majority owner of Aegis and a direct
competitor of Life Spine. Aegis and L&K have a close
No. 21â1649 5
relationship; Aegis supplies information to L&K upon reâ
quest, and several of the companiesâ top managers have
worked at both companies. Around April 2016, L&K and Aeâ
gis decided that, to remain competitive in the United States
market, L&K should design and develop an expandable cage
product.
In October 2017âwhile Aegis and L&K were still planâ
ning the launch of a new expandable cage productâAegis
contacted Life Spine about serving as a distributor of the Proâ
Lift. In connection with this proposal, Aegis asked Life Spine
for a ProLift device, explaining that certain customers wanted
to see it for demonstration purposes. Life Spine agreed, but
first required Aegis to promise in writing that it would protect
Life Spineâs confidential information, use the confidential inâ
formation only in furtherance of the partiesâ business relationâ
ship, and refrain from sharing the ProLift with anyone who
intended to use it for purposes of reverse engineering, copyâ
ing, or otherwise competing with Life Spine. After making
these promises, Aegis showed the ProLift device to a surgeon
and asked the surgeon to help it and L&K develop a competâ
ing expandable cage. The surgeon agreed.
In January 2018, Life Spine and Aegis signed a formal disâ
tribution agreement. The agreement (which superseded earâ
lier agreements) allowed Aegis to solicit sales of the ProLift
from a list of surgeons, including two surgeons who had
agreed to help L&K develop a competing expandable cage. In
return, Aegis promised to act as a fiduciary for Life Spineâs
property. Aegis also promised not to copy, reverse engineer,
or create derivative products based on the ProLift. The agreeâ
ment contained confidentiality provisions barring Aegis from
sharing Life Spineâs confidential information or using it for
6 No. 21â1649
any nonâcontractual purpose. It further required Aegis to
train its employees on complying with these provisions and
provided that the obligations would âsurvive the expirationâ
of the agreement.
In March 2018, Aegis held a kickoďŹ meeting for L&Kâs
forthcoming expandable cage product, the AccelFixâXT. Aegis
brought a ProLift set to the meeting, and its surgeon consultâ
ants examined it. The surgeon consultants continued to help
Aegis and L&K throughout the design process; they purâ
chased and used the ProLift in surgeries and gave feedback to
Aegis and L&K on the deviceâs performance. Aegis and L&K
incorporated their feedback into the design process.
In May 2018, Aegis sent L&K a ProLift cage. A month later,
Aegis sent L&K a full ProLift set (cage and installer). L&K had
asked to see the devices to help develop the AccelFixâXT. Aeâ
gis sent the devices to L&K without Life Spineâs knowledge
or consent. After receiving the installer, L&K told Aegis that
it was copying the basic design of the ProLift installer. Mateâ
rials from a meeting a few months later show that L&K deâ
signed the AccelFixâXT installer to be compatible with the
ProLift cage.
The district court described the evidence surrounding
these device shipments as âmurky.â L&Kâs head of Research
and Development claimed that he never saw the cage that Aeâ
gis sent over in May 2018. As for the full ProLift set that Aegis
sent over in June, he testified that he decided not to open the
package because he did not want L&K to have to pay for it.
He maintained that L&K returned the unopened box to Aegis,
but he could not recall any details about returning it, nor was
there any other evidence to verify the return. Aegis eventually
told Life Spine that Aegis had received an empty box from
No. 21â1649 7
Life Spine, without a cage in it. But Life Spine was skeptical;
it had never had such a problem in the past, and a photo of
the âempty boxâ showed that someone had aďŹxed a second
antitampering sticker over the original one. Life Spine susâ
pected that someone had opened the box, removed the cage,
and then tried to cover it up. The district court ultimately
agreed, concluding that L&Kâs explanation to the contrary
was not credible.
The distribution agreement between Life Spine and Aegis
expired on August 31, 2018, but the parties chose to continue
their arrangement for the time being. In September 2018, Aeâ
gis and Life Spine orally agreed that the parties would conâ
tinue to operate under the terms of the distribution agreement
while they negotiated a new contract. Aegis continued to subâ
mit purchase orders, and Life Spine continued to fill them.
Around the same time, Aegis asked Life Spine for a cusâ
tom installer to show its customers. In September 2018, Life
Spine sent Aegis an email with a picture and details about the
custom installer. Aegis forwarded the email to L&K, despite
knowing that Life Spine considered it confidential.
