Alarm.com Holdings, Inc. v. ABS Capital Partners, Inc. ( 2018 )


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  •                                                      EFiled: Jun 15 2018 08:00AM EDT
    Transaction ID 62136447
    Case No. 2017-0583-JTL
    IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
    ALARM.COM HOLDINGS, INC.,    )
    )
    Plaintiff,   )
    )
    v.                   ) C.A. No. 2017-0583-JTL
    )
    ABS CAPITAL PARTNERS INC., )
    ABS PARTNERS V, LLC, and ABS )
    PARTNERS VII, LLC,           )
    )
    Defendants.  )
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Date Submitted: April 4, 2018
    Date Decided: June 15, 2018
    Philip A. Rovner, Jonathon A. Choa, Alan R. Silverstein, POTTER ANDERSON &
    CORROON LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Attorneys for Plaintiff.
    Raymond J. DiCamillo, Chad M. Shandler, Matthew W. Murphy, RICHARDS, LAYTON
    & FINGER, P.A., Wilmington, Delaware; Steven F. Barley, Andrea W. Trento, HOGAN
    LOVELLS US LLP, Baltimore, Maryland; Attorneys for Defendants.
    LASTER, V.C.
    A private equity firm invested in a Delaware corporation through two funds that it
    managed. One of the firm’s partners served on the corporation’s board of directors. The
    firm later invested in one of the corporation’s competitors, and a different partner joined
    the competitor’s board of directors.
    The corporation filed suit against the firm and its two funds. The complaint alleges
    that the private equity firm acquired confidential information from the corporation,
    including its trade secrets, through the partner’s service on the corporation’s board of
    directors. The complaint alleges that the firm misused the corporation’s confidential
    information by investing in the competitor. The complaint asserts a claim for
    misappropriation of trade secrets under the Delaware Uniform Trade Secrets Act
    (“DUTSA”) and a claim for common law misappropriation of confidential information.
    The private equity firm moved to dismiss the complaint on multiple grounds. This
    decision reaches only one. Multiple agreements between the private equity firm and the
    corporation memorialized that the private equity firm could and would invest in competing
    businesses. The corporation’s certificate of incorporation recognizes that fact. This
    decision concludes that in light of those agreements, the facts alleged in the complaint do
    not support a reasonably conceivable inference of misappropriation. The non-statutory
    claim is pre-empted by DUTSA. The complaint is therefore dismissed.
    I.      FACTUAL BACKGROUND
    At this procedural stage, the facts are drawn from the operative complaint and the
    documents it incorporates by reference. As the non-movant, the plaintiff receives the
    benefit of all reasonable inferences.
    1
    A.     ABS Invests In Alarm.
    Defendant ABS Capital Partners, Inc. (“ABS”) is a private equity firm that invests
    in later-stage growth companies.1 The firm takes an active role in its investments and
    markets itself as a strategic partner who will work with management teams to help them
    achieve the next stage in growth.2
    Beginning in late 2008, ABS explored a potential investment in Alarm.com
    Incorporated (“Alarm”). As part of the due diligence process, ABS entered into a non-
    disclosure agreement with Alarm dated December 12, 2008 (the “2008 NDA”). Paragraph
    2 both established ABS’s confidentiality undertaking and recognized that ABS might
    invest in a competing business. It stated:
    You hereby agree that you and your Representatives shall use the
    Confidential Information solely for the purpose of evaluating the Proposed
    Transaction, that the Confidential Information will be kept confidential and
    that you and your Representatives will not disclose any of the Confidential
    Information in any manner whatsoever; provided, however, that (i) you may
    make any disclosure of such information to which the Company gives its
    prior written consent; and (ii) any of such information may be disclosed only
    to those of your Representatives who need to know such information for the
    sole purpose of evaluating the Proposed Transaction, who agree to keep such
    information confidential and who are provided with a copy of this letter
    agreement and agree to be bound by the confidentiality provisions of this
    letter agreement.
    Subject to your observance of all the terms of this letter agreement, including
    the confidentiality obligations, nothing in this letter agreement will prevent
    you from evaluating a possible investment in and/or collaboration with, or
    1
    Compl. ¶ 20-21.
    2
    
    Id. ¶ 20.
    2
    entering into any transaction with (including any investment in), a company
    whose business is similar or competitive with the business of the Company.
    The Company acknowledges that you deal with many companies, some of
    which may, independently of the Company, pursue similar or competitive
    paths regarding their products or services, technology and/or market
    development plans to those which are or may be pursued by the Company.
    The occurrence or existence of such similar or competitive activities shall
    not, by itself, be conclusive evidence that you have failed to observe your
    confidentiality obligations set forth herein, provided that none of the
    Confidential Information is provided or disclosed to any Competing
    Company without the Company’s prior written permission. In any event, you
    shall be responsible for any breach of this letter agreement by any of your
    Representatives, and you agree, at your sole expense, to take all reasonable
    measures (including but not limited to court proceedings) to restrain your
    Representatives from prohibited or unauthorized disclosure or use of the
    Confidential Information.3
    The 2008 NDA expired in accordance with its terms on December 12, 2011.4
    After conducting due diligence, ABS agreed to acquire a controlling stake in Alarm.
    The parties formed plaintiff Alarm.com Holdings, Inc. as a new holding company that
    owned 100% of the equity of Alarm.com Incorporated. ABS caused two of its funds,
    defendants ABS Partners V, LLC and ABS Partners VII, LLC, to purchase shares of
    preferred stock issued by Alarm Holdings. The shares of preferred stock carried 80% of
    Alarm’s outstanding voting power.5
    3
    Dkt. 37 Ex. A, ¶ 2 (emphasis and formatting added).
    4
    
