Orthofix, Inc. v. Eric Hunter , 630 F. App'x 566 ( 2015 )


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  •                  NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
    File Name: 15a0755n.06
    FILED
    Case No. 15-3216                        Nov 17, 2015
    DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    ORTHOFIX, INC.,                                    )
    )
    Plaintiff-Appellant,                        )
    )       ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED
    v.                                                 )       STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR
    )       THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF
    ERIC W. HUNTER,                                    )       OHIO
    )
    Defendant-Appellee.                         )
    )
    ____________________________________/              )
    Before: MERRITT, McKEAGUE, and WHITE, Circuit Judges.
    MERRITT, Circuit Judge.           This case is about the relationship of three separate
    categories of business information: (1) “trade secrets,” (2) contractually protected “confidential
    information,” and (3) “general skills and knowledge.”       The Restatement (Third) of Unfair
    Competition succinctly sets out the legal meaning of these three categories of information and
    how the three should be applied in this case.
    According to the Restatement, a trade secret is “any information that can be used in the
    operation of a business or other enterprise and is sufficiently valuable and secret to afford an
    actual or potential economic advantage over others.”        RESTATEMENT (THIRD)       OF   UNFAIR
    COMPETITION § 39 (AM. LAW INST. 1995). Meanwhile, “a nondisclosure agreement prohibiting
    the use or disclosure of particular information can clarify and extend the scope of an employer’s
    Case No. 15-3216, Orthofix, Inc. v. Hunter
    rights” beyond the protection afforded by trade secret statutes.          RESTATEMENT (THIRD)   OF
    UNFAIR COMPETITION § 42 cmt. g. (AM. LAW INST. 1995) (emphasis added). But the rules
    governing trade secrets are still relevant in analyzing the reasonableness and enforceability of
    non-disclosure provisions because, in order to justify the contractual restraint, information
    subject to non-disclosure provisions must share at least some characteristics with information
    protected by trade secret statutes. Id.; RESTATEMENT (THIRD)       OF   UNFAIR COMPETITION § 41
    Reporters’ Note cmt. d. (AM. LAW INST. 1995). Finally, information forming the “general skill,
    knowledge, training, and experience of an employee cannot be” a trade secret or subject to a non-
    disclosure agreement. RESTATEMENT (THIRD) OF UNFAIR COMPETITION § 42 cmt. d. (AM. LAW
    INST. 1995). Whether particular information is part of an employee’s general skill or knowledge
    depends on the facts or circumstances of a particular case.         
    Id. But the
    “fact that other
    competitors have been unsuccessful in independent attempts to [obtain] the information may
    suggest that the information” does not constitute general skill or knowledge. 
    Id. at 4.
    In this Ohio diversity case, the dispute over these three categories of business
    information is between plaintiff-appellant Orthofix, Inc. and defendant-appellee Eric W. Hunter,
    its former employee. Orthofix is suing Hunter for the misappropriation of Orthofix’s trade
    secrets and the use and disclosure of “confidential information” covered by the non-disclosure
    provision in Hunter’s employment agreement.          Hunter left Orthofix for a competitor and
    immediately started selling his old customers the same medical device made by his new
    employer. After a bench trial, the district court held that Hunter was not liable to Orthofix
    because (1) Orthofix did not protect its trade secrets with measures “that are reasonable under the
    circumstances”; and (2) the non-disclosure provision in Hunter’s employment agreement
    -2-
    Case No. 15-3216, Orthofix, Inc. v. Hunter
    prohibited Hunter from using his general skills and knowledge and, therefore, formed an
    unenforceable non-compete agreement.
    The district court’s primary error in this case arose because it confused Orthofix’s
    contract claim against Hunter for disclosure of “confidential information” with a claim for
    misappropriation of trade secrets under the Ohio Uniform Trade Secrets Act (“the Ohio Act”).