Life Spine never shared ProLift testing data with Aegis,
but Aegis somehow obtained it. The materials from an Octoâ
ber 2018 meeting between L&K and Aegis include a reference
to the results of a âstatic shear compression testâ for the Proâ
Lift. A static shear compression test measures how much load
a cage can withstand on a oneâtime basis before breaking or
deforming. Life Spine considers the results of its static shear
compression testing to be confidential trade secrets. It submitâ
ted the results to the FDA when applying for approval to marâ
ket the ProLift, but it did not otherwise disclose them. Because
the FDA approved the ProLift (and, by extension, its testing
8 No. 21â1649
results), a competitor with access to ProLift testing results
would have a leg up in the trialâandâerror process. Aegis
could not explain how it obtained the testing results. The disâ
trict court found that âthe most likely explanation is that L&K
used its access to the ProLift cage to conduct its own testing.â
In December 2018, development of the AccelFixâXT was
going poorly, so L&K decided to start from scratch. Three
months later, in March 2019, L&K applied for FDA approval
to market the AccelFixâXT. By FDA regulation, medical device
developers must keep âdesign history filesâ that reflect each
step in the design of a medical device. See 21 C.F.R. § 820.30(j).
But there is almost no documentation in the AccelFixâXT deâ
sign history file from January 2019 through April 2019. Durâ
ing that short period, as it happens, L&K redesigned the Acâ
celFixâXT to change a square component to a dovetail feature,
such that its key measurements were essentially identical to
the ProLiftâs dovetail feature. The design history file does not
reflect the process behind that redesign. The FDA approved
the AccelFixâXT in September 2019.
Meanwhile, the partiesâ distribution relationship had
ended. In December 2018, Aegis directly purchased 45 ProLift
cages from Life Spine. Attempts to formally renew the relaâ
tionship, however, were unsuccessful. In the spring and sumâ
mer of 2019, Aegis and Life Spine attempted to negotiate a
new agreement. In July 2019, however, Aegis backed out of
negotiations. In September 2019, Life Spine first learned that
Aegis and L&K were launching the AccelFixâXT in direct
competition with the ProLift.
No. 21â1649 9
B. Procedural Background
Shortly after learning of the AccelFixâXT, Life Spine sued
Aegis for breaching the distribution agreement and misapâ
propriating its trade secrets in violation of the Defend Trade
Secrets Act, 18 U.S.C. § 1836 et seq., and the Illinois Trade Seâ
crets Act, 765 ILCS 1065/1 et seq. The parties consented to Magâ
istrate Judge Kimâs jurisdiction. See 28 U.S.C. § 636(c).
In August 2020, Life Spine moved for a preliminary injuncâ
tion. The district court held a nineâday hearing on the motion.
Representatives from both sides testified, as did John Ashley,
a seasoned medical device developer whom Life Spine called
as an expert witness. Ashley testified that the ProLift cage and
the AccelFixâXT cage are âessentially the same.â Both devices
have the same five essential componentsâtwo endplates, a
nose ramp, a base ramp, and an expansion screwâwhich
function together in substantially the same way. In both deâ
vices, the endplates and ramps connect via dovetailâshaped
grooves and a screw that controls the cageâs expansion. The
dovetailsâ specifications vary by mere fractions of a millimeâ
ter. Remarkably, the ProLift installer is compatible with the
AccelFixâXT cage, which Ashley found âshockingâ and unâ
precedented in his experience. Even Aegisâs CEO conceded
that it would be âimpossibleâ to produce a cage compatible
with another companyâs installer without knowing the speciâ
fications of the other companyâs cage.
Ashley was surprised at how fast L&K developed the Acâ
celFixâXT after starting from scratch in December 2018. He
testified that 18 months is a reasonable timeframe for develâ
oping an expandable cage, and that the threeâmonth period
for L&K was much shorter than he would have expected. He
also commented on the lack of documentation in the design
10 No. 21â1649
history file. After reviewing 20 diďŹerent expandable cage deâ
vices, Ashley concluded that the ProLift and AccelFixâXT
were the only two devices that were âessentially the same.â
This led him to conclude that the AccelFixâXT was a âderivaâ
tive productâ based on the ProLift cage. In his opinion, L&K
used either the ProLift cage itself or detailed information
about the ProLift to develop the AccelFixâXT.
