Court Opinion

ID: 4075695
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-09-30 06:17:00.234325+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:26:06.793916
License: Public Domain

ACCEPTED
                                                                                                       03-15-00025-CV
                                                                                                               7931339
                                                                                            THIRD COURT OF APPEALS
                                                                                                       AUSTIN, TEXAS
                                                                                                 11/20/2015 3:12:21 PM
                                     No. 03-15-00025-CV                                              JEFFREY D. KYLE
                                                                                                                CLERK

                      IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
                 FOR THE THIRD DISTRICT OF TEXAS
                           IN AUSTIN, TEXAS                  FILED IN
                                                      3rd COURT OF APPEALS
 _____________________________________________________________________
                                                           AUSTIN, TEXAS
                                                                             11/20/2015 3:12:21 PM
      LAKEWAY REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER, LLC, and SURGICAL
                                                    JEFFREY D. KYLE
           DEVELOPMENT PARTNERS, LLC (Appellants), and Clerk

      LAKE TRAVIS TRANSITIONAL LTCH, LLC, N/K/A LAKE TRAVIS
             SPECIALTY HOSPITAL, LLC (Cross-Appellant),

                                                v.

      LAKE TRAVIS TRANSITIONAL LTCH, LLC, N/K/A LAKE TRAVIS
                SPECIALTY HOSPITAL, LLC (Appellee),

      LAKEWAY REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER, LLC, and SURGICAL
         DEVELOPMENT PARTNERS, LLC (Cross-Appellees), and

       BRENNAN, MANNA, & DIAMOND, LLC, and FRANK T. SOSSI
                       (Additional Cross-Appellees).
_____________________________________________________________________

                    From the 345th Judicial District Court, Travis County, Texas
                                     No. D-1-GN-12-000983
 _____________________________________________________________________

               BRIEF OF ADDITIONAL CROSS-APPELLEES
       BRENNAN, MANNA, & DIAMOND, LLC, and FRANK T. SOSSI
_____________________________________________________________________
                                                     Robert A. Bragalone
                                                     BBragalone@gordonrees.com
                                                     Texas Bar No.: 02855850
                                                     B. Ryan Fellman
                                                     RFellman@gordonrees.com
                                                     Texas Bar No.: 24072544

                                                     GORDON & REES LLP
                                                     Suite 2800
November 20, 2015                                    2100 Ross Avenue
                                                     Dallas, Texas 75201
ORAL ARGUMENT REQUESTED                              Phone: 214-231-4660
                                                     Fax: 214-461-4053
                  IDENTITY OF PARTIES AND COUNSEL
1.    Defendant/Appellant/Cross-Appellees and Their Counsel.

      Additional Cross-Appellees have no objection to the identification of

Defendant/Appellant/Cross-Appellees and their counsel identified in the "Brief of

Cross-Appellant Lake Travis Transitional LTCH, LLC, n/k/a Lake Travis

Specialty Hospital, LLC."

2.    Plaintiff/Appellee/Cross-Appellant and Its Counsel.

      Additional Cross-Appellees have no objection to the identification of

Plaintiff, Appellee/Cross-Appellant and its Counsel identified in the "Brief of

Cross-Appellant Lake Travis Transitional LTCH, LLC, n/k/a Lake Travis

Specialty Hospital, LLC."

      However, they note that the underlined heading "Counsel for Defendant-

Cross-Appellant" at the bottom of p. ii should read "Counsel for Plaintiff-Cross-

Appellant."

3.    Defendant/Additional Cross-Appellees and their Counsel.

      Additional Cross-Appellees have no objection to the their and their counsel's

identification in the "Brief of Cross-Appellant Lake Travis Transitional LTCH,

LLC, n/k/a Lake Travis Specialty Hospital, LLC."

4.    Caption and Identification of Parties.

      Defendants Brennan, Manna, & Diamond, LLC, and its member Frank T.

Sossi, who are the attorneys who represented Defendants Lakeway Regional

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                              Page i
Medical Center, LLC, and Surgical Development Partners, LLC, in the transaction

underlying this lawsuit, were dismissed from the case before trial pursuant to a

summary judgment granted by the trial court.          Plaintiff/Cross-Appellant Lake

Travis Transitional LTCH, LLC, n/k/a Lake Travis Specialty Hospital, has

appealed that summary judgment as part of its cross-appeal against the Defendants

involved in the trial verdict.

      The result has been that Brennan, Manna, and Diamond, LLC, and Frank T.

Sossi are sometimes referred to as "Appellees," and sometimes as "Cross-

Appellees." Each may be misleading. To make it clear that these parties were not

parties to the original appeal in this matter, and that their only role is as appellees

in Plaintiff's cross-appeal, we have denominated them "Additional Cross-

Appellees" in the caption.

      Reading the submissions in this matter can be difficult because the parties

have similar-sounding names, all of the non-attorney parties are both appellant(s)

and appellee(s), and the many initialisms hinder clarity.     This Brief will refer to

the parties as follows:

Plaintiff/Appellee/Cross-Appellant                  Lake Travis
Lake Travis Transitional LTCH, LLC,
nka Lake Travis Specialty Hospital

Defendant/Appellant/Cross-Appellee                  Lakeway
Lakeway Regional Medical Center, LLC

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                                 Page ii
Defendant/Appellant/Cross-Appellee               Surgical Development (together
Surgical Development Partners, LLC               with Lakeway, "Hospital
                                                 Appellants")

Defendant/Additional Cross-Appellee              the Brennan Firm
Brennan, Manna, & Diamond, LLC

Defendant/Additional Cross-Appellee              Sossi (together with the Brennan
Frank T. Sossi                                   Firm, "Lawyer Appellees")

      "Defendants" will be used from time to time to refer to all defendants below

(Lakeway, Surgical Development, the Brennan Firm, and Sossi).

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                            Page iii
                                             TABLE OF CONTENTS
IDENTITY OF PARTIES AND COUNSEL .................................................................................. i

TABLE OF CONTENTS............................................................................................................... iv

INDEX OF AUTHORITIES......................................................................................................... vii

NOTE ON RECORD REFERENCES.............................................................................................x

STATEMENT OF THE CASE..................................................................................................... xii

STATEMENT REGARDING ORAL ARGUMENT....................................................................xv

STANDARD OF REVIEW ......................................................................................................... xvi

ISSUE PRESENTED................................................................................................................. xviii

STATEMENT OF FACTS ..............................................................................................................1

          I.        THE FACTS OF RECORD DO NOT REVEAL THE EXISTENCE,
                    MUCH LESS THE MISUSE BY THE LAWYER APPELLEES, OF
                    ANY "TRADE SECRETS."..................................................................................1

                    A.        There Is No Such Thing As a "Project File." ...........................................1

                    B.        Lake Travis's Berry Refused to Identify Trade Secrets Claimed to
                              Have Been Misappropriated by the Lawyer Defendants............................5

                    C.        Lake Travis's Trade Secret Expert R. Mark Halligan Similarly
                              Refused to Identify Misappropriated Trade Secret Information, and
                              the Trial Court Rejected His and Lake Travis's Theory of the Case. ........10

          II.       THE COURSE OF EVENTS DOES NOT PORTRAY
                    MISAPPROPRIATION BY THE LAWYER APPELLEES OF LAKE
                    TRAVIS'S "TRADE SECRETS.".......................................................................13

