Guest Post by Matthew D’Amore, Professor of the Practice, Cornell Tech and Cornell Law School.
Should a plaintiff in a trade secret case under the DTSA be required to detail its alleged trade secrets before discovery? Can a district court give the question of trade secret particularity to the jury? The Ninth Circuit’s recent decision in Quintara Biosciences v. Ruifeng Biztech rejects importing California’s pre-discovery “reasonable particularity” rule into the Defend Trade Secrets Act, reaffirming that federal law imposes no such up-front requirement. But while Quintara endorses an iterative identification process, it also embraces a problematic notion — that “reasonable particularity” is a fact question for the jury — creating new uncertainty for courts and litigants managing DTSA cases. (more…)