LAKE WORTH SURGICAL CENTER, INC. v. CRERESER GATES, JOSHUA RULEMAN and ARNOLD RULEMAN , 266 So. 3d 198 ( 2019 )


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  •        DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA
    FOURTH DISTRICT
    LAKE WORTH SURGICAL CENTER, INC.,
    Petitioner,
    v.
    CRERESER GATES, JOSHUA RULEMAN
    and ARNOLD RULEMAN,
    Respondents.
    No. 4D18-2774
    [February 27, 2019]
    Petition for writ of certiorari to the Circuit Court for the Nineteenth
    Judicial Circuit, Indian River County; Paul B. Kanarek, Judge; L.T. Case
    No. 31-2017-CA-000016.
    Matthew D. Grosack, Frances G. De La Guardia and Benjamin J. Tyler
    of Holland & Knight LLP, Miami, for petitioner.
    Carri S. Leininger of Williams, Leininger & Cosby, P.A., North Palm
    Beach, for respondents Joshua Ruleman and Arnold Ruleman.
    CONNER, J.
    Lake Worth Surgical Center, Inc. (“Petitioner”), a non-party provider,
    petitions for certiorari review of an order allowing discovery of alleged
    proprietary and trade secret information without a confidentiality order.
    Petitioner does not challenge the required production, but argues the trial
    court departed from the essential requirements of law by denying the
    request for a confidentiality order. Because the trial court ordered the
    disclosure of trade secret information related to Petitioner’s internal cost
    structure for billing and did not impose any confidentiality protections, we
    grant the petition as to some information and deny the petition as to other
    information.
    Background
    In the underlying negligence case, the plaintiff (“Plaintiff”) is suing
    Joshua and David Arnold Ruleman (“Respondents”) for damages resulting
    from a car accident. Plaintiff was treated at the surgical center operated
    by Petitioner and was billed for its services. In contention are two charges:
    one for an arthroscopic knee surgery and one for the supplies used during
    that surgery.
    Respondents served Petitioner with a non-party subpoena requesting
    the following billing information: (1) two examples of reimbursement rates
    Petitioner has received from insurance carriers for each service provided
    to Plaintiff without naming the carriers; (2) the approximate percentage for
    the last three years of Petitioner’s practice that treated patients involved
    in personal injury litigation or a pre-suit claim; and (3) the amounts
    collected for services unrelated to the underlying litigation that Petitioner
    previously provided to Plaintiff on two different dates. Respondents believe
    that Petitioner accepts far less on the charges for the majority of their
    patients than what it had charged Plaintiff for the surgery at issue in the
    underlying litigation.
    Petitioner moved for a protective order to prohibit disclosure of
    confidential financial information. Petitioner primarily objected to the
    request for examples of reimbursement rates from unnamed insurers
    arguing that insurance reimbursement rates and the makeup of the
    center’s patients are trade secret. At the hearing on the motion, Petitioner
    contended that: (1) Respondents’ counsel intend to share the information
    with other clients; (2) Respondents’ counsel represents the interests of an
    insurance company and disclosing what other insurers pay would
    disadvantage Petitioner the next time it negotiates contracts with insurers;
    and (3) what other insurance companies pay is confidential and
    proprietary.
    Because Respondents’ subpoena only requested that Petitioner provide
    a corporate representative with knowledge of these issues, and the trial
    court was not asked to rule on specific questions, the trial court denied
    the motion for protective order.
    During the deposition of the corporate representative, Petitioner
    objected to a number of questions on the grounds that the requested
    information was a confidential trade secret and instructed the
    representative to not answer.
    A hearing was held on Petitioner’s objections to the deposition
    questions.     Petitioner requested that the trial court enter “basic
    confidentiality protections” for any of the questions it required Petitioner’s
    representative to answer, restricting use of the information to the
    underlying litigation and prohibiting disclosure to third parties. Of the six
    questions Petitioner objected to, the trial court overruled four objections.
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    In so doing, the trial court required Petitioner to answer: (1) what amount
    it was paid for services provided to Plaintiff for surgery for an unrelated
    slip and fall accident; (2) what amount it was paid for services provided to
    Plaintiff for another surgery related to the slip and fall; (3) for the last three
    years, what was the approximate percentage of Petitioner’s practice that
    treated patients involved in a pre-suit claim or personal litigation; and (4)
    two examples of contracted reimbursement rates with unnamed insurance
    carriers for the surgery Plaintiff received for the injury being litigated.
    Petitioner asked the trial court to consider a confidentiality order citing
    Columbia Hospital (Palm Beaches) Ltd. Partnership v. Hasson, 
    33 So. 3d 148
     (Fla. 4th DCA 2010), where we found the trial court erred by not
    providing confidentiality protection for similar information. The trial court
    denied the request and entered a written order overruling Petitioner’s
    objections to the four deposition questions described above.