After hearing the evidence, the district court granted Life
Spineâs motion for a preliminary injunction. It set forth its reaâ
soning in a 65âpage order that comprehensively analyzed the
facts and legal arguments. On the merits, the court found that
Life Spine had a strong likelihood of success on its trade secret
misappropriation claim and its breach of contract claims. Speâ
cifically, Life Spine made a strong showing that Aegis had
misappropriated three distinct trade secrets: â(1) the combiâ
nation, dimensions, and interconnectivity of the ProLiftâs
components and subcomponents; (2) static shear compression
testing data; and (3) information about how Life Spine prices
the ProLift.â As for the breach of contract claim, Life Spine
made a strong showing that Aegis had breached the confidenâ
tiality, fiduciary duty, and anticopying provisions of the disâ
tribution agreement. The court also found, as a preliminary
matter, that each of these provisions survived the agreementâs
expiration. Moving to the other injunction factors, the court
found that Life Spine had suďŹered irreparable harm in the
form of lost customers and market share, damaged goodwill
and reputation, and price erosion. It found, too, that the harm
to Life Spine of denying an injunction outweighed the harm
to Aegis of granting one. Based on these findings, the district
court enjoined Aegis and its business partners from making,
marketing, distributing, selling, or obtaining intellectual
property rights in the AccelFixâXT.
No. 21â1649 11
Aegis filed an interlocutory appeal of the order granting
the preliminary injunction. See 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1).
II. Discussion
To obtain a preliminary injunction, a plaintiďŹ must show
that it is likely to succeed on the merits, and that traditional
legal remedies would be inadequate, such that it would suďŹer
irreparable harm without the injunction. Speech First, Inc. v.
Killeen, 968 F.3d 628, 637 (7th Cir. 2020). If the plaintiďŹ makes
this showing, the court weighs the harm of denying an injuncâ
tion to the plaintiďŹ against the harm to the defendant of grantâ
ing one. Id. This balancing test is done on a sliding scale: âIf
the plaintiďŹ is likely to win on the merits, the balance of harms
need not weigh as heavily in his favor.â Id. In balancing the
harms, the court also considers the public interest. Id.
We review a district courtâs decision to grant or deny a
preliminary injunction for abuse of discretion. Id. at 638. In
doing so, we review the courtâs legal conclusions de novo and
its factual findings for clear error. Id. Absent legal or factual
errors, we aďŹord âgreat deferenceâ to the courtâs decision. Id.
(internal quotation and citation omitted).
A. Likelihood of Success on the Merits
Aegisâs appeal focuses primarily on Life Spineâs likelihood
of success on the merits. For present purposes, Aegis does not
dispute that L&K used the information that Aegis shared with
it to reverse engineer the ProLift. Instead, Aegis maintains
that none of the shared information was confidential. In Aeâ
gisâs view, the district court legally erred in finding that Life
Spine could have trade secret protection in information that it
publicly disclosed through patents, displays, and sales. Aegis
12 No. 21â1649
maintains that this error permeated the courtâs assessment of
the merits.
We recently clarified that âa plaintiďŹ must demonstrate
that its claim has some likelihood of success on the merits, not
merely a better than negligible chance.â Mays v. Dart, 974 F.3d
810, 822 (7th Cir. 2020) (internal quotations and citations omitâ
ted). In other words, âa mere possibility of success is not
enough.â Ill. Republican Party v. Pritzker, 973 F.3d 760, 762 (7th
Cir. 2020). The precise showing necessary âdepends on the
facts of the case at hand because of our sliding scale apâ
proach.â Mays, 974 F.3d at 822.
1. Trade Secret Misappropriation
Life Spine brings parallel trade secret misappropriation
claims under federal and state law. Under federal law, inforâ
mation qualifies as a âtrade secretâ if (1) âthe owner thereof
has taken reasonable measures to keep such information seâ
cretâ and (2) âthe information derives independent economic
value, actual or potential, from not being generally known to,
and not being readily ascertainable through proper means by,
another person who can obtain economic value from the disâ
closure or use of the information.â 18 U.S.C. § 1839(3). Illiâ
noisâs definition is materially identical. 765 ILCS 1065/2(d).
Under both statutes, whether information qualifies as a trade
secret is a question of fact that ârequires an ad hoc evaluation
of all the surrounding circumstances.â Learning Curve Toys,
Inc. v. PlayWood Toys, Inc., 342 F.3d 714, 723 (7th Cir. 2003).
Although the existence of a trade secret is a question of
fact, there are some general rules that guide the inquiry. Relâ
evant here, â[i]nformation that is public knowledge or that is
generally known in an industry cannot be a trade secret.â
No. 21â1649 13
Ruckelshaus v. Monsanto Co., 467 U.S. 986, 1002 (1984); accord
Pope v. AlbertoâCulver Co., 694 N.E.2d 615, 617 (Ill. App. Ct.
