Dow Corning Corporation et al v. Xiao et al
Filing
177
ORDER granting in part and denying in part 157 Motion to Exclude Evidence of Defendants' Expert. Signed by District Judge Thomas L. Ludington. (SGam)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN
NORTHERN DIVISION
DOW CORNING CORPORATION et al.,
Plaintiffs,
Case Number 11-10008-BC
Honorable Thomas L. Ludington
v.
JIE XIAO et al.,
Defendants.
________________________________________ /
OPINION AND ORDER GRANTING IN PART AND DENYING IN PART
PLAINTIFFS’ MOTION TO EXCLUDE EVIDENCE OF DEFENDANTS’ EXPERT
The scientific method is premised on the search for replicable, predicable results. See
generally Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharms., Inc., 509 U.S. 579, 593 (1993) (“Scientific
methodology today is based on generating hypotheses and testing them to see if they can be
falsified; indeed, this methodology is what distinguishes science from other fields of human
inquiry.”). Before expert scientific evidence may be admitted under Federal Rule of Evidence
702, the trial court must make a “preliminary assessment of whether the reasoning or
methodology underlying the testimony is scientifically valid and of whether that reasoning or
methodology properly can be applied to the facts in issue.” Id. at 592–93.
In this trade secrets dispute, Dow Corning and Hemlock Semiconductor bring suit against
Dr. Jie Xiao and four of his companies, LXE Solar, Inc., LXE Solar Ltd., LXEng LLC, and HXJ
Science & Tech, Inc. Plaintiffs allege that Defendants misappropriated 17 of Plaintiffs’ trade
secrets and used that information to secure multi-million dollar contracts to build fluid bed
reactors for foreign firms.
Plaintiffs and Defendants have each retained expert witnesses, and the Court has
appointed a neutral expert as well. Plaintiffs now move to exclude the evidence of Defendants’
expert, Mr. Stephen Lord. When questioned about his methods of evaluating some of Plaintiffs’
claimed trade secrets, he responded that the calculations were “not a science, it’s a little rougher
on the calculational side than you might think.” Questioned about inconsistencies in his methods
of evaluating some of Plaintiffs’ other claimed trade secrets, he explained: “My opinion of
consistency is [that it is] the hobgoblin of tiny minds. I’m not a believer in consistency.”
The Federal Rules of Evidence, as noted, require more. The gentleman’s evidence on
these claims must be excluded. His evidence on other claims, however, has not been shown to
be similarly unreliable. Accordingly, Plaintiffs’ motion will be granted in part and denied in
part.
I
A
Dow Corning manufactures polysilicon products, including trichlorosilane. In 1960,
Dow Corning selected Hemlock, Michigan as the site for its polysilicon plant. In 1979, Dow
Corning formed Hemlock Semiconductor, which manufactures polysilicon using Dow Corning’s
trichlorosilane. Dow Corning remains the majority shareholder of Hemlock Semiconductor
today.
Michael Little was employed by Dow Corning for twenty five years as a chemical
engineer. During this time Mr. Little was involved in the manufacture of both trichlorosilane
and polysilicon.
Indeed, for a period of time Mr. Little served as the leader of Dow’s
trichlorosilane production facility in Michigan. In this role, Plaintiffs assert, Mr. Little “learned
certain process specifications and process design techniques including . . . the specifications and
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characteristics for Dow Corning’s fluid bed reactors.” Compl. ¶ 27. Mr. Little also signed
several contracts with Dow Corning promising not to disclose “any trade secret, confidential
know-how or confidential business or technical information of Dow Corning.” Id. ¶ 26. Mr.
Little left Dow Corning in 2002.
B
Five years later, Dr. Xiao and Mr. Little formed LXEng, LLC. Each gentleman owned a
50 percent stake in LXEng. Although both gentlemen were chemists, only Mr. Little had
expertise in the trichlorosilane and polysilicon industries.
Dr. Xiao had worked in the
pharmaceutical industry before joining LXEng.
Shortly after LXEng was formed, Plaintiffs allege, Mr. Little and Dr. Xiao disclosed
Plaintiffs’ trade secrets to prospective customers, including the specifications and characteristics
of Dow Corning’s first generation fluid bed reactors. And Plaintiffs allege that Mr. Little, who
was also a pilot and photographer, conducted aerial surveillance of Plaintiffs’ Michigan facility
and used that information in sales pitches to prospective clients. As a result, Plaintiffs further
allege, LXEng secured contracts worth as much as $18.4 million to provide trichlorosilane and
polysilicon technology to two foreign companies. LXEng also entered into negotiations with
two other foreign companies for contracts worth as much as $12 million.
Mr. Little died in November 2007, when the single-engine plane he was flying crashed
near Gladwin, Michigan.
C
Five months later, Dow Corning’s counsel wrote a letter to LXEng. Expressing concern
that Mr. Little may have shared Dow Corning’s trade secrets with LXEng’s customers, the letter
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emphasized Dow Corning’s intent to protect its intellectual property rights. The letter also asked
LXEng to consent to an inspection of Mr. Little’s laptop computer. The request was refused.
Around this time, Dr. Xiao was approached by Woongjin Polysilicon Co., Ltd. “To keep
this new contract free of any possible liabilities of LXEng caused by Michael Little,” Defs.’
Third-Party Compl. ¶ 7, Dr. Xiao formed LXE Solar in the Caribbean nation of Nevis in July
2008. Dr. Xiao is the only shareholder of LXE Solar. He placed the new company’s funds in a
bank account in the Republic of Seychelles. Less than a month after LXE Solar’s formation, it
secured a $10 million contract with Woongjin.
A short time later, the Seychelles government froze LXE Solar’s account and alerted U.S.
authorities. The FBI began a criminal investigation and a grand jury empanelled in the Southern
District of Florida issued subpoenas for documents and electronic information held by Dr. Xiao,
LXEng, and LXE Solar.
The FBI contacted Dow Corning and invited them to view the documents suspected of
containing Dow Corning’s trade secrets. Eventually, the Seychelles account was released. The
grand jury did not indict Dr. Xiao, LXEng, or LXE Solar.
D
In January 2011, Plaintiffs filed a seven-count complaint against Dr. Xiao, LXEng, and
LXE Solar.
The claims included misappropriation of trade secrets under Michigan law;
trademark infringement in violation of the Lanham Act; false advertising, false representation,
and unfair competition in violation of the Lanham Act; trademark dilution in violation of the
Lanham Act; unfair competition in violation of Michigan law; violations of the Michigan
Uniform Trade Practices Act; and tortious interference with a contract in violation of Michigan
law.
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Dr. Xiao, LXEng, and LXE Solar moved to dismiss the complaint. Granting the motion
in part and denying it in part, the Court dismissed Plaintiffs’ trademark claims and Michigan
Consumer Protection Act claims, but permitted the trade secret, false advertising, unfair
competition, and tortious interference claims to proceed. Dow Corning v. Xiao, No. 11-10008,
2011 WL 2015517 (E.D. Mich. May 20, 2011).
In April 2012, Plaintiffs deposed Dr. Xiao and learned that he had formed two other
companies: LXE Solar Ltd., formed in the British Virgin Islands; and HXJ Science & Tech Inc.,
formed in China. Dr. Xiao is the sole owner of the two companies.
Plaintiffs moved for leave to join these two entities as defendants and to amend the
complaint. ECF No. 135. In September 2012, the motion was granted in part and both entities
were joined as defendants. ECF No. 148.
Also in September 2012, the parties filed a joint motion for the appointment of a neutral
expert pursuant to Federal Rule of Evidence 706. ECF No. 147. The motion was granted, and
the Court appointed Dr. Hugo Caram. ECF No. 149.