    Id. ¶ 19
    (“This letter agreement and all obligations hereunder shall terminate on
    the third anniversary of the date hereof . . . .”).
    5
    For the remainder of this decision, distinctions between Alarm and Alarm
    Holdings and between ABS and its funds are not important, so this decision refers only to
    ABS and Alarm.
    3
    In connection with the investment, ABS, Alarm, and Alarm’s other stockholders
    entered into a stockholders agreement dated March 6, 2009 (the “2009 Stockholders
    Agreement”).6 They agreed that Alarm would have a five-member board of directors (the
    “Alarm Board”), and they agreed that ABS could designate individuals to fill three of the
    five seats. ABS named Ralph Terkowitz, a partner with the firm, as one of its designees.7
    Terkowitz served as Chairman of the Board and regularly attended Alarm Board
    meetings. As a director, Terkowitz was involved in many major business decisions,
    including determining Alarm’s business model, its go-to market strategy, and its pricing
    strategy. Terkowitz also participated as a director in overseeing Alarm’s marketing efforts
    and its research and development pipeline.8 Terkowitz spoke regularly with Alarm’s CEO
    about Alarm’s business.9
    Two other ABS partners, Bobby Goswami and Tim Weglicki, served on the Alarm
    Board. They also participated in Alarm Board meetings and learned confidential
    information about Alarm. 10
    The 2009 Stockholders Agreement contemplated that investors might own equity in
    companies with businesses that were similar to Alarm’s. The 2009 Stockholders
    6
    
    Id. ¶ 22.
          7
    
    Id. ¶ 23.
          8
    
    Id. ¶ 25.
          9
    
    Id. ¶ 26.
          10
    
    Id. ¶ 27.
    4
    Agreement also provided that holders of more than 5% of Alarm’s equity could have an
    observer attend Alarm Board meetings, but that right terminated if the equity holder
    invested “in any entity engaging . . . in the business of selling residential or commercial
    alarm security products or services, or independent living, health or environmental
    monitoring products or services.”11 This limitation did not apply to ABS or its
    representatives on the Alarm Board.
    B.     The 2012 Recapitalization
    In 2012, Alarm raised additional capital by creating a new series of preferred stock
    and issuing shares to investors.12 As part of this transaction, Alarm adopted an Amended
    and Restated Certificate of Incorporation (the “Amended Charter”).13 Alarm and its
    stockholders also entered into an Amended and Restated Stockholders Agreement dated
    July 11, 2012 (the “2012 Stockholders Agreement”).14 The 2012 Stockholders Agreement
    superseded the 2009 Stockholders Agreement.
    In the 2012 Stockholders Agreement, the parties agreed to increase the size of the
    Alarm Board to seven members. ABS agreed to reduce its number of designees from three
    11
    Dkt. 37 Ex. E, § 2.2.
    12
    Compl. ¶ 28.
    13
    Dkt. 37 Ex. B.
    14
    Dkt. 59 Ex. 1.
    5
    to two.15 The parties agreed that Terkowitz would continue to serve as Chairman of the
    Board.16
    The remaining director seats were allocated among the parties to the 2012
    Stockholders Agreement.17 In addition, the preferred stockholders received Board observer
    rights. Section 2.2(f) stated that
    [e]ach Observer shall have the right to attend meetings of the Board of
    Directors and to receive advance notice thereof (but shall not have any rights
    to any information or materials otherwise provided to members of the Board
    of Directors or its committees); provided that each Observer shall execute a
    confidentiality agreement in form and substance reasonably acceptable to the
    Board of Directors: provided, further, that the Company reserves the right to
    exclude any Observer from a meeting if the Observer’s presence at such
    meeting would jeopardize any privilege of the Company or involve highly
    confidential or sensitive information of the Company or otherwise be deemed
    by a majority of the Board of Directors of the Company to be detrimental to
    the Company or the Board of Directors’ deliberations.18
    The complaint does not allege that Alarm ever took the step of excluding an observer from
    the Alarm Board’s deliberations.
    More importantly for present purposes, Section 12.16 of the 2012 Stockholders
    Agreement addressed the use of Alarm’s confidential information. In the first part of
    Section 12.16, the parties agreed to protect information that the Company had identified in
    writing as being confidential or proprietary:
    15
    