    In its conclusions of law, the district court said that “because Orthofix cannot maintain a
    misappropriation claim [under the Ohio Act], it cannot maintain a breach of contract claim”
    under Texas contract law governing the disclosure of “confidential information.”                                   This
    conclusion of law led the court to its subsequent conclusion that the “non-disclosure provision
    here [forms] a lifetime non-compete clause” under Texas law because it prohibits Hunter from
    using his general skills and knowledge.
    We conclude that Hunter breached his employment agreement with Orthofix by using
    and disclosing “confidential information” that, while not necessarily qualifying as trade secrets,
    did not constitute his general skills or knowledge.                    Therefore, we REVERSE the court’s
    judgment in favor of Hunter on Orthofix’s breach of contract claim. Because Orthofix prevails
    on its breach of contract claim, we need not reach Orthofix’s alternative trade secret
    misappropriation claim.1
    I.       Background
    Eric Hunter is a medical-device salesman. This case centers on his possession and use of
    the aggregate of information about physicians in his sales territory—information that Orthofix
    1
    Orthofix explained that the relief it seeks under its Ohio statutory claim is identical to the relief it seeks under its
    breach-of-contract claim, except that it may be entitled to attorneys’ fees only under the latter. (Reply Br. 19).
    -3-
    Case No. 15-3216, Orthofix, Inc. v. Hunter
    colloquially refers to as its “playbook.” Hunter claims that his possession and use of this
    information was innocent.
    Orthofix employed Hunter, who had no previous experience selling medical devices,
    from 2000 to November 2012. As an Orthofix salesman, Hunter primarily sold bone growth
    stimulators,2 devices typically worn on the skin of patients who have fractured a bone or
    undergone spinal fusion surgery. Three main competitors—Orthofix, DonJoy Orthopedics, and
    Biomet—control the bone growth stimulator field.
    Upon hiring Hunter, Orthofix presented him with an employment agreement containing
    both non-compete and non-disclosure provisions.3                    Before signing the agreement, Hunter
    consulted with an attorney and underlined the term “confidential information” on the signed
    copy of the agreement. Hunter began his employment at Orthofix as a territory sales manager
    for northwest Ohio and a portion of southeast Michigan. He worked to make contacts with
    orthopedic doctors, podiatrists, and neurosurgeons in the Toledo area.                         Hunter developed
    customers and acquired detailed information about practices of the doctors in his territory,
    inquiring about their schedules, prescribing habits, and preferred brands of bone growth
    stimulators. Over time, Hunter became a district sales manager and his territory expanded to
    include part of northern Indiana and Metro Detroit.
    2
    “Bone growth stimulators” are devices that use either electrical stimulation or ultrasonic waves to augment bone
    repair. A noninvasive electrical stimulator “is characterized by an external power source which is attached to a coil
    or electrodes placed on the skin or on a cast or brace over a fracture or fusion site” while an ultrasonic
    stimulator applies an ultrasound signal “to the skin surface at the fracture location via
    ultrasound conductive coupling gel in order to stimulate fracture healing.”             Bone Growth Stimulators,
    http://www.aetna.com/cpb/medical/data/300_399/0343.html (last visited Sept. 16, 2015).
    3
    The contract between Orthofix and Hunter provides in pertinent part for the confidentiality of Orthofix information
    as follows:
    Employee agrees that he/she will never use or disclose any confidential information which employee has acquired
    during the term of his/her employment with the corporation . . . . The term “confidential information” shall include
    customer lists or identification, trade secrets, processes . . . business and trade practices, sales or distribution
    methods and techniques, regulatory agreements and business strategies, and other confidential information
    pertaining to the Corporation’s business or financial affairs . . . which are developed by corporation at considerable
    time and expense, and which could be unfairly utilized in competition with the corporation.
    -4-
    Case No. 15-3216, Orthofix, Inc. v. Hunter
    In July 2012, Hunter and his fellow employee, Bob Lemanski, began negotiations to join
    DonJoy Orthopedics, Orthofix’s competitor. Richard Spina, DonJoy’s area vice president of
    sales for the central United States, contacted Hunter, and negotiations progressed quickly. By
    August 2012, Hunter had disclosed to Spina much of the information he had acquired over
    twelve years that he would use if he transferred his business to DonJoy, including his Orthofix
    employment agreement, his W-2 wage statement, copies of his Orthofix sales reports, and an
    account-by-account breakdown of some of his sales of bone growth stimulators.