E
The parties, as noted, also retained their own experts. Plaintiffs retained the services of
Dr. Liang-Shih Fan. He earned a Ph.D. in chemical engineering in 1975. Since 1978, he has
been on the chemical engineering faculty at Ohio State University.
Presently, he is the
Distinguished University Professor and C. John Easton Professor in Engineering in Ohio State’s
department of chemical and biomolecular engineering. He specializes, among other things, in
fluidization and multiphase flow.
-5-
Defendants retained the services of Mr. Stephen M. Lord. He earned a master’s degree in
chemical engineering in 1970. Since 1985, he has been the owner of SML Associates, a
consulting firm. And since 2009, he has been the president of Lord Engineering Corp.
Mr. Lord’s businesses are similar to those operated by Defendants. See Lord Dep. 22–23,
Oct. 3, 2012, attached as Pls.’ Daubert Mot. Ex. A. When someone is interested in setting up a
trichlorosilane plant, for example, Mr. Lord’s businesses will “sell them technology, technology
package or equipment plus technology package.” Lord Dep. 22.
Each gentleman has produced an expert report, as well as a rebuttal report responding to
the other party’s expert report. And each gentleman has been deposed.
Before turning to these documents, however, one note is in order. Because the parties’
respective designs each contain confidential proprietary information, the discussion that follows
addresses the experts findings while omitting specific design dimensions and technical
specifications.
1
Dr. Fan’s report begins by explaining that Plaintiffs asked him to answer three questions.
First, “compare the fluid-bed reactor (‘FBR’) technology used by Plaintiffs with the FBR
technology sold by Defendants . . . [and] opine on the similarities between these technologies.”
Fan Report ¶ 7, attached as Pls.’ Daubert Mot. Ex. H. Second, “conduct a public literature
search on some of the key features of the FBR technology used by Plaintiffs . . . [and] determine
whether these features are in the public domain.” Id. ¶ 8. And third, “evaluate the likelihood
that similarities between Plaintiffs’ and Defendants’ FBR technologies could be independently
derived from the public literature without extensive separate laboratory work and field testing.”
Id.
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Dr. Fan’s report answers the first question in the affirmative, the second and third in the
negative. That is, he reports that the technologies are the same. The key features are not in the
public domain. And the similarities could not be derived from proper sources without extensive
testing.
a
Elaborating, Dr. Fan’s report explains that not only are the respective fluid-bed reactor
designs similar — they “are practically identical.” Id. ¶ 13.
Dr. Fan explains: “Based on my review of the design parameters of the two reactors, I
have concluded that the level of similarity between the two FBR technologies is beyond
coincident. That is, it would be unusual and most unlikely that the two technologies could be
developed independently and have the end result be so similar.” Fan Report ¶ 18.
b
Turning to the second question, Dr. Fan concludes that “the details of the design,
configuration, and operational conditions of Plaintiffs’ fluid-bed reactor are not available in the
public literature.” Id. ¶ 12. Weaving in his answer to the third question, he explains that after
reviewing “publicly-available patents, articles, and other documents,” id., he has concluded:
[C]ertain information about the general design and use of FBRs in the production
of TCS and polysilicon is in the public domain. However, the details of the
structure of the fluidized bed reactor and operational conditions remain
confidential, in the possession of those companies who practice the arts. Thus, it
would be very difficult, if not impossible, for anyone to develop commercially
viable FBR technologies for TCS production based solely on information from
the public literature, without detailed experimental tests, validation of the design,
and extensive prior experimental and scale up work.
Id. ¶ 36. Dr. Fan also emphasizes that because the design details and operational conditions are
not publically available, “the specifications and characteristics detailed above could only have
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been developed by someone with detailed, non-public know-how and experience in operating
fluid-bed reactors on a commercial scale.” Id. ¶ 18.
Finally, Dr. Fan reiterates: “It is also highly unlikely that Defendants’ fluid-bed reactor
technology could have been independently derived without extensive field testing and
experimental data.” Fan Report ¶ 14. (There is no evidence that Defendants undertook such
testing or experimentation. See id.)
2
The report of Defendants’ expert, Mr. Lord, reaches an opposite set of conclusions. Mr.
Lord’s report begins by explaining that he was retained by Defendants “to review the specific
claims of the Plaintiffs and evaluate if they were trade secrets and to evaluate if the Defendants
had used the technology of the specific claims.” Lord Report 2, attached as Pls.’ Daubert Mot.
Ex. B.
Mr. Lord answers both questions in the negative. Specifically, Mr. Lord concludes that
of Plaintiffs’ 17 claimed trade secrets, 10 “are merely engineering preference, fifteen of the
claims have been previously disclosed in various patents, five of the claims can be calculated
from third party data and four of the claims are standard engineering practice, so none of the
specified claims are trade secrets.” Id.
a
Elaborating, Mr. Lord explains that he started his review by conducting a public literature
search, like Dr. Fan. See id. at 4. But unlike Dr. Fan, Mr. Lord found that “any proprietary
information that Dow may have at one time possessed has been overcome by events and is now
public knowledge.” Id. at 14.
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b
Mr. Lord’s report then discusses each of Plaintiffs’ 17 claimed trade secrets. Plaintiffs’
fourth trade secret claim, for example, concerns the fluid bed reactor’s height.
A fluid bed reactor’s proper height, Mr. Lord explains in his report, is a product of
“fluidization velocity and space time.” Lord Report 48. And a patent obtained by Tom Barker
(and assigned to Union Carbide) reveals that (1) the “preferred” fluidization velocities range
from 3 centimeters/second to 7.5 centimeters/second; and (2) the “preferred space times” range
from five seconds to five minutes. Id. (citing U.S. Patent No. 4,585,643 (Filed May 31, 1985)
(issued April 29, 1986) (“‘643 Patent”)).
From this operational range, Mr. Lord calculated a hypothetical reactor height similar to
that of the parties’ reactors. Lord Report 49. For space time, he selected a value roughly in the
middle of the “preferred” operative range. Id. For linear velocity, in contrast, he selected a
value at the outermost edge of the preferred operative range. Id. Combined, these two values
result in a height similar to the parties’ reactors, leading him to conclude that the height of
Plaintiffs’ reactor is not a trade secret because a reactor’s proper height is “readily ascertainable
by proper means. ” Id.
c
Pivoting to address Dr. Fan’s findings, Mr. Lord argues that the parties’ designs are not
“practically identical” — but downright dissimilar. He writes:
Dr. Fan’s main analysis is based on side-by-side comparison of the Plaintiffs’ and
Defendants’ reactors using a diagram and a table, but his analysis only covers a
portion of the reactor and a small number of design features. I have prepared a
fuller comparison. . . .
It can be seen when looking at [the] full range of features important to the design
of an FBR reactor that none of the numbers are the same. . . . Thus, Dr. Fan’s
conclusion of similarity is not borne out upon deeper analysis.
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Lord Report 16 (paragraph breaks omitted). Arguing in the alternative, Mr. Lord asserts that
even if the designs are similar, the information is publically available. Id. at 19, 27. He writes:
Dr. Fan’s other important finding was that there were no commercial designs
available in the public literature, but the Chinese [Institute drawing] contradicts
this claim . . . . Thus, Dr. Fan’s final conclusion that . . . Defendants could not
have independently engineered the technology is clearly erroneous.
Id. at 19. Mr. Lord reiterates: “The fact that a reactor with similar dimensions would work is not
a secret. The Chinese Institute drawing shows a [reactor with similar dimensions].” Id. at 27.
