Conxall Corporation v. Iconn Systems, LLC , 61 N.E.3d 1081 ( 2016 )


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    2016 IL App (1st) 140158
    SIXTH DIVISION
    September 2, 2016
    No. 1-14-0158
    IN THE
    APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
    FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT
    CONXALL CORPORATION, an Illinois Corporation,              )   Appeal from the Circuit
    )   Court of Cook County.
    Plaintiff-Appellant and Cross-Appellee,              )
    )
    v.                                                         )   No. 08 CH 15396
    )
    ICONN SYSTEMS, LLC, an Illinois Limited Liability          )   (Transferred to Law 08 L
    Corporation; RICHARD REGOLE; KERRY NELSON;                 )   15396)
    ROBERT SMITH; MANUAL SANCHEZ; MARIO                        )
    CALDERA; and JEROME VOREL,                                 )
    )
    Defendants-Appellees and Cross-Appellants            )
    )
    )
    (Mine Safety Appliances Company, a Pennsylvania            )
    corporation,                                               )
    )   Honorable Gregory J.
    Third-Party Defendant).                              )   Wojkowski,
    )   Judge Presiding.
    JUSTICE DELORT delivered the judgment of the court as to Parts I, II, and III, with
    opinion.
    JUSTICE DELORT delivered the judgment of the court as to Part IV.
    Presiding Justice Rochford concurred in the judgment of the court as to Parts I, II, and III,
    and specially concurred as to Part IV, with opinion.
    Justice Hoffman concurred in the judgment of the court as to Parts I, II, and III, and
    dissented as to Part IV, with opinion.
    OPINION
    1-14-0158
    ¶1      The plaintiff, Conxall Corporation, sued defendants iCONN Systems, LLC, Richard
    Regole, Kerry Nelson, Robert Smith, Manual Sanchez, Mario Caldera, and Jerome Vorel,
    alleging that they misappropriated trade secrets relating to a cable assembly and panel mount that
    Conxall produced and sold to third-party defendant Mine Safety Appliances (MSA). After a
    four-week trial, a jury returned a general verdict in favor of defendants. Conxall filed a posttrial
    motion for judgment n.o.v. and new trial, and iCONN filed a motion for attorney fees pursuant to
    section 5 of the Illinois Trade Secrets Act (Act) (765 ILCS 1065/1 et seq. (West 2008)). The
    court denied both motions, precipitating Conxall’s appeal and iCONN’s cross-appeal. MSA is
    not a party to either appeal.
    ¶2      In its appeal, Conxall contends that the trial court erred by denying its posttrial motion for
    three reasons. First, it contends that the trial court tendered an instruction to the jury that
    misstated the law and prejudiced its case. Second, it argues that the court should have instructed
    the jury to limit its consideration of a special interrogatory that MSA propounded to its
    deliberations over iCONN’s cross-claim against MSA. Third, it argues that the jury’s answer to
    the special interrogatory was against the manifest weight of the evidence. In its cross-appeal,
    iCONN claims that the trial court abused its discretion by denying its motion for attorney fees.
    ¶3                                        BACKGROUND
    ¶4      Conxall manufactures cable and connector assemblies used in electronic devices. The
    third-party defendant, MSA, is a Pennsylvania corporation that manufactures safety equipment
    for firefighters. Defendant iCONN was formed by defendants Richard Regole, Kerry Nelson,
    and Robert Smith, who are all former executive-level Conxall employees. Regole worked at
    Conxall from 1991 to 2000, serving as general manager, director of sales and marketing, and
    manufacturing director; Nelson worked at Conxall from 1997 to 2004, serving as national sales
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    manager and manager of industrial products; and Smith worked at Conxall from 1994 to 2006,
    serving as director of operations.
    ¶5     Defendants Jerome Vorel, Manual Sanchez, and Mario Caldera are former Conxall
    manufacturing employees who went to work for iCONN. Vorel worked at Conxall from 1993 to
    2008. From 1993 to 2000, Vorel was a maintenance mechanic responsible for repairing leaky
    roofs, toilets that would not flush, and jammed doors. In 2000, he became an industrial engineer.
    Vorel left Conxall on June 24, 2008, and began working at iCONN on June 26. Sanchez and
    Caldera worked on Conxall’s assembly line from 1988 and 1992, respectively, to November 8,
    2007, when both men began working at iCONN.
    ¶6     The events that gave rise to this lawsuit began in March 2006. Around that time, Conxall
    secured a lucrative business opportunity to sell MSA cable assemblies and panel mounts for
    incorporation into the Firehawk, a firefighter’s mask that MSA manufactured. Once MSA
    notified Conxall that it had been chosen to supply the components, Conxall and MSA
    collaborated on a design for the cable assembly and panel mount.
    ¶7     After the design process concluded, Conxall began shipping parts to MSA. MSA
    eventually became dissatisfied with the quality of Conxall’s products. As a result, MSA sought
    out iCONN so that it could also supply MSA with cable assemblies and panel mounts for the
    Firehawk. In October 2007, Jim Flaherty, an MSA materials manager, contacted iCONN and
    spoke to Regole. Flaherty told Regole that MSA was experiencing problems with Conxall
    because Conxall was struggling to deliver enough quality products to MSA in a timely manner.
    Regole visited MSA’s manufacturing facility on October 23, 2007. During the visit, MSA
    agreed to allow iCONN to submit a bid for the Firehawk cable assembly and panel mount.
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    1-14-0158
    ¶8     To assist iCONN, Flaherty gave iCONN (1) a sample cable assembly and panel mount,
    (2) MSA’s quality control specifications, (3) two dimensional (2D) design drawings, and (4)
    three dimensional (3D) models. Flaherty e-mailed Regole the 2D drawings and quality control
    documents on October 25. Jeremy Steck, an MSA engineer, e-mailed the 3D models to iCONN
    on October 29. Flaherty testified that the drawings MSA sent to iCONN “were the property of
    [MSA],” that the 2D drawings contained a proprietary title block with MSA’s name on it, and
    that he told Regole the samples “were MSA parts.” When Steck e-mailed the 3D models, he did
    not refer to Conxall, and the models themselves bore no indicia of ownership as to any party.
    According to Regole, he also asked Steck to send component drawings, but Steck refused
    because he believed that the component drawings belonged to Conxall.
    ¶9     Sometime around April 1, 2008, Conxall discovered that iCONN was also supplying
    MSA with cable assemblies and panel mounts. Later that month, Conxall filed this lawsuit.
    ¶ 10   On March 9, 2009, Conxall added two claims alleging that iCONN misappropriated trade
    secrets with respect to products that Conxall had sold to three additional companies—Skybitz,
    Hach, and Kustom Signals, Inc. (KSI). When all was said and done, Conxall had alleged that
    iCONN misappropriated four categories of purportedly secret information: (1) the overall design
    of the Firehawk products; (2) the designs and related information covering certain component
    parts that went into the Firehawk products; (3) the process that Conxall used to manufacture the
    Firehawk products; and (4) the overall designs of the Hach, Skybitz, and KSI products.
    ¶ 11   On November 16, 2009, defendants filed a motion to dismiss Conxall’s amended
    complaint. The trial court denied the motion on May 27, 2010. On June 27, 2011, iCONN filed
    a third-party complaint against MSA. iCONN’s complaint set forth claims for indemnity and
    fraud. The gist of iCONN’s claims against MSA was that, assuming iCONN had
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    misappropriated a trade secret by using the information contained in the 2D and 3D files that
    MSA gave iCONN, MSA had misled iCONN into believing that MSA owned the information in
    the files.
    ¶ 12    On October 26, defendants filed a motion for summary judgment against Conxall. The
    court denied the motion, and the case proceeded to a jury trial.
    ¶ 13    After the close of evidence, the trial court instructed the jury. Over Conxall’s objection,
    the court tendered instruction No. 18 to the jury, a nonpattern instruction, which stated: “the
    plaintiff must show that specific secrets were misappropriated. It is not sufficient to point to
    broad areas of technology and assert that something there must have been secret and
    misappropriated.”
    ¶ 14    The court also tendered six special interrogatories to the jury. Special interrogatory No.
    4, which was proffered by MSA, asked “[d]id MSA own the information contained in the two
    drawings and two [3D] files relating to the panel mount and cable assembly that MSA produced
    to ICONN?” In chambers, Conxall specifically objected to a different interrogatory that is not at
    issue in this appeal, but it did not specifically object to special interrogatory No. 4. After that
    objection was overruled and immediately before the parties and judge returned to the courtroom,
    one of Conxall’s attorneys lodged a general objection to all of MSA’s special interrogatories,
    stating simply, “I think I better—just for the record, Conxall objects to all MSA’s proposed
    special interrogatories.”
    ¶ 15    Ultimately, the jury returned a general verdict in favor of iCONN and answered special
    interrogatory No. 4 “yes.” Conxall filed a motion for a new trial and judgment n.o.v., and
    iCONN filed a motion for attorney fees. The trial court denied all three motions in a single order
    on December 20, 2013. With respect to iCONN’s motion for attorney fees, the court stated:
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    “Defendant iCONN’s Motion for Attorney Fees is denied. The Court finds that Conxall’s claims
    were not frivolous and not brought in bad faith. There was sufficient circumstantial evidence for
    this finding that Conxall’s claims were not brought in bad faith and were not frivolous.” Conxall
    appealed, and iCONN cross-appealed.