1998). Thus, a company may not publicly disclose information
in a patent and then claim that the information is a trade seâ
cret. âPublication in a patent destroys the trade secret.â
BondPro Corp. v. Siemens Power Generation, Inc., 463 F.3d 702,
706 (7th Cir. 2006). Similarly, a company may not publicly sell
or display a product and then claim trade secret protection in
information that is âreadily ascertainableâ upon examination
of the product. Restatement (Third) of Unfair Competition
§ 39 cmt. f (1995); accord Accent Packaging, Inc. v. Leggett & Platt,
Inc., 707 F.3d 1318, 1329 (Fed. Cir. 2013); Pope, 694 N.E.2d at
618; 1 Milgrim on Trade Secrets § 1.05 (2021).
Importantly, though, a limited disclosure does not destroy
all trade secret protection in a product. Rockwell Graphic Sys.,
Inc. v. DEV Indus., Inc., 925 F.2d 174, 176â77 (7th Cir. 1991).
Trade secret law focuses on the âconcrete secretsâ that the
plaintiďŹ seeks to protect, rather than âbroad areas of technolâ
ogy.â Composite Marine Propellers, Inc. v. Van Der Woude, 962
F.2d 1263, 1266 (7th Cir. 1992). Thus, a company can maintain
trade secret protection in the undisclosed aspects of a prodâ
uct, even if it has publicly disclosed other aspects of the same
product. See, e.g., Henry Hope XâRay Prods., Inc. v. Marron Carâ
rel, Inc., 674 F.2d 1336, 1342 (9th Cir. 1982) (patent drawings
did not destroy trade secret protection because they provided
âonly a general depiction of a gearing systemâ and did not
disclose the precise information that the plaintiďŹ sought to
protect); see also Wellogix, Inc. v. Accenture, L.L.P., 716 F.3d 867,
875 (5th Cir. 2013) (â[A] patent destroys the secrecy necessary
to maintain a trade secret only when the patent and the trade
secret both cover the same subject matter.â) (internal quotaâ
tion and citation omitted). A trade secret can even exist âin a
14 No. 21â1649
combination of characteristics and components, each of
which, by itself, is in the public domain,â so long as their
âunique combinationâ has competitive value. 3M v. Pribyl, 259
F.3d 587, 595â96 (7th Cir. 2001); accord Restatement (Third) of
Unfair Competition § 39 cmt. f.
By the same token, a company does not forfeit trade secret
protection by publicly displaying or selling a product unless
the trade secret is âreadily ascertainableâ upon examination
of the product. Restatement (Third) of Unfair Competition
§ 39 cmt. f. (â[I]f acquisition of the information through an exâ
amination of a competitorâs product would be diďŹcult, costly,
or timeâconsuming, the trade secret owner retains protection
against an improper acquisition, disclosure, or use.â); accord
Televation Telecomm. Sys., Inc. v. Saindon, 522 N.E.2d 1359, 1365
(Ill. App. Ct. 1988); 1 Milgrim on Trade Secrets § 1.05; see also
Hicklin Engâg, L.C. v. Bartell, 439 F.3d 346, 350 (7th Cir. 2006);
Thermodyne Food Serv. Prod., Inc. v. McDonaldâs Corp., 940 F.
Supp. 1300, 1307 (N.D. Ill. 1996).
These teachings reveal a critical flaw in Aegisâs argument.
Aegis contends that the district court legally erred in concludâ
ing that information about the ProLift could remain a proâ
tected trade secret after Life Spine patented, displayed, and
sold the device to hospitals and surgeons. Aegis appears to
view trade secret protection as an allâorânothing proposition
for a given productâeither it exists, or it does not. But the inâ
quiry is more nuanced than that. We focus on the precise inâ
formation that the plaintiďŹ seeks to protect and ask if it qualâ
ifies as a trade secret under the relevant statutory definition.
That is precisely what the district court did here; it did not
legally err. To be sure, if it turns out that the precise inforâ
mation is known to the public, or is general knowledge in the
No. 21â1649 15
industry, then there is no trade secret. Ruckelshaus, 467 U.S. at
1002. But whether the information is public is a question of
fact. Learning Curve, 342 F.3d at 723; Atl. Rsch. Mktg. Sys., Inc.
v. Troy, 659 F.3d 1345, 1357 (Fed. Cir. 2011) (whether patent
disclosed alleged trade secrets was a question for the jury).
Properly framed, then, the issue here is factual: Did Life
Spine publicly disclose its alleged trade secrets by patenting,
displaying, and selling the ProLift? The district court found
that the answer was no, and Aegis does not come close to
showing that its detailed finding was clear error.
