Telecom America, Inc. v. Oncor Communications, Inc. , 31 F. App'x 809 ( 2002 )


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  •                          UNPUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    TELECOM AMERICA, INCORPORATED,        
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    ONCOR COMMUNICATIONS,
    INCORPORATED, a Delaware
    Corporation,
    Defendant-Appellee,             No. 01-1765
    and
    NATIONAL OPERATOR SERVICES,
    INCORPORATED, a Maryland
    Corporation,
    Defendant.
    
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of Maryland, at Greenbelt.
    Alexander Williams, Jr., District Judge.
    (CA-98-679-AW)
    Argued: February 28, 2002
    Decided: March 19, 2002
    Before WIDENER and MOTZ, Circuit Judges, and
    HAMILTON, Senior Circuit Judge.
    Affirmed by unpublished per curiam opinion.
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Alan C. Thomas, FISCHER, PORTER, CALIGUIRE &
    THOMAS, P.C., Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, for Appellant. Jef-
    2            TELECOM AMERICA v. ONCOR COMMUNICATIONS
    frey Martin Schwaber, STEIN, SPERLING, BENNETT, DE JONG,
    DRISCOLL & GREENFEIG, P.C., Rockville, Maryland, for Appel-
    lee. ON BRIEF: Arthur L. Porter, Jr., Jay D. Fischer, Scott H. Gold-
    stein, FISCHER, PORTER, CALIGUIRE & THOMAS, P.C.,
    Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, for Appellant. Alexia Kent Bourgerie,
    STEIN, SPERLING, BENNETT, DE JONG, DRISCOLL & GREEN-
    FEIG, P.C., Rockville, Maryland, for Appellee.
    Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit. See
    Local Rule 36(c).
    OPINION
    PER CURIAM:
    In this diversity action, Telecom America, Incorporated, sues
    Oncor Communications, Incorporated, for breach of contract, unjust
    enrichment, and various related torts. The district court granted Oncor
    summary judgment on Telecom’s breach of contract claim, and, after
    Telecom presented its evidence, judgment as a matter of law on Tele-
    com’s remaining claims. Telecom appeals; we affirm.
    I.
    Oncor provides long-distance telephone service. To build its cus-
    tomer base, Oncor entered into a contract with National Operator Ser-
    vices, Incorporated (NOS), under which NOS agreed to solicit owners
    of public telephone sites onto the Oncor network. NOS, in turn,
    entered into a contract with Telecom, under which Telecom directly
    solicited sites for NOS. Periodically, Oncor would determine the call
    activity of each site assigned to the network by NOS, and pay NOS
    a commission. NOS then remitted a percentage to Telecom for sites
    Telecom had referred; Telecom, finally, would pay a percentage back
    to site owners for the right to continue serving as their agent (i.e., for
    authorization to switch their sites from one long distance service to
    another).
    TELECOM AMERICA v. ONCOR COMMUNICATIONS                3
    In the Spring of 1995, a dispute arose between Oncor and NOS,
    and on June 30, Oncor stopped making commission payments to
    NOS. NOS sued Oncor in state court, and at the same time suspended
    payments to its site solicitors, including Telecom. Consequently,
    Telecom attempted to obtain payment from Oncor.
    Telecom and Oncor engaged in a series of conversations, at the end
    of which Oncor wrote Telecom a letter dated July 13, 1995. The letter
    briefly described the relationship between NOS and Telecom, and
    then stated, in pertinent part:
    NOS has informed Telecom America that it will not pay all
    or any portion of the commissions and surcharges due to
    Telecom America on July 15, 1995 (the "July Payment").
    Based upon such statement by NOS you [Telecom] have
    contacted Oncor to determine if Oncor would be willing to
    pay Telecom America the July Payment owed to Telecom
    America by NOS.
    Based upon the representation and agreements made by
    Telecom America and contained in this letter, Oncor will
    agree to pay to Telecom America the July Payment. You
    will provide Oncor with such documents as may be reason-
    ably requested by Oncor, including a list of all public pay
    phone Sites brought to Oncor through the efforts of Telecom
    America, so that the parties can calculate and Oncor can
    verify the amount properly due to Telecom America. Once
    Oncor and Telecom America agree upon the amount due to
    Telecom America by NOS, Oncor shall pay such amount.
    Telecom America covenants and agrees to pay the Sites all
    sums do [sic] and owing to such parties.