    The three men then developed a plan for Lemanski and Hunter to join DonJoy while
    trying to avoid legal issues presented by the non-disclosure and non-compete provisions in their
    Orthofix employment agreements. Upon joining DonJoy, Hunter would, through an introduction
    by Lemanski, sell bone growth stimulators to those doctors who were former Lemanski clients.
    Hunter would cease selling bone growth stimulators to his Orthofix customers and would instead
    introduce his customers to other DonJoy representatives.
    Hunter resigned, effective immediately, from Orthofix via email just after midnight on
    November 13, 2012. Later that morning, he signed an employment agreement with DonJoy.
    Hunter resigned with no notice in order to thwart any Orthofix efforts to send in a new sales
    representative to service Hunter’s existing Orthofix sales accounts before Hunter could contact
    them on behalf of DonJoy.
    Upon resigning from Orthofix, Hunter maintained Orthofix “confidential information” in
    the form of documents and spreadsheets on his personal laptop and in his memory. Orthofix
    claims that its “playbook” is protected as a trade secret or as “confidential information” under
    Hunter’s employment agreement. The “playbook” includes: customer lists, wholesale price
    information, sales data, staff contacts, physician schedules and preferences, and physicians’
    -5-
    Case No. 15-3216, Orthofix, Inc. v. Hunter
    prescribing habits. At the time of Hunter’s resignation, Orthofix had no protocol in place for
    departing employees to return or destroy Orthofix “confidential information.” Consequently, no
    Orthofix employee directed Hunter to return or destroy his “playbook.”
    Hunter disclosed and used Orthofix’s “confidential information” when, as a DonJoy
    employee, he introduced other DonJoy representatives to his former Orthofix customers and
    provided information on their buying and use habits. Orthofix’s damages expert calculated
    $2,224,490 in annual lost sales and $1,623,877 in total lost profits for accounts serviced by
    Hunter and Lemanski.
    Orthofix filed this diversity suit against Hunter in the United States District Court for the
    Northern District of Ohio alleging (1) misappropriation of trade secrets under R.C. §§ 133.61-69,
    the Ohio Act; (2) breach of contract for violating the non-disclosure and non-compete provisions
    of Hunter’s employment agreement; and (3) tortious interference with Orthofix sales contracts.
    Hunter filed a counterclaim for disputed unpaid commissions.
    On October 24th, 2014, the District Court found in favor of Hunter on Orthofix’s claims
    of trade-secret misappropriation and breach of non-disclosure provision and in favor of Orthofix
    on its tortious interference claim. The court awarded Orthofix $62,039 in damages for Hunter’s
    tortious interference. The Court found in favor of Hunter on his counterclaim and awarded
    Hunter $8,710 for unpaid commissions.4
    II. Analysis
    A. The Non-disclosure Provision
    The district court made two related errors in finding that Hunter was not liable for
    breaching the non-disclosure provision in his employment agreement.                           First, the court
    4
    Previously, the parties jointly moved to reform the non-compete provision because it was overbroad and
    unenforceable. The district court granted the motion, which had the practical effect of dismissing the non-compete
    claim from the case.
    -6-
    Case No. 15-3216, Orthofix, Inc. v. Hunter
    misinterpreted Hunter’s non-disclosure provision when it determined that “confidential
    information” covered only trade secrets instead of the full measure of information agreed to by
    the parties as set forth in the agreement. Second, the court misinterpreted Texas law when it held
    that Hunter’s non-disclosure provision constituted an unenforceable non-compete agreement
    without limitation as to time or geography. We address each of these errors in turn. Without
    regard to established conflict-of-laws rules, the parties agree that Hunter’s non-disclosure
    provision is governed by Texas law.5
    1) The “Confidential Information” in Hunter’s Non-Disclosure Provision Covers
    more than Trade Secrets
    Orthofix argues that the district court erred in interpreting Hunter’s non-disclosure
    provision to cover only trade secrets because Texas law provides for the enforcement of non-
    disclosure provisions covering confidential information that does not qualify as a trade secret.