    ¶ 16                                        ANALYSIS
    ¶ 17   In its appeal, Conxall has raised three issues. First, Conxall contends that the trial court
    erred by tendering instruction No. 18. Second, Conxall argues that the trial court erred by
    refusing to restrict the jury’s consideration of special interrogatory No. 4 to its deliberations with
    respect to iCONN’s case against MSA. Finally, Conxall claims that the jury’s answer to special
    interrogatory No. 4 was against the manifest weight of the evidence. In its cross-appeal, iCONN
    argues that the trial court erred by denying its motion for attorney fees. We consider these
    arguments in turn.
    ¶ 18                        I. Instruction No. 18 Was Properly Granted
    ¶ 19   We first consider Conxall’s claim that the trial court erred by tendering instruction No.
    18. “The purpose of jury instructions is to provide the jury with correct legal rules that can be
    applied to the evidence to guide the jury toward a proper verdict.” People v. Lovejoy, 
    235 Ill. 2d 97
    , 150 (2009); Dillon v. Evanston Hospital, 
    199 Ill. 2d 483
    , 507 (2002). To be proper, a jury
    instruction “must state the law fairly and distinctly and must not mislead the jury or prejudice a
    party.” (Emphasis in original.) 
    Dillon, 199 Ill. 2d at 507
    . “The decision whether to give a
    nonpattern instruction rests within the sound discretion of the trial court.” People v. Bannister,
    
    232 Ill. 2d 52
    , 81 (2008). “[A]s a court of review we will not disturb such a determination absent
    a clear abuse of discretion.” Surestaff, Inc. v. Azteca Foods, Inc., 
    374 Ill. App. 3d 625
    , 627
    (2007). To determine if the trial court abused its discretion, “we look at the jury instructions,
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    taken as a whole, to determine whether they fairly, fully, and comprehensively instructed the jury
    of the relevant legal principles.” Holland v. Schwan’s Home Service, Inc., 
    2013 IL App (5th) 110560
    , ¶ 139. “A reviewing court ordinarily will not reverse a trial court for giving faulty
    instructions unless they clearly misled the jury and resulted in prejudice to the appellant.”
    Schultz v. Northeast Illinois Regional Commuter R.R. Corp., 
    201 Ill. 2d 260
    , 274 (2002).
    ¶ 20    Conxall has proffered a complex, multifaceted argument setting forth its belief that
    instruction No. 18 inaccurately stated the law and was misleading. But we need not adopt its
    approach because we find that the instructions, taken as a whole, “fairly, fully, and
    comprehensively apprised the jury of the relevant legal principles.” 
    Schultz, 201 Ill. 2d at 273
    -
    74. Specifically, instruction Nos. 15, 16, and 17, painstakingly set forth—in language almost
    indistinguishable from the relevant text of the Act—the definition of a trade secret, the elements
    of trade secret misappropriation, and Conxall’s burden of proof. Of special relevance here,
    instruction No. 15 contained an extensive definition of the “trade secret.” It stated, in relevant
    part:
    “A trade secret is information which may include but is not limited to, technical
    or non-technical data, a formula, pattern, compilation, program, device, method,
    technique, drawing, process, financial data, or list of actual or potential customers or
    suppliers. To prove its information is entitled to special protection as a trade secret,
    Conxall must show that:
    1. The information is sufficiently secret to derive economic value, actual
    or potential, from not being generally known to other persons who can obtain
    economic value from its use or disclosure; and
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    2. Conxall took reasonable efforts under the circumstances to maintain the
    secrecy or confidentiality of the information.
    In determining whether Conxall has proven that it possessed a trade secret, you
    may consider the following factors:
    1. The extent to which the information was known outside of Conxall’s
    business;
    2. The extent to which the information was known by employees and
    others involved in Conxall’s business;
    3. The extent of measures taken by Conxall to guard the secrecy of the
    information;
    4. The value of the information to Conxall and its competitors;
    5. The amount of time, effort or money expended by Conxall in
    developing the information; and
    6. The ease or difficulty with which the information could be properly
    acquired or duplicated by others.”
    ¶ 21   In light of this extensive definition of trade secret, as well as the other instructions that
    largely tracked the text of the Act, we find that the jury could not have been misled by
    instruction No. 18. Accordingly, under these circumstances, the trial court’s decision to tender
    instruction No. 18 did not constitute an abuse of discretion. We therefore reject Conxall’s first
    claim of error.
    ¶ 22              II. Conxall Forfeited Its Objection to Special Interrogatory No. 4
    ¶ 23   Next, Conxall contends that the trial court erred by failing to limit the jury’s
    consideration of special interrogatory No. 4 to iCONN’s case against MSA. A party may object
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    to a special interrogatory, but the objecting party must specifically object to an individual special
    interrogatory. See Struthers v. Jack Baulos, Inc., 
    52 Ill. App. 3d 823
    , 826 (1977). In Struthers,
    the plaintiff lodged a general objection “ ‘for the record’ ” to a special interrogatory tendered by
    the defendant. 
    Id. On appeal,
    this court held that the plaintiff forfeited any challenge to the
    interrogatory because, by lodging only a general objection, the plaintiff precluded the trial court
    from “mak[ing] a considered ruling” and prevented the defendant from propounding a corrected
    interrogatory. 
    Id. ¶ 24
      The record shows that Conxall only specifically objected to special interrogatory six on
    the basis that it was confusing and should only apply to iCONN’s case against MSA. That
    specific objection was overruled. Immediately before the parties retired from the instruction
    conference in chambers, one of Conxall’s attorneys lodged a general objection, stating, “I think I
    better—just for the record, Conxall objects to all MSA’s proposed special interrogatories.”
    Thus, just as in Struthers, Conxall forfeited any objection to special interrogatory No. 4.
    ¶ 25   III. The Jury’s Answer to Special Interrogatory No. 4 Was Not Against the Manifest
    Weight of the Evidence
    ¶ 26   Next, Conxall argues that the trial court erred by failing to set aside the jury’s answer to
    special interrogatory No. 4. A jury’s answer to a special interrogatory will be set aside only if it
    is against the manifest weight of the evidence. Simmons v. Garces, 
    198 Ill. 2d 541
    , 561 (2002).
    “ ‘A verdict is against the manifest weight of the evidence where the opposite conclusion is
    clearly evident or where the findings of the jury are unreasonable, arbitrary and not based upon
    any of the evidence.’ ” Maple v. Gustafson, 
    151 Ill. 2d 445
    , 454 (1992) (quoting Villa v. Crown
    Cork & Seal Co., 
    202 Ill. App. 3d 1082
    , 1089 (1990)).
    ¶ 27   Conxall argues that the jury’s answer was against the manifest weight of the evidence
    because (1) there was testimony that the 3D models that MSA sent to iCONN contained some
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    internal dimensions and (2) Uber testified that MSA was not claiming to own “the internal
    design structure” of the cable assembly and panel mount. We disagree.
    ¶ 28   Although Conxall is correct that there was testimony showing that the 3D models
    revealed some internal dimensions and Uber testified that MSA was not claiming to own that
    information, Flaherty testified clearly and without qualification that the 2D design drawings and
    3D models he gave to iCONN were “the property of MSA.” In addition, Flaherty testified that
    he “never sent [Regole] anything that wasn’t MSA owned” and that no one from Conxall told
    him that any of the information in the files belonged to Conxall.
    ¶ 29   Moreover, there was evidence showing that when iCONN communicated with MSA
    regarding the various files that MSA sent to iCONN, MSA never said that some part of the
    information contained in the files belonged to Conxall or was subject to a confidentiality
    agreement it had with Conxall. In essence, Conxall asks this court to reweigh the evidence,
    substitute its judgment for the jury’s, and answer special interrogatory No. 4 in its favor. This
    court, however, does not reweigh contested evidence. See 
    Maple, 151 Ill. 2d at 452-53
    (“[T]he
    appellate court should not usurp the function of the jury and substitute its judgment on questions
    of fact fairly submitted, tried, and determined from the evidence which did not greatly
    preponderate either way.”). We therefore affirm the trial court’s denial of Conxall’s posttrial
    motion.
    ¶ 30                           IV. iCONN’s Attorney Fee Request
    ¶ 31   We next consider iCONN’s cross-appeal. iCONN contends that it is entitled to receive
    its attorney fees from Conxall pursuant to section 5 of the Act. Section 5 provides “[i]f *** a
    claim of misappropriation is made in bad faith ***, the court may award reasonable attorney’s
    fees to the prevailing party.” 765 ILCS 1065/5 (West 2008). The question dispositive of this
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    issue is whether the trial court applied the correct legal standard when determining whether
    Conxall’s claims were brought in “bad faith,” as that term is used and understood in the Act.
    ¶ 32   That question is one of first impression in this court, and it has generated a sharp
    difference of opinion among the members of this panel. As set forth below, I would apply the
    two-part test for bad faith articulated by the California Court of Appeals in SASCO v. Rosendin
    Electric, Inc., 
    207 Cal. App. 4th 837
    (Ct. App. 2012). My esteemed colleagues, on the other
    hand, believe that, when assessing bad faith under section 5 of the Act, courts may “be
    guided”—but not “constrained”—“by the body of case law construing [Illinois Supreme Court]
    Rule 137 [(eff. July 1, 2013)].” Infra ¶ 99 (Rochford, P.J., concurring); infra ¶ 108 (Hoffman, J.,
    concurring). Accordingly, this court holds, by a majority of two to one, that the appropriate
    standard to determine bad faith under section 5 of the Act is the position taken by Presiding
    Justice Rochford and Justice Hoffman.