To begin, ample evidence supports the district courtâs
finding that Life Spineâs patent did not disclose the precise
specifications of the ProLift. Life Spineâs engineering manager
testified that the precise specifications are ânot easily deâ
rivedâ from patent materials. Expanding on that point, Life
Spineâs director of engineering explained that the measureâ
ments of the ProLiftâs dovetail component are extremely preâ
ciseâdown to fractions of a millimeter. And these granular
measurements are not available from patent materials, which
include only âpictures of the partâ and do not âgo into detail,â
provide dimensions, or âtell anyone how the features connect,
how itâs assembled.â A third party can learn the precise measâ
urements only with access to the device itself and sophistiâ
cated measurement technology.
To counter this evidence, Aegis points to Life Spine expert
Ashleyâs concession that some measurements of the ProLift
are standard in the industry and that an engineer reading Life
Spineâs patent would have a good âstarting pointâ for ascerâ
taining some of the other measurements. But Ashleyâs testiâ
mony does not support a finding that every dimension and
measurement of the ProLift is in the public domain. Rather, it
16 No. 21â1649
supports a finding that the ProLift patent would be helpful to
a company developing a competing productâa fact that is
unremarkable and undisputed in this litigation. Nowhere did
Ashley testify that Life Spineâs patent materials disclose the
exact dimensions and measurements of every ProLift compoâ
nent. And it is these dimensions and measurements, rather
than the product itself, which Life Spine seeks to protect as a
trade secret.
Nor can Aegis show that the district court clearly erred in
finding that Life Spineâs displays and sales did not disclose
the precise specifications of the ProLift. The evidence
showedâand Aegis does not disputeâthat those who attend
ProLift displays do not have unfettered access to the device.
Rather, Life Spine supervises them as they handle the device,
much like a jeweler supervises someone trying on a watch.
As for sales, the only purchasers of the ProLift are hospiâ
tals and surgeons, who purchase the device for use in schedâ
uled surgeries. The evidence showed that Life Spine takes
many precautions to safeguard the device prior to surgery. A
Life Spine representative testified that Life Spine or its distribâ
utors ship the ProLift in sealed boxes aďŹxed with antitamperâ
ing stickers. For sterilization purposes, the boxes remain
sealed until surgery. Moreover, Life Spine requires its distribâ
utors to oversee the devices until surgery. Distributors inspect
the devices âprior to surgery and through surgery.â They
keep documentation about the surgery and confirm with the
hospital that the surgery went as planned. They must even be
present in the operating room âto assist and answer any quesâ
tions that the surgeon or his surgical staďŹ has regarding the
product thatâs being used.â While carrying out these tasks, the
distributors act as fiduciaries for Life Spineâs property.
No. 21â1649 17
Relying on this evidence, the district court found that Life
Spine did not publicly disclose the precise specifications of the
ProLift by selling it for use in surgeries. Aegis strains to exâ
plain why that finding was clear error. Distributors are bound
by confidentiality agreements, so Aegis is left to suggest that
surgeons or patients, who are not similarly bound, might reâ
verse engineer the device. This speculative argument is hard
to accept. As just mentioned, distributors acting as fiduciaries
sell the device for use in specific surgeries and oversee the deâ
vice throughout the process. Even apart from that, it seems
doubtful that the hospitals or surgeons purchasing the device
for use in planned surgeries would secretly unpackage the deâ
vice, measure all its components with specialized measureâ
ment technology, reassemble the device, and then use the deâ
vice in the surgery. It seems even more unlikely that a device
would be removed from a patientâs body and then reverse enâ
gineered. Aegis has not identified any evidence that supports
these unfounded scenarios.
The district court was not obligated to credit Aegisâs specâ
ulative and factually unsupported hypotheses. After all, the
owner of a trade secret need only take âreasonable measuresâ
to preserve secrecy. 18 U.S.C. § 1839(3). Life Spine takes many
steps to protect the secrecy of the precise specifications of the
ProLift. It does not take every conceivable measureâbut it is
not required to do so. See Rockwell Graphic Sys., 925 F.2d at
177â80. The district courtâs factual finding that the precise
specifications of the ProLift are trade secrets has substantial
evidentiary support and does not approach clear error.
Unable to show clear error, Aegis retreats to legal arguâ
ments. It leans heavily on the Eleventh Circuitâs decision in
Roboserve, Ltd. v. Tomâs Foods, Inc., 940 F.2d 1441 (11th Cir.