    Id. § 2.2(b).
           16
    
    Id. § 2.2(a).
           17
    See 
    id. § 2.2.
           18
    
    Id. § 2.2(f).
    6
    Each Stockholder agrees, severally and not jointly, to use the same degree of
    care as such Stockholder uses to protect its own confidential information for
    any information obtained pursuant to Section 8.1 or Section 8.2 hereof which
    the Company identifies in writing as being proprietary or confidential and
    such Stockholder acknowledges that it will not, unless otherwise required by
    law or the rules of any national securities exchange, association or
    marketplace, disclose such information without the prior written consent of
    the Company except such information that
    (a) was in the public domain prior to the time it was furnished to such
    Stockholder,
    (b) is or becomes (through no willful improper action or inaction by such
    Stockholder) generally available to the public,
    (c) was in its possession or known by such Stockholder without restriction
    prior to receipt from the Company,
    (d) was rightfully disclosed to such Stockholder by a third party without
    restriction or
    (e) was independently developed without any use of the Company’s
    confidential information. 19
    However, Section 12.16 allowed ABS and other investors to share Alarm’s
    information to a limited extent:
    Notwithstanding the foregoing; each of ABS Capital Partners, TCV, Egis and
    Backbone may disclose such proprietary or confidential information to any
    former partners or members who retained an economic interest in such
    Stockholder, current or prospective partner of the partnership or any
    subsequent partnership under common investment management, limited
    partner, general partner, member or management company of such
    Stockholder (or any employee or representative of any of the foregoing)
    (each of the foregoing persons, a “Permitted Disclosee”) or legal counsel,
    accountants or representatives for such Stockholder;
    provided, however, that such Stockholder shall ensure that such Permitted
    Disclosees have signed a non-use and non-disclosure agreement in content
    19
    
    Id. § 12.16
    (formatting added).
    7
    similar to the provisions of this provision or are otherwise legally obligated
    not to disclose such confidential information (subject to customary
    exceptions), prior to disclosure of any such confidential information to such
    persons.20
    Alarm also agreed that ABS and another investor could, among other things,
    “invest[] in . . . any other company (whether or not competitive with the Company),” as
    long as they did not “disclose or otherwise make use of any proprietary or confidential
    information of the Company in connection with such activities.” In full, this aspect of
    Section 12.16 stated:
    Furthermore, nothing contained herein shall prevent ABS Capital Partners or
    TCV or any of their respective Permitted Disclosees from (x) entering into
    any business, entering into any agreement with a third party, or investing in
    or engaging in investment discussions with any other company (whether or
    not competitive with the Company), provided that such Stockholder or
    Permitted Disclosee does not, except as permitted in accordance with this
    Section 12.16, disclose or otherwise make use of any proprietary or
    confidential information of the Company in connection with such activities,
    or (y) making any disclosures required by or reasonably necessary to comply
    with law, rule, regulation or court or other governmental order or other legal
    or regulatory process.21
    Finally, and most importantly for present purposes, the Amended Charter included
    a provision authorized by Section 122(17) of the Delaware General Corporation Law (the
    “DGCL”), which exempts stockholders such as ABS from any duty not to pursue corporate
    20
    