    ¶ 33   In Presiding Justice Rochford’s view, the fee issue should be remanded to the trial court
    so that it can reconsider the issue under the standard articulated in Presiding Justice Rochford’s
    concurring opinion. For the reasons expressed in infra ¶¶ 109-10, I cannot join Justice
    Hoffman’s conclusion that “circumstantial evidence exists supporting” the trial court’s
    conclusion that Conxall did not proceed in bad faith. Rather, I have a strong belief that the
    record is replete with evidence to the contrary. I would be inclined to simply reverse the trial
    court’s denial of fees. However, prudence suggests that an appropriate course may simply be to
    allow the court below to itself reconsider the issue upon due consideration of our analysis.
    Accordingly, I concur with Presiding Judge Rochford to vacate the fee order and to remand for
    further proceedings. I offer the following analysis to detail my own view of the evidence and to
    guide the trial court on remand.
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    ¶ 34                                 A. The Applicable Standard
    ¶ 35    As stated above, I would adopt the standard for determining bad faith articulated by the
    California Court of Appeals in cases such as SASCO v. Rosendin Electric, Inc., 
    207 Cal. App. 4th 837
    (Ct. App. 2012), FLIR Systems, Inc. v. Parrish, 
    174 Cal. App. 4th 1270
    (Ct. App. 2009), and
    Gemini Aluminum Corp. v. California Custom Shapes, Inc., 
    95 Cal. App. 4th 1249
    (Ct. App.
    2002). In those cases, the court explained that “bad faith” in the context of California’s trade
    secret statute—which, like the Act, is derived from the Uniform Trade Secrets Act (UTSA)—
    consists of (1) “objective speciousness” and (2) “subjective bad faith.” (Internal quotation marks
    omitted.) (Internal quotation marks omitted.) 
    SASCO, 207 Cal. App. 4th at 845
    (quoting Cal.
    Civ. Code § 3426.4 (West 2008)). In my view, this definition of bad faith is correct for several
    reasons.
    ¶ 36    Consider first the drafter’s comment to section 4 of the UTSA, from which section 5 of
    the Act is derived. 1 The comment states: “Section 4 allows a court to award reasonable attorney
    fees to a prevailing party in specified circumstances as a deterrent to specious claims of
    misappropriation ***.” (Emphases added.) Unif. Trade Secrets Act § 4, Comment (2015).
    Based on that statement, it is clear that the drafters intended for attorney fees to be awarded when
    the plaintiff’s trade secret claim was (1) objectively specious and (2) brought in subjective bad
    faith. With respect to the first requirement, one need look no further than the comment: the only
    adjective the drafter’s used to describe the sort of claims that should result in an award of fees
    are specious ones. The second requirement arises from the drafter’s indication that fees should
    deter specious claims, since a person or entity cannot be deterred from engaging in conduct that
    1
    The General Assembly adopted the Act in 1988 without significant comment. As such, I find it
    appropriate to turn to the drafter’s comments to the Uniform Act from which the Act traces its lineage.
    See McArdle v. McArdle, 
    55 Ill. App. 3d 829
    , 833 (1977) (when interpreting provisions of uniform laws,
    court may consult drafter’s comments).
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    they do not know they are engaging in. See 
    Gemini, 95 Cal. App. 4th at 1261
    (“To be deterrable,
    conduct must be at least reckless or grossly negligent, if not intentional and willful.” (quoting
    Stilwell Development, Inc. v. Chen, No. CV86-4487-GHK, 
    1989 WL 418783
    , at *3 (C.D. Cal .
    Apr. 25, 1989)).
    ¶ 37    Importantly, the words “specious” and “frivolous”—the latter being the standard under
    which Rule 137 motions are measured (see Cult Awareness Network v. Church of Scientology
    International, 
    177 Ill. 2d 267
    , 279 (1997); Heckinger v. Welsh, 
    339 Ill. App. 3d 189
    , 191
    (2003))—mean different things. Frivolousness is a demanding legal standard. This court has
    explained that a claim or filing is frivolous when it contains “false allegations” made “without
    reasonable cause.” 
    Heckinger, 339 Ill. App. 3d at 191
    . And importantly, for a claim to be
    frivolous, its falsity must be readily ascertainable on its face. See, e.g., Technology Innovation
    Center, Inc. v. Advanced Multiuser Technologies Corp., 
    315 Ill. App. 3d 238
    , 245 (2000)
    (finding allegation in plaintiff’s complaint was frivolous where factual defect was “apparent” and
    the plaintiffs “kn[e]w, or should have known” about the defect). In other words, if a claim
    cannot be judged frivolous based on the pleadings and obvious factual defects, it likely never
    will.
    ¶ 38    Speciousness is looser standard that embraces a wider range of claims. Unlike a
    frivolous claim, a claim cannot be judged “specious” simply by reviewing the text of the
    plaintiff’s complaint because specious claims are by definition superficially meritorious. See
    Bryan A. Garner, A Dictionary of Modern Usage 825 (2d ed. 1995) (defining “specious” as
    “having superficial appeal but false”); see also Black’s Law Dictionary 1529 (9th ed. 2009)
    (defining “specious” as “[f]alsely appearing to be true, accurate, or just”); FLIR, 
    174 Cal. App. 13
    1-14-0158
    4th at 1276 (“Objective speciousness exists where the action superficially appears to have merit
    but there is a complete lack of evidence to support the claim.”).
    ¶ 39    The foregoing discussion still begs the question whether frivolousness or speciousness is
    the appropriate standard for judging bad faith. The text of section 5 readily supplies the answer.
    Section 5 states that attorney fees should be awarded to “to the prevailing party.” As a case
    proceeds, a defendant has multiple opportunities to “prevail.” By its plain text, section 5
    expresses no preference for defendants who prevail on a motion to dismiss versus a defendant
    who prevails on summary judgment or after a lengthy bench trial. Yet, restricting the application
    of section 5 only to frivolous claims—that is, claims with obvious or apparent defects—achieves
    that precise result, since most claims will not be judged frivolous once the court moves past the
    pleadings. In this way, the approach adopted by my colleagues significantly blunts the ability of
    section 5 to actually deter litigants like Conxall, since it is often the case that the factual
    baselessness of a claim can become apparent only after summary judgment or trial. See 
    FLIR, 174 Cal. App. 4th at 1283
    (the court rejected the plaintiff’s argument that the trial court’s denial
    of the defendant’s motion for summary judgment precluded an award of attorney fees, reasoning
    that “[i]f the rule were otherwise, a trade secrets plaintiff could file sham declarations to
    successfully oppose a summary judgment motion and immunize itself from sanctions”); cf.
    Krautsack v. Anderson, 
    223 Ill. 2d 541
    , 562 (2006) (“Because Rule 137 addresses the pleadings,
    motions and other papers a litigant files, the rule does not provide a sanction against all asserted
    instances of bad-faith conduct by a litigant or the litigant’s attorney during the course of
    litigation.”).
    ¶ 40    In holding that bad faith under section 5 is determined based on whether the plaintiff’s
    claim violated the letter or spirit of Rule 137, my colleagues principally rely on Krautsack. I do
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    1-14-0158
    not share this reliance. Krautsack had nothing to do with the law at issue here, which is a specific
    act governing a highly technical field. Instead, the issue before the court was how to define the
    term “bad faith” in the context of a motion for attorney fees pursuant to section 10a(c) of the
    Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act (Consumer Fraud Act) (815 ILCS
    505/10a(c) (West 2004)).
    ¶ 41    More to the point, Krautsack simply does not support the position taken by my
    colleagues. Notably, in Krautsack, the plaintiff argued that the court should construe bad faith in
    the context of the Consumer Fraud Act as coterminous with bad faith under Rule 137. The court
    unambiguously rejected that argument, stating:
    “Because Rule 137 addresses the pleadings, motions and other papers a litigant
    files, the rule does not provide a sanction against all asserted instances of bad-faith
    conduct by a litigant or the litigant’s attorney during the course of litigation. [Citation.]
    For example, a party’s pleadings may conform to Rule 137, yet the party may be guilty of
    other rule violations amounting to bad faith. We discern no reason why a prevailing
    defendant should be limited by Rule 137 in establishing a plaintiff’s bad faith. Rule 137,
    and the body of case law that has developed around it, provide useful guidance to
    litigants and judges, but a defendant’s failure to demonstrate bad faith by the plaintiff
    under Rule 137 is not fatal to a prevailing defendant’s fee petition under the Act.
    Appellate court opinions which hold to the contrary, including Krautsack I, are
    overruled.” 
    Id. at 562.
    ¶ 42    Thus, to the extent it is even relevant, Krautsack strongly suggests that the Rule 137
    definition of bad faith is not a one-size fits all standard applicable to every Illinois statute
    containing a fee-shifting provision that hinges on the plaintiff acting in bad faith. 
    Id. 15 1-14-0158
    ¶ 43                  B. iCONN Has Made a Strong Case for Attorney Fees
    ¶ 44   Applying the framework described in SASCO, I note that the record is replete with
    evidence that Conxall’s claims were both objectively specious and brought in subjective bad
    faith. “An objectively specious claim is one that is completely unsupported by the evidence
    [citation], or one that lacks proof as to one of its essential elements.” JLM Formation, Inc. v.