    Oncor will continue to make such payments to Telecom
    America each month for so long as (i) NOS fails to pay all
    sums properly due to Telecom America pursuant to the
    Agreement [between NOS and Telecom], and (ii) no legal
    or regulatory action is taken which would prohibit or limit
    Oncor’s ability or right to make such payments. Telecom
    America covenants and agrees that for so long as Oncor
    makes payments on behalf of NOS, that Telecom America
    4            TELECOM AMERICA v. ONCOR COMMUNICATIONS
    shall not move any of its Sites off of the Oncor network and
    further agrees that it will not solicit any public pay phone
    customers on the Oncor network and attempt to move them
    to another operator service provider.
    Telecom America acknowledges and agrees that the pay-
    ments made by Oncor are an accommodation to Telecom
    America and Oncor is not in any way assuming ongoing lia-
    bility or obligations under Telecom America’s Agreement
    with NOS. . . .
    If you agree with the terms and conditions set forth in this
    letter, please acknowledge your acceptance by signing this
    letter in the space provided below and returning an original
    to me for Oncor’s files.
    Although no representative of Telecom ever signed the July 13 let-
    ter, on July 17 Telecom sent Oncor a database of its 8,000 active and
    inactive sites, including contact names, phone numbers and addresses
    of the site owners as well as the contract terms, and commission
    arrangements between Telecom and the site owners. On July 21,
    1995, however, NOS obtained an order from the state court, effective
    July 17, compelling Oncor to pay into an escrow account all money
    "due and payable to [NOS’] sites and subagents" and prohibiting
    Oncor from having any "direct contact with" the site owners or sub-
    agents. Five days later, in a letter dated July 26, Oncor informed Tele-
    com that "[b]ased upon the Court’s [July 17] order, Oncor must
    retract any offers made by Oncor in its July 13, 1995 letter." Telecom
    nevertheless kept its sites on the Oncor network for some unspecified
    length of time and, to date, Oncor has never paid any commissions
    or surcharges to Telecom for these customers.
    On August 21, 1995, NOS and Oncor settled the suit NOS had
    brought against Oncor in state court. According to the terms of that
    settlement, Oncor (1) forgave NOS $1,908,906 of prepaid commis-
    sion debt and (2) paid NOS $436,000. On the next day, NOS sent
    Telecom a proposed release requiring NOS to pay Telecom $65,074
    (an amount equal to the commissions owed to Telecom for the month
    of May 1995) in exchange for Telecom’s acknowledgment that it had
    been paid all past commissions and that "all claims, past, present and
    TELECOM AMERICA v. ONCOR COMMUNICATIONS                 5
    future, are hereby waived." Telecom and NOS executed this agree-
    ment without material change, and NOS made the agreed-upon pay-
    ment to Telecom.
    According to Telecom, Oncor then "began directly soliciting Tele-
    com’s customers," using both the data it had "tricked Telecom into
    providing," and also an "authorization" it had received from NOS
    allowing it "to circumvent NOS and its subagents, i.e., Telecom, and
    deal directly with the site owners that they provided."
    On April 20, 1998, Telecom filed this action against both NOS and
    Telecom, alleging that it was entitled to payment from both compa-
    nies under several theories. In May 1999 the district court granted
    Oncor summary judgment on Telecom’s claim that Oncor breached
    a contract it had entered into with Telecom. On May 3, 2000, Tele-
    com settled with NOS. A bench trial on Telecom’s other claims
    against Oncor began on May 7, and at the close of Telecom’s case
    Oncor moved for judgment as a matter of law pursuant to Rule 52(c).
    The court granted the motion and Telecom appeals.
    We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment on the
    breach of contract claim de novo. As to the other claims, on which
    the district court granted judgment as a matter of law pursuant to Rule
    52(c), we review the court’s findings of fact for clear error and its
    conclusions of law de novo. See Carter v. Ball, 
    33 F.3d 450
    , 457 (4th
    Cir. 1994). The parties agree that Maryland law governs their dispute.
    II.
    Telecom contends that Oncor’s July 13, 1995 letter constituted a
    contract between the parties, which it fully performed and Oncor
    breached. Specifically, Telecom maintains that the letter "contained
    unilateral promises by Oncor that invited Telecom’s acceptance by
    performance," and that Telecom performed (i.e., sent its database disk
    to Oncor) according to the terms spelled out in the letter. Brief of
    Appellant at 27. However, in the July 13 letter Oncor specifically
    notified Telecom: "[i]f you agree with the terms and conditions set
    forth in this letter, please acknowledge your acceptance by signing
    this letter in the space provided below and returning an original to me
    for Oncor’s files." (Emphasis added). The letter also contained a
    6            TELECOM AMERICA v. ONCOR COMMUNICATIONS
    space for Telecom to sign under the words "ACCEPTED AND
    AGREED TO BY." Telecom never signed or returned the letter, and
    so the district court held that, as a matter of law, no contract was
    formed.