                    A.        The Brennan Firm and Sossi Represented Surgical
                              Development and Lakeway in the Development of Lakeway
                              Regional Medical Center. ........................................................................13

                    B.        Lake Travis Attempts to Build and Operate Lake Travis
                              Specialty Hospital, but Hits a Potentially Fatal Snag. ...........................14

                    C.        The Brennan Firm and Sossi Are Also Counsel for Health Care
                              REIT, a Partner of Lake Travis's Landlord HCN Interra, from
                              whom Sossi Learns Details of Plaintiff’s Plan to Operate Lake
                              Travis Specialty Hospital.........................................................................15

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                                                                           Page iv
                     D.         Surgical Development Signs a Letter of Intent on Behalf of
                                Lakeway with Lake Travis's Principals to Investigate a
                                Potential Transaction................................................................................17

                     E.         After Conducting Due Diligence, Lakeway Decides Not To
                                Acquire Lake Travis's Lease. ..................................................................18

                     F.         Lakeway Obtains a Mortgage Guarantee for Its Lakeway
                                Hospital Project from HUD, and Sossi Responds to Questions
                                from HUD. ................................................................................................19

                     G.         The May 10 Email Does Not Disclose or Use Any "Trade Secrets"
                                – and Lake Travis's Berry Testified that All of Sossi's Statements
                                Were False. ................................................................................................21

                     H.         Lake Travis's Other Evidence Did Not Suggest Lawyer Appellees'
                                Use of Its Trade Secrets. ............................................................................26

                     I.         Lakeway Hospital Opens; the Lake Travis Hospital Does Not. ................30

                     J.         HUD Did Not Rely on Any "Trade Secrets" Communicated by the
                                Lawyer Appellees in Issuing Lakeway's Loan Guaranty...........................31

SUMMARY OF THE ARGUMENT ............................................................................................33

ARGUMENT.................................................................................................................................35

          I.         SUMMARY JUDGMENT STANDARD: TO DEFEAT SUMMARY
                     JUDGMENT, LAKE TRAVIS WAS REQUIRED TO SHOW THAT
                     THE FACTS IN QUESTION WERE MATERIAL, AND THE ISSUES
                     GENUINE..............................................................................................................35

          II.        THE MATERIAL FACTS AS TO WHICH THERE ARE NO GENUINE
                     ISSUES ALLOW ONLY THE CONCLUSION THAT LAKE TRAVIS
                     DID NOT ESTABLISH ANY ELEMENT OF ITS CLAIM AGAINST
                     THE    ATTORNEY    APPELLEES                    FOR           TRADE               SECRET
                     MISAPPROPRIATION.........................................................................................37

                     A.         First Element: There Was No Evidence of the Identity or
                                Existence of Any Claimed "Trade Secrets." ..............................................37

                     B.         Second Element: There Was No Evidence Attorney Appellees
                                Received "Trade Secrets" from Lake Travis, or Through Breach of
                                a Relationship or Otherwise Improper Means; the Lake Travis
                                Brief's Record Citation Is to Its Own Summary Judgment Brief in
                                the Trial Court Which Itself Does Not Cite to the Record. .......................47

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                                                                                    Page v
                      C.         Third Element: There Was No Evidence that the Lawyer
                                 Appellees "Disclosed" or "Used" any "Trade Secret." ..............................50

                      D.         Fourth Element: There Was No Evidence that Lake Travis's
                                 Failure Had Any Connection with Any Activity by Lawyer
                                 Appellees....................................................................................................54

CONCLUSION..............................................................................................................................63

PRAYER........................................................................................................................................64

CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE.............................................................................................65

CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE ......................................................................................................66

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                                                                                    Page vi
                                        INDEX OF AUTHORITIES

CASES

Alliantgroup, L.P. v. Solanji, 2014 Tex.App. LEXIS 2961 (Tex.App. - Houston [1st Dist.]
     2014, no pet.)..........................................................................................................................46

Am. Steel & Supply, Inc. v. Commercial Metals, Inc., 2010 Tex.App. LEXIS 1776, *5,
    **17-18 (Tex.App. - Corpus Christi 2010, pet. denied).........................................................58

Bertolli v. C.E. Sheperd Co., 752 S.W.2d 648, 654 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.]
    1998, no writ) .........................................................................................................................41

Bishop v. Miller, 412 S.W.3d 758, 767 (Tex.App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2013, no pet.) ............41

Bohnsack v. Varco, L.P., 668 F.3d 262, 267 (5th Cir. Tex. 2012) ................................................59

Brownlee v. Brownlee, 665 S.W.2d 111, 112 (Tex. 1984). ..........................................................36

Buck v. Palmer, 381 S.W.3d 525, 527 n. 2 (Tex. 2012) ................................................................37

Cudd Pressure Control, Inc. v. Roles, 328 Fed.Appx. 961, 965 (5th Cir. 2009)...........................41

Cuidado Casero Home Health of El Paso, Inc. v. Ayuda Home Health Care Servs., LLC,
    404 S.W.3d 737 (Tex. App. - El Paso 2013, no pet.) .............................................................58

Daniels Health Sciences, LLC v. Vascular Health Sciences, LLC, 710 F.3d 579, 584 (5th
    Cir. 2013)................................................................................................................................54

Game Sys. v. Forbes Hutton Leasing, Inc., 2011 Tex. App. LEXIS 4098, **75-76
   (Tex.App.- Fort Worth 2011, no pet.) ....................................................................................45

General Insulation Co. v. King, 2010 Tex. App. LEXIS 490 (Tex. App. - Houston [14th
   Dist.] 2010, no pet.)................................................................................................................46

Gonzales v. Zamora, 791S.W.2d 258, 265 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi 1990, no writ)...............41

H.E. Butt Grocery Co. v. Moody’s Quality Meats, Inc., 951 S.W.2d 33, 36 (Tex. App.–
    Corpus Christi 1997, pet. denied)...........................................................................................53

Hyde Corp. v. Huffines, 314 S.W.2d 763 (Tex. 1958)...................................................................54

In re Bass, 113 S.W.3d 735, 739 (Tex. 2003). ..............................................................................38

KCM Fin. LLC v. Bradshaw, 457 S.W.3d 70 (Tex. 2015); KIT Projects, LLC v. PLT
   P'ship, 2015 Tex.App. LEXIS 11475, **3-4 (Tex. App. Houston [14th Dist.] 2015)...........xv

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                                                                                   Page vii
Lamont v. Vaquillas Energy Lopeno, Ltd., 421 S.W.3d 198, 210 (Tex.App. - San Antonio
   2013, no pet.)....................................................................................................................37, 55

Liggett v. Blocher, 849 S.W.2d 846, 852 (Tex.App. – Houston [1st Dist] 1993, no writ) ............36

Lina T. Ramey & Assocs. v. TBE Group, Inc., 2015 Tex.App. LEXIS 5089 (Tex.App. -
    Dallas 2015)............................................................................................................................62

Mattox v. Timmerman, 2013 Tex.App. LEXIS 10517, **2-3 (Tex. App. – Austin 2013,
    no pet.)....................................................................................................................................xv