    Form+Pac, No. C 04-1774 CW, 
    2004 WL 1858132
    , at *2 (N.D. Cal. Aug. 19, 2004). In making
    that showing, a defendant is not required to “prove a negative” by conclusively disproving the
    plaintiff’s claim. 
    SASCO, 207 Cal. App. 4th at 848
    . Rather, the defendant’s burden under the
    objective speciousness prong is satisfied by a simple showing that there was an “absence of
    evidence” with respect to an element of the plaintiff’s claim. 
    Id. There is
    ample support in the
    record from which the trial could conclude that iCONN has satisfied this burden.
    ¶ 45   First, with respect to Conxall’s claims pertaining to the overall design of the Firehawk
    products, Conxall did not prove that (1) it owned the designs and (2) the designs were even
    secret. With respect to the ownership issue, the evidence at trial showed that Conxall and MSA
    jointly designed the Firehawk products. The evidence further showed that MSA maintained total
    control over the design. Conxall’s own witnesses—specifically Smaczny, Conxall’s director of
    engineering, and Kryza, one of Conxall’s engineers—conceded during their respective cross-
    examinations that MSA “had the final call” on all elements of the design and that when MSA
    rejected Conxall’s design proposals, MSA, would tell Conxall how the design needed to be
    changed and Conxall would implement the changes “as instructed.”
    ¶ 46   Moreover, the evidence showed that in September 2006, Scott Sanchez, a Conxall sales
    manager, sent an e-mail to his colleagues expressing concern about whether Conxall or MSA
    would own the designs. At trial, Sanchez acknowledged that he never sent the e-mail to anyone
    16
    1-14-0158
    at MSA and he testified that no one at Conxall ever asked MSA to sign a contract turning over
    ownership of the designs to Conxall.
    ¶ 47   To make matters worse, Conxall could not even prove that the designs were secret
    because it never entered into a confidentiality agreement with MSA. To be sure, Conxall tried to
    prove that it obtained an oral confidentiality agreement with MSA and that Steck bound MSA to
    a written confidentiality agreement by signing design drawings that contained Conxall’s
    proprietary title block. Those arguments, however, were hopelessly meritless, as the evidence
    showed that MSA itself rejected these assertions long before trial.
    ¶ 48   Specifically, the evidence showed that in February 2009, Bandolik told Jacqueline
    Debick, a senior buyer at MSA, that Conxall and MSA had a confidentiality agreement. After
    Debick asked Bandolik to produce the agreement, Bandolik admitted that Conxall did not have
    “a single written agreement with MSA.” Bandolik nonetheless insisted that the parties had a
    confidentiality agreement because MSA signed drawings that contained Conxall’s title block and
    MSA orally agreed to confidentiality. On March 2, 2009, Debick replied to Bandolik, informing
    him that MSA’s law department had no record of a confidentiality agreement. Moreover, she
    stated that “[t]he lack of a written confidentiality agreement confirms that no such understanding
    as to confidential information was ever agreed to by MSA.”
    ¶ 49   Thus, the record shows that by no later than March 2, 2009, Conxall was on notice that it
    did not have a confidentiality agreement with MSA. Accordingly, the record shows that as of
    March 2, 2009, Conxall knew that it did not have a confidentiality agreement with MSA, and it
    knew that the title block and oral agreement theories were unfounded.
    ¶ 50   That conclusion is reinforced by testimony elicited from James Uber, MSA’s general
    counsel. Uber testified that MSA does not, as a matter of corporate policy, enter into oral
    17
    1-14-0158
    confidentiality agreements. Moreover, he testified that he “did not believe that there was any
    kind of agreement or contract between MSA and Conxall with regard to confidentiality.”
    ¶ 51   Additional evidence that Conxall’s confidentiality claims were factually baseless came
    from Sanchez, whose testimony established that Conxall concocted the title block theory for
    purposes of advancing this litigation after it learned that it did not have a genuine confidentiality
    agreement with MSA. The evidence showed that Bandolik asked Sanchez to find a
    confidentiality agreement after Conxall discovered iCONN’s competition. Sanchez’s search
    proved fruitless, and according to him only then did Conxall begin internal discussions about
    whether the signed design drawings could serve as a confidentiality agreement.
    ¶ 52   Numerous witnesses confirmed Conxall’s stance in this regard. Regole, Smith, and
    Nelson all explained that during their tenure, Conxall required that its customers sign design
    drawings to confirm the drawing depicted what the customer wanted. Sanchez corroborated that
    understanding, explaining that he “never heard anyone take a position other than that” until
    Conxall filed this lawsuit. Even Conxall’s witnesses confirmed this view. Kryza conceded that
    the Firehawk project could not proceed unless Steck approved the drawings, and he
    acknowledged that when he e-mailed Steck drawings, he did not (1) mention the title block; (2)
    refer to confidentiality; or (3) inform Steck that by signing the drawings, he was actually entering
    into a confidentiality agreement with Conxall.
    ¶ 53   The title block theory was also undermined by Dunmead, who candidly admitted that
    Bandolik was the only Conxall employee who could execute a confidentiality agreement. The
    record is devoid of evidence, however, showing that Bandolik signed any of the drawings. Thus,
    Conxall’s title block theory was actually inconsistent with its own business practices.
    18
    1-14-0158
    ¶ 54   These facts make it apparent that Conxall’s oral agreement and title block theories were
    nothing more than “fabricated, post-hoc notions lacking a scintilla of factual or legal support.”
    Contract Materials Processing, Inc. v. Kataleuna GmbH Catalysts, 
    222 F. Supp. 2d 733
    , 746 (D.
    Md. 2002). Because Conxall could not prove that it had a confidentiality agreement with MSA,
    its trade secret claim with respect to the design of the Firehawk cable assembly and panel mount
    suffered a total failure of proof as to a critical element, namely that the designs were a trade
    secret. Accordingly, there is support for a finding that Conxall’s claims with respect to the
    Firehawk cable assembly and panel mount were objectively specious.
    ¶ 55   Conxall’s claims with respect to the Firehawk products’ component parts fared no better.
    At trial, Conxall failed to produce any evidence showing that the designs of the component parts
    were not generally known in the industry. Conxall’s witnesses opined that Conxall’s use of
    component parts like a coupling nut was not generally known in the industry. When Conxall’s
    witnesses were cross-examined, however, they conceded that Conxall was not the first company
    to use any of the components parts at issue in this case and that the only secret aspect of the
    components was their specific dimensions, which, Conxall’s witnesses conceded, could be
    readily ascertained using a vision system. Notably on that point, iCONN elicited extensive
    testimony from Regole, Smith, and Bill Alvelo, one of its engineers, establishing that iCONN
    obtained dimensions for the component parts by dissecting product samples and measuring with
    calipers, height gauges, and a “vision system” capable of 150x magnification that gave “precise
    measurements.” When a company can acquire its competitor’s allegedly secret information
    “with relative ease, ‘the inference is that the information was either essentially “public” or is of
    de minimis economic value.’ ” Trident Products & Services, LLC v. Canadian Soiless
    Wholesale, Ltd., 
    859 F. Supp. 2d 771
    , 779 (E.D. Va. 2012) (quoting MicroStrategy Inc. v.
    19
    1-14-0158
    Business Objects, S.A., 
    331 F. Supp. 2d 396
    , 416-17 (E.D. Va. 2004)). Again, as to this issue,
    there is support in the record that Conxall’s claims with respect to the component parts were
    objectively specious.
    ¶ 56   I next address whether there is evidence showing that Conxall’s claims with respect to the
    Skybitz, KSI, and Hach products were objectively specious. Conxall failed to produce any
    evidence whatsoever establishing that any of the designs were not generally known in the
    industry. Cooper and Anthony did offer vague and conclusory testimony that the designs for
    these products were trade secrets, but that testimony was obliterated on cross-examination.
    Cooper, for example, conceded that aspects of the designs were in fact generally known and
    “probably not trade secrets.” Yet, he conceded that he did not conduct any study to separate the
    secret from the not secret, and so his testimony had zero evidentiary value. The same was true of
    Anthony, who like Cooper also failed to undertake any study to determine what aspects of the
    designs were secret and what was generally known. Anthony instead opined based on his
    “personal knowledge,” which he acknowledged could not be independently verified. Thus, as
    with Cooper, Anthony’s testimony was worthless. And to ice an already iced cake (1) Cooper
    and Dunmead both conceded that they did not even know if Conxall and iCONN sold the same
    product to Hach, (2) Cooper testified that he was not aware of any Conxall drawings relating to
    Hach that had been found in iCONN’s possession, and (3) Anthony admitted that he never
    compared Conxall and iCONN’s Hach drawings or examined a physical sample of iCONN’s
    Hach product.
    ¶ 57   The inability of Conxall’s witnesses to identify a single specific aspect of the design of
    the MSA, Skybitz, KSI or Hach products that was a trade secret provides further factual support
    for a finding that Conxall’s claims were objectively specious.