    Telecom contends that this holding was error. The company relies
    on Porter v. General Boiler Casing Co., Inc., 
    396 A.2d 1090
     (Md.
    1977), for the proposition that "in certain circumstances signatures are
    not required to bring a contract into being." Brief of Appellant at 27.
    Of course this is true, but those "circumstances" are limited. As the
    Court of Appeals of Maryland explained in Porter, "there need be no
    signatures unless the parties have made them necessary at the time
    they expressed their assent and as a condition modifying that assent."
    396 A.2d at 1095 (emphasis added). Given the plain language of the
    July 13 letter, it does not appear that the district court erred in con-
    cluding that in this case signatures were necessary.
    But even assuming that the July 13 letter did constitute a contract
    between the parties, Oncor’s obligations under the contract were
    either conditional or fully performed. The July 13 letter stated that
    Oncor was not obligated to make payments if any "legal or regulatory
    action is taken which would prohibit or limit Oncor’s ability or right
    to make such payments." Shortly thereafter, the state court issued an
    injunction barring such payments. The letter also made clear that
    Oncor’s payments were entirely derivative of NOS’s liability; that is,
    Oncor agreed to pay only so long as "NOS fails to pay all sums prop-
    erly due to Telecom America pursuant to the Agreement [between
    NOS and Telecom]." When Telecom accepted a settlement from NOS
    on August 23, it waived all of its past and future claims arising from
    its contract with NOS. Therefore, Oncor’s derivative liability also
    came to an end.
    For all of these reasons, the district court did not err in granting
    Oncor summary judgment on Telecom’s breach of contract claims.
    III.
    Alternatively, Telecom maintains that Oncor was unjustly enriched
    when it received and used Telecom’s confidential information, and
    TELECOM AMERICA v. ONCOR COMMUNICATIONS                   7
    retained Telecom’s sites on the Oncor network, without compensating
    Telecom.
    Under Maryland law a plaintiff must prove three elements to make
    out an unjust enrichment claim:
    1. A benefit conferred upon the defendant by the plaintiff;
    2. An appreciation or knowledge by the defendant of the
    benefit; and
    3. The acceptance or retention by the defendant of the bene-
    fit under such circumstances as to make it inequitable for the
    defendant to retain the benefit without the payment of its
    value.
    Mass Transit Admin. v. Granite Const. Co., 
    471 A.2d 1121
    , 1125
    (Md. Ct. Spec. App. 1984) (quoting Everhart v. Miles, 
    422 A.2d 28
    (Md. Ct. Spec. App. 1980)).
    The district court held that Telecom had failed to prove the third
    element — that Oncor retained a benefit without payment in circum-
    stances in which it was inequitable to do so. Specifically, after careful
    consideration of Telecom’s evidence, the court found that Telecom
    had not proved unjust enrichment because it had "voluntarily" made
    its decisions, "knowing the risk involved." The court reasoned that
    Telecom "had an opportunity to take back the phones, to switch the
    phones, but for a business decision decided it wasn’t practical."
    Rather, Telecom "received a business benefit by leaving the phones
    there, because [the company] felt ultimately [it] would get a deal out
    of it and would get paid [its] commissions." In sum, the court con-
    cluded, "[a] restitution claim is not available under . . . circumstances
    where a plaintiff voluntarily made the decision knowing the risk
    involved in getting commissions or not getting commissions."
    Ample evidence supports these findings and the district court did
    not err in concluding that, given these facts, Telecom had not demon-
    strated that it would be inequitable to permit Oncor to retain, without
    payment, any benefit it received from the Telecom’s sites and
    assertedly confidential information.
    8            TELECOM AMERICA v. ONCOR COMMUNICATIONS
    IV.
    Telecom also maintains that Oncor misappropriated Telecom’s
    trade secrets when it retained Telecom’s customer data base. The
    Maryland Uniform Trade Secrets Act defines a "trade secret" as infor-
    mation that (i) derives "independent economic value" from "not being
    generally known" or "readily ascertainable" by others who can obtain
    economic value from its use or disclosure; and (ii) is the subject of
    "efforts that are reasonable under the circumstances" to maintain the
    secrecy of the information." See Md. Code Ann. Com. Law II § 11-
    1201(e) (Michie 2000).