    The interpretation of a contract is a question of law that this Court reviews de novo. Meridian
    Leasing, Inc. v. Assoc. Aviation Underwriters, Inc., 
    409 F.3d 342
    , 346 (6th Cir. 2005);
    Healthcare Cable Sys., Inc. v. Good Shepherd Hosp., Inc., 
    180 S.W.3d 787
    , 791 (Tex. App.
    2005).
    Both Texas courts and federal courts applying Texas law have given effect to non-
    disclosure provisions regardless of whether the information covered by the provisions achieves
    trade-secret status.      See Corp. Relocation, Inc. v. Martin, No. 3:06-CV-232-L, 
    2006 WL 4101944
    , at *15 n.17 (N.D. Tex. Sept. 12, 2006) (“Regardless of whether the information
    contained in the 24 missing files qualifies for trade secret status, the court is satisfied that such
    5
    Under both Texas and Ohio law, Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws § 187 provides the framework for
    determining whether the parties’ agreement as to choice of law is enforceable. Sekeres v. Arbaugh, 
    508 N.E.2d 941
    ,
    942 (Ohio 1987); Exxon Mobil Corp. v. Drennen, 
    452 S.W.3d 319
    , 324 (Tex. 2013). Section 187(2)(b) indicates
    that a court should not apply the law of the chosen state if application of the chosen state law “would be contrary to
    a fundamental policy of a state which has a materially greater interest than the chosen state in the determination of
    the particular issue and which . . . would be the state of applicable law” in the absence of the choice of law
    provision. RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF CONFLICT OF LAWS § 187 (AM. LAW INST. 1971).
    -7-
    Case No. 15-3216, Orthofix, Inc. v. Hunter
    information is confidential pursuant to Section 5(a) of the Employment Agreement, to which the
    parties expressly agreed.”); Trilogy Software, Inc. v. Callidus Software, Inc., 
    143 S.W.3d 452
    ,
    471 (Tex. App. 2004) (“Liu’s non-disclosure obligations under the PIA are not limited solely to
    protection of trade secrets.”); Simplified Telesys, Inc. v. Live Oak Telecom, L.L.C., 
    68 S.W.3d 688
    , 693 (Tex. App. 2000) (“Whether the plaintiffs have any valuable secret or not[,] the
    defendant knows the facts, whatever they are, through a special confidence that he accepted; and
    while a trade-secret status may be denied, the confidence cannot be.”) (alterations in the original)
    (internal quotation marks and citations omitted); see also RESTATEMENT (THIRD)          OF   UNFAIR
    COMPETITION § 42 cmt. g. (AM. LAW INST. 1995) (stating that a non-disclosure provision’s
    prohibition on use or disclosure of particular information “can clarify and extend” the scope of
    an employer’s rights beyond the protection afforded by a trade-secret statute.) (emphasis added).
    Finally, Texas courts have found that non-disclosure provisions may protect information
    maintained in an employee’s memory. See, e.g., M.N. Dannenbaum, Inc. v. Brummershop,
    
    840 S.W.2d 624
    , 632 (Tex. App. 1993) (stating memorized information may constitute
    confidential information if the information is not readily accessible).