    20
    1-14-0158
    ¶ 58   Finally, there is support in the record that Conxall’s claims regarding its manufacturing
    process were objectively specious. At trial, Conxall presented testimony from James Considine,
    its vice president of manufacturing. During his cross-examination, Considine was confronted
    with a December 2007 e-mail he sent to his colleagues in preparation for a visit that some MSA
    employees were making to Conxall’s facility. With respect to the alleged secrecy of Conxall’s
    manufacturing process, the e-mail could not be more damning for Conxall’s case. Considine
    wrote: “There are few places where we employ ‘special’ processes or technology, so there really
    is nothing that we shouldn’t show them.”
    ¶ 59   It is difficult to imagine a person better situated to opine on the secrecy and novelty of
    Conxall’s manufacturing methods than its vice president of manufacturing. And as the above-
    quoted e-mail shows, Considine (and by extension, Conxall) knew in December 2007—long
    before this case was ever filed—that its manufacturing process was not a trade secret.
    ¶ 60   And that is not all. Bandolik—who verified Conxall’s complaint under penalty of
    perjury—admitted that he could not identify any specific manufacturing process that Conxall
    used that was not generally known in the industry. Likewise, Anthony conceded that he did not
    conduct any study to determine whether Conxall’s manufacturing processes were not generally
    known in the industry.
    ¶ 61   Then there was Dunmead, who, when pressed by iCONN’s attorney to identify just one
    specific part of the manufacturing process that was not generally known in the industry, instead
    replied “[t]he entire process is secret.” That statement led to the following colloquy in which
    Dunmead conceded that Conxall’s method of crimping contacts was both generally known in
    Conxall’s industry and yet somehow simultaneously a secret to Conxall:
    “Q. *** Is crimping a contact onto a wire a secret?
    21
    1-14-0158
    A. Yes.
    Q. It is?
    A. Yes.
    Q. It is something that only Conxall knows how to do?
    A. No.
    Q. Okay. That part isn’t a secret, right? You would agree with that?
    A. No.
    Q. You wouldn’t agree with that?
    A. That’s correct.
    Q. So when everybody else does it, it is common knowledge, but when you do it,
    it’s a secret; is that right?
    A. In sum total with all the rest of the processes, the entire process is a trade
    secret, yes.
    Q. Well, I want to know about crimping a contact. I want to know whether
    crimping a contact is something that is a secret that belongs to Conxall.
    A. It could be.
    Q. What does Conxall do to crimp a contact in the MSA Firehawk cable
    assembly and panel mount that only Conxall knows how to do? What is it?
    A. On that particular product, nothing.
    Q. Nothing.
    A. Yes.
    Q. So that part isn’t a secret, right?
    A. I believe it is, yes.”
    22
    1-14-0158
    ¶ 62   Not only does the record contain support for a finding that Conxall’s claims were
    objectively specious, it also contains support for a finding that they were brought in subjective
    bad faith. Subjective bad faith “means the action was commenced or continued for an improper
    purpose, such as harassment, delay, or to thwart competition.” 
    SASCO, 207 Cal. App. 4th at 847
    .
    Subjective bad faith is present “ ‘where a plaintiff knows or is reckless in not knowing that its
    claim for trade secret misappropriation has no merit.’ ” Contract 
    Materials, 222 F. Supp. 2d at 744
    (quoting Computer Economics, Inc. v. Gartner Group, Inc., No. 98-CV-0312 TW (CGA),
    
    1999 WL 33178020
    , at *6 (S.D. Cal. Dec. 14, 1999)). To be clear, “the test is not what the
    plaintiff believed about its objectively specious claim, but for what purpose it pursued such a
    claim.” (Emphasis in original.) Cypress Semiconductor Corp. v. Maxim Integrated Products,
    Inc., 
    236 Cal. App. 4th 243
    , 267 (Ct. App. 2015). Thus, “[i]f the court finds that a claim is
    objectively specious, and that the plaintiff made it for an improper purpose, there is no further
    requirement that the court also find a lack of ‘subjective belief in the merits of its case.’ ” 
    Id. ¶ 63
      To determine whether a claim was brought for an improper purpose, courts may consider
    “evidence of the plaintiff’s knowledge during certain points in the litigation” as well as the
    degree of speciousness of the plaintiff’s claims. JLM Formation, 
    2004 WL 1858132
    , at *2; see
    Contract 
    Materials, 222 F. Supp. 2d at 744
    . Thus, even if a claim was initially brought in good
    faith, evidence that the plaintiff later knew or gained knowledge that its claims were factually
    baseless may constitute evidence of subjective bad faith. See 
    FLIR, 174 Cal. App. 4th at 1278
    .
    In addition, the timing of the plaintiff’s lawsuit relative to other events germane to the plaintiff’s
    and defendant’s respective businesses is a relevant factor courts should consider. Id.; 
    Gemini, 95 Cal. App. 4th at 1263
    ; see also Contract 
    Materials, 222 F. Supp. 2d at 748
    (fact that plaintiff’s
    claim was brought after plaintiff learned that the defendant corporation might obtain a cash
    23
    1-14-0158
    infusion from outside investors was evidence of bad faith based on inference that the defendants
    would seek quick settlement so as to not scare off investors).
    ¶ 64    The court may also take into account evidence showing that the plaintiff used the
    litigation as a means of conveying its litigiousness to other market participants, including the
    plaintiff’s competitors as well as its business partners. See, e.g., Cypress Semiconductor Corp. v.
    Maxim Integrated Products, Inc., 
    236 Cal. App. 4th 243
    , 269 (Ct. App. 2015) (evidence showing
    that, after plaintiff dismissed its lawsuit, it issued a press release indicating its willingness to
    “ ‘file again if we perceive more unfair efforts to hire away our employees’ ” supported an
    inference that the plaintiff’s lawsuit which it later dismissed was filed for the purpose of
    inhibiting lawful conduct). And of course, the court should consider statements made by the
    plaintiff (including in the case of a business, its officers, and its employees) that shed light on the
    true reason the lawsuit was filed. See, e.g., 
    FLIR, 174 Cal. App. 4th at 1285
    (statement by the
    plaintiff’s CEO that the plaintiff “ ‘couldn’t tolerate a direct competitive threat by [respondents]
    because it would fly in the face of everything that we spent 200 million dollars to buy’ ” was
    evidence that the plaintiff’s claim was brought in bad faith).
    ¶ 65    The record contains abundant evidence that Conxall’s claims were brought in subjective
    bad faith. First, the evidence at trial established that that once Conxall began shipping product to
    MSA, MSA almost immediately began lodging complaints about the quantity and quality of
    Conxall’s shipments. By the middle of November, MSA reported to Conxall that it had two
    products returned to it that had life-threatening defects, and by January 4, MSA informed
    Conxall that it had to shut down its production line because Conxall had not shipped enough
    quality product that MSA could use. By April 4, 2008, MSA informed Conxall that it would not
    24
    1-14-0158
    purchase any more cable assemblies and panel mounts until it corrected its quality problems. In
    light of these facts, Sanchez explained at trial that Conxall was “blowing the deal” with MSA.
    ¶ 66     The record further establishes that, when MSA told Conxall that it would not place
    additional orders until it rectified its quality problems, Conxall had known for at least one day
    that iCONN was also supplying products to MSA. Accordingly, Conxall had to have known that
    it was in real jeopardy of losing MSA’s business. Armed with this awareness and knowing that
    it could not gainfully compete with iCONN in the marketplace, Conxall filed this lawsuit to (1)
    financially cripple iCONN and (2) render iCONN legally unable to compete for MSA’s business.
    The strength of this inference is underscored by the baseless nature of Conxall’s claims set forth
    above.
    ¶ 67     Second, the allegations contained in Conxall’s complaint, and MSA’s actions after the
    complaint was filed, also suggest that Conxall filed this lawsuit for the singular purpose of
    thwarting iCONN’s legitimate competition for MSA’s business. Although Conxall’s original
    complaint did not name MSA as a defendant, it nonetheless signaled that Conxall believed that
    MSA had acted wrongfully by engaging with iCONN. Specifically, Conxall’s complaint alleged
    that (1) MSA approved design changes by signing off on drawings that Conxall sent MSA, (2)
    “[e]ach and every drawing Conxall submitted to MSA acknowledged that the design was
    Conxall’s,” and (3) Conxall “never gave permission” for anyone to copy the drawings and it did
    not “give MSA authority to distribute the drawings.” Despite the fact that MSA had previously
    told Conxall it would not place any more orders until Conxall fixed its quality problems, after the
    lawsuit was filed, MSA began ordering products from Conxall again. The content of Conxall’s
    complaint, in conjunction with the chronology above, demonstrates that Conxall filed this
    lawsuit in part to signal to MSA that it was willing to litigate over the Firehawk business and that
    25
    1-14-0158
    it believed MSA breached a legal obligation it owed to Conxall. See Cypress Semiconductor
    Corp. v. Maxim Integrated Products, Inc., 
    236 Cal. App. 4th 243
    , 269 (Ct. App. 2015) (evidence
    showing that, after plaintiff dismissed its lawsuit, it issued a press release indicating its
    willingness to “ ‘file again if we perceive more unfair efforts to hire away our employees’ ”
    supported inference that the plaintiff’s lawsuit which it later dismissed was filed for the purpose
    of inhibiting lawful conduct); Contract 
    Materials, 222 F. Supp. 2d at 748
    (fact that plaintiff’s
    claim was brought after plaintiff learned that the defendant corporation might obtain a cash
    infusion from outside investors was evidence of bad faith based on inference that the defendants
    would seek quick settlement so as to not scare off investors).