18 No. 21â1649
1991). But Roboserve is distinguishable. There, the court held
that Roboserve lost trade secret protection in a vending maâ
chine by selling nearly 1,300 machines to a company that reâ
sold them to distributors who had âno direct connection to
Roboserve.â Id. at 1455. In other words, Roboserveâs vending
machine was not secret because countless distributors had unâ
limited access to it. Here, by contrast, the district court found
that Life Spineâs trade secrets are not in the public domain;
rather, they are accessible only to third parties who sign conâ
fidentiality agreements.
***
Aegis only briefly challenges the district courtâs finding
that Life Spineâs testing data and pricing information qualify
as trade secrets. Aegis claims the testing data was not a trade
secret because, at most, Aegis obtained the information by reâ
verse engineering a publicly disclosed product. As explained,
though, the district court found that the relevant details of the
ProLift were not public, so this argument fails for reasons deâ
scribed above.
As to pricing, Aegis suggests that it obtained no economic
value from that information. But the district court found that
Aegis used its knowledge of the ProLift distributor price to
undercut Life Spine in competing for customers. And, in any
event, trade secret protection extends to information that has
âactual or potential value.â 18 U.S.C. § 1839(3) (emphasis
added). Aegis argues as well that the district court applied the
wrong standard when it concluded that Life Spine had only
âsome likelihoodâ of success in showing that its standard disâ
tributor price is a trade secret that Aegis misappropriated. But
the court did not err: âSome likelihoodâ is the correct standâ
ard. Mays, 974 F.3d at 822; see also Pritzker, 973 F.3d at 763
No. 21â1649 19
(noting that the overlapping standard for granting a motion
to stay requires a âstrong showingâ of success).
2. Breach of Contract
The district court found that Life Spine was likely to sucâ
ceed in proving that Aegis breached three sections of the disâ
tribution agreement: the confidentiality provisions, the fiduâ
ciary duty provisions, and the anticopying provisions. Aegis
challenges some aspects of these findings, along with the
courtâs preliminary determination that the relevant proviâ
sions survived the expiration of the distribution agreement.
Confidentiality. In the distribution agreement, Aegis
promised ânot to discloseâ Life Spineâs confidential inforâ
mation and to use it âonly for the purpose set forth in this
Agreement.â It also required Aegis to train its employees on
their confidentiality obligations. The district court found that
Life Spine had a âhigh likelihood of successâ on its claim that
Aegis breached the confidentiality provisions by sharing Life
Spineâs confidential informationâspecifically, the ProLift deâ
vices, pricing data, and the email about the custom installerâ
with L&K, and by failing to train its employees on their conâ
fidentiality obligations.
Aegis has little to say on this score. Relying on its trade
secret argument, Aegis contends that the supposedly confiâ
dential information was already public, thus falling outside
the agreementâs protections. But this argument fails for reaâ
sons already explained: Aegis has not shown that the district
court clearly erred in finding that Life Spine did not publicly
disclose its alleged trade secrets.
As for its failure to train its employees on their confidentiâ
ality obligations, Aegis maintains that Life Spine never
20 No. 21â1649
demonstrated how that breach led to any harm. But as the disâ
trict court noted, two Aegis employees who admittedly never
read the distribution agreement worked with L&K to develop
the AccelFixâXT. This evidence permitted a finding that Aeâ
gisâs failure to train its employees contributed to Life Spineâs
harm: If the employees had known of their confidentiality obâ
ligations, it is reasonable to infer that they may not have parâ
ticipated in a scheme to disclose Life Spineâs confidential inâ
formation to a direct competitor.
Fiduciary duties. The distribution agreement required Aeâ
gis to âmaintain custody and/or control of each item of Invenâ
tory in a fiduciary capacity, as a trustee of [Life Spineâs] propâ
erty rights therein.â The district court found that Aegis vioâ
lated its fiduciary duties by transferring custody of the ProLift
devices to L&K, and by sharing the ProLift with its surgeon
consultants.
Aegis maintains that, even if it breached its fiduciary duâ
ties, the injunction is overbroad. We disagree. The district
court found that Aegis shipped ProLift devices to L&K to help
it develop a competing product. It shared the devices with its
consultants, too, so that they could provide feedback. The fiâ
nal productâthe AccelFixâXTâcould reasonably be viewed
as a product of those breaches, given that both breaches furâ
thered its development. An injunction prohibiting Aegis from
profiting from the product of its breaches is proportionate. Cf.
Foodcomm Intâl v. Barry, 328 F.3d 300, 305 (7th Cir. 2003).
Anticopying. The distribution agreement forbade Aegis
from âcopy[ing],â âreverse engineer[ing],â or âcreat[ing] deâ
rivative worksâ based on the ProLift. The district court found,
however, that Life Spine was likely to succeed in proving that
Aegis did just those things in concert with L&K. Aegisâs
No. 21â1649 21
defense is legal, rather than factual. It contends that federal
patent law preempts the anticopying provision, such that its
breach (if any) of that provision cannot sustain the injunction.