Summarizing his findings, Mr. Lord concludes: “After having read the expert report from
Dr. Fan, my original conclusions are unchanged with regard to the technical aspects of the
claims, all of which do not seem to be trade secrets.” Lord Report 19.
3
Dr. Fan responded to Mr. Lord’s report via a rebuttal report. See Fan Rebuttal, attached
as Pls.’ Daubert Mot. Ex. E. Addressing Mr. Lord’s assertion that the reactors’ dimensions are
different, Dr. Fan writes: “Mr. Lord points to slight differences between the Defendants’ reactor
and the reactor used by Plaintiffs to attempt to argue that all reactor dimensions are
interchangeable and that Plaintiffs’ dimensions have no trade-secret value. The differences,
however, are small and immaterial.” Id. ¶ 5(b); see also id. ¶¶ 15–30 (specifying why the design
differences are immaterial).
Turning to Mr. Lord’s assertion that the information is in the public domain, Dr. Fan
continues: “Although certain particular dimensions or specifications may appear in connection
with descriptions of other fluid-bed reactor technologies, the unique combination of
specifications and dimensions used by Plaintiffs do not appear in the public literature.” Id. ¶
5(c).
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The Chinese Institute drawing, for example, Dr. Fan asserts is “different in significant
ways.”
Fan Rebuttal ¶ 33.
After enumerating the differences, Dr. Fan explains that the
consequence is that the reactors fluidize particles differently. Specifically, the Chinese Institute
drawing illustrates a “slugging” rather than “bubbling bed” reactor. See id. (“[T]he reactor
designed by the Chinese Institute . . . [has] hydrodynamics and performance [that] are entirely
different . . . . For example, [the Chinese Institute design] is characterized by solid concentration
stratification, while [in the reactors used by Plaintiffs and sold by Defendant, such stratification
will not occur. Thus, these are two different types of reactors.”). Moreover, “the Chinese
Institute drawing does not show any information about operational conditions, while the
operational conditions for Defendants’ and Plaintiffs’ reactors, including temperature, pressure
and particle size, are very similar, as stated above.” Id.
Summarizing his findings, Dr. Fan writes: “It is my conclusion that the design of the
Defendants’ fluid-bed reactor is substantially similar to that of Plaintiffs, and Plaintiffs’ design is
significantly different from the other designs that Mr. Lord identifies as being in the public
domain.” Id. ¶ 6.
4
Mr. Lord also prepared a rebuttal report. See Lord Rebuttal, attached as Pls.’ Daubert
Mot. Ex. C.
Responding to Dr. Fan’s assertions regarding the Chinese Institute drawing, Mr. Lord
counters that “fluidization characteristics are not part of the specific claims” and, even if they
were, “the fluidization is the same” in the reactors. Lord Rebuttal 5–6. He writes that Plaintiffs’
and Defendants’ reactors “are not typical bubbling beds where the bubbles move up through the
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solids and then burst at the surface but instead are slugging beds where the bubble lifts a section
of the bed.” Id. at 6.
Turning to how Defendants arrived at precisely the same reactor bed diameter as
Plaintiffs, Mr. Lord writes that Defendants employed a “common industrial engineering practice
of calculating the basic size, adding a safety factor, then rounding up to the nearest foot.” Id. at
6. He elaborates that this “is a perfectly reasonable example of industrial engineering practice
which simply requires easy hand calculations and a reasonable safety factor to ensure meeting
the throughput requirements[1] of the client.” Id. at 8.
Summarizing his conclusions, Mr. Lord writes that “in multiple ways” Plaintiffs’
“claimed trade secrets [a]re not trade secrets according to the legal definition.” Id. at 21.
5
In October 2012, Mr. Lord was deposed. Although a range of subjects were covered,
much of the conversation centered on fluid bed reactor dimensions.
a
Plaintiffs’ second claimed trade secret, for example, concerns the reactor diameter. (The
reactors that Plaintiffs use and Defendants sell have identical diameters.)
The diameter of a fluid bed reactor, Mr. Lord initially asserted in his deposition, is “very
strongly dependent on particle size.” Lord Dep. 48–49.
Defendants’ reactor was initially designed with a particle size of 80 microns — allegedly.
See Little Email, attached as Pls.’ Daubert Mot. Ex. G. The reactors that Defendants actually
built, however, used much coarser particles (with diameters ranging from 150 to 250 microns).
See Lord Report 16.
1
“Throughput” is defined by Webster’s Dictionary as “an amount of raw material put through processing
or finishing operations in a specific time.” Webster’s Third International Dictionary 2385 (unabridged ed. 2002).
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Nevertheless, Defendants did not change the diameter of the reactor — instead, they kept
the same diameter as Plaintiffs. In his deposition, Mr. Lord was asked:
Q:
In your professional judgment, if you had made a decision at this point to
change from an 80 micron diameter particle to a — let’s keep it simple —
to 150 micron particle, would you have rerun this basic calculation to
resize the reactor?
A:
No. I don’t think I would, in actual fact. I think what I would have done
is I would have looked at the minimum fluidization for that particular
particle and see whether or not the velocity through there was still
significantly above the minimum fluidization velocity. . . . So I would
probably have gone back and said okay, I’m operating pretty high velocity
any way, can I — can I still fluidize a bigger particle? And if I could, I
would say you can try and probably be okay.
Q:
Do you have any idea whether you would still be able to fluidize a
particle?
A:
Not without doing some calculations, no.
Q:
. . . [D]oes your opinion change if we use the upper end of the range you
provided if you knew you were going to run 250 micron particle —
A:
Like I said, I would do the calculation and then I would know. I haven’t
done them.
Lord Dep. 223–25. Thus, Mr. Lord acknowledges that he does not know whether Defendants’
decision to keep the same diameter although they were using particles two to three times larger
than originally planned was reasonable. He did not do the math.
b
Mr. Lord also opined in his deposition that designing a reactor diameter was not a precise
science, explaining: “There’s a reasonable variation in what the diameter can be. . . . You could
certainly round up, round down.” Lord Dep. 47–48. Asked how much rounding would be
reasonable, Mr. Lord responded: “Probably about — maybe 15 percent of the diameter,
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something like that, 10 to 15 percent of the diameter. . . . Probably, you know — probably at
least 15 percent. There’s — there’s a lot of flexibility in actual fact.” Lord Dep. 48–49.
This sort of “flexible” calculation, as noted, resulted in Defendants arriving at precisely
the same reactor diameter as Plaintiffs, according to Mr. Lord’s rebuttal report.
More
particularly, his rebuttal report asserts that Defendants used the “common industrial engineering
practice of calculating the basic size, adding a safety factor, then rounding up to the nearest
foot.” Lord Rebuttal 6.
To illustrate that Defendants calculated the diameter of their reactor according to this
formula, Mr. Lord ran the numbers himself. See id. at 7 (showing Mr. Lord’s calculations). In
his deposition, Mr. Lord explained that after he accepted Defendants’ basic size calculation, he
added “the fudge factor.” Lord Dep. 235. He elaborated: “You know there are supports in there
. . . you know you probably are going to be around 10 percent, it’s typical.” Lord Dep. 235–36.
Plaintiffs’ counsel inquired:
Q:
Was there any — I mean did you do any calculations to determine whether
10 percent was an appropriate estimate?
A:
No. And that’s not typically done. You know it’s not zero. And if you
don’t put something in you’re going to be wrong for sure. So 10 percent is
a reasonable — no one is going to occupy the entire reactor in supports,
people are going to try and minimize the support area. So 10 percent is
probably reasonable. At this level of calculation, early design phase.
Q:
So once you got [this calculation], the next — so you apply yet another I
guess safety margin or fudge factor. Is that correct?