    ¶ 68    Third, Conxall’s witnesses admitted that Conxall filed this lawsuit for an anticompetitive
    purpose. At trial, Bandolik testified that (1) Conxall’s parent company, Switchcraft, purchased
    Conxall for $30 million; (2) all Conxall employees are required to review an employee handbook
    that discusses confidentiality obligations; and (3) Regole, Smith, and Nelson were required to
    sign confidentiality agreements at that time of the acquisition. According to Bandolik, the
    confidentiality agreement precluded Regole, Nelson, and Smith from speaking to Conxall
    customers about custom products sold by Conxall or working on any custom products that
    Conxall had “ever made.” Similarly, Bandolik testified that the handbook “bars Conxall’s
    former employees from ever working on any of the products that Conxall has ever made” as well
    as “any product, even if Conxall didn’t make it, that performs the same product and mates
    properly with Conxall’s product.” In a similar vein, Bandolik stated that Conxall’s custom
    product customers belonged to Conxall “forever.”
    ¶ 69    This testimony shows that Conxall believed it was entitled to exist in a marketplace free
    from competition, and that when that view was shattered by the reality of iCONN’s competition,
    26
    1-14-0158
    Conxall filed this lawsuit to accomplish in court what it could not accomplish in the free
    market—defeat iCONN’s competition. See 
    FLIR, 174 Cal. App. 4th at 1285
    (statement by the
    plaintiff’s CEO that the plaintiff “ ‘couldn’t tolerate a direct competitive threat by [respondents]
    because it would fly in the face of everything that we spent 200 million dollars to buy’ ” was
    evidence that the plaintiff’s claim was brought in bad faith).
    ¶ 70   Furthermore, Bandolik admitted that he was one of the people who made the decision to
    pursue this case and candidly acknowledged that one of the reasons the case was filed was to
    “put iCONN *** out of business.” Likewise, Dunmead testified that he was one of the people
    who made the decision to file suit against iCONN and that he would “personally *** love to see
    iCONN out of business.” This testimony further supports a finding that Conxall pursued its trade
    secret claims in subjective bad faith. See FLIR 
    Systems, 174 Cal. App. 4th at 1276
    .
    ¶ 71   Fourth, Conxall’s attorneys conceded during opening statements and closing arguments
    that Conxall could not prove its claims. During his opening statement, Conxall’s attorney stated
    “[t]here may be some paths to get iCONN this proprietary and confidential information that none
    of us never know the answer to.” In line with that concession, during his closing argument,
    Conxall’s attorney repeatedly disclaimed any obligation on the part of Conxall to prove how
    iCONN allegedly misappropriated Conxall’s purportedly secret information, stating at various
    points, “[w]e don’t have to prove what that source was, although there are lots of candidates”;
    “the law doesn’t require that we tell you exactly what their sources are”; and “[i]t’s enough that
    using reasonable inferences under the law, your common sense, that you know they stole the
    designs because they’ve been caught with it in their hands.”
    ¶ 72   The law is precisely the opposite. To prove that iCONN misappropriated secret
    information, Conxall was required to show that defendants either (1) acquired Conxall’s
    27
    1-14-0158
    information by “improper means,” i.e., by “theft, bribery, breach or inducement of a breach of a
    confidential relationship or other duty to maintain secrecy or limit use, or espionage through
    electronic or other means” or (2) used Conxall’s information after acquiring it (a) by improper
    means, or (b) under circumstances giving rise to a duty on the part of defendants to maintain its
    secrecy, or (c) from someone who had a duty to maintain its secrecy. See 765 ILCS 1065/2(a),
    (b) (West 2014).
    ¶ 73   It is thus clear from the plain language of the Act that “[t]he essential element of a
    misappropriation claim is the ‘abuse of confidence or impropriety in the means of
    procurement.’ ” Trandes Corp. v. Guy F. Atkinson Co., 
    996 F.2d 655
    , 660 (4th Cir. 1993)
    (quoting Space Aero Products Co. v. R.E. Darling Co., 
    208 A.2d 74
    , 84 (Md. Ct. Spec. App.
    1965)); Contract 
    Materials, 222 F. Supp. 2d at 747
    (finding that claim was objectively specious
    because the plaintiff “failed to identify any admissible probative evidence that defendants
    acquired the Technology through improper means”); see also Restatement (First) of Torts § 757
    cmt. a (1939) (“It is the employment of improper means to procure the trade secret, rather than
    the mere copying or use, which is the basis of the liability ***.”). Thus, the specific
    circumstances under which defendants acquired or used Conxall’s allegedly secret information
    are crucial considerations in assessing whether misappropriation took place.
    ¶ 74   It is difficult to understand how, for example, Conxall could prove that iCONN induced
    someone to “breach a confidential relationship” without identifying the person or entity that it
    had a confidential relationship with and the contours of the relationship. See Contract 
    Materials, 222 F. Supp. 2d at 747
    (court examined technology transfer agreement to determine whether
    information was acquired through improper means). Accordingly, Conxall’s admission during
    its opening statement and closing argument that it could not prove how iCONN misappropriated
    28
    1-14-0158
    its allegedly secret information, coupled with Conxall’s disclaimer of responsibility thereto, is
    further evidence that Conxall brought this case in subjective bad faith.
    ¶ 75   Fifth, the record shows that Bandolik admitted that Conxall lacked a factual basis for
    many of the allegations contained in its complaint. Conxall filed pleadings on April 25 and
    August 8, 2008, and added claims on March 11, 2009. Every pleading was verified by Bandolik.
    Among other things, Conxall alleged in its amended complaint (1) that Sanchez was responsible
    for “developing” Conxall’s “manufacturing processes” in order to meet the “print specifications
    of the MSA panel and cable assemblies” and avoid quality control problems; (2) that Caldera had
    “significant input” into Conxall’s engineering designs for the cable assembly; (3) that iCONN
    hired Sanchez and Caldera “with the expectation that they would” disclose trade secrets to
    iCONN regarding Conxall’s “engineering prints” and the “confidential processes and
    procedures” that Conxall developed in order to assemble the MSA products; (4) that iCONN and
    its executives “knew or had reason to know” that, when MSA gave iCONN the product samples,
    TST files, and 2D and 3D files, that MSA had a duty to maintain that information’s secrecy; (5)
    that iCONN obtained Conxall’s trade secrets by inducing MSA to “breach the confidential
    relationship it had with Conxall”; and (6) that with respect to the Skybitz, KSI, and Hach
    products, Nelson, Regole, Smith, and Vorel misappropriated information pertaining to the design
    drawings, pricing, contracts, and manufacturing processes.
    ¶ 76   Bandolik swore to these allegations under penalty of perjury. Yet Bandolik admitted
    both during his April 27, 2012, deposition and at trial that that he lacked knowledge or a factual
    basis for many of the allegations contained in Conxall’s amended complaint. For example, when
    cross-examined, Bandolik admitted that he did not actually know what the manufacturing
    processes were that Conxall claimed were a trade secret:
    29
    1-14-0158
    “Q. And you can’t tell us specifically what manufacturing processes Conxall uses
    that Conxall claims are unknown outside of Conxall, correct?
    A. No, I cannot.”
    This concession is significant because if Bandolik could not identify what aspect of Conxall’s
    manufacturing process was a trade secret, then he could not have had a factual basis for the
    allegation that iCONN misappropriated it. See Perlan Therapeutics, Inc. v. Superior Court, 
    178 Cal. App. 4th 1333
    , 1350 (Ct. App. 2009) (“If Perlan does not know what its own trade secrets
    are, it has no basis for suggesting defendants misappropriated them.”).
    ¶ 77   Similarly, at trial, Bandolik acknowledged that he did not have firsthand or personal
    knowledge of what Sanchez or Caldera did at Conxall with respect to the Firehawk cable
    assembly and panel mount. The complaint that Bandolik verified, however, alleged that Sanchez
    helped Conxall develop the manufacturing process for the MSA products and that Caldera had
    “significant input” into Conxall’s engineering designs.
    ¶ 78   Likewise, during his deposition, Bandolik acknowledged that he did not know (1) if any
    former Conxall worker took any 2D or 3D files to iCONN or (2) how iCONN actually set up its
    assembly line to manufacture the Firehawk cable assembly and panel mount. In the complaint
    that Bandolik verified, Conxall alleged that iCONN hired Sanchez and Caldera “with the
    expectation that they would” disclose trade secrets to iCONN regarding Conxall’s “engineering
    prints” and “confidential processes and procedures.”
    ¶ 79   Moreover, during his deposition, Bandolik acknowledged that he could not identify any
    specific documentary evidence proving that iCONN and Conxall ever sold the same product to
    Hach. Likewise, with respect to KSI, Bandolik admitted during his deposition that he knew
    30
    1-14-0158
    practically nothing about the KSI products. Indeed, as the following colloquy shows, Bandolik
    had no knowledge about the KSI products:
    “Q. You said earlier there were multiple products that were at in [sic] this lawsuit
    that were being sold to Kustom Signals.
    Are all of these products—do all these products fall within the same general
    category?
    A. I don’t know.
    Q. You don’t know what the products are?
    A. No, I just—those are custom part numbers.
    Q. No, but I’m asking you about the products now that are the subject of this
    lawsuit.
    Do you know what Conxall products are the subject of this lawsuit?