    Appellate Analysis
    “Certiorari review is appropriate when a discovery order departs from
    the essential requirements of law, causing material injury to a petitioner
    throughout the remainder of the proceedings and effectively leaving no
    adequate remedy on appeal.” Westco, Inc. v. Scott Lewis’ Gardening &
    Trimming, Inc., 
    26 So. 3d 620
    , 622 (Fla. 4th DCA 2009) (citation omitted).
    “Orders improperly requiring the disclosure of trade secrets or other
    proprietary information often create irreparable harm and are thus
    appropriate for certiorari review.” 
    Id.
    When a party seeks protection against disclosure of a trade secret or
    proprietary information, the court must first determine whether the
    disputed information is in fact trade secret or proprietary. Summitbridge
    Nat’l Invs. LLC v. 1221 Palm Harbor, L.L.C., 
    67 So. 3d 448
    , 449 (Fla. 2d
    DCA 2011) (citation omitted); see also Westco, 
    26 So. 3d at 622
     (holding
    that where a party claims a document is privileged and the trial court fails
    to conduct an in camera review or balancing test, the trial court has
    departed from the essential requirements of the law).
    The Florida Legislature has adopted the Uniform Trade Secrets Act and
    has defined a trade secret as follows:
    “Trade secret” means information, including a formula,
    pattern, compilation, program, device, method, technique, or
    process that:
    (a) Derives independent economic value, actual or potential,
    from not being generally known to, and not being readily
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    ascertainable by proper means by, other persons who can
    obtain economic value from its disclosure or use; and
    (b) Is the subject of efforts that are reasonable under the
    circumstances to maintain its secrecy.
    § 688.002(4), Fla. Stat. (2018) (emphases added).
    In the instant case, Respondents are seeking information from
    Petitioner about the amounts paid for services rendered to Plaintiff on two
    different dates, the approximate percentage of Petitioner’s practice of
    treating patients who are involved in a pre-suit claim or personal injury
    litigation over a three-year period, and two examples of contracted
    reimbursement rates by private health insurance carriers, who have no
    interest in this case, for the surgery Plaintiff received.
    The trial court did not make any specific rulings as to whether any of
    the information sought was trade secret or proprietary information.
    However, the Second District has already held that internal cost structure
    information constitutes a trade secret. Gulfcoast Surgery Ctr., Inc. v.
    Fisher, 
    107 So. 3d 493
    , 495 (Fla. 2d DCA 2013); Summitbridge, 
    67 So. 3d at 450
     (noting that a formula resulting in a price amount may be a trade
    secret). Similarly, as we observed in Hasson, the parties conceded that
    the amounts the hospital charged patients with and without insurance,
    those with letters of protection, and differences in billing for litigation
    patients versus non-litigation patients, constituted trade secret
    information. 
    33 So. 3d at 149
    . In the instant case, there was no such
    concession by Respondents, but we agree with the Second District that
    internal cost structure information, including methodologies or formulas
    used to compute pricing and insurance reimbursement rates, constitutes
    trade secret information that should be protected from disclosure to third
    parties if obtained through discovery processes. See Fisher, 
    107 So. 3d at 495
    . However, we also agree with the Second District’s distinction made
    in Summitbridge that not all business information falls within this
    privilege; namely, the price for a single transaction, such as the amount
    received for a previous service to a litigant, is not information subject to
    protection as a trade secret. 
    67 So. 3d at 450
    .
    Applying the statutory definition of trade secret and the case law, we
    conclude the trial court properly declined to impose confidentiality
    restrictions on information regarding the amounts paid for services
    rendered to Plaintiff on two different dates and the approximate percentage
    of Petitioner’s practice of treating patients who are involved in a pre-suit
    claim or personal injury litigation over a three-year period. We note that
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    Petitioner did not present any evidence to support a finding that the
    percentage of practice information was trade secret. Like the trial court,
    we are not persuaded by the argument made to the trial court as to that
    information. However, we conclude the trial court erred in failing to grant
    Petitioner’s request for confidentiality protection for information regarding
    the two examples of contracted reimbursement rates by private health
    insurance carriers for the surgery received by Plaintiff. We quash the
    portion of the order below denying confidentiality protection for that trade
    secret or proprietary information. Similar to the disposition in Hasson, we
    remand the case for the trial court to stay the discovery until the parties
    have an opportunity to negotiate a confidentiality agreement as to that
    information. In the event the parties are unable to agree, the trial court
    shall narrowly tailor any order requiring disclosure in such a way as to
    protect Petitioner’s trade secret interests.
    Petition granted in part and denied in part with instructions.
    WARNER and DAMOORGIAN, JJ., concur.
    *        *         *
    Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.
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