A:
Well, what I did was I calculated what the cross-sectional area needed to
be, include for the — for the support — for the tubes, plus a reasonable
allowance for the supports . . . and then back-calculated the diameter.
Lord Dep. 239. After completing this calculation, Mr. Lord testified in his deposition, he applied
an additional “fudge factor.” Lord Dep. 239. After adding this, he rounded off to the nearest
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foot — “a nice round number.” Lord Dep. 240. This, he acknowledged, resulted in a safety
margin of 23 percent. Lord Dep. 239.
When Plaintiffs’ counsel asked whether Mr. Lord had “any literature” suggesting that
rounding off to the nearest foot is an appropriate manner of calculating the diameter of a fluid
bed reactor, he responded:
I don’t know — I certainly can’t point to it sitting here. I just know that’s typical
engineering practice. If you don’t — if you . . . go to some obscure number . . .
people think you’re crazy. And part of it is, there is a lot of unknowns in these
calculations. . . . So people tend to round up and have a bit more volume, a bit
more capacity, so that it’s going to work.
Lord Dep. 242. Asked whether a 23 percent safety margin was unusual (given that the “typical”
safety factor margin was 15 to 20 percent), Mr. Lord responded:
Of course, it’s a typical safety margin. These are rough — these are rules of
thumb. These are not cast in concrete. So you look at it and say, okay, that’s
pretty reasonable and you move on. This is — you are designing a whole
chemical plant in a few weeks. You are not going to sit around arguing about it, it
was only 15 percent and we can shave a penny off the price. It doesn’t matter at
that point.
Lord Dep. 247. (Mr. Lord did not elaborate on whether it was a “typical engineering practice” to
design “a whole chemical plant in a few weeks.”) Probing deeper into the safety margin issue,
counsel for Plaintiffs asked:
Q:
At what point does a safety margin become too big, in your opinion?
A:
Probably 40 percent.
Q:
40 percent. So 30 percent would be okay?
A:
Yeah. Probably you would be saying well, we’re spending — can we
afford to do it, kind of thing.
Q:
So at the end of all these mathematical calculations I can increase the
number by 40 percent and come up with the same reactor?
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A:
You won’t come up with the same reactor. You’ll come up with a bigger
reactor. Yeah. It’s not an art, it’s not a science, it’s a little rougher on the
calculational side than you might think.
Lord Dep. 248. Returning to Mr. Lord’s assertion that calculating fluid bed reactor dimensions
is “not a science,” Plaintiffs’ counsel inquired:
Q:
So as you said before, it’s [not] a science — it’s an art and it’s not a
science, right?
A:
Yeah. You do some basic calculations and you get close to the number
you think it probably is and say okay, what’s convenient to build it with?
That’s what [Plaintiffs’ engineers] did. You read the e-mails. They
always are chopping bits off and putting some stuff on and trying some
new thing in the plant.
Q:
Making it —
A:
— hands-on, you know, playing around and stuff.
Q:
— making adjustments based on their experience with the piece of
equipment?
A:
Well, you could put it that way. Or you could say a whole bunch of
engineers who were bored and wanted to change things, which is I think a
little closer to the truth.
Q:
Is that why you make changes to your equipment, because you’re bored
and you want to change things?
A:
Yes. We have a bright idea one day and we said yeah, it would be really
cool if we did that.
Lord Dep. 260–61. Turning to what “chemical engineers worry about,” what they “actually
really worry about,” Mr. Lord explained: “We are worrying about mass heat transfer and fluid
flow.” Lord Dep. 263.
Mr. Lord later testified that to properly design a fluid bed reactor, it is necessary “to do
the heat transfer calculations.” Lord Dep. 342. But, he acknowledged, he did not do this
calculation. He explained: “If I want to do a heat transfer calculation, that’s real work. That’s
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complicated.
You got to calculate all these properties and heat transfer coefficients.
It’s
definitely a pain.” Lord Dep. 341; see also Lord Dep. 332–33 (acknowledging that he did not do
a heat transfer calculation). Plaintiffs’ counsel followed up by asking:
Q:
How long would it take you to do a heat transfer calculation?
A:
Oh, God. Depending — depending on what tools were available, probably
several days. It’s complicated. You got to go through some iterative
steps. It appeared that [Defendants’ partner] had some tools, computer
tools available to them that would be useful. I don’t have those tools. So
it would be difficult for me.
Lord Dep. 341. And finally, Mr. Lord further testified that in his regular professional consulting
work he would not size a reactor’s diameter according to the method he used in his report. Lord
Dep. 299–300. In his deposition, he was asked:
Q:
Would you recommend that anyone who is designing a commercial fluid
bed reactor rely solely on the calculations you provided on page 7 of your
rebuttal report to size the diameter?
A:
I wouldn’t do it that way.
Lord Dep. 299–300.
c
Plaintiffs’ fourth claimed trade secret regards the fluid bed reactor’s height. In his report,
Mr. Lord concludes that the “operational details” of a fluid bed reactor, including its height, are
“well known to those skilled in the art.” Lord Report 48. He bases this conclusion on the ‘643
Patent. See Lord Report 47–49; Lord Dep. 294.
Mr. Lord asserts, as noted, that the appropriate height of a fluid bed reactor is the product
of space time multiplied by linear velocity. Lord Report 48. And the ‘643 Patent reveals that (1)
the
“preferred”
fluidization
velocities
range
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from
3
centimeters/second
to
7.5
centimeters/second; and (2) the “preferred space times” range from five seconds to five minutes.
Id. (citing ‘643 Patent).
In calculating the height of Defendants’ reactor, Mr. Lord chose a midpoint value for
space time. Lord Report 49. But he chose an outlier value for linear velocity — one at the
outermost edge of the operative range. Id. This resulted in a fluid bed reactor height similar to
Plaintiffs’ reactor. Pls.’ Daubert Mot. 18. In his deposition, Mr. Lord was asked:
Q:
Did you try different iterations of this when you were preparing your
report?
A:
No. I didn’t try a whole bunch of different iterations. I just pointed out
what you could do. The question is, is it readily ascertainable? To me it’s
readily ascertainable. Now, you could come up with a different number if
you chose different options, yes. Undoubtedly, I won’t disagree with that.
But can you come up with a number? And the answer is yes. . . . [The
‘643 Patent] provides, you know, the necessary information for someone
to make at least an initial calculation for what might be a reasonable
height. And then you could then look at, you know — can you get all the
heat exchange in there that you need and the other various, you know,
engineering considerations? So it seemed reasonable that you could do
that. I could — I mean I gave — it’s a hand calculation. It’s not a — you
know, a — you know, a computer simulation. It’s okay.
Lord Dep. 293–94. Pressing Mr. Lord on the variety of heights that he could have reached using
the operational ranges of the ‘643 Patent, counsel for Plaintiffs inquired:
Q: [I]n calculating if you plug those numbers into your equation at the top of the
next page you would get a range, by our calculations, anywhere between 35
centimeters or 75 feet.
A: Yeah. Yeah.
Lord Dep. 295–96. Following up, Plaintiffs’ counsel asked “would you consider that to be a
substantial range?” Lord Dep. 296. “I mean, I think that’s almost identical,” Mr. Lord dryly
replied. Plaintiffs’ counsel, returning to the precise numbers that Mr. Lord chose, inquired:
Q:
Why is it reasonable in one case to [choose] the high end and the other
case to choose the midpoint?
-18-
A:
Because engineering is not particularly a logical thing. It’s an art. And
okay, this is — there is a lot of feel to it, I suppose. It seemed to me —
I’ve had a fair bit of experience in fluidized beds over the years, running
and operating and designing them. . . .