    ***
    THE WITNESS: I don’t know the specific products, I just see the part numbers. They’re
    custom numbers, I would have to see the print.”
    ¶ 80   Bandolik continued along this line. The pertinent testimony reads:
    “Q. Can you tell me what is a trade secret about any of these Kustom Signals
    products?
    A. Yeah, they’re all custom part numbers.
    Q. The part numbers are the secret?
    A. *** I don’t know what, specifically are on those individual specifications, but
    they are signed off on the drawings, as far as I know.
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    Q. So they’re trade secrets because, like all of your custom products, a customer
    signed off on a drawing; is that accurate?
    A. Well, in some cases beyond that. But in this particular case, I believe, to the
    best of my knowledge, that these were custom part numbers *** that [KSI] procured
    from us. So we get that straight.
    Q. Do you have an understanding as to whether any portion of the design of the
    [KSI] part is not generally known in the industry?
    A. I don’t know.
    Q. Do you have any information as to whether any portion of the manufacturing
    process used to create the products sold to [KSI] is not generally known in the industry?
    A. I don’t know.”
    ¶ 81   Bandolik’s testimony shows a conscious awareness on his part that the allegations in
    Conxall’s pleadings were not supported by a reasonable factual basis. Under these
    circumstances, Conxall knew that its lawsuit was not filed to vindicate any legitimate legal
    rights, as Bandolik’s concessions vitiated the existence of any such rights. Simply put, if
    Bandolik did not know what was a trade secret about the KSI product, he had no basis to allege
    that iCONN misappropriated it. 
    Perlan, 178 Cal. App. 4th at 1350
    . These concessions, taken in
    conjunction with Conxall’s knowledge that it was on the cusp of losing MSA’s business and the
    timing of the lawsuit, supports the inference that Conxall filed this lawsuit in subjective bad faith
    in order to thwart iCONN’s competition and illegitimately retain MSA’s business.
    ¶ 82   For these reasons, I believe that iCONN has made an exceptionally strong case that it
    should be awarded attorney fees on remand, even under the more stringent standard adopted by
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    the majority of this panel. Having said that, I agree with Justice Rochford that the case should be
    remanded to the trial court for reconsideration of iCONN’s motion.
    ¶ 83                                      CONCLUSION
    ¶ 84   For the reasons stated in this lead opinion and the opinions of the panel members, this
    court affirms the trial court’s order denying Conxall’s various requests for posttrial relief, vacates
    the court’s order denying iCONN’s motion for attorney fees, and remands the case to the trial
    court for further proceedings. The proceedings on remand should be guided by the concurring
    opinion of Justice Rochford.
    ¶ 85   Affirmed in part, vacated in part, and remanded with directions.
    ¶ 86   PRESIDING JUSTICE ROCHFORD, specially concurring.
    ¶ 87   I concur with Justice Delort’s conclusions in parts I, II, and III of this opinion and agree
    that the judgment in favor of defendants and the denial of Conxall’s posttrial motion should be
    affirmed.
    ¶ 88   As to part IV (iCONN’s cross-appeal), I disagree (1) that the term “bad faith” found in
    section 5 of the Act should be construed under the two-prong test set forth in SASCO v. Rosendin
    Electric, Inc., 
    207 Cal. App. 4th 837
    (Ct. App. 2012); (2) that this court should express a belief,
    strong or otherwise, that Conxall’s claims were brought in bad faith (supra ¶ 33); and (3) that the
    trial court should be guided by the review of the evidence set forth above, which is dicta and was
    made under the standards of SASCO (supra ¶¶ 44-82). I would vacate the order denying
    iCONN’s motion for fees and remand to the trial court for consideration of the motion for
    attorney fees with directions as discussed below.
    ¶ 89   In its cross-appeal, iCONN argues that the trial court erred in denying its request for
    attorney fees under section 5 of the Act. That section provides that, “[i]f *** a claim of
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    misappropriation is made in bad faith ***, the court may award reasonable attorney’s fees to the
    prevailing party.” 765 ILCS 1065/5 (West 2012). Where a statute provides that a court “may”
    award attorney fees, the award lies within the discretion of the trial court and will be overturned
    only upon a showing of an abuse of discretion. Armour Swift-Eckrich v. Industrial Comm’n, 
    355 Ill. App. 3d 708
    , 711-12 (2005); Timan v. Ourada, 
    2012 IL App (2d) 100834
    , ¶ 29. An abuse of
    discretion may be found when there is an error of law. US Bank, National Ass’n v. Avdic, 
    2014 IL App (1st) 121759
    , ¶ 18.
    ¶ 90    The Act does not define the term “bad faith.” Where there is an undefined term in a
    statute, the well-settled principle of statutory interpretation requires that courts give the term its
    ordinary and commonly understood meaning. People v. Ward, 
    215 Ill. 2d 317
    , 325 (2005). Our
    review of an issue of statutory interpretation is de novo. Alvarez v. Pappas, 
    374 Ill. App. 3d 39
    ,
    43 (2007).
    ¶ 91    iCONN urges the adoption of the two-prong test set forth in SASCO for determining
    whether a claim of misappropriation has been made in “bad faith” such that the court may award
    reasonable attorney fees under section 5 of the Act. The SASCO two-prong test requires findings
    both that the plaintiff’s claim was objectively specious and maintained with subjective bad faith.
    
    SASCO, 207 Cal. App. 4th at 845
    . For several reasons, I would reject the adoption of this test.
    ¶ 92    First, section 5 of the Act plainly states that “bad faith” is the sole cornerstone for an
    award of fees to a prevailing party (765 ILCS 1065/5 (West 2012)); the provision does not
    include the term “objective speciousness.” In construing a statute, “[c]ourts may not depart from
    the plain language of a statute by reading into it exceptions, conditions, or limitations that the
    legislature did not express.” Skaperdas v. Country Casualty Insurance Co., 
    2015 IL 117021
    ,
    ¶ 15.
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    1-14-0158
    ¶ 93   Further, the SASCO court, in accepting the two-prong test, relied on the legislative
    purpose behind the fee provision 
    (SASCO, 207 Cal. App. 4th at 846
    ), which is found in the
    comment to the fee provision of the Uniform Trade Secrets Act (UTSA). That comment states
    that a fee award serves “as a deterrent to specious claims of misappropriation.” Unif. Trade
    Secrets Act § 4, Comment (2015). However, section 5 of the Act does not include a similar
    comment. Because the comment of the UTSA was not adopted by our legislature, I believe the
    comment and the case law interpreting the fee provisions of other state trade secret statutes in
    accordance with the UTSA’s comment “to be of little value.” Dass v. Yale, 
    2013 IL App (1st) 122520
    , ¶ 40 (where this court made a similar conclusion based on the fact that the legislature in
    adopting the Limited Liability Company Act (805 ILCS 180/10-10 (West 2010)), did not adopt
    the relevant comment of the Uniform Limited Liability Company Act (1996)). Instead, I would
    construe section 5 of the Act by its plain language that fees may be awarded to a prevailing party
    upon a showing of bad faith as that term is commonly understood in this state.
    ¶ 94   Finally, I note that, while federal courts have accepted the two-prong test of SASCO, state
    courts have shown a reluctance to do so in their interpretations of bad faith contained in the fee
    provisions of the trade secret acts of their states. Krafft v. Downey, 
    68 A.3d 329
    , 338 n.12 (Pa.
    Super. Ct. 2013) (“The [two-prong] test has taken hold in federal trial courts with precious little
    analysis. Without advocacy and a thorough analysis of other available alternatives, we refuse to
    join the parade.”). The superior court of Pennsylvania in Krafft, explained its refusal to adopt the
    two-prong test of SASCO, in this way:
    “[I]t does not appear that the two-prong test garners the support of the majority of
    other states that have enacted the UTSA and its attorney’s fee provision.
    [Citation.] *** As explained, our research reveals that the courts of only one
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    1-14-0158
    state—California—have adopted this test. [Citation.] The remaining states that
    have defined bad faith for the purpose of awarding attorney’s fees under the
    UTSA have not adopted a uniform test. Indeed, the only uniformity among these
    states’ tests is that each of them draws on their own state’s pre-existing test for
    defining bad faith. [Citation.]” 
    Id. at 336.
    ¶ 95    I am persuaded by the analysis of Krafft and conclude that the term “bad faith” in section
    5 of the Act should be given the preexisting definition of “bad faith” of this state.
    ¶ 96    Though no Illinois court has previously been asked to interpret “bad faith” within section
    5 of the Act, our supreme court in Krautsack v. Anderson, 
    223 Ill. 2d 541
    (2006), had the
    opportunity to announce a test for determining bad faith in the context of awarding statutory
    attorney fees to a prevailing defendant under the Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business
    Practices Act (815 ILCS 505/10a(c) (West 2004)). In Krautsack, our supreme court first held
    that when a prevailing defendant petitions the trial court for a reasonable attorney fee under
    section 10a(c) of the Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act, the defendant must
    show the plaintiff acted in bad faith. See id.; 
    Krautsack, 223 Ill. 2d at 559
    .