Melendez v. Citimortgage, Inc., 2015 Tex.App. LEXIS 10260, *8 (Tex.App. - Austin
    2015, no pet.)..........................................................................................................................xv

Merriman v. XTO Energy, Inc., 407 S.W.3d 244, 248 (Tex. 2013); citations omitted..................xv

Metallurgical Indus., Inc. v. Fourtek, Inc., 790 F.2d 1195, 1202 (5th Cir. 1986).........................41

Neely v. Wilson, 2013 Tex. LEXIS 511, **10-11 (Tex. 2013)......................................................36

Paragon General Contractors, Inc. v. Larco Constr., Inc., 227 S.W.3d 876, 883-884
    (Tex.App. -- Dallas 2007, no pet.)..........................................................................................45

Parker Barber & Beauty Supply, Inc. v. Wella Corp., 2006 Tex.App. LEXIS 8841 (Tex.
    App. - Austin 2006, no pet.) ...................................................................................................46

Phan Son Van v. Pena, 990 S.W.2d 751, 753 (Tex. 1999)............................................................36

Plas-Tex, Inc. v. Jones, 2000 Tex. App. LEXIS 3188, *18 (Tex.App. - Austin 2000, pet
    denied) ....................................................................................................................................62

Plotkin v. Joekel, 304 S.W.3d 455, 487 (Tex.App. - Houston [1st Dist.] 2009, no pet.) ..............58

Rimkus Consulting Group, Inc. v. Dupre, 2001 Tex.App. LEXIS 6170, **10-11
    (Tex.App. - Houston [14th Dist.] 2001, no pet.) ....................................................................49

Rusty's Weigh Scales & Serv., Inc. v. N. Tex. Scales, Inc., 314 S.W.3d 105, 111 (Tex.
    App. - El Paso 2010, no pet.)..................................................................................................54

Security Telecom Corp. v. Meziere, 2000 Tex. App. LEXIS 1818 (Tex.App. – Dallas, no
    pet.).........................................................................................................................................46

Southwestern Energy Prod. Co. v. Berry-Helfand, 411 S.W.3d 581, 587 (Tex. App. Tyler
    2013).................................................................................................................................41, 59

Speedemissions, Inc. v. Capital C Enters., 2008 Tex.App. LEXIS 7303, **17-19
    (Tex.App. - Houston [1st Dist.] 2008, no pet.).......................................................................58

Univ. Computing Co. v. Lykes-Youngstown Corp., 504 F.2d 518 (5th Cir. 1974) ........................59

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                                                                                      Page viii
STATUTES

Medicaid and SCHIP Extension Act of 2007 (Pub.L.No. 110-173, §114(d), 121 Stat.
   2492, 2503 (2007) ............................................................................................................15, 55

Rule 166a(b), Tex.R.Civ.P.............................................................................................................35

Rule 166a(c), Tex.R.Civ.P.............................................................................................................35

Rule 166a(i), Tex.R.Civ.P..............................................................................................................36

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                                                                              Page ix
                    NOTE ON RECORD REFERENCES
      The record on appeal consists of:

      (1)    A three-volume Clerk's Record filed on May 29, 2015. It should be

noted that starting at page 201 of Volume 1 of this filing, there are 197 pages

missing if the Index is used as a guide. The result is that the Index for Volume 1 is

in error after page 200. References in this Brief will be to the numbers appearing

on the documents themselves, and not to the Index designations.

      (2)    A Supplemental Clerk's Record (titled "Clerk's Record") filed on

May 21, 2015. Note that this was filed before the main three-volume record that is

more properly denominated "Supplemental Record" (item (1) on this list), but was

filed in response to a party's request for supplementation and should be considered

"supplemental" even though filed "out of order."

      (3)    A Supplemental Clerk's Record (titled "Clerk's Record") filed on

June 18, 2015.

      (4)    A Supplemental Clerk's Record (titled "Clerk's Record") filed on

July 17, 2015.

      (5)    A Supplemental Clerk's Record (titled as such) filed on July 21, 2015.

      This Brief will cite to these filings as follows:

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                               Page x
Clerk's Record (three volumes)

 Volume 1 of 3                               CR1 ____
 Volume 2 of 3                               CR2 ____
 Volume 3 of 3                               CR3 ____

May 21, 2015, Supplemental Clerk's Record    5/21 SR ____

June 18, 2015, Supplemental Clerk's Record   6/18 SR ____

July 17, 2015, Supplemental Clerk's Record   7/17 SR ____

July 21, 2015, Supplemental Clerk's Record   7/21 SR ____

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                             Page xi
                            STATEMENT OF THE CASE
       This is a suit for damages.       It arose out of an investigation of a potential

transaction between Lake Travis Transitional LTCH, LLC ("Lake Travis" or

"Appellee"), on the one hand, and Lakeway Regional Medical Center, LLC

("Lakeway") and Surgical Development Partners, LLC ("Surgical Development";

together with Lakeway, "the Hospital Appellants"), on the other.                  Brennan,

Manna, and Diamond, LLC ("the Brennan Firm") and its member Frank T. Sossi

("Sossi"; together with the Brennan Firm, "the Lawyer Appellees") represented

the Hospital Appellants in connection with the potential transaction.

       The parties never entered into the transaction.

       Lake Travis filed suit against the Hospital Appellants, eventually alleging

breach of confidentiality provisions in a letter of intent between Lake Travis's

principals and Surgical Development and misappropriation of trade secrets. (CR1

81.)

       Over six months later, Lake Travis added the Brennan Firm and Sossi as

Defendants and expanded the causes of action to include "Participatory Liability

Theories" of vicarious and joint and several liability.                      (CR1 122.)1

       Approximately ten months later, Lake Travis amended again, adding a claim

       1
          Lake Travis also added one of the Law Firm's affiliates, Brennan, Manna, & Diamond,
P.L., as a Defendant. Lake Travis later nonsuited this entity. (Notice of Nonsuit Without
Prejudice filed May 21, 2014 [not in appellate record].) It is not a party to this appeal.

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                                     Page xii
for negligent misrepresentation. (CR1 158.)

      Lake Travis later nonsuited the Participatory Liability Theories against the

Brennan Firm and Sossi (CR3 12268), leaving only the trade secret and negligent

misrepresentation claims pending against them.

      The Brennan Firm and Sossi filed an Amended Traditional and No-Evidence

Motion for Summary Judgment based on the lack of evidence of trade secrets

under Texas law, or their communication to and use by the Lawyer Appellees.

(CR2 5229.)

      Following oral argument, the trial court granted summary judgment in favor

of the Lawyer Appellees on the remaining trade secret misappropriation and

negligent misrepresentation counts, noting that "[n]othing that could qualify as a

trade secret was 'used' as that word is defined in the case law. All of the alleged

secrets in [Lake Travis's] own presentation, are at least one step removed from any

disclosure." (CR3 12252 [letter of reasoning]; 7/17 SR 201 [order].)

      With respect to its case against the Lawyer Appellees, Lake Travis has only

cross-appealed the summary judgment with respect to the trade secret

misappropriation count.      (Brief of Cross-Appellant Lake Travis Transitional

LTCH, LLC nka Lake Travis Specialty Hospital, LLC ("LTT") ["Lake Travis

Brief"]; see "Issues Presented" at p. xiv.)