Q.
You didn’t think it was important to be consistent in your assumptions
over the course of the calculation?
A:
No. My opinion of consistency is [that it is] the hobgoblin of tiny minds.
I’m not a believer in consistency.
Lord Dep. 339–40.
d
Plaintiffs’ eighth claimed trade secret is a combination claim — specifically, that the
reactor design will work as promised.
Similar to Plaintiffs’ eighth claim, the Chinese Institute drawing involves a combination
of elements that allegedly depict a working reactor. Dr. Fan asserts that while the Chinese
Institute drawing depicts a reactor — it depicts a fundamentally different type of reactor than the
type used by Plaintiffs and sold by Defendant. Fan Rebuttal ¶ 33. Specifically, the Chinese
Institute drawing illustrates a “slugging” rather than “bubbling bed” reactor. See id.
Mr. Lord’s rebuttal report agrees that the Chinese Institute drawing depicts a slugging
reactor, but contends that the reactor Plaintiffs use and Defendants sell are likewise “firmly in the
slugging regime.” Lord Rebuttal 28.
In his deposition, Mr. Lord explained: “I took the position based on the calculations I did
that they were all essentially in the same fluidization regime.” Lord Dep. 192. When pressed on
the question by Plaintiffs’ counsel, however, he acknowledged: “I haven’t done the calculations
that [Plaintiffs’ expert, Dr. Fan,] talks about, so I could be — I could be wrong, but I believe that
if those calculations were done for all . . . of the reactors, they would show them all to be in
-19-
essentially the same flow issue.” Lord Dep. 194. Later in the deposition, Plaintiffs’ counsel
returned to the issue, asking:
Q:
I want to return briefly to the discussion . . . about the calculations or the
statements you made in your rebuttal report about — about Dow Corning
and Defendants having a slugging as opposed to bubbling regime. At this
point in time are you — is it your opinion still at this point in time that the
Defendants reactor is a slugging reactor and not a bubbling bed reactor?
A.
I think I don’t know for sure what their fluidization regime is. I think Dr.
Fan had some good points. There is obviously different calculational
procedures you could apply, different models, different ways of
comparing things. . . . I think Dr. Fan brought up a point of having the
internal — internals does make — could make a significant difference and
could make it difficult to predict exactly what goes on. So I think that’s a
very good point. But nevertheless, the fluidization regime would be the
same if the Plaintiffs’ is bubbling, then the Chinese Institute one would be
bubbling as well and probably the Defendants would be bubbling. So they
will all be essentially the same fluidization regime, and that’s what I was
trying to say.
Lord Dep. 320–21. Mr. Lord further acknowledged that he “could perhaps have done a little
more research in that area, but there wasn’t really time and I didn’t think it was particularly
relevant.” Lord Dep. 304.
F
By the parties’ stipulation, the court-appointed neutral expert, Dr. Caram, has reviewed
the expert reports and depositions and evaluated the Plaintiffs’ 17 claimed trade secrets. And in
December 2012, Dr. Caram produced a report of his own.
1
Dr. Caram’s report concludes that of the Plaintiffs’ 17 claimed trade secrets, four are not
in the public domain, not ascertainable by proper means, and derive value from not being
publically known. See Caram Report 3.
-20-
Discrete elements of the fluid bed reactor’s design make up the first three viable claims.
These elements are the reactor’s: (1) cone angle; (2) diameter; and (3) hydrogen chloride and
silicon injection sites. Id. Plaintiffs’ combination claim — that the reactor design will work as
promised — is the fourth viable claim. Id.
2
Dr. Caram next concludes that Defendants “used some of the identified trade secrets in
their fluid reactor technology sold to third parties.” Id. at 4. That is, Defendants did not
“independently design these trade secrets in their fluid-bed reactor for TCS production by using
publicly-available information [or] engineering expertise.” Id. Dr. Caram writes:
The Defendants used some publically available information, engineering expertise
and third-party engineering and industry experience for the FBR design.
However, in two critical areas . . . they have not provided a clear engineering
explanation on how they arrived at their design choices. Therefore, it is highly
likely that they used M. Little’s experience and recommendations in the design
process.
Id. One of the two “critical areas” identified by Dr. Caram is the reactor’s diameter. Explaining
why he believes that Defendants did not independently arrive at this dimension, Dr. Caram
writes: “The Defendants marketed a well-defined performance [estimate] but only used either a
crude engineering approach to determine the reactor diameter, or previous knowledge, and
ignored all potential problems.” Id. He continues: “There was no scale up of the design of the
LXE reactors. Instead the designers used exactly the same diameter of the Dow reactors with the
knowledge that it would work.” Caram Report 6. Similarly, Dr. Caram notes:
While there is agreement between the expert witnesses for the plaintiff and
defendant that the reactor diameters are equivalent there is no clear explanation on
how the defendants arrived at the [same] diameter [as Plaintiffs]. . . .
I believe it extremely unlikely that the defendants arrived at this reactor diameter
independently, and most likely used M. Little’s information to make informed
choices about the reactor design, that could not have been reached without
-21-
significant testing.
satisfactory.
The explanations provided by the defendant[s] are not
Id. at 7. Dr. Caram summarizes: “While not an exact replica of one another, the DOW and LXE
reactors are quite similar and functionally identical. . . . My conclusion is that the basic design
characteristics . . . came through M. Little to [Defendants].” Id. at 12, 13.
Dr. Caram further concludes that two of the fluid bed reactor’s basic design
characteristics each qualify as “a radical design decision and one that under normal
circumstances would not have been made without careful experimental and theoretical study. . . .
These two basic design characteristics were not public information and could not be easily
ascertained by a practitioner in the field.” Id. at 13.2
G
Plaintiffs, as noted, now move to exclude the testimony, reports, and opinions of Mr.
Lord.
II
As a threshold matter, Plaintiffs’ motion does not challenge Mr. Lord’s qualifications as
an expert. Rather, it challenges the methods that he employed in this case. And it challenges the
legal conclusions that he reached.
The motion thus centers on two Federal Rules of Evidence, Rules 702 and 704, which
govern the admissibility of expert evidence and opinions embracing ultimate issues. Each is
discussed in turn. Then each is applied to Mr. Lord’s evidence.
A
Rule 702 establishes the general standards for the admissibility of expert evidence. It
provides:
2
The reactor’s diameter is one such “radical design decision” identified by Dr. Caram. Its height is not.
Indeed, Dr. Caram concludes that the height is “readily accessible through proper means.” Caram Report 3.
-22-
A witness who is qualified as an expert by knowledge, skill, experience, training,
or education, may testify in the form of an opinion or otherwise if:
(a)
the expert’s scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge will help
the trier of fact to understand the evidence or to determine a fact in issue;
(b)
the testimony is based on sufficient facts or data;
(c)
the testimony is the product of reliable principles and methods; and
(d)
the expert has reliably applied the principles and methods to the facts of
the case.
Fed. R. Evid. 702. Under the rule, the Supreme Court instructs: “The subject of an expert’s
testimony must be scientific knowledge.” Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharms., Inc., 509 U.S. 579,
589–90 (1993); see also Kumho Tire Co., Ltd. v. Carmichael, 526 U.S. 137, 150 (1999)
(“Engineering testimony rests upon scientific foundations.”).3
And the rule, the Court further instructs, “imposes a special obligation upon a trial judge
to ensure that any and all scientific testimony is not only relevant, but reliable.” Kumho Tire,
526 U.S. at 147 (quotation marks and ellipsis omitted) (quoting Daubert, 509 U.S. at 589).
“The adjective ‘scientific,’” the Court explains, “implies a grounding in the methods and
procedures of science. Similarly, the word ‘knowledge’ connotes more than subjective belief or
unsupported speculation.” Daubert, 509 U.S. at 590; see id. at 593 (“[T]he criterion of the
scientific status of a theory is its falsifiability, or refutability, or testability.” (brackets omitted)
(quoting Karl Popper, Conjectures and Refutations: The Growth of Scientific Knowledge 37 (5th
ed. 1989))). This much is, perhaps, self-evident. What is less immediately obvious how to
determine whether the scientific testimony is “reliable.”