    Id. (formatting added).
          21
    
    Id. 8 opportunities
    that otherwise might arguably belong to Alarm.22 Article 8 of the Amended
    Charter states:
    To the fullest extent permitted by the DGCL, the Corporation acknowledges
    that:
    (i) each stockholder (subject to the proviso below) and each Preferred
    Director (each an “Exempted Person”) shall have no duty (contractual or
    otherwise) not to, directly or indirectly, engage in the same or similar
    business activities or lines of business as the Corporation or any of its
    subsidiaries, including those deemed to be competing with the Company
    or any of its subsidiaries; and
    (ii) in the event that any Exempted Person acquires knowledge of a potential
    transaction or matter that may be a corporate opportunity for the
    Corporation, then such Exempted Person shall have no duty (contractual
    or otherwise) to communicate or present such corporate opportunity to
    the Company or any of its subsidiaries, as the case may be, and shall not
    be liable to the Company or its affiliates or stockholders for breach of any
    duty (contractual or otherwise) by reason of the fact that such Exempted
    Person, directly or indirectly, pursues or acquires such opportunity for
    itself, directs such opportunity to another person, or does not present such
    opportunity to the Company or any of its subsidiaries;
    provided, however, that this Article 8 shall not apply to Backbone Partners,
    LLC or stockholders who are also officers or employees of the Corporation
    or any subsidiary of the Corporation (other than officers affiliated with any
    Preferred Director) or who are permitted transferees of any such person.23
    22
    See 
    8 Del. C
    . § 122(17) (providing that a corporation has the power to
    “[r]enounce, in its certificate of incorporation or by action of its board of directors, any
    interest or expectancy of the corporation in, or in being offered an opportunity to participate
    in, specified business opportunities or specified classes or categories of business
    opportunities that are presented to the corporation or 1 or more of its officers, directors or
    stockholders”).
    23
    Dkt. 37 Ex. B, art. 8.
    9
    C.     The 2015 IPO
    In June 2015, Alarm completed an initial public offering, and its shares began
    trading on the NASDAQ. With the completion of the IPO, the 2012 Stockholders
    Agreement expired, and all of the preferred stock that ABS had issued converted into
    common stock.
    In connection with its IPO, Alarm adopted a Code of Business Conduct that
    addressed conflicts of interest that might arise as a result of funds like ABS having
    representatives on the Alarm Board. In pertinent part, it stated:
    In the interest of clarifying the definition of “conflict of interest,” if any
    member of the Board who is also a partner or employee of an entity that is a
    holder of Alarm Common Stock, or an employee of an entity that manages
    such an entity (each, a “Fund”), acquires knowledge of a potential
    transaction (investment transaction or otherwise) or other matter other than
    in connection with such individual’s service as a member of the Board
    (including, if applicable, in such individual’s capacity as a partner or
    employee of the Fund or the manager or general partner of a Fund) that may
    be an opportunity of interest for both the Company and such Fund (a
    “Corporate Opportunity”), then, provided that such director has acted
    reasonably and in good faith with respect to the best interests of the
    corporation, such an event shall be deemed not to be a “conflict of interest”
    under this policy.24
    After the IPO, Terkowitz continued to serve on the Alarm Board and to serve on various
    committees. He ultimately resigned in August 2016.25 No representative of ABS has held
    a position with Alarm since then.
    24
    Dkt. 37 Ex. C, at 2.
    25
    Compl. ¶ 30.
    10
    According to Alarm, Terkowitz attended many meetings of the Alarm Board during
    his years of service as a director, including meetings on March 19, 2014; June 4, 2014;
    September 17, 2014; December 3, 2014; February 26, 2015; May 6, 2015; August 5, 2015;
    November 5, 2015; February 23, 2016; May 3, 2016; and July 29, 2016.26 The complaint
    alleges that Terkowitz obtained confidential information during these meetings, including
    information that “was too sensitive to ever be placed in writing or be included in the board
    decks.”27 Alarm believes that Terkowitz passed this information along to his partners at
    ABS in oral and written reports.
    D.     ABS Invests In Resolution.
    In September 2017, ABS acquired a significant ownership stake in Resolution
    Products, Inc. (“Resolution”), a venture that competes directly with Alarm.28 As part of its
    investment, ABS gained the right to appoint one member to the Resolution board of
    directors (the “Resolution Board”). ABS appointed Phil Clough, one of its partners.29
    Clough had never served on the Alarm Board, nor had he observed any meeting of
    the Alarm Board. ABS did not nominate Terkowitz to the Resolution Board. Alarm has not
    alleged that ABS has any intention of nominating Terkowitz to the Resolution Board.30
    26
    
    Id. ¶ 34.
           27
    
    Id. ¶ 35.
           28
    
    Id. ¶ 63.
           29
    
    Id. ¶ 66.
           30
    
    Id. ¶ 8.
    11
    II.     LEGAL ANALYSIS
    Citing ABS’s investment in Resolution and Clough’s service as a Resolution
    director, Alarm claims that ABS must already have misappropriated or inevitably will
    misappropriate its trade secrets in violation of DUTSA or, in the absence of any trade
    secrets, has engaged or inevitably will engage in common law misappropriation of Alarm’s
    confidential information.31 ABS has moved to dismiss the complaint pursuant to Court of
    Chancery Rule 12(b)(6) for failing to state a claim on which relief can be granted. When
    considering such a motion:
    (i) all well-pleaded factual allegations are accepted as true; (ii) even vague
    allegations are well-pleaded if they give the opposing party notice of the
    claim; (iii) the Court must draw all reasonable inferences in favor of the non-
    moving party; and [ (iv) ] dismissal is inappropriate unless the plaintiff would
    not be entitled to recover under any reasonably conceivable set of
    circumstances susceptible of proof.32
    Taking into account the relationship between Alarm and ABS, which is documented
    through the 2008 NDA, the 2009 Stockholders Agreement, the 2012 Stockholders
    Agreement, and continues to be governed by the Amended Charter, it is not reasonably
    conceivable based on the facts alleged that ABS has engaged in misappropriation under
    DUTSA. The common law claim is preempted by DUTSA. The complaint is therefore
    dismissed.
    31
    See Dkt. 27 ¶ 71-99.
    32
    Savor, Inc. v. FMR Corp., 
    812 A.2d 894
    , 896-97 (Del. 2002) (internal quotation
    marks and citations omitted).
    12
    A.     Alarm’s Claim For Misappropriation Of Trade Secrets Under DUTSA
    Count I of the complaint asserts that ABS violated DUTSA by misappropriating
    Alarm’s trade secrets. To survive a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6), the complaint
    must plead four elements:
    (i)     A trade secret exists.
    (ii)    The plaintiff communicated the trade secret to the defendant.
    (iii)   The communication was made pursuant to an express or implied
    understanding that the defendant would maintain the secrecy of the
    information.
    (iv)    The trade secret has been misappropriated within the meaning of that
    term as defined in … DUTSA.33
    ABS contends that Alarm has not met any of the necessary elements.
    This decision assumes for purposes of analysis that (i) at least some of the
    information that Alarm communicated to its directors constituted trade secrets, (ii) the
    information was communicated to Terkowitz and ABS, and (iii) the communication was
    made pursuant to an express or implied understanding that Terkowitz and ABS would
    maintain the secrecy of the information. In other words, this decision assumes for purposes
    of analysis that the first three elements of a DUTSA claim are met. Under the facts alleged
    in the complaint, the claim still founders on the fourth element because Alarm has not pled
    facts supporting a reasonable inference of misappropriation.
    Section 2001(2) of DUTSA states that “misappropriation” shall mean:
    33
    See Wayman Fire Prot., Inc. v. Premium Fire & Sec., LLC, 
    2014 WL 897223
    , at
    *13 (Del. Ch. Mar. 5, 2014).
    13
    a. Acquisition of a trade secret of another by a person who knows or has
    reason to know that the trade secret was acquired by improper means; or
    b. Disclosure or use of a trade secret of another without express or implied
    consent by a person who:
    1. Used improper means to acquire knowledge of the trade secret; or
    2. At the time of disclosure or use, knew or had reason to know that his
    or her knowledge of the trade [secret] was:
    A. Derived from or through a person who had utilized improper
    means to acquire it;
    B. Acquired under circumstances giving rise to a duty to maintain its
    secrecy or limit its use; or
    C. Derived from or through a person who owed a duty to the person
    seeking relief to maintain its secrecy or limit its use[.]34
    Section 2001(1) of DUTSA states that “‘improper means’ shall include theft, bribery,
    misrepresentation, breach or inducement of a breach of a duty to maintain secrecy, or
    espionage through electronic or other means.”35
    Ultimately, at trial, Alarm would be able to rely on circumstantial evidence when
    attempting to prove misappropriation.36 “Misappropriation and misuse can rarely be proved
    by convincing direct evidence.”37 Instead, in most cases “plaintiffs must construct a web
    of perhaps ambiguous circumstantial evidence from which the trier of fact may draw
    34
    