      Accordingly, with respect to the Lawyer Appellees, the only issue before the

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                           Page xiii
Court is the correctness of the trial court's summary judgment in their favor on

Lake Travis's claims of misappropriation of trade secrets.

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                         Page xiv
              STATEMENT REGARDING ORAL ARGUMENT
      The Lawyer Appellees request oral argument. The facts are unusual for a

trade secrets case, and this matter presents the additional complication of the

impact of federal loan and loan guaranty policy and practice in the hospital

services industry.

      In addition, the summary judgment record contained in the Clerk's Record

and Supplemental Records (of particular importance for the Lawyer Appellees,

since they were not involved in the trial of this cause) is very large and fragmented.

Oral argument will aid the Court in understanding the evidentiary basis for the trial

court's grant of the Lawyer Appellees' summary judgment motion.

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                               Page xv
                               STANDARD OF REVIEW
          This Court reviews summary judgments de novo. (Mattox v. Timmerman,

2013 Tex.App. LEXIS 10517, **2-3 (Tex. App. – Austin 2013, no pet.).)

          On review, the court first considers the existence of cognizable evidence:

          When a party moves for summary judgment on both traditional and
          no-evidence grounds . . . we first address the no-evidence grounds.
          That is because if the non-movant fails to produce legally sufficient
          evidence to meet his burden as to the no-evidence motion, there is no
          need to analyze whether the movant satisfied its burden under the
          traditional motion. [Merriman v. XTO Energy, Inc., 407 S.W.3d 244,
          248 (Tex. 2013); citations omitted.]

"In the interest of efficiency, however, [the Court] may review under the traditional

standard of Rule 166a(c) first if that standard is dispositive[.]" (Melendez v.

Citimortgage, Inc., 2015 Tex.App. LEXIS 10260, *8 (Tex.App. - Austin 2015, no

pet.).)

          When considering the appeals from the grant of hybrid motions, especially

where the trial court has not distinguished between the forms in rendering

summary judgment, the reviewing court will itself frequently analyze the trial

court's decision without distinguishing between the forms of motion, as both focus

on the presence vel non of disputed facts. (See, e.g., KCM Fin. LLC v. Bradshaw,

457 S.W.3d 70 (Tex. 2015); KIT Projects, LLC v. PLT P'ship, 2015 Tex.App.

LEXIS 11475, **3-4 (Tex. App. Houston [14th Dist.] 2015) ("When, as in this

case, the order granting summary judgment does not specify the grounds upon

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                                Page xvi
which the trial court relied, we must affirm the summary judgment if any of the

independent summary-judgment grounds is meritorious.").)

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                       Page xvii
                              ISSUE PRESENTED
      ON LAKE TRAVIS'S APPEAL OF THE SUMMARY JUDGMENT IN
                FAVOR OF THE LAWYER APPELLEES

                 (PART OF LAKE TRAVIS'S CROSS-APPEAL)

      Did the trial court commit reversible error in granting the Lawyer Appellees'

"Traditional and No-Evidence Motion for Summary Judgment" on Lake Travis's

cause of action against them for misappropriation of trade secrets?

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                          Page xviii
                              STATEMENT OF FACTS
       By the time it comes to this brief, the Court will already have seen the

other parties' chronological accounts of the failure of the Lake Travis project.

We will provide our own account in Section II.             We begin, however, by

zeroing in on the summary judgment record on the issues critical to Lake

Travis's failed claim against the Lawyer Appellees.

I.     THE FACTS OF RECORD DO NOT REVEAL THE EXISTENCE,
       MUCH LESS THE MISUSE BY THE LAWYER APPELLEES, OF
       ANY "TRADE SECRETS."

       A.     There Is No Such Thing As a "Project File."
       The phrase "Project File" appears in the Lake Travis Brief 41 times, and

an additional 15 times in the Declaration of Robert Berry ("Berry

Declaration") attached to it (as Appendix 7; from CR2 7604ff). Lake Travis

capitalizes it, as if it is an actual thing.

       As far as the operative facts of this case go, it is not.

       Neither the phrase nor the concept of "Project File" appears anywhere in

the record until well into the course of litigation.

       The birth of the "Project File" came about like this:

       The claim against the Lawyer Appellees was limited to trade secrets.

There was no claim that they breached the "Confidentiality" provision of the

Letter of Intent ("LOI") between Lake Travis's principals and Surgical

Development, which defined "Proprietary Information" as "all information

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                           Page 1
disclosed by any Party or its Representatives at any time to any other Party or

its Representatives in connection with the Project in any manner[.]" (CR1 29.)

So the issues with which the Brennan Firm and Sossi were contending did not

relate to the universal definition of "Proprietary Information" in the LOI, but

only to that information which qualified as actual trade secrets.

       Throughout the discovery process, the Lawyer Appellees sought to have

Lake Travis identify the embodiment, or even the substantive content, of the

trade secrets Lake Travis claimed they had misappropriated. It proved to be a

struggle. Subsection (B) next will describe Lake Travis's interrogatory

response listing generic categories of information and Lake Travis's Chief

Executive Officer and Managing Member Robert Berry's outright refusal to

answer questions on Defendants' claimed use of any "secret" within any of

these categories. On January 14, 2014, the Lawyer Appellees filed a motion to

compel interrogatory answers identifying specific trade secrets alleged to have

been wrongfully misused or disclosed, among other things.             (CR2 6639

[referring to the filing].)

       A week later, on January 21, 2014, Defendants deposed Plaintiff's

designated expert, Chicago lawyer R. Mark Halligan.                 Lake Travis's

designation of Halligan stated that he would testify "that the information

provided by [Lake Travis] to Defendants constituted its trade secrets and that

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                            Page 2
Defendants misappropriated [Lake Travis's] trade secrets."       (5/21 SR 86.)

(More on Halligan in Subsection (C) below.) At his deposition, he testified

that he hadn't actually looked at any documents or other information – instead,

he had only reviewed Lake Travis's interrogatory answers. Included in his

testimony was this puzzling passage – but his conclusion was clear:

      I also determined from my review of the relationship and all of the
      confidentiality surrounding the relationship that the – that the
      entire project, which I have referred to as the project file based –
      based upon the agreement that was entered into on May 11, 2009,
      where the parties define confidential information, [Lake Travis]
      may furnish [Surgical Development] with certain confidential
      nonpublic and/or proprietary information concerning a certain
      project – in Texas called "the project," [Surgical Development]
      may furnish [Lake Travis] with proprietary information concerning
      the business that this was defined as "the project" and at the
      combination or compilation level of – of – of – of the status of
      information as a trade secret, that the entire project as a whole
      constitutes a protectable trade secret. [5/21 SR 164-165; emphases
      supplied.]

      He had not misspoken; his position really was that the entire Lake Travis

project was a trade secret, consistent with Lake Travis's position on appeal that

everything surrounding Lake Travis and the Lake Travis Hospital, no

exceptions, is a trade secret. This was the first mention of anything called a

"project file" or the identification of the entire Lake Travis project as a trade

secret. Halligan admitted he had not seen the "project file" because it was

"broken up into bits and pieces." (5/21 SR 166.) "I'm not quite sure how it's

stored," he testified. (Id.) Halligan assumed that the "trial lawyers" would

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                           Page 3
compile the information into a physical compilation at some point so that they

could "mark the project file as an exhibit for trial."