3
See generally Jeffrey S. Parker, Daubert’s Debut: The Supreme Court, the Economics of Scientific
Evidence, and the Adversarial System, 4 Sup. Ct. Econ. Rev. 1, 17-18 (1995) (“The Court’s opinion [in Daubert]
resolves the Rule 702 standard into two distinct aspects: (1) whether the proffered evidence is ‘scientific
knowledge,’ which means, in essence, that it was arrived at through the scientific method; and (2) whether the
evidence ‘will assist the trier of fact to understand or determine a fact in issue,’ which means that there is an
adequate ‘fit’ or ‘valid scientific connection’ to the factual issues in the litigation.”).
-23-
“Many factors will bear on the inquiry,” the Court observes. Daubert, 509 at 593. In
Daubert, however, the Court identifies four factors in particular. Id. at 593–94. The first factor
— “a key question to be answered in determining whether a theory or technique is scientific
knowledge” — is whether the theory or technique “can be (and has been) tested.” Id. at 593.
The second is “whether the theory or technique has been subjected to peer review and
publication.” Id. The third is whether the theory or technique has a “known or potential rate of
error and the existence and maintenance of standards controlling the technique’s operation.” Id.
at 594. And the fourth is whether the theory or technique has gained “general acceptance” in the
“relevant scientific community.” Id.
And several other factors are identified in the advisory committee notes to Rule 702. One
is: “Whether the expert is being as careful as he would be in his regular professional work
outside his paid litigation consulting.” Fed. R. Evid. 702 advisory committee notes (2000
amend.) (quotation marks omitted) (quoting Sheehan v. Daily Racing Form, Inc., 104 F.3d 940,
942 (7th Cir. 1997)).
A second is: “Whether the expert has unjustifiably extrapolated from an accepted premise
to an unfounded conclusion.” Fed. R. Evid. 702 advisory committee notes (2000 amend.); see
Gen. Elec. Co. v. Joiner, 522 U.S. 136, 146 (1997) (observing that a court “may conclude that
there is simply too great an analytical gap between the data and the opinion proffered”).
And a third is: “Whether experts are proposing to testify about matters growing naturally
and directly out of research they have conducted independent of the litigation, or whether they
have developed their opinions expressly for purposes of testifying.” Fed. R. Evid. 702 advisory
committee notes (2000 amend.) (quotation marks omitted) (quoting Daubert v. Merrell Dow
Pharms., Inc., 43 F.3d 1311, 1317 (9th Cir. 1995)); see also Mike’s Train House, Inc. v. Lionel,
-24-
L.L.C., 472 F.3d 398, 408 (6th Cir. 2006) (cautioning district courts to be “suspicious of
methodologies created for the purpose of litigation, because expert witnesses are not necessarily
always unbiased scientists”).
“The objective” of each of these factors, as noted, “is to ensure the reliability and
relevancy of expert testimony. It is to make certain that an expert, whether basing testimony
upon professional studies or personal experience, employs in the courtroom the same level of
intellectual rigor that characterizes the practice of an expert in the relevant field.” Kumho Tire,
526 U.S. at 152.
“Red flags that caution against certifying an expert,” the Sixth Circuit cautions, “include
reliance on anecdotal evidence, improper extrapolation, failure to consider other possible causes,
lack of testing, and subjectivity.” Newell Rubbermaid, Inc. v. Raymond Corp., 676 F.3d 521,
527 (6th Cir. 2012) (citing Best v. Lowe’s Home Ctrs., Inc., 563 F.3d 171, 177 (6th Cir. 2009)).
B
Rule 704, in turn, provides: “An opinion is not objectionable just because it embraces an
ultimate issue.” Fed. R. Evid. 704(a). But an opinion is objectionable when it offers not a
factual opinion — but a legal one. E.g., Berry v. City of Detroit, 25 F.3d 1342, 1353 (6th Cir.
1994). The Sixth Circuit, for example, cautions: “Although an expert’s opinion may embrace an
ultimate issue to be decided by the trier of fact, the issue embraced must be a factual one.” Id.
(citation, brackets, and quotation marks omitted) (quoting Fed. R. Evid. 704(a))). As that court
explains:
It would have been easy enough for the drafters of the Federal Rules of Evidence
to have said that a properly qualified expert may opine on the ultimate question of
liability. They did not do so. When the rules speak of an expert’s testimony
embracing the ultimate issue, the reference must be to stating opinions that
suggest the answer to the ultimate issue or that give the jury all the information
from which it can draw inferences as to the ultimate issue. We would not allow a
-25-
fingerprint expert in a criminal case to opine that a defendant was guilty (a legal
conclusion), even though we would allow him to opine that the defendant’s
fingerprint was the only one on the murder weapon (a fact). The distinction,
although subtle, is nonetheless important.
Id.; see also Jones v. Pramstaller, 874 F. Supp. 2d 713, 720 (W.D. Mich. 2012) (“The principle
that an expert may not make legal conclusions is indeed well established.”).
C
Portions of Mr. Lord’s proposed evidence — specifically, the portions of his opinions
regarding Plaintiffs second, fourth, and eighth claimed trade secrets — do not meet these
standards. Nor do his conclusions that Plaintiffs’ “claimed trade secrets [a]re not trade secrets
according to the legal definition.” Lord Rebuttal 21.
1
First is Mr. Lord’s evidence regarding Plaintiffs’ second claimed trade secret (concerning
the reactor’s diameter).
As noted, addressing how Defendants arrived at precisely the same reactor bed diameter
as Plaintiffs, Mr. Lord writes in his rebuttal report that Defendants employed a “common
industrial engineering practice of calculating the basic size, adding a safety factor, then rounding
up to the nearest foot.” Lord Rebuttal 6.
In his deposition, however, Mr. Lord acknowledged that he did not have a scientific
foundation for his conclusion. When he was pressed on the method that he used to calculate the
reactor’s diameter, for example, he responded that “it’s not a science, it’s a little rougher on the
calculational side than you might think.” Lord Dep. 248. Later in the deposition, Plaintiffs’
counsel returned to the topic, inquiring:
Q:
So as you said before, it’s [not] a science — it’s an art and it’s not a
science, right?
-26-
A:
Yeah. You do some basic calculations and you get close to the number
you think it probably is and say okay.
Lord Dep. 260. Thus, by his own acknowledgement Mr. Lord’s evidence on this claim is not
“scientific.” (As discussed below, moreover, Mr. Lord also acknowledged that in his regular
professional consulting work he would not size a reactor’s diameter according to the method he
used in his report. Lord Dep. 299–300. Thus, he cannot rely on practical experience as a
justification for the method he employs in his report.)
Nor has Mr. Lord’s method of sizing a fluid bed reactor’s diameter been subject to peer
review or publication. In his deposition, Mr. Lord was asked if he was aware of any authority
suggesting that rounding off to the nearest foot is an acceptable manner of calculating the
diameter. He responded:
I don’t know — I certainly can’t point to it sitting here. I just know that’s typical
engineering practice. If you don’t — if you . . . go to some obscure number . . .
people think you’re crazy. And part of it is, there is a lot of unknowns in these
calculations.