    Here, Hunter promised that he would “never use or disclose any confidential information
    which [he] . . . acquired during the term of his[] employment with [Orthofix].” According to the
    agreement, “confidential information” included, among other items, Orthofix “customer lists or
    identification,” “business and trade practices,” “sales or distribution methods and techniques,”
    “business strategies,” and “other confidential information pertaining to [Orthofix’s] business or
    financial affairs.”   Hunter’s understanding and acceptance of the agreement’s definition of
    “confidential information” is only underscored by his underlining of the term “confidential
    information” and his consultation with an attorney before signing the agreement. Finally, the
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    Case No. 15-3216, Orthofix, Inc. v. Hunter
    record establishes that the information Hunter retained—both through tangible documents and in
    his memory—and eventually disclosed to DonJoy meets the agreement’s definition of
    “confidential information.” See Orthofix, Inc. v. Hunter, 
    55 F. Supp. 3d 1005
    , 1013 (N.D. Ohio
    2014) (determining that Orthofix information disclosed by Hunter was “as a whole, valuable, not
    readily available, and acquired at great expense and effort by Orthofix and its sales force
    (including Hunter).”);         Because Texas law provides for the enforcement of non-disclosure
    provisions covering information that is not a protected trade secret, Hunter’s non-disclosure
    provision may prohibit Hunter from disclosing “confidential information” that does not qualify
    as a trade secret.6
    Still, Hunter argues that Texas law requires information subject to a non-disclosure
    provision to be secret, and thus argues that the district court was correct in finding that
    ‘“confidential information’ protected by the non-disclosure provision is coterminous with
    information protected” by the Ohio Act. Orthofix, 
    Inc., 55 F. Supp. 3d at 1015
    . But neither of
    the Texas cases Hunter cites to support this contention addresses a claim based on the breach of a
    non-disclosure provision. M.N. 
    Dannenbaum, 840 S.W.2d at 631
    ; Tom James of Dallas, Inc. v.
    Cobb, 
    109 S.W.3d 877
    , 888 (Tex. App. 2003). While Hunter makes much of the court’s
    statement in Tom James that “[t]o warrant protection, the information must have a substantial
    element of secrecy,” this statement refers to trade secrets, not information subject to a non-
    disclosure provision. Tom 
    James, 109 S.W.3d at 888
    . Similarly, the court’s reasoning in M.N.
    Dannenbaum, which Hunter relies upon to support his secrecy argument, is based on a wrongful
    6
    In limiting the scope of Hunter’s non-disclosure provision, the district court seemed to rely, in part, on its finding
    that the information in the provision did not achieve trade-secret status under the Ohio Act. Orthofix, Inc., 55 F.
    Supp. 3d at 1015; The Ohio Act, however, has no effect on the scope of Hunter’s non-disclosure provision because
    the contractual provision is governed by Texas law. Because the non-disclosure provision is enforceable under
    Texas law regardless of whether the covered information qualifies as a trade secret, this Court need not determine
    whether information covered by Hunter’s non-disclosure provision would qualify for protection under Texas’s trade
    secret act.
    -9-
    Case No. 15-3216, Orthofix, Inc. v. Hunter
    misappropriation of information claim, not a breach of contract claim. M.N. 
    Dannenbaum, 840 S.W.2d at 631
    .
    Finally, Hunter argues Orthofix cannot claim that the scope of Hunter’s non-disclosure
    provision extends beyond trade secrets because Orthofix failed to “articulate [at the post-trial
    hearing] information that would constitute confidential information but not be classified as a
    trade secret.” Orthofix, 
    Inc., 55 F. Supp. 3d at 1015
    . This argument is without merit. Orthofix
    was unwilling to identify specific confidential information that did not qualify as a trade secret
    because it claimed all of the information covered by Hunter’s non-disclosure provision also
    qualified as a trade secret. Although it sought to bring all of the information covered by Hunter’s
    non-disclosure provision within the scope of its trade-secrets claim, Orthofix never conceded that
    its breach-of-contract claim must rise and fall with its trade-secrets claim. Counsel for Orthofix
    reemphasized this point in a post-trial hearing:
    I have always envisioned [the relationship between confidential information and
    trade secrets] as a [Venn] diagram, a big circle I call confidential information.