    6 Del. C
    . § 2001(2).
    35
    
    Id. § 2001(1).
          36
    Savor, Inc. v. FMR Corp., 
    2004 WL 1965869
    , at *8 (Del. Super. July 15, 2004).
    37
    Greenberg v. Croydon Plastics Co., Inc., 
    378 F. Supp. 806
    , 814 (E.D. Pa. 1974).
    14
    inferences which convince him that it is more probable than not that what plaintiffs allege
    happened did in fact take place.”38 Consequently, at the pleading stage, Alarm need only
    plead sufficient facts to make it reasonably conceivable that circumstances exist from
    which the necessary inferences can be drawn.
    Even given this relaxed pleading standard, Alarm’s complaint does not support a
    reasonably conceivable inference of misappropriation. Alarm relies only on ABS’s
    investment in Resolution, made approximately a year after Terkowitz left Alarm and
    following an auction in which ABS outbid other potential investors. In my view, these
    circumstances only support an inference that ABS invested in a company that competes
    with Alarm, just as Alarm and ABS always understood ABS could do.
    Alarm and ABS’s shared understanding about ABS’s ability to invest in a
    competitor dates back to the 2008 NDA. In that document, Alarm acknowledged to ABS
    that “you deal with many companies, some of which may, independently of the Company,
    pursue similar or competitive paths regarding their products or services, technology and/or
    market development plans to those which are or may be pursued by the Company.”39 Alarm
    agreed that “[s]ubject to your observance of all the terms of this letter agreement, including
    the confidentiality obligations, nothing in this letter agreement will prevent you from
    38
    Merck & Co., Inc. v. SmithKline Beecham Pharms. Co., 
    1999 WL 669354
    , at *20
    (Del. Ch. Aug. 5, 1999) (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Greenberg, 378 F.
    Supp. at 814), aff’d, 
    766 A.2d 442
    (Del. 2000).
    39
    Dkt. 37 Ex. A, ¶ 2.
    15
    evaluating a possible investment in and/or collaboration with, or entering into any
    transaction with (including any investment in), a company whose business is similar or
    competitive with the business of the Company.”40
    The 2008 NDA is not controlling, and it expired by its terms in 2011, but it
    evidences the original understanding between the parties about ABS’s ability to invest in
    competing companies. The same is true about the 2009 Stockholders Agreement and the
    2012 Stockholders Agreement. The former, which was superseded by the latter,
    contemplated that certain investors with board observer rights could not exercise those
    rights if they invested in a competitive company, but did not apply that limitation to ABS.41
    The 2012 Stockholders Agreement, which terminated when Alarm completed its IPO,
    stated that “nothing contained herein shall prevent ABS . . . from . . . investing in or
    engaging in investment discussions with any other company (whether or not competitive
    with the Company).”42 When doing so, ABS was not permitted to “make use of any
    proprietary or confidential information of the Company in connection with such activities,”
    but the 2012 Stockholders Agreement thereby recognized that the fact of an investment in
    a competitor, standing alone, would not give rise to a violation.43 The same agreement
    40
    