Lord Dep. 242. Addressing what “chemical engineers worry about,” what they “actually really
worry about,” Mr. Lord explained: “We are worrying about mass heat transfer and fluid flow.”
Lord Dep. 263. And he testified that to properly size a reactor’s diameter it is necessary “to do
the heat transfer calculations.” Lord Dep. 342.
But Mr. Lord didn’t do these calculations. Lord Dep. 332–33, 342. He explained: “It
appeared that [Defendants’ partner] had some tools, computer tools available to them that would
be useful. I don’t have those tools. So it would be difficult for me.” Lord Dep. 341. He
elaborated: “If I want to do a heat transfer calculation, that’s real work. That’s complicated.
You got to calculate all these properties and heat transfer coefficients. It’s definitely a pain.”
Lord Dep. 341.
-27-
Thus, Mr. Lord again acknowledges that his evidence on an essential calculation for
sizing a reactor’s diameter is not scientific, but speculative.
He does not know whether
Defendants could have sized their reactor diameter by proper means. He didn’t do the math to
check.
Mr. Lord also acknowledged that in his regular professional consulting work he would
not size a reactor’s diameter according to the method he used in his report. Lord Dep. 299–300.
In his deposition, he was asked:
Q:
Would you recommend that anyone who is designing a commercial fluid
bed reactor rely solely on the calculations you provided on page 7 of your
rebuttal report to size the diameter?
A:
I wouldn’t do it that way.
Lord Dep. 299–300. As noted, one factor courts may consider in evaluating whether an expert’s
evidence is reliable is if “the expert is being as careful as he would be in his regular professional
work outside his paid litigation consulting.” Fed. R. Evid. 702 advisory committee notes (2000
amend.) (quotation marks omitted) (quoting Sheehan v. Daily Racing Form, Inc., 104 F.3d 940,
942 (7th Cir. 1997)). Here, by his own acknowledgement, Mr. Lord was not.
2
Mr. Lord’s evidence regarding Plaintiffs’ fourth claimed trade secret (concerning the
reactor’s height) will likewise be excluded.
A fluid bed reactor’s proper height, Mr. Lord writes in his report, is a product of
“fluidization velocity and space time.” Lord Report 48. And he concludes that the “operational
details” of a fluid bed reactor, including its height, are readily ascertainable by proper means
because of the ‘643 Patent. Id. That patent reveals that (1) the “preferred” fluidization velocities
-28-
range from 3 centimeters/second to 7.5 centimeters/second; and (2) the “preferred space times”
range from five seconds to five minutes. Id.
From this “preferred” operational range, as noted, Mr. Lord selected a midpoint value for
space time, but an outlier value for linear velocity, which resulted in a reactor height similar to
Plaintiffs’ reactor. Lord Report 49. In his deposition, Mr. Lord was asked:
Q:
Did you try different iterations of this when you were preparing your
report?
A:
No. I didn’t try a whole bunch of different iterations. I just pointed out
what you could do. The question is, is it readily ascertainable? To me it’s
readily ascertainable.
Lord Dep. 293–94. Pressing Mr. Lord on the variety of heights that he could have reached using
the operational ranges of the ‘643 Patent, counsel for Plaintiffs inquired:
Q:
[I]n calculating if you plug those numbers into your equation at the top of
the next page you would get a range, by our calculations, anywhere
between 35 centimeters or 75 feet.
A:
Yeah. Yeah.
Lord Dep. 295–96. Plaintiffs’ counsel, returning to the precise numbers that Mr. Lord chose,
inquired:
Q:
Why is it reasonable in one case to [choose] the high end and the other
case to choose the midpoint?
A:
Because engineering is not particularly a logical thing. It’s an art. And
okay, this is — there is a lot of feel to it, I suppose. . . .
Q.
You didn’t think it was important to be consistent in your assumptions
over the course of the calculation?
A:
No. My opinion of consistency is [that it is] the hobgoblin of tiny minds.
I’m not a believer in consistency.
Lord Dep. 339–40. Setting to one side Mr. Lord’s wit, by his own admission his height
calculations are not based on science. And while his humor may amuse the trier of fact, his
-29-
evidence on Plaintiffs’ fourth claimed trade secret would not assist the fact-finder in determining
a fact in issue.
Mr. Lord’s evidence regarding Plaintiffs’ fourth claimed trade secret will be excluded
pursuant to Rule 702.
3
Mr. Lord’s evidence regarding Plaintiffs’ eighth claimed trade secret (the combination
claim that the reactor design will work as promised) will also be excluded pursuant to Rule 702.
In Mr. Lord’s report, he asserts: “The fact that a reactor with similar dimensions would
work is not a secret. The Chinese Institute drawing shows a [reactor with similar dimensions].”
Lord Report 27.
Dr. Fan counters that the Chinese Institute drawing is “different in significant ways from
the technology adopted by Defendants and Plaintiffs.” Fan Report ¶ 33. After enumerating the
differences, Dr. Fan explains that the consequence is that the reactors’ respective kinetics,
hydrodynamics, and performance “are entirely different. . . . [T]hese are two different types of
reactors.” Id.
Mr. Lord responds in his rebuttal report that “fluidization characteristics are not part of
the specific claims” and, even if they were, “the fluidization is the same” in the reactors. Lord
Rebuttal 5–6. All of the reactors, he asserts, are “firmly in the slugging regime.” Id. at 28.
In his deposition, Mr. Lord explained: “I took the position based on the calculations I did
that they were all essentially in the same fluidization regime.” Lord Dep. 192. When pressed on
the question by Plaintiffs’ counsel, however, he acknowledged: “I haven’t done the calculations
that [Plaintiffs’ expert, Dr. Fan,] talks about, so I could be — I could be wrong.” Lord Dep. 194.
Later in the deposition, Plaintiffs’ counsel returned to the issue, asking:
-30-
Q:
I want to return briefly to the discussion . . . about the calculations or the
statements you made in your rebuttal report about — about Dow Corning
and Defendants having a slugging as opposed to bubbling regime. At this
point in time are you — is it your opinion still at this point in time that the
Defendants reactor is a slugging reactor and not a bubbling bed reactor?
A.
I think I don’t know for sure what their fluidization regime is. I think Dr.
Fan had some good points. There is obviously different calculational
procedures you could apply, different models, different ways of
comparing things. . . . I think Dr. Fan brought up a point of having the
internal — internals does make — could make a significant difference an
could make it difficult to predict exactly what goes on. So I think that’s a
very good point. But nevertheless, the fluidization regime would be the
same if the Plaintiffs’ is bubbling, then the Chinese Institute one would be
bubbling as well and probably the Defendants would be bubbling. So they
will all be essentially the same fluidization regime, and that’s what I was
trying to say.
Lord Dep. 320–21. Mr. Lord further acknowledged that he “could perhaps have done a little
more research in that area, but there wasn’t really time and I didn’t think it was particularly
relevant.” Lord Dep. 304. He was asked:
Q:
As of now you don’t have sufficient information to know whether either
the Chinese Institute or the Plaintiff’s reactor is a slugging regime as
opposed to a bubbling bed?
A:
Dr. Fan brought up another set of calculations that could possibly be
applied that might indicate a different answer with some — some degree
of a mix of bubbling and slugging, depending on what equation you pick.
So this is obviously, you know, an area where there is no clear answer, nor
likely to be any clear answer. . . .
But I think the answer — the point I’m trying to get to is when you come
down to it, if something is geometrically all very similar and geometrically
has — and has the same gas properties and say essentially flow rate and
same particle size you would expect the fluidization would be the same,
whatever it might be, it should be the same.