    There’s a circle within that that I call trade secrets, and the Court is going to
    decide whether that interior circle is smaller than the confidential information
    circle . . . . I think an alternative finding that what does not fall under the Ohio
    trade secret statute does fall within the confidential information definition of the
    nondisclosure agreement, I think that is prudent, it is judicial economy at work,
    and of course it has the added benefit of affording Orthofix all of the economic
    relief to which it is entitled.
    Because Orthofix articulated that information covered by Hunter’s non-disclosure provision
    could constitute confidential information but not be classified as a trade secret, Hunter’s estoppel
    and waiver arguments fail.
    2) The Non-Disclosure Provision Is Not an Unenforceable Non-Compete
    Agreement under Texas Law
    Orthofix argues that the district court erred in finding Hunter’s non-disclosure provision
    to be an unenforceable non-compete clause without limitation as to time or geography. The
    - 10 -
    Case No. 15-3216, Orthofix, Inc. v. Hunter
    district court’s conclusion regarding the enforceability of the agreement is a question of law that
    this Court reviews de novo. Chi. Title Ins. Corp. v. Magnuson, 
    487 F.3d 985
    , 990 (6th Cir.
    2007); Zep Mfg. Co. v. Harthcock, 
    824 S.W.2d 654
    , 663 (Tex. App. 1992).
    Under Texas law, “non-disclosure covenants are more readily enforced than non-
    competition covenants because they are not restraints on trade, do not prevent the employee from
    making use of the general experience he acquired during his employment, and do not offend
    public policy.” CDX Holdings, Inc. v. Heddon, No. 3:12-CV-126-N, 
    2012 WL 11019355
    , at *11
    (N.D. Tex. Mar. 2, 2012); see also Alliantgroup, L.P. v. Feingold, 
    803 F. Supp. 2d 610
    , 622
    (S.D. Tex. 2011) (stating that a non-disclosure provision may be enforceable when a covenant
    not to compete is not). In addition, non-disclosure provisions need not contain geographic and
    durational limits to be enforceable. See Marsh USA Inc. v. Cook, 
    354 S.W.3d 764
    , 768 (Tex.
    2011) (stating that non-disclosure agreements are not expressly governed by the Texas
    Covenants Not to Compete Act, which requires reasonable temporal and geographic restrictions);
    Zep Mfg. 
    Co., 824 S.W.2d at 662-63
    (finding no law requiring that non-disclosure agreements
    contain durational and geographic limitations).
    Indeed, the Restatement (Third) of Unfair Competition parallels Texas law in concluding
    that the absence of geographic and durational limitations in a non-disclosure agreement does not
    render it unenforceable. RESTATEMENT (THIRD) OF UNFAIR COMPETITION §41 cmt. d. (AM. LAW
    INST. 1995). However, a non-disclosure agreement prohibiting employees from using general
    knowledge, skill, and experience acquired in their former employment is more properly
    characterized as a non-compete agreement. Oxford Global Res., 
    2005 WL 350580
    at *2. Texas
    law does subject non-compete agreements to durational and geographic limitations. See Tex.
    - 11 -
    Case No. 15-3216, Orthofix, Inc. v. Hunter
    Bus. & Com. Code §§ 15.50(a) (West 1983) (stating that a non-compete agreement is
    enforceable if it is reasonable in time, scope, and geography).
    When the district court erroneously determined that the scope of Hunter’s non-disclosure
    provision validly extended only to trade secrets, it necessarily made a subsequent finding that the
    provision constituted an unenforceable non-compete agreement because it attempted to cover
    “confidential information” that, in the court’s view, concerned Hunter’s general knowledge or
    skills, not trade secrets. Orthofix, 
    Inc., 55 F. Supp. 3d at 1015
    . This subsequent finding was also
    in error.   As we have already determined (supra, 8-9), Texas law is clear:              “confidential
    information” is generally defined by the parties, and not by achieving trade-secret status, so long
    as it does not encompass publicly available information or an employee’s general knowledge or
    skills. See, e.g., Corp. Relocation, 
    2006 WL 4101944
    , at *15 n.17 (“Regardless of whether the
    information contained in the 24 missing files qualifies for trade secret status, the court is satisfied
    that such information is confidential pursuant to Section 5(a) of the Employment Agreement, to
    which the parties expressly agreed.”); Glattly v. Air Starter Components, Inc., 
    332 S.W.3d 620
    ,
    629, 639-40 (Tex. App. 2010) (affirming the trial court’s finding that a non-disclosure provision
    prohibiting an employee from ever selling a competing product to a list of companies on his
    former employer’s customer list constitutes a covenant not to compete). Here, the “confidential
    information” covered by Hunter’s non-disclosure provision does not merely concern publicly
    available information or Hunter’s general knowledge. Nor does it prevent Hunter from working
    for DonJoy or competing with Orthofix. 