    Id. 41 Dkt.
    37 Ex. E, § 2.2.
    42
    Dkt. 59 Ex. 1, § 12.16.
    43
    
    Id. 16 specified
    that the Company would have to “identif[y]” information “in writing as being
    proprietary or confidential.”44
    The 2008 NDA, the 2009 Stockholders Agreement, and the 2012 Stockholders
    Agreement thus establish an understanding that an investment by ABS in a competitor,
    without more, would not constitute improper use that could give rise to a claim for
    misappropriation. To the contrary, the concept that ABS could make such an investment
    was something the parties anticipated, contemplated, and permitted.
    Cementing this understanding is the Amended Charter, which, along with the Code
    of Conduct, remains binding and operative. Under Article 8, ABS, Terkowitz, and the other
    ABS representatives on the Alarm Board had “no duty (contractual or otherwise) not to,
    directly or indirectly, engage in the same or similar business activities or lines of business
    as the Corporation.”45 The effect of this provision, which is authorized by Section 122(17)
    of the DGCL, is to waive any claim for breach of the duty of loyalty against ABS,
    Terkowitz, or the other ABS director representatives based on either usurpation of a
    corporate opportunity or anticompetitive activity.46
    44
    
    Id. 45 Dkt.
    37 Ex. B, art. 8.
    46
    See, e.g., Wayne County Empls.’ Ret. Sys. v. Corti, 
    2009 WL 2219260
    , at *17
    (Del. Ch. July 24, 2009) (“It is conceded that 
    8 Del. C
    . § 122(17) permits a corporation to
    renounce in its certificate of incorporation any interest or expectancy in a corporate
    opportunity.”); Senate Bill 363: Original Synopsis, Del. Gen. Assembly,
    http://legis.delaware.gov/BillDetail?LegislationId=10399 (last visited June 13, 2018)
    (“[Section 122(17)] is intended to eliminate uncertainty regarding the power of a
    corporation to renounce corporate opportunities in advance raised in Siegman v. Tri-Star
    17
    The clear intent of Article 8 is to permit ABS to invest in competing companies like
    Resolution. If Alarm had attempted to assert a claim for breach of the fiduciary duty of
    loyalty against ABS or its representatives, then they could have invoked Article 8 as a
    defense. In my view, this fact counsels against permitting Alarm to bring a comparable
    claim based on a statutory theory that operates against non-fiduciaries. As illustrated by
    the seminal decision of Guth v. Loft, Inc.,47 a claim for breach of the fiduciary duty of
    loyalty based on usurpation of a corporate opportunity empowers a court to enforce the
    special and heightened relationship that exists between a fiduciary and the cestui que
    trust.48 When a corporation has waived that claim, it gives up the most powerful remedial
    Pictures, Inc., [
    1989 WL 48746
    (Del. Ch. May 5, 1989)]. It permits the corporation to
    determine in advance whether a specified business opportunity or class or category of
    business opportunities is a corporate opportunity of the corporation rather than to address
    such opportunities as they arise. The subsection does not change the level of judicial
    scrutiny that will apply to the renunciation of an interest or expectancy of the corporation
    in a business opportunity, which will be determined based on the common law of fiduciary
    duty, including the duty of loyalty.”); 1 R. Franklin Balotti & Jesse A. Finkelstein,
    Delaware Law of Corporations and Business Organizations § 4.16 (3d ed. Supp. 2014)
    (“In the 2000 Amendments to the Delaware General Corporation Law, Section 122 was
    amended to provide that a corporation may renounce any interest in specific business
    opportunities of the corporation.”); Mark J. Loewenstein, The Deverging Meaning Of Good
    Faith, 34 Del. J. Corp. L. 433, 460-61 (2009) (same). See generally, Gabriel Rauterberg &
    Eric Talley, Contracting out of the Fiduciary Duty of Loyalty: An Empirical Analysis of
    Corporate Opportunity Waivers, 117 Colum. L. Rev. 1075, 1089-1101 (2017). No one has
    challenged the scope of the waiver, and this decision provides no opportunity to opine on
    the validity of a broad and general renunciation of corporate opportunities, as contrasted
    with a more tailored provision addressing a specified business opportunity or a well-
    defined class or category of business opportunities.
    47
    