Lord Dep. 322–26. Mr. Lord acknowledged that he did not know the Chinese Institute drawing’s
flow rate or particle size. Lord Dep. 326; see also Fan Rebuttal ¶ 33 (“[T]he Chinese Institute
drawing does not show any information about operational conditions, while the operational
-31-
conditions for Defendants’ and Plaintiffs’ reactors, including temperature, pressure and particle
size, are very similar.”). But, he asserted that “it doesn’t really matter because you’re not trying
to — I’m not trying to duplicate the Chinese Institute process, you are looking at a reactor that
would work.” Lord Dep. 326.
Again, Mr. Lord’s evidence does not demonstrate the “same level of intellectual rigor
that characterizes the practice of an expert in the relevant field.” Kumho Tire, 526 U.S. at 152.
First, Mr. Lord did not attempt to test his theory that the reactors’ fluidization regime is
the same. Compelled to acknowledge that his conclusion depends on variables that he did not
determine, he further acknowledges that he does not know what the reactors’ fluidization regime
is.
As the Supreme Court observes: “Trained experts commonly extrapolate from existing
data. But nothing in either Daubert or the Federal Rules of Evidence requires a district court to
admit opinion evidence that is connected to existing data only by the ipse dixit of the expert.”
Joiner, 522 U.S. at 146. Here, as in Joiner, “there is simply too great an analytical gap between
the data and the opinion proffered.” General Elec. Co. v. Joiner, 522 U.S. 136, 146 (1997); see
also Newell Rubbermaid, 676 F.3d at 527 (cautioning that “[r]ed flags” improper extrapolation,
failure to consider other possible causes, lack of testing, and subjectivity.”
Mr. Lord’s evidence regarding Plaintiffs’ eighth trade secret claim is inadmissible.
4
Finally, Mr. Lord’s legal conclusions will be excluded pursuant to Rule 704. In his
report, he writes that of Plaintiffs’ 17 claimed trade secrets, 10 “are merely engineering
preference, fifteen of the claims have been previously disclosed in various patents, five of the
-32-
claims can be calculated from third party data and four of the claims are standard engineering
practice, so none of the specified claims are trade secrets.” Lord Report 2.
Likewise, in his rebuttal report the gentleman writes that Plaintiffs’ “claimed trade secrets
[a]re not trade secrets according to the legal definition.” Lord Rebuttal 21.
As Plaintiffs pointedly observe, “expert testimony about what constitutes a trade secret”
is “clearly inadmissible,” since it is “not the expert’s role to instruct the jury on the applicable
law.” Pls.’ Daubert Mot. 10 (brackets and quotation marks omitted) (quoting Bausch & Lomb,
Inc. v. Alcon Labs., Inc., 79 F. Supp. 2d 252, 259 (W.D.N.Y. 2000)).
D
In sum, Plaintiffs’ motion will be granted in part and denied in part. Mr. Lord’s evidence
regarding Plaintiffs’ second, fourth, and eighth claimed trade secrets will be excluded, as will his
legal conclusions.
Against this conclusion, Defendants make several arguments. None have merit.
1
Defendants first assert that the “Daubert challenge is essentially moot,” and Rule 702
gatekeeping is unnecessary, because Dr. Caram has been appointed as a neutral expert. Defs.’
Resp. to Pls.’ Daubert Mot. 4. “In exercising its gatekeeping function,” Defendants write, “this
Court should accept Dr. Caram’s reliance on Mr. Lord’s expertise and reliability.”
Id.
Defendants’ argument lacks merit as a matter of fact and law.
As a matter of fact, for example, Dr. Caram took issue with some of the methods
employed by Mr. Lord, such as his method of sizing a reactor diameter. Dr. Caram found that
the “choice of particle diameter and safety factors appears to be arbitrary.” Caram Report 7. “I
-33-
found no evidence of any rational procedure,” Dr. Caram likewise reports, “to arrive [at the]
diameter.” Id. at 9.
Even if Dr. Caram had concluded that all of Mr. Lord’s methods are reliable, moreover,
this Court would be required to evaluate the admissibility of the challenged evidence.
“The court must decide,” Federal Rule of Evidence 104 provides, “any preliminary
question about whether a witness is qualified, a privilege exists, or evidence is admissible.” Fed.
R. Evid. 104(a). Likewise, as the Court explained in Daubert, “under the Rules the trial judge
must ensure that any and all scientific testimony or evidence admitted is not only relevant, but
reliable.” 509 U.S. at 589. The findings of a neutral expert such as Dr. Caram are helpful in
making this determination. But those findings do not excuse this Court’s duty of ensuring that
Mr. Lord’s evidence is admissible.
2
Next, Defendants argue that “the conclusions drawn from Plaintiffs’ cherry-picked
snippets of Mr. Lord’s deposition testimony are both illogical and irrelevant. . . . Mr. Lord’s
analysis is both sound and thorough.” Defs.’ Resp. 1–2. Defendants elaborate: “Plaintiffs follow
a potshot approach of attacking Mr. Lord, quoting isolated comments out of context and
ascribing great significance to several of Mr. Lord’s jocular statements. . . . Daubert does not
exclude an expert’s stab at humor.” Id. at 11, 15.
Yet it is not the levity that Mr. Lord attempted to bring to the deposition that is at issue.
It is the lack of scientific rigor that he brought to his analysis of Plaintiffs’ second, fourth, and
eighth claimed trade secrets. For reasons detailed above, his methods of evaluating these claims
were not grounded in the methods or procedures of science.
-34-
3
Finally, Defendants argue that “Mr. Lord never testified that any of his conclusions were
based on incorrect assumptions, never testified that he failed to do any necessary calculations
and never engaged in any unsupported speculation.” Id. at 20.
Contrary to Defendants’ contention, Mr. Lord repeatedly acknowledged that he had not
done necessary calculations.
Plaintiffs’ second claimed trade secret, for example, concerns the reactor diameter. The
diameter of a fluid bed reactor, Mr. Lord initially asserted in his deposition, is “very strongly
dependent on particle size.” Lord Dep. 48–49. Defendants designed a reactor based on a
particle size of 80 microns, but built reactors with particles of 150 to 250 microns. Mr. Lord
acknowledges that he does not know whether Defendants’ decision to keep the same diameter
although they were using particles two to three times larger than originally planned was
reasonable. He did not do the math. Lord Dep. 223–25.
Turning to what “chemical engineers worry about,” what they “actually really worry
about,” Mr. Lord explained: “We are worrying about mass heat transfer and fluid flow.” Lord
Dep. 263. Mr. Lord later testified that to properly design a fluid bed reactor, it is necessary “to
do the heat transfer calculations.” Lord Dep. 342. But, he acknowledged, he did not do this
calculation. He explained: “If I want to do a heat transfer calculation, that’s real work. That’s
complicated.” Lord Dep. 341; see also Lord Dep. 332–33 (acknowledging that he did not do a
heat transfer calculation).
III
Accordingly, it is ORDERED that Plaintiffs’ motion (ECF No. 157) is GRANTED IN
PART AND DENIED IN PART. Mr. Lord’s evidence regarding Plaintiffs’ second, fourth, and
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eighth claimed trade secrets will be excluded, as will his legal conclusions regarding each of
Plaintiffs’ 17 claimed trade secrets.
Dated: March 13, 2013
s/Thomas L. Ludington
THOMAS L. LUDINGTON
United States District Judge
PROOF OF SERVICE
The undersigned certifies that a copy of the foregoing order was served
upon each attorney or party of record herein by electronic means or first
class U.S. mail on March 13, 2013.
s/Tracy A. Jacobs
TRACY A. JACOBS
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