    In this case, as the district court found, Telecom did not make rea-
    sonable efforts to keep its database secret. Telecom produced no evi-
    dence of any agreement, procedure or other measure instituted to
    guard against unauthorized disclosure of this information. And, the
    Telecom employee entrusted to compile and disseminate the informa-
    tion to Oncor received no instructions concerning its alleged confi-
    dential nature. Cf. Motor City Bagels, L.L.C. v. The American Bagel
    Co., 
    50 F. Supp. 2d 460
    , 480 (D. Md. 1999) (company did not meet
    secrecy requirement when it failed to exact secrecy agreements from
    potential investors and the exclusivity language was ineffective).
    Nor, again as the district court found, did Telecom prove that there
    was a "misappropriation," that is, "acquir[ing] the trade secret by
    improper means or disclos[ing] the trade secret without express or
    implied consent." Diamond v. T. Rowe Price Assocs., Inc., 
    852 F. Supp. 372
    , 412 (D. Md. 1994). Under the Uniform Trade Secret Act,
    "improper means" include "theft, bribery, misrepresentation, breach
    or inducement of a breach of a duty to maintain secrecy, or espionage
    through electronic or other means." § 11-1201(b). In determining that
    Oncor did not obtain the lists by "misappropriation," the district court
    expressly found that Oncor had perpetrated "no fraud in asking for
    this information," and indeed, had made "no false representation of
    material fact." Rather, Telecom sent the information "hoping that [it]
    would ultimately reach an agreement or under the impression that [it]
    had a deal." Again, abundant evidence supports these findings. Thus,
    there was no misappropriation and Telecom’s trade secret claim fails
    on two grounds.
    TELECOM AMERICA v. ONCOR COMMUNICATIONS                  9
    V.
    Telecom further maintains that Oncor intentionally interfered with
    contracts between Telecom and its site owners.
    Under Maryland law, competition is "just cause for damaging
    another in his [or her] business," and "a competitor who intentionally
    causes a third person not to continue an existing contract terminable
    at will does not improperly interfere with the contractual relation if
    no wrongful means are employed." Macklin v. Robert Logan Assocs.,
    
    639 A.2d 112
    , 119, 121 (Md. 1994) (quoting Natural Design Inc. v.
    Rouse Co., 
    485 A.2d 663
    , 676 (Md. 1984)). In the instant case, Tele-
    com concedes that its contracts with site owners were terminable at
    will, and that Oncor’s aim was to "market ANIs" directly, without
    recourse to agents or subagents. In other words, Oncor intended to
    compete directly with Telecom for site owners’ business.
    Telecom asserts that Oncor is nevertheless liable because it used
    wrongful means: that Oncor "tricked" Telecom to turn over customer
    lists, obtained the right (from NOS) to deal directly with site owners,
    and then used Telecom’s "trade secrets" (i.e., customer lists) to con-
    tact site owners. But, as already noted, supra, the district court made
    factual findings, fully supported by record evidence, that Oncor did
    not "trick" Telecom and that Telecom’s customer lists were not trade
    secrets. The district court also found that Telecom did not produce
    any other evidence "of any malicious, deliberate, intentional, willful
    interference." Accordingly, the district court did not err in granting
    judgment on the intentional interference claim.
    VI.
    Finally, Telecom contends that Oncor fraudulently induced it to
    provide confidential contact information about its sites and to keep its
    sites on the Oncor network. The district court generally found that
    Oncor did not knowingly make any false representation of material
    fact. With respect to the specific allegation of fraud — the testimony
    from Telecom’s principal that, in sum, "they didn’t perform, they
    rescinded, they canceled the deal" — the court found that this fell
    well short of fraud under Maryland law. Moreover, the court
    expressly found that the reason Oncor did not move forward with the
    10            TELECOM AMERICA v. ONCOR COMMUNICATIONS
    deal "was . . . a court order." "And on top of that, on the 26th of July
    of 1995 there was a clear retraction letter," barring any reliance by
    Telecom "on any so-called misrepresentation." As explained within,
    the evidence at trial well supported these findings; accordingly, the
    court did not err.*
    VII.
    For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is in
    all respects
    AFFIRMED.
    *Given our conclusion that all of Telecom’s liability claims fail, we
    need not address its contentions that the district court erred in finding its
    damages claims too speculative, in refusing to grant an accounting, and
    not permitting additional time to designate an expert on damages.