    5 A.2d 503
    (Del. 1939).
    48
    
    Id. at 510.
    18
    tool that a court of equity possesses. Once a corporation has given up its most effective
    check on fiduciary misbehavior, it would be counterintuitive to permit the same corporation
    to pursue the lesser theories that could be asserted against a non-fiduciary. Respecting the
    waiver contemplated by Section 122(17) requires that courts not attempt to forge a
    fiduciary substitute.49
    In my view, in light of the clear understanding that ABS could invest in competitive
    businesses, it is not reasonably conceivable that the fact of ABS’s investment in Resolution
    and the placement of a different ABS representative on the Resolution Board could support
    an inference of misappropriation. The only reasonably conceivable inference is that the
    parties contemplated that ABS could do precisely what it did. The complaint fails to state
    a claim under DUTSA.
    B.     DUTSA Preempts The Claim For Common Law Misappropriation.
    Count II of the complaint asserts a claim for common law misappropriation. In my
    view, DUTSA preempts this claim.
    Delaware modeled DUTSA on the Uniform Trade Secrets Act (the “Uniform Act”),
    which the American Law Institute drafted to address the “uneven and unsatisfactory
    development” of “state trade secrets law” and “codif[y] the basic principles of common
    law trade secret protection.”50 The drafters of the Uniform Act sought to create a bipartite
    49
    See Lonergan v. EPE Hldgs., LLC, 
    5 A.3d 1008
    , 1018-19 (Del. Ch. 2010).
    50
    Reingold v. Swiftships Inc., 
    210 F.3d 320
    , 322-23 (5th Cir. 2000).
    19
    categorization of commercial knowledge into either “a protected ‘trade secret’ or
    unprotected ‘general skill and knowledge.’”51 To achieve this goal, the drafters sought to
    preempt other causes of action that parties could use to elide the distinction and pursue
    remedies based on information that did not rise to the level of a trade secret.52
    The preemption provision in DUTSA states:
    (a) Except as provided in subsection (b) of this section, this chapter displaces
    conflicting tort, restitutionary and other law of this State providing civil
    remedies for misappropriation of a trade secret.
    (b) This chapter does not affect:
    (1) Contractual remedies, whether or not based upon misappropriation of
    a trade secret;
    (2) Other civil remedies that are not based upon misappropriation of a
    trade secret; or
    (3) Criminal remedies, whether or not based upon misappropriation of a
    trade secret.53
    51
    See Robert Unikel, Bridging the “Trade Secret” Gap: Protecting “Confidential
    Information” Not Rising To The Level Of Trade Secrets, 29 Loy. U. Chi. L.J. 841, 868 &
    n.20 (1998); see also Restatement (Third) of Unfair Competition §§ 39, 41 (Am. Law Inst.
    1995); cf. Edmund W. Kitch, The Expansion of Trade Secrecy Protection and the Mobility
    of Management Employees: A New Problem for the Law, 
    47 S.C. L
    . Rev. 659, 662 (1996)
    (“The Restatement of Unfair Competition, following the lead of the Uniform Trade Secrets
    Act and cases following the Act, eliminates the distinction between information that is a
    trade secret and other confidential information. All secret information of economic value
    falls within the definition of trade secrets.” (footnotes omitted)).
    52
    See generally 
    Unikel, supra, at 871-88
    .
    53
    
    6 Del. C
    . § 2007.
    20
    As a result of this section, if “common law claims are based on the same alleged wrongful
    conduct as the trade secret claims, they are precluded under 
    6 Del. C
    . § 2007.”54
    As I read this provision, it preempts a claim for common law misappropriation of
    confidential information. Contrary to the intent of the Uniform Act, permitting this claim
    would enable a party to seek to enforce a common law cause of action for “unprotected
    ‘general skill and knowledge.’”
    Alarm argues that two prior decisions of this court recognize that DUTSA does not
    have preemptive effect on common law claims that are based on the same wrongful conduct
    as a trade secret claim. In Beard Research, this court held that a plaintiff’s claim for breach
    of fiduciary duty was not preempted by DUTSA.55 In reaching that conclusion, the court
    reasoned that “[t]he same facts are not required to establish all the elements of both the
    misappropriation and breach of fiduciary duty claims,”56 and the court noted that a
    defendant could have breached his fiduciary duties by taking and misusing confidential
    information that did not rise to the level of a trade secret.57 In my view, the distinguishing
    fact in Beard Research was the existence of a fiduciary relationship, which required proof
    beyond what is required for misappropriation under DUTSA and which brings with it
    54
    
    Savor, 812 A.2d at 898
    .
    55
    Beard Research, Inc. v. Kates, 
    8 A.3d 573
    , 602 (Del. Ch. 2010).
    56
    
    Id. 57 Id.
    21
    special duties and obligations.58 A claim for common law misappropriation, by contrast,
    has the same scope and parameters as a claim for misappropriation under DUTSA. The
    only difference is that the common law claim extends protection to materials that do not
    qualify as a trade secret. As a result, it runs contrary to the purpose underlying DUTSA of
    distinguishing between protected trade secrets and non-protectable business information.
    Alarm also relies on Overdrive, where this court permitted a conversion claim to
    proceed notwithstanding the preemption provision in DUTSA.59 The court reasoned that
    for preemption under DUTSA to apply, the claims must be “grounded in the same facts,”
    which means that “the same facts are used to establish all the elements of both claims.”60
    The Overdrive court held that the success of the plaintiff’s conversion claim did not
    “necessarily depend on the success of plaintiff’s misappropriation of trade secrets claim”61
    and that no element of a claim for conversion turned on whether the plaintiff’s property
    constituted “‘confidential information’ or a ‘trade secret.’”62 The court later added that “[i]f
    58
    See 
    id. at 601-02.
           59
    Overdrive, Inc. v. Baker & Taylor, Inc., 
    2011 WL 2448209
    , at *4 (Del. Ch. June
    17, 2011).
    60
    
    Id. (internal quotation
    marks omitted) (quoting Accenture Glob. Servs. GMBH v.
    Guidewire Software Inc., 
    631 F. Supp. 2d 504
    , 508 (D. Del. 2009)).
    61
    