    ¶ 97    In considering the proper standard for judging a plaintiff’s bad faith in that context, our
    supreme court in Krautsack cited Illinois Supreme Court Rule 137 (eff. July 1, 2013), which
    states in relevant part:
    “The signature of an attorney or party constitutes a certificate by him that he has read the
    pleading, motion or other document; that to the best of his knowledge, information, and
    belief formed after reasonable inquiry it is well grounded in fact and is warranted by
    existing law or a good-faith argument for the extension, modification, or reversal of
    existing law, and that it is not interposed for any improper purpose, such as to harass or to
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    1-14-0158
    cause unnecessary delay or needless increase in the cost of litigation. *** If a pleading,
    motion, or other document is signed in violation of this rule, the court, upon motion or
    upon its own initiative, may impose upon the person who signed it, a represented party,
    or both, an appropriate sanction, which may include an order to pay to the other party or
    parties the amount of reasonable expenses incurred because of the filing of the pleading,
    motion or other document, including a reasonable attorney fee.”
    ¶ 98   Our supreme court recognized that the purpose of Rule 137 is to penalize claimants who
    bring vexatious and harassing actions and to prevent false and frivolous filings. 
    Krautsack, 223 Ill. 2d at 561-62
    . Our supreme court, however, further noted:
    “Because Rule 137 addresses the pleadings, motions and other papers a litigant
    files, the rule does not provide a sanction against all asserted instances of bad-faith
    conduct by a litigant or the litigant’s attorney during the course of litigation. [Citation.]
    *** We discern no reason why a prevailing defendant should be limited by Rule 137 in
    establishing a plaintiff’s bad faith. Rule 137, and the body of case law that has developed
    around it, provide useful guidance to litigants and judges, but a defendant’s failure to
    demonstrate bad faith by the plaintiff under Rule 137 is not fatal to a prevailing
    defendant’s fee petition under the Act.” 
    Id. at 562.
    ¶ 99   I construe Krautsack as holding that the standard for determining a party’s bad faith in
    maintaining suit that would justify an award of statutory fees is (1) whether the pleadings,
    motions and other papers which were filed by the party violated Rule 137 or (2) whether the
    party’s other conduct during the course of the litigation ran afoul of the underlying purpose of
    Rule 137, which is “to prevent abuse of the judicial process by penalizing claimants who bring
    vexatious and harassing actions” or violated other court rules. (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
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    1-14-0158
    
    Id. at 561.
    In determining whether bad faith exists in a given case, the trial court may consider
    and be guided by the body of case law construing Rule 137, but is not constrained by Rule 137.
    
    Id. at 562.
    Thus, I am not saying, in any way, that the Krautsack standard of bad faith is
    “coterminous” or stops with Rule 137 as suggested supra ¶¶ 39-42.
    ¶ 100 As our supreme court has articulated guidelines for determining bad faith in the award of
    statutory fees to a prevailing party, I believe these guidelines should be followed in the
    determination of bad faith under section 5 of the Act. See People v. Bingham, 
    2014 IL 115964
    ,
    ¶ 42 (holding that, when a statute is unclear, a court may look to similar statutes as an aid to
    construction); Midwest Rem Enterprises, Inc. v. Noonan, 
    2015 IL App (1st) 132488
    , ¶ 89 (where
    court, in considering fee provision in the Citizen Participation Act (735 ILCS 110/25 (West
    2010)), looked “to precedent involving other statutes that permit the award of fees to a successful
    party”).
    ¶ 101 The fee request was argued before the trial court under the California two-prong test for
    bad faith in SASCO, instead of under the Illinois’s preexisting test for defining “bad faith” as
    discussed in Krautsack. The trial court, in denying the fee request, referenced “bad faith” and
    “frivolous,” but not “speciousness.” It is, thus, not clear to me exactly what standard the trial
    court applied. Therefore, I would vacate the order denying iCONN’s motion for attorney fees.
    Further, because the trial court is in the best position to consider whether an award of fees is
    appropriate, I suggest the fee issue be remanded to the trial court to allow it an opportunity to
    consider whether iCONN, as a prevailing party, made a sufficient showing of bad faith on the
    part of Conxall as that term has been defined by our state courts and articulate its findings under
    that standard.
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    1-14-0158
    ¶ 102 In doing so, I understand that the able trial court, who had firsthand knowledge of this
    case and observed the witnesses and the presentation of evidence, did find that there was no bad
    faith under the arguments that were presented by the parties. Further, I do not find, nor even
    suggest, that the trial court’s findings that iCONN had not shown Conxall acted in bad faith and
    that the claims were not frivolous and its denial of iCONN’s fee request under section 5 were in
    error, only that the parties presented the wrong test for bad faith to the trial court and that it is not
    apparent from the record what standard was applied by the trial court. And, as I have stated, I do
    not agree that the trial court may or should be guided by the discussion set forth supra ¶¶ 44-82,
    which is done under the SASCO standard and which is described above (supra ¶ 38) as less strict.
    It is my belief that this discussion does not give the deference that is due to the trial court in
    determining whether a fee award is appropriate and may invade the trial court’s province to
    determine credibility.
    ¶ 103 JUSTICE HOFFMAN, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
    ¶ 104 I concur with Justice Delort’s conclusion that the trial court’s decision to give instruction
    No. 18 to the jury was not an abuse of discretion. I base my conclusion in this regard upon a
    firm belief that, taken as a whole, the instructions that the court gave fully instructed the jury on
    the relevant legal principles necessary to a resolution of the case, and the giving of instruction
    No. 18 neither misled the jury nor prejudiced Conxall.
    ¶ 105 For the reasons stated in Justice Delort’s opinion, I also agree that Conxall forfeited any
    objection to special interrogatory No. 4 by making only a general objection before the trial court
    and that the jury’s answer to special interrogatory No. 4 is not against the manifest weight of the
    evidence.
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    1-14-0158
    ¶ 106 Consequently, I too vote to affirm the judgment in favor of the defendants and the denial
    of Conxall’s posttrial motion.
    ¶ 107 I disagree, however, with both of my colleagues on the resolution of iCONN’s cross-
    appeal. Justice Delort proposes the adoption of a two-prong test consisting of objective
    speciousness and subjective bad faith for determining bad faith under section 5 of the Illinois
    Trade Secrets Act (Act) (765 ILCS 1065/5 (West 2012)). Justice Delort has cited cases decided
    by the California Appellate Court in support of his proposed test. However, as was observed by
    the Superior Court of Pennsylvania, although the two-prong test for determining bad faith in a
    trade secrets case has been widely adopted by federal district courts throughout the country, it
    has not been implemented by a reviewing court in any state other than California. Krafft v.
    Downey, 
    68 A.3d 329
    , 334-36 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2013). As the Krafft court noted, the only
    uniformity among the states such as Illinois that have adopted the Uniform Trade Secrets Act is
    that they determine “bad faith” by applying their own preexisting test for defining bad faith.
    
    Krafft, 68 A.3d at 336
    .
    ¶ 108 I agree with Presiding Justice Rochford’s analysis as to the proper standard that a trial
    judge should employ in determining bad faith under section 5 of the Act. The trial judge should
    be guided by cases construing Illinois Supreme Court Rule 137 (eff. July 1, 2013) and which
    define bad faith consistent with the underlying purpose of Rule 137. Where I disagree with
    Presiding Justice Rochford is on the need to remand this matter to the trial court for a rehearing
    on the issue of iCONN’s entitlement to an award of fees.
    ¶ 109 The record establishes that the trial court conducted a hearing on iCONN’s motion for an
    award of fees, following which the trial court entered its order denying the motion and finding
    that Conxall’s claims were not frivolous and not brought in bad faith. I find nothing in the
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    1-14-0158
    record establishing that the trial judge did not apply the standards that both Presiding Justice
    Rochford and I have held appropriate; namely, an application of the analysis of Illinois
    reviewing courts that have defined bad faith in a manner consistent with the underlying purpose
    of Rule 137. Further, from a factual standpoint, I cannot say that the trial court erred in finding
    that sufficient circumstantial evidence exists supporting its conclusion that Conxall’s claims
    were neither frivolous nor brought in bad faith. For these reasons, I am unable to find an abuse
    of discretion in the trial court’s denial of iCONN’s motion for an award of attorney fees and
    would, therefore, affirm its judgment in that regard.
    ¶ 110 Justice Delort devotes 21 pages of a 33 page opinion to detail his “view of the evidence
    and to guide the trial court on remand.” Supra ¶ 33. On the issue of the standard that the trial
    court should employ on remand when it reconsiders iCONN’s motion for an award of fees, I fail
    to see what guidance Justice Delort’s opinion gives in light of the fact that a majority of this
    panel has rejected the test for bad faith that he proposed. Further, our view of the evidence,
    either supporting or opposing an award of fees, is wholly irrelevant. As stated earlier, I would
    affirm the order denying iCONN’s motion for an award of fees, but I am not in the majority on
    that issue. Rather, the majority has vacated the circuit court’s order and remanded the matter for
    a new hearing on the motion for fees. Whether the trial court grants or denies the motion for fees
    on remand is a matter committed to its sound discretion, unencumbered at this juncture by our
    “view of the evidence.” Had Justice Delort dissented from the denial of iCONN’s motion for an
    award of fees, his “view of the evidence” would certainly be relevant. However, having voted to
    vacate the trial court’s judgment and remand the matter back to the trial court for
    reconsideration, the 17 pages which Justice Delort has devoted to his “view of the evidence”
    serves no purpose other than as an attempt to influence the trial judge’s decision on remand.
    41
    1-14-0158
    There is time enough for the members of this court to express their views of the evidence after
    the trial court has issued its order on remand and the question of its propriety is properly before
    us.
    42