This argument surfaces for the first time on appeal, so it is
waived. See Henry v. Hulett, 969 F.3d 769, 786 (7th Cir. 2020)
(en banc). It is also meritless. Courts rarely, if ever, hold that
federal intellectual property law preempts a âsimple twoâ
party contract,â which binds only the parties to the contract
and therefore does not frustrate federal policies. ProCD, Inc.
v. Zeidenberg, 86 F.3d 1447, 1453â55 (7th Cir. 1996); accord Bowâ
ers v. Baystate Techs., Inc., 320 F.3d 1317, 1323â26 (Fed. Cir.
2003); see also Aronson v. Quick Point Pencil Co., 440 U.S. 257,
264 (1979). Aegis does not convince us that the agreementâs
anticopying provisions interfere with federal patent policy.
Survival clause. As a more general matter, Aegis argues
that the distribution agreement did not apply to its direct purâ
chase of 45 ProLift devices in December 2018, months after the
agreement expired on August 31, 2018. It disclaims any supâ
posed breaches flowing from those direct sales. The district
court rejected this argument because of the agreementâs surâ
vival clause, which provides: âNotwithstanding anything to
the contrary in this Agreement,â the relevant provisions âwill
survive the expiration or termination of this Agreement.â Aeâ
gis maintains that the December 2018 purchases were not
governed by the distribution agreement because they postâ
dated its expiration and they were direct purchases rather
than consignmentâbased sales (in contrast to the partiesâ earâ
lier arrangement).
We need not, and do not, resolve this issue because even
without the December 2018 sales, there was plenty of eviâ
dence supporting the district courtâs finding that Aegis
22 No. 21â1649
breached the relevant contract provisions. Aegis does not disâ
pute, for example, that it was bound by the distribution agreeâ
ment in May and June 2018, when it shipped ProLift devices
to L&K. And the district court permissibly found that those
shipments alone breached Aegisâs contractual duties: they
breached the fiduciary duty provisions because Aegis was reâ
quired to maintain custody over the shipped devices; they
breached the confidentiality provisions because the shipped
devices contained Life Spineâs confidential information; and
they breached the anticopying provisions because, as the disâ
trict court found, Aegis and L&K used the shipped devices to
reverse engineer the ProLift. In fact, L&K told Aegis after reâ
ceiving the ProLift installer that it was copying its basic deâ
sign. So, even without the breaches, if any, stemming from the
December 2018 sales, the district courtâs breach of contract
analysis stands.
Even so, we make a few observations for further proceedâ
ings. The survival clause, though relevant, does not fully reâ
solve this issue. That clause merely provides that the partiesâ
duties will survive the expiration of the agreement. But that
begs the question: What is the scope of those duties? Answerâ
ing that question requires examining precisely what the parâ
tiesâ duties were under the distribution agreement. Survival
clause aside, a separate question is whether the parties enâ
tered a binding oral contract to renew the distribution agreeâ
ment in September 2018, such that its terms remained in eďŹect
in December 2018. The agreement provides that it âmay be
extended by mutual consent of both parties in writing.â And
indeed, the parties pursued that option twice, executing two
written addenda that extended the agreement by four
months. But even if the agreement implicitly banned oral exâ
tensions, Illinois law (which governs all claims under the
No. 21â1649 23
agreement) permits oral modification despite such bans. See,
e.g., U.S. Neurosurgical, Inc. v. City of Chicago, 572 F.3d 325, 332
(7th Cir. 2009); Czapla v. Commerz Futures, LLC, 114 F. Supp.
2d 715, 718â19 (N.D. Ill. 2000); A.W. Wendell & Sons, Inc. v.
Qazi, 626 N.E.2d 280, 287 (Ill. App. Ct. 1993). Neither the court
below nor the parties fully address these issues, so we do not
resolve them in this appeal.
B. Irreparable Harm
A finding of irreparable harm absent an injunction âis a
threshold requirement for granting a preliminary injunction.â
Foodcomm, 328 F.3d at 304. Harm is irreparable if legal remeâ
dies are inadequate to cure it. Id. Inadequate âdoes not mean
wholly ineďŹectual; rather, the remedy must be seriously defiâ
cient as compared to the harm suďŹered.â Id.
Aegis contends that the district court wrongly relied on a
presumption of irreparable harm. It adds that the harm stemâ
ming from Life Spineâs loss of customers and market share is
quantifiable and thus remediable through damages.