      And that is exactly what Lake Travis's "trial lawyers" did. A month

later, on February 21, 2014, Lake Travis filed its "Objections and Second

Supplemental Responses" to the Lawyer Appellees' interrogatories. At the

same time, it produced 2,033 pages that it called, for the first time, the "Project

File," capital P, capital F. The interrogatory response not only confirmed that

it was assembled by Lake Travis not in furtherance of the hospital project but

only of its litigation position, it also made the same claim for the Project File

that Halligan had made for the Lake Travis project itself:

      In further supplemental response to Interrogatory No. 3, [Lake Travis]
      is producing a set of Documents that were furnished to Defendants in
      connection with the "Project" (as defined by the parties in their
      agreements) and/or that evidence or reflect knowledge Defendants
      gained in the Project discussions or in the negotiation and
      development process for the Project. Collectively, [Lake Travis] refers
      to this set of documents as the "Project File." The Project File includes
      information furnished by [Lake Travis] and also by any third party
      who was included in the Project discussions as agreed by the parties.
      In response to this interrogatory, [Lake Travis] has gathered the
      Project File and organized the Project File into sub-files identified by
      slipsheets.

      * * *

      [Lake Travis] contends that the Project File in its entirety constitutes,
      evidences, or reflects trade secrets of Lake Travis because it was a
      compilation of information used in [Lake Travis's] business that gave
      [Lake Travis] a competitive advantage over those who did not know it
      or use it. [CR2 5505-06; emphases supplied.]

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                               Page 4
Lake Travis principal Robert Berry advanced a similar description in his

declaration opposing the summary judgment motion. (CR2 7604ff.) (The

Berry declaration, the centerpiece of Lake Travis's appeal of the trade secret

misappropriation summary judgment, will be discussed in detail in the

Argument.)

      The Court's attention is respectfully directed to Lake Travis's and

Halligan’s use of the word "compilation."        This is noteworthy in light of

authorities that identify "compilations" as a variety of trade secret. Without

argument at this point, the Lawyer Appellees respectfully note that the Project

File was not a "compilation" that existed during the period in which the

operative facts of this case took place. Berry testified in an affidavit that "the

trade secret comprised of the Project File is reflected in its unique

combination" (CR1 2025). It follows that the "Project File" could not have

been a "trade secret" because that "unique combination" did not come about

until Lake Travis assembled it after the litigation was well underway.

      B.     Lake Travis's Berry Refused to Identify Trade Secrets Claimed to
             Have Been Misappropriated by the Lawyer Defendants.
      There is no other evidence that the Brennan Firm and Sossi acquired any

"trade secrets" from Lake Travis that became the subject of an improper use or

disclosure. In his first sworn answer to Lawyer Appellees' interrogatory asking for

identification of "all of [Lake Travis's] trade secrets that you claim [the Lawyer

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                             Page 5
Defendants] misappropriated and/or unlawfully disclosed to a third party," Berry,

who was Lake Travis's CEO and Managing Member (and only living principal –

Keith McDonald passed away in 2011) responded:

      The confidential and proprietary information and trade secrets
      misappropriated and improperly communicated and disclosed
      included [Lake Travis's] architectural plans; program design; financial
      information; hospital organization; mission; staff recruitment and
      retention; sources and uses of funds and other "cost based"
      information; preliminary financial feasibility and other information
      about projected revenues and costs for the initial operation of [Lake
      Travis]; and preliminary financial feasibility ratios and other
      information about projected key operational ratios of [Lake Travis].
      [CR2 5499.]

      However, at his deposition on August 8, 2013, when asked about these

generic categories, Berry:

           Testified that he had never met Frank Sossi and only spoken with him

            on three telephone conference calls that related to negotiations on the

            LOI and the release of escrow funds – not trade secrets. (CR2 5371.)

           Testified that he had no knowledge of anything that Frank Sossi, or

            any other Defendant, discussed in meetings with HUD. (CR2 5373-

            75.)

           Testified that he had no knowledge of whether Sossi misappropriated

            any of those claimed Lake Travis trade secrets, other than what his

            attorneys told him, refusing to answer direct questions as to

            misappropriation of information from the very categories of

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                             Page 6
          documents he listed in his previously sworn interrogatory answer,

          upon instruction from counsel:

          Q.    So, other than information learned from your attorneys, you
                have no outside knowledge [of trade secret misappropriation]?

                A.    None that I recall. [CR25375.]

                                    * * * *

          Q.    * * * And when is the first time that you believe that Frank
                Sossi disclosed any [Lake Travis] trade secret to anybody.

          A.    I would not – I'm not able to – I'm not going to share that
                information with you as that is privileged. [CR2 5377.]

                                    * * * *

          Q.    Do you have any personal knowledge as to whether Frank Sossi
                ever disclosed [Lake Travis's] architectural plans to HUD?

                      [Form objection omitted.]

          A.    I'm not able to answer that question.

          Q.    Why not?

                      MR. KUCZAJ: You can answer to the extent that you
                      won't disclose your conversations with counsel.

          A.    I'm unable to answer the question.

          Q.    Do you have any personal knowledge as to whether Frank Sossi
                ever disclosed [Lake Travis's] program design to HUD?

                      MR. KUCZAJ: Same instruction.

          A.    Same answer.

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                       Page 7
          Q.   * * * Do you have any personal knowledge as to whether
               Frank Sossi ever disclosed [Lake Travis's] financial information
               to HUD?

                     MR. KUCZAJ: Same instruction.

          A.   Same answer.

          Q.   Do you have any personal knowledge as to whether Frank Sossi
               ever shared [Lake Travis's] hospital organization with HUD?

                     MR. KUCZAJ: Same instruction.

          A.   Same answer.

          Q.   Do you have any personal knowledge as to whether Frank Sossi
               ever shared [Lake Travis's] mission with HUD?

                     MR. KUCZAJ: Same instruction.

          A.   Same answer.

          Q.   Do you have any personal knowledge as to whether Frank Sossi
               ever shared [Lake Travis's] staff recruitment and retention with
               HUD?

                     MR. KUCZAJ: Same instruction.

          A.   Same answer.

          Q.   Do you have any personal knowledge as to whether Frank Sossi
               ever shared the sources and uses of funds and other cost-based
               information of [Lake Travis] to HUD?

                     MR. KUCZAJ: Same instruction.

          A.   Same answer.

          Q.   Do you have any personal knowledge as to whether Frank Sossi
               ever shared preliminary financial feasibility and other

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                         Page 8
                    information about projected revenues and costs for the initial
                    operation of [Lake Travis] with HUD?

                          MR. KUCZAJ: Same instruction.

             A.     Same answer.

             Q.     And finally, do you have any personal knowledge of whether
                    Frank Sossi ever shared [Lake Travis's] preliminary financial
                    feasibility ratios and other information about projected key
                    operational ratios of [Lake Travis] with HUD?

                          MR. KUCZAJ: Same instruction.

             A.     Same answer. [CR2 5377-5380; emphases supplied.]

Counsel for the Lawyer Appellees tried to get at the material facts for Lake

Travis's trade secret claim in a different way, with the same results:

             Q.     What specific trade secret of [Lake Travis] do you believe was
                    shared with HUD which HUD relied on to issue a guarantee to
                    [Lakeway]?