    Id. Instead, the
    provision only ensures Orthofix may
    recover damages for Hunter’s use and disclosure of its information—information which the
    district court found, “as a whole, [to be] valuable, not readily available, and acquired at great
    expense and effort by Orthofix and its sales force (including Hunter).” Orthofix, Inc., 55 F.
    - 12 -
    Case No. 15-3216, Orthofix, Inc. v. Hunter
    Supp. 3d at 1013; Because Hunter’s non-disclosure provision protects Orthofix’s confidential
    information, and not Hunter’s general knowledge, the provision is not an unenforceable non-
    compete agreement under Texas law.
    3) Application of Texas Law to Orthofix’s Breach of Contract Claim
    Because the district court misinterpreted Texas law and left this court with a full record
    on review, we now apply Texas law to determine whether Hunter breached his employment
    agreement.
    To prevail on its breach of contract claim under Texas law, Orthofix must establish
    (1) the existence of a binding contract; (2) that Hunter breached the contract; and (3) that it
    suffered damages caused by Hunter’s alleged breach.        E. Tex. Med. Ctr. Cancer Inst. v.
    Anderson, 
    991 S.W.2d 55
    , 62 (Tex. App. 1998).
    The trial record demonstrates that Hunter and Orthofix are parties to a valid and binding
    contract. Orthofix, 
    Inc., 55 F. Supp. 3d at 1007
    ; While the district court found that the non-
    disclosure provision in Hunter’s contract acted as an unenforceable non-compete agreement, we
    have already determined that this provision is valid under Texas law. Supra, 11.
    Hunter breached the non-disclosure provision of his employment agreement when he
    turned over to a competitor his old company’s confidential information. First, Hunter breached
    his non-disclosure provision when he disclosed to DonJoy an account-by-account breakdown of
    his Orthofix bone growth stimulator sales, information that qualifies as “confidential
    information” under the agreement. Hunter also breached his agreement when he failed to return
    to Orthofix forty-six converted customer orders, which underlie Orthofix’s tortious interference
    recovery and contain confidential Orthofix information. Orthofix, 
    Inc., 55 F. Supp. 3d at 1015
    -
    16; Finally, Hunter breached the non-disclosure provision of his contract when he drew upon his
    - 13 -
    Case No. 15-3216, Orthofix, Inc. v. Hunter
    knowledge of his former customers’ prescribing habits, schedules, and contact information in
    introducing DonJoy representatives to these very customers. While Hunter may not be liable
    under Texas law for his general use or disclosure of publicly available information, the
    compilation of information Hunter acquired as an Orthofix employee and later used to introduce
    DonJoy representatives to his former customers extends far beyond information that could
    reasonably be considered public. See Orthofix, 
    Inc., 55 F. Supp. 3d at 1013
    ; (finding that
    Orthofix’s confidential information “is, as a whole, valuable, not readily available, and acquired
    at great expense and effort by Orthofix and its sales force (including Hunter).”); (Hunter’s
    admission that it could take as long as six months for someone to acquire his level of detailed
    knowledge about a surgeon).
    Because Orthofix has demonstrated both the existence and breach of a valid contract
    under Texas law, the judgment of the district court is REVERSED and the case is REMANDED
    to the district court for the calculation of damages and further proceedings consistent with this
    opinion.
    - 14 -