To start, we agree that the district court erred in relying on
a presumption of irreparable harm. The district court thought
a presumption of irreparable harm attached upon a showing
of likely success on a trade secret claim. And indeed, that used
to be true in this circuit. Atari, Inc. v. N. Am. Philips Consumer
Elecs. Corp., 672 F.2d 607, 620 (7th Cir. 1982). But the Supreme
Court rejected such a presumption in eBay Inc. v. Merâ
cExchange, L.L.C., 547 U.S. 388, 393 (2006), as we explained in
Flava Works, Inc. v. Gunter, 689 F.3d 754, 755 (7th Cir. 2012); see
also First W. Cap. Mgmt. Co. v. Malamed, 874 F.3d 1136, 1143
(10th Cir. 2017).
24 No. 21â1649
All the same, the courtâs error was harmless. The court
spent one page of its analysis on the presumption before movâ
ing on to explain why Life Spine had shown irreparable harm
even without the presumption. For one thing, Life Spine preâ
sented evidence that it would lose customers and market
share because Aegis was marketing the AccelFixâXT âin the
same finite pool of hospitals and surgeons in which Life Spine
markets the ProLift.â Granted, harm stemming from lost cusâ
tomers or contracts may be quantifiable if the lost customers
or contracts are identifiable. But here, the district court found
that they were not fully identifiable. Rather, because hospitals
do not publicize their contracts for spinal products, identifyâ
ing and quantifying lost business âwould be especially diďŹâ
cultâ for Life Spine. And we have held that âit is precisely the
diďŹculty of pinning down what business has been or will be
lost that makes an injury âirreparable.ââ Hess Newmark Owens
Wolf, Inc. v. Owens, 415 F.3d 630, 632 (7th Cir. 2005).
Beyond lost customers and market share, the district court
found that Life Spine had âsome likelihoodâ of proving irrepâ
arable harm stemming from the loss of goodwill and reputaâ
tion. The court explained that Life Spine had worked to deâ
velop âniche contractsâ with hospitals by marketing the Proâ
Lift as a unique product. The nearly identical AccelFixâXT
would undercut that strategy, thereby damaging Life Spineâs
goodwill and reputation. And it is well established that the
loss of goodwill and reputation, if proven, can constitute irâ
reparable harm. Stuller, Inc. v. Steak N Shake Enters., Inc., 695
F.3d 676, 680 (7th Cir. 2012); 11A Charles Alan Wright & Arâ
thur R. Miller, Federal Practice & Procedure § 2948.1 (3d ed. 2002
& April 2021 Supp.) (âInjury to reputation or goodwill is not
easily measurable in monetary terms, and so often is viewed
as irreparable.â).
No. 21â1649 25
The district courtâs finding of irreparable harm stemming
from loss of customers and loss of goodwill and reputation is
suďŹcient to sustain the injunction, so its error in applying a
presumption of irreparable harm does not warrant reversal.
We do not rely on the courtâs finding of irreparable harm
stemming from âprice erosionâ because it is not clear to us
why any such harm (e.g., being forced to reduce prices to reâ
main competitive) would not be quantifiable.
C. Balancing Test and the Public Interest
We easily uphold the district courtâs careful balancing of
the harms. The court acknowledged that Aegisâs purported
harmsâpulling a product, losing revenue, laying oďŹ employâ
ees, and possibly going out of businessâwere âreal and seriâ
ous harms.â It found, however, that the evidence did not fully
support Aegisâs claimed harms: Aegis had existed for a decâ
ade before it started selling the AccelFixâXT, and nothing in
the injunction prevented it from selling other products, inâ
cluding other expandable cage products. As such, the potenâ
tial harm to Aegis did not tip the balance. In the end, the court
found that âthe strength of Life Spineâs showing of likely sucâ
cessâ on the merits, âits strong showing of irreparable harm,
and the publicâs interest in the enforcement of contracts and
protection of trade secrets and confidential informationâ outâ
weighed âthe relatively weak evidence that Aegis would sufâ
fer catastrophic harm under the proposed injunction.â
Beyond disagreeing with how the court balanced the
harms, Aegis gives no good reason why the court abused its
discretion in balancing the harms. The court acknowledged
the competing interests at stake, properly calibrated the inâ
quiry based on Life Spineâs strong merits showing, and conâ
sidered the public interest. We find no abuse of discretion.
26 No. 21â1649
III. Conclusion
For these reasons, we aďŹrm the preliminary injunction.
We commend Judge Kim for his thorough and precise analyâ
sis in this complex case.