                          [Form objection omitted.]

             A.     I'm not going to answer that question because I would have
                    obtained that information from my attorney.

                          [Colloquy omitted; Lakeway counsel repeats the
                          question:]

             Q.     What specific trade secret of [Lake Travis] do you believe was
                    disclosed to HUD that HUD relied on to determine whether or
                    not to issue a guarantee to [Lakeway]?

                          [Form objection and instruction not to answer omitted.]

             A.     I will not answer that question. (CR2 5381-82.)

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                             Page 9
      C.     Lake Travis's Trade Secret Expert R. Mark Halligan Similarly
             Refused to Identify Misappropriated Trade Secret Information,
             and the Trial Court Rejected His and Lake Travis's Theory of the
             Case.
      Plaintiff’s sole "trade secret" expert (in fact – after Berry's refusal to answer

– the sole witness Lake Travis offered to testify on the identity of trade secrets and

their misappropriation by the Lawyer Appellees) R. Mark Halligan is not

mentioned in the Lake Travis Brief.

      Recall that Lake Travis's designation of Halligan stated that he would

testify "that the information provided by [Lake Travis] to Defendants

constituted its trade secrets and that Defendants misappropriated [Lake

Travis's] trade secrets." (5/21 SR 86.) The "project file" Halligan mentioned

for the first time in his January 21, 2014, deposition was then assembled by

Lake Travis and produced to Defendants on February 21 as the "Project File."

Defendants were allowed to redepose Halligan on April 11.

      He testified in his depositions:

             (1) Despite the fact that the hastily-assembled "Project File" was

      only days old at that point, he testified that it was a "unique combination

      and protectable as a trade secret." (5/21 SR 177-78.) (Robert Berry

      testified to the same effect in the Berry Declaration; see Argument,

      Subsection II(A), CR2 7609.)

             (2)   Halligan contended that all information Defendants were

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                               Page 10
     provided was a trade secret, which he called "confidential project

     information," based on his reading of the LOI (5/21 SR 184) – to which

     the Lawyer Appellees were not parties and which Lake Travis was not

     charging them as having breached. In fact, Halligan went even further,

     testifying that "that entire project as a whole constitutes a trade secret."

     (5/21 SR 164-165.)

           (3)   He had never read Sossi's deposition or affidavits (read no

     depositions at all other than Berry's before his second deposition); he

     could not identify any information other than Sossi's own May 10 Email

     (discussed in Section (B)(6) below, sent over two months after HUD

     guaranteed Lakeway’s loan), that the Lawyer Appellees had supplied to

     HUD; and he had not analyzed any document included in the "Project

     File." (5/21 SR 154-56, 167, 187-88, 189-90, 191, 193-96.)

           (4)   He did not review the "Project File" prior to his first

     deposition. (5/21 SR 116.) He testified that he did not need to review

     the information to determine if it was a trade secret. (5/21 SR 145-46.)

           (5) Halligan's sole criterion for whether any information was a

     trade secret – which he repeatedly reaffirmed – was whether it fell into

     one of Lake Travis's categories of generic information in its interrogatory

     answers quoted in Subsection (B) above. If Lake Travis said it was a

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                          Page 11
      trade secret in its interrogatory answer, then, according to Halligan, any

      document falling within the generic category was a trade secret. (5/21 SR

      147-49.)    For example, when asked if the adequacy of Lake Travis

      Hospital parking was a trade secret, he responded: "I would go to the

      answers to interrogatories . . . to see whether or not the adequacy of

      the parking . . . has been defined by the plaintiff as a specific alleged

      trade secret at issue in this litigation." (5/21 SR 150.) More generally,

      he testified that in determining whether anything in the case was a trade

      secret "the analysis I have done is to look at how the plaintiff has defined

      the alleged trade secrets at issue." (5/21 SR 33-34 [excerpted in brief;

      record cite in brief is in error].)

             (6) Halligan agreed to testify that what Lake Travis's counsel told

      him they thought were trade secrets were, in fact, trade secrets, and were,

      in fact, misappropriated, during his first phone conference with Lake

      Travis counsel, before he had reviewed (or declined to review) any of the

      evidence in this case, and before he was even retained. (5/21 SR 170-

      72.)

      The trial court rejected Halligan's testimony on the designated topics and

his theory of the case.      On July 16, 2014, the trial court issued an order

forbidding Halligan from testifying that "(a) the information provided by [Lake

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                           Page 12
Travis] to Defendants constituted trade secrets, or (2) that Defendants

misappropriated [Lake Travis's] trade secrets." (CR3 12262.)

                                     *      *   *

      To summarize: (1) the "Project File" was a creation of Lake Travis that

was not "compiled" or produced to Defendants until well into the course of

litigation; (2) Lake Travis repeatedly refused to identify its supposedly

misappropriated trade secrets except in the most generic way; and (3) its

"expert" on the subject knew almost nothing about the record in the case and

could identify no specific information that was either a "trade secret" or

misappropriated.

      The empty trial court record on "trade secrets" is fully consistent with the

events of the case in which the Lawyer Appellees participated.

II.   THE COURSE OF EVENTS DOES NOT PORTRAY
      MISAPPROPRIATION BY THE LAWYER APPELLEES OF
      LAKE TRAVIS'S "TRADE SECRETS."
      The record on the underlying facts of this case contains no mention of

the "Project File" or any "project file."

      A.     The Brennan Firm and Sossi Represented Surgical
             Development and Lakeway in the Development of Lakeway
             Regional Medical Center.
      Defendant      Surgical    Development        Partners,   LLC   ("Surgical

Development") develops hospitals and outpatient surgery centers.            (CR2

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                           Page 13
5288.) In March, 2008, Surgical Development, as agent for Lakeway Regional

Medical Center, LLC ("Lakeway"), began developing a general acute care

hospital in Lakeway, Texas that would be known as "Lakeway Regional

Medical Center" ("Lakeway Hospital"). (CR2 5289.) The law firm Brennan,

Manna, & Diamond, LLC ("the Brennan Firm") represented Surgical

Development and Lakeway. (CR2 5306-5307, 5291.) Brennan Firm attorney

Frank Sossi ("Sossi") was Surgical Development's and Lakeway’s lead counsel

for the development of Lakeway Regional Medical Center. (CR2 5326, 5287.)

      B.    Lake Travis Attempts to Build and Operate Lake Travis
            Specialty Hospital, but Hits a Potentially Fatal Snag.
      Lake Travis Transitional LTCH, LLC ("Lake Travis"), was formed to

develop and operate a health care facility in Lakeway, Texas, to be called Lake

Travis Specialty Hospital ("Lake Travis Hospital"). Lake Travis Hospital was

originally designed and built as a long-term acute care hospital ("LTACH"). (CR2

5340-41.) In order to finance the project, LTT entered into a ground lease with

HCN Interra Lake Travis LTACH, LLC ("HCN Interra"). (CR2 5349, 5351.)

Under the terms of the lease, HCN Interra would own the building of Lake Travis

Hospital. (CR2 5348, 5349, 5352-53.)

      Construction of Lake Travis Hospital began in August 2008. (CR2 5349.)