    Id. at *5.
           62
    
    Id. at *5
    n.31.
    22
    it turns out later that plaintiff’s conversion claim is ‘based upon’ a trade secret, it will be
    preempted by DUTSA.”63
    The Overdrive decision gave relatively brief treatment to the preemption issue. It
    did not explore the intent of the drafters of the Uniform Act or the rationale for the
    preemption provision. It also did not discuss the Delaware Supreme Court’s decision in
    Savor, which held that DUTSA preempted common law claims alleging unfair competition
    and civil conspiracy.64 Unlike the litigants in Beard Research, the defendants in Overdrive
    did not have a special fiduciary relationship with the plaintiff. Nor did Overdrive otherwise
    distinguish the conversion claim from a setting where DUTSA would apply. In substance,
    the Overdrive decision limited the scope of the preemption provision in DUTSA on
    conversion claims to claims involving information that met the statutory definition of a
    trade secret.
    A more recent Delaware Superior Court decision has reasoned through these issues
    thoroughly.65 The Atlantic Medical decision concluded that “Delaware has joined the
    ‘majority view’ that section 7 of DUTSA precludes common law claims based on
    misappropriation of business information even in cases in which the claim does not meet
    63
    Id.
    64
    
    Savor, 812 A.2d at 898
    .
    65
    Atl. Med. Specialists, LLC v. Gastroenterology Assocs., P.A., 
    2017 WL 1842899
    (Del. Super. Apr. 20 2017).
    23
    the statutory definition of ‘trade secret’ under the Code.”66 Other jurisdictions likewise
    have interpreted their versions of the Uniform Act to abolish all common law theories for
    misappropriation of confidential information.67 Preemption applies “regardless of whether
    the information would ultimately rise to the level of a trade secret.”68
    Regardless, Overdrive does not speak to this case. Alarm has not asserted a claim
    for conversion. Alarm has asserted a claim for common law misappropriation of
    confidential information, which to my mind is the clearest possible candidate for
    66
    See 
    id. at *15;
    accord Yeiser Research & Development LLC v. Teknor Apex Co.,
    
    281 F. Supp. 3d 1021
    , 1050 (S.D. Cal. 2017) (“Because all claims stemming from the same
    acts as the alleged misappropriation are intended to be displaced, a claim can be displaced
    even if the information at issue is not a trade secret” and therefore “a determination of
    whether the information at issue constitutes a trade secret under [DUTSA] need not be
    addressed prior to making a determination of displacement”) (internal quotation marks and
    citation omitted); see also Ethypharm S.A. France v. Bentley Pharms., Inc., 
    388 F. Supp. 2d
    426, 433 (D. Del. 2005) (same).
    67
    See, e.g., Composite Marine Propellers, Inc. v. Van Der Woude, 
    962 F.2d 1263
    ,
    1265 (7th Cir. 1992) (holding Illinois’ statute “has abolished all common law theories of
    misuse of [secret] information. Unless defendants misappropriated a (statutory) trade
    secret, they did no legal wrong” (citation omitted)); Hauck Mfg. v. Astec Indus., 375 F.
    Supp. 2d 649, 656 (E.D. Tenn. 2004) (“If the information is a trade secret, the plaintiff’s
    claim is preempted; if not, the plaintiff has no legal interest upon which to base his or her
    claim. Either way, the claim is not cognizable.”); Bliss Cleaning Niagara, Inc. v. Midwest
    Brake Bond Co., 
    270 F. Supp. 2d 943
    , 948-49 (W.D. Mich. 2003) (“[T]he Court concludes
    that the disputed status of information as a trade secret does not preclude a court from
    determining whether a claim or claims are displaced by the MUTSA . . . . [A]llowing
    otherwise displaced tort claims to proceed on the basis that the information may not rise to
    the level of a trade secret would defeat the purpose of the UTSA.” (citation omitted)).
    68
    Yeiser 
    Research, 281 F. Supp. 3d at 1051
    .
    24
    preemption under DUTSA. Count II of the complaint is preempted by DUTSA and
    dismissed on that basis.
    C.     The Request To Amend
    Alarm has requested leave to amend its complaint to further describe its trade
    secrets. Alarm contends that good cause exists for the court to grant the request and allow
    Alarm to supplement the information under Court of Chancery Rule 15(aaa).
    Alarm’s request is denied. During an initial hearing on a motion to expedite, I voiced
    concern about Alarm’s allegations and instructed Alarm to specify the trade secrets that
    were misappropriated and how the misappropriation occurred.69 Alarm has therefore
    already had a chance to do what it now seeks leave to accomplish.
    In any event, this decision has not held that the complaint fails to identify trade
    secrets. The complaint fails because Alarm has not pled a reasonably conceivable set of
    circumstances under which ABS misappropriated or improperly used Alarm’s trade
    secrets. This is not a failure that can be cured by requiring “the plaintiff to simply
    supplement that information.”70
    III.    CONCLUSION
    Alarm’s complaint fails to state a claim on which relief can be granted. It is
    dismissed with prejudice.
    69
    Dkt. 26 at 9-10.
    70
    Pl.’s Answering Br. ¶ 51.
    25