However, storm clouds had already begun to gather over the project. In 2007,

Congress enacted the Medicaid and SCHIP Extension Act of 2007 (Pub.L.No. 110-

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                         Page 14
173, §114(d), 121 Stat. 2492, 2503 (2007) (together with applicable regulations,

"Act"), placing a moratorium on the licensure of new long-term health care

facilities, such as LTACHs. Lake Travis determined that its ability to get a license

as an LTACH was in doubt under the "grandfathering" provisions of the Act and

that, among other reasons, was why it decided to abandon its original strategy and

instead to pursue licensure as a general (as opposed to a long-term) acute care

hospital. (CR2 5360-64.)

       C.     The Brennan Firm and Sossi Are Also Counsel for Health
              Care REIT, a Partner of Lake Travis's Landlord HCN
              Interra, from whom Sossi Learns Details of Plaintiff’s Plan to
              Operate Lake Travis Specialty Hospital.
       But that strategy prompted by the Act created another problem for Lake

Travis, because its two principals – Robert Berry and Keith McDonald

("Berry" and "McDonald") – did not have recent experience working at a

general acute care facility, and had never developed one.2 Thus, in late 2007 or

early 2008, a real estate investment trust named Health Care REIT, one of the

joint venturers who founded Lake Travis's landlord HCN Interra, retained the

Brennan Firm to provide legal advice on the impact the Act's LTACH

moratorium would have on the development of Lake Travis Specialty Hospital.

       2
         See Lakeway Regional Medical Center, LLC's and Surgical Development Partners,
LLC's Opening Appellant's Brief ("Lakeway Appellants' Brief") at 2, second full paragraph,
adopted by reference with record citations pursuant to Rule 9.7, Tex.R.Civ.P. ("Any party may
join in or adopt by reference all or any part of a brief, petition, response, motion, or other
document filed in an appellate court by another party in the same case.").

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                                      Page 15
(CR2 5311, 5313-5316.) Sossi was the Brennan Firm's attorney who provided

the legal advice. (CR2 5312.)

      To assist Sossi in that engagement, Health Care REIT – not Lake Travis

– provided Sossi with Lake Travis's timeline for the completion of Lake Travis

Specialty Hospital and Plaintiff’s spreadsheet of incurred expenses.        (CR2

5319-20.) Sossi also independently gathered information about Plaintiff from

public records, such as governmental filings and Health Care REIT's public

website. (CR2 5316-18.) At his deposition, Sossi noted that site plans for Lake

Travis Hospital were the subject of "government filings." (CR2 5317.) Sossi

was experienced in this area, having been working with Health Care REIT on a

number of other similar projects not involving Lake Travis that were in the

development phase. (CR2 5316.)

      In March 2009, Health Care REIT contacted Frank Sossi regarding whether

Surgical Development/Lakeway would have any interest in acquiring Lake

Travis's leasehold rights pursuant to the HCN Interra lease. The email from

Health Care REIT is an example of the kind of detailed information Health Care

REIT – one of the joint venturers who founded Lake Travis's landlord HCN Interra

– was conveying to the Lawyer Appellees before the latter had any contact with the

"third party" – Lake Travis – mentioned in this email:

      Construction should be completed in 1Q10, approx February. Yes it
      was built to be an LTACH, but it was built to Texas acute care

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                           Page 16
      standards, not specialty hospital standards, so it could be operated as a
      short stay hospital without additional licensure-related costs. There are
      2 ORs, imaging space, lab space, 6 ICU beds, etc. Can be expanded
      horizontally by 12-20k sq ft – trying to confirm the exact number.
      Probably [sic; room?] for additional OR's if you wanted to operate the
      building as a hospital. We own the parcel next door – planned for
      approx 50k sq ft of medical office. So although the hospital itself is
      only 55k sq ft today, most outpatient and administrative services could
      be put in the MOB.

      We have a signed lease with a third party, so we don't exactly control
      this one, but recent Medicare related LTACH issues have caused us to
      consider alternatives. [CR2 5400.]

      Lakeway did have an interest in acquiring the lease, thinking that it might

use the site as an initial campus for Lakeway Hospital. (CR2 5321.) Lakeway had

its own concerns over the possibility that the new Patient Protection and

Affordable Care Act would include a ban on physician-owned hospitals like its

own planned Lakeway Hospital.        (Lakeway Appellants' Brief at 3, first full

paragraph with record citations; Rule 9.7, Tex.R.App.P.) As a result of Health

Care REIT's initiative, in late April 2009 Surgical Development (on behalf of

Lakeway) contacted Lake Travis to initiate discussions on taking over the Lake

Travis lease and improvements. (CR1 154.)

      D.    Surgical Development Signs a Letter of Intent on Behalf of
            Lakeway with Lake Travis's Principals to Investigate a
            Potential Transaction.
      On September 15, 2009, Surgical Development, as a disclosed agent for

Lakeway, executed a letter of intent ("LOI") with Lake Travis's principals

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                             Page 17
Berry and McDonald for the "acquisition of the lease." (CR2 5403, 5372.)

Sossi represented Surgical Development and Lakeway in the drafting of the LOI.

(CR2 5323.) The potential transaction described in the LOI was subject to

multiple material conditions, including approval by Lakeway's Board of

Managers; landlord HCN Interra's approval of the lease assignment; Lakeway's

ability to obtain funding; and a "reasonable due diligence process related to the

feasibility of the Facility to serve as a campus for a general acute care hospital

as configured or reasonably modified." (CR2 5403-09.)

      The confidentiality provision of the LOI defines all information to be

exchanged by the parties as "Proprietary Information." (CR2 5405-06.) The

LOI does not suggest expressly or by implication that all or any of that

information is a "trade secret" as defined by Texas law.

      Neither the Brennan Firm nor Sossi were parties to the LOI. They were

not charged with its breach in the trial court.

      E.    After Conducting Due Diligence, Lakeway Decides Not To
            Acquire Lake Travis's Lease.
      From September 15, 2009, through March, 2010, Lakeway performed a

due diligence investigation pursuant to the LOI. In March 2010, Lakeway

decided not to consummate the potential transaction, because of the excessive

expense required to convert the facility from its original LTACH design to a

full-service general acute care hospital.         In addition, Lakeway and Lake

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                           Page 18
Travis's landlord's principal Health Care REIT could not agree upon the terms

of the modified lease that would have to have been executed if the proposed

transaction had been completed. There was also uncertainty over whether

Lakeway's major investor would advance additional funds to finance the

development at the Lake Travis site. (CR2 5291-94, 5295-96, 5324, 5325.)

These issues, plus the regulatory uncertainty regarding Housing and Urban

Development ("HUD") approval, ultimately caused Lakeway's Board of Managers

to reject the proposed transaction. On March 22, 2010, HCN notified Plaintiff that

LRMC had elected not to complete the transaction. (CR2 5295-96, 5487-88.)

      At this point – March 2010 – no person associated with Lakeway or Surgical

Development had provided any information, trade secret or otherwise, to HUD

about Lake Travis or Lake Travis Hospital. (CR2 5539.)

      F.    Lakeway Obtains a Mortgage Guarantee for Its Lakeway
            Hospital Project from HUD, and Sossi Responds to Questions
            from HUD.
      Nothing in the LOI, expressly or by implication, obligated Lakeway to cease

its own efforts to develop Lakeway Hospital. (CR2 5403-09.)

      In March 2010, HUD committed to guarantee Lakeway's construction loan

for Lakeway Hospital (CR2 5417) through a program designed to encourage the

development of hospitals in underserved areas. (Lakeway Appellants' Brief at 7,

first two full paragraphs with record citations; Rule 9.7, Tex.R.App.P.)     After

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                            Page 19
receiving a complaint from the CEO of another area hospital that the area was not

underserved because Lake Travis Hospital was also underway (Lake Travis was

obviously not a secret to the medical services community), HUD e-mailed

Lakeway's primary lender with eight general questions about Lake Travis Hospital.

(CR2 5419.)

      On May 10, 2010, Sossi attempted to answer those questions in an email to

the responsible HUD official, Robert Deen ("Deen"). (CR2 5422; "the May 10

Email".) When responding to HUD’s questions, Sossi did not rely upon any of

LTT’s confidential, proprietary, or purported "trade secret" information, in this or

in subsequent communications with HUD.             Instead, as illustrated above in

Subsection (C), Sossi learned a great deal of information about Lake Travis and the

proposed Lake Travis Hospital not from Lake Travis, but from a principal of Lake

Travis's landlord (Health Care REIT, who the Brennan firm also represented) and

publicly available documents, as he testified in his affidavit:

      As part of the process of developing Lakeway Regional, I learned
      information about Lake Travis Specialty Hospital ("Lake Travis
      Hospital") from conversations with Health Care REIT and from
      publicly available documents. As early as March 2008, I was
      communicating with Health Care REIT, and Health Care REIT
      provid[ed] information to me about [Lake Travis] and Lake Travis
      Hospital, including financial information. I also learned information
      regarding Lake Travis Hospital through my representation of Health
      Care REIT, which occurred prior to [Lakeway's] consideration of the
      acquisition of the Lake Travis Hospital lease.

      On May 10, 2010, I responded to an e-mail from HUD and provided

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                             Page 20
      my view of certain questions HUD had regarding [Lake Travis] and
      the proposed Lake Travis Hospital. I subsequently sent additional
      correspondence to HUD. In corresponding with HUD on May 10,
      2010, and afterward, I did not rely upon any of [Lake Travis's]
      Proprietary Information [i.e., as defined in the LOI], trade secrets, or
      other confidential information. Any information conveyed to about
      [Lake Travis] or Lake Travis Hospital on May 10, 2010, and afterward
      resulted from information obtained from Health Care REIT and from
      publicly available sources. [CR2 5494.]

      G.    The May 10 Email Does Not Disclose or Use Any "Trade Secrets"
            – and Lake Travis's Berry Testified that All of Sossi's Statements
            Were False.
      The Court's attention is invited to the May 10 Email, which is the

centerpiece of Lake Travis's claims against the Lawyer Appellees:

      Sossi begins by providing information on the history, number of beds, and

medical specialty not of Lake Travis, but of Westlake Hospital, the one that

complained about the HUD loan guarantee (suggesting that information of this sort

about hospitals is not exactly secret).     He next reviews Lakeway's actions

investigating the impact of Lake Travis's legislative problems (themselves not a

trade secret) on Lakeway, and Lakeway's consideration of its own potential use of

the facility. He states that he is "not aware" of any request for a zoning change or

plans for parking or traffic impact studies "required for the conversion process."

(CR2 5422.) No Lake Travis trade secrets here.

      Sossi then responds to the eight questions HUD was asking.

      In answer to the first question, Sossi discusses the size, number of beds, the

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                             Page 21
kind of information he was receiving in the very first communication from Health

Care REIT, consistent with his affidavit testimony that he did get this type of

information from Health Care REIT. This information was also publicly available

from a Lake Travis engineers report filed with the City of Lakeway and disclosed

by its mayor, described below in Subsection (H). Sossi mentions the location of

the facility, the size of the parking lot, the publicly-available information on zoning

and lack of zoning changes. He states his view that parking is inadequate and that

conversion would "cost a great deal of money" and that there were "code issues."

(CR2 5423.) As will be seen in this Subsection below, the evidence is that none of

these opinions or topics was a trade secret.

      In questions 2, 3, and 4, Sossi passes along the name of the Lake Travis

development, its joint-venture history, and ownership. Question 5 repeats the

information on the size of the hospital and expresses the opinion that "limited

imaging" would cause issues for an acute care facility. Question 6 notes the

existence of the finance lease, information Sossi received from Health Care REIT

before he even knew Lake Travis's name. Question 7 asked if Lake Travis was

really going to open in summer 2010, and Sossi replies that "we do not believe so."

In HUD's final question 8, it asks about Lake Travis's medical staff, and Sossi

replies "none that we are aware of." (Id.)

      As Sossi testified, this information is all either publicly available (or

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                               Page 22
available to anyone viewing the project and in any event not secret) or provided to

him by a party with a keen interest in the success of Lake Travis, its landlord's

principal Health Care REIT. And the rest of it is Sossi's opinion.

      But the most dramatic demonstration contained in the summary judgment

record that none of these items is a "trade secret" is Lake Travis's CEO Robert

Berry's testimony that it is Lake Travis's position that Sossi's information and

opinions about Lake Travis Hospital in the May 10 Email were false or inaccurate

or never provided to Lakeway or Surgical Development (recall Berry's testimony

cited in Subsection (I)(B) above that he never met or spoke to Sossi other than

about the LOI):

             That Lake Travis missed the deadline to qualify as an LTAC. (CR2

              5359 ["I don't believe that's an accurate portrayal."].)3

             That the Lake Travis facility, in the fall of 2009 and the spring of

              2010, had numerous code violations (CR2 5364 ["Q: Was it true that

              the Lake Travis facility had numerous code violations in the fall of '09

              and the spring of '10? A: No."].) ;

             That conversion of Lake Travis Hospital to true general acute care

              hospital would cost a great deal of money. (CR2 5365 ["Q: Did

              anyone at Lake Travis ever provide information to [Lakeway or

      3
          Form objections omitted in these bullet-point excerpts from the Berry deposition.

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                                        Page 23
          Surgical Development] that the conversion of Lake Travis from an

          LTCH to a general acute care hospital was going to cost a great deal

          of money? A: No."].)

         That it would be difficult to expand Lake Travis Hospital in the

          future. (CR2 5366 ["Q: Did anyone at Lake Travis ever provide any

          information to [Lakeway or Surgical Development] that the Lake

          Travis facility would be difficult to expand in the future? A: No. Q:

          Was it true that the Lake Travis facility would be difficult to expand

          in the future? A: No."].)

         That Lake Travis has no physician support. (CR2 5366-67 ["Q: Was

          it true that Lake Travis lacked physician support for its general acute

          care hospital plan [in the fall of '09, spring of '10]? A: No."].)

         That the lease was structured as a 100% interest-only lease. (CR2

          5367 ["Q:     Since you're not familiar with the term, would it be

          accurate to say that it's highly unlikely that you made that statement to

          [Surgical Development or Lakeway]? A: Yes."].)

         That Lake Travis Hospital would not open in summer of 2010. (CR2

          5368 ["Q: To your knowledge, did anyone at Lake Travis tell or

          provide information to [Lakeway or Surgical Development] that Lake

          Travis would not open by the summer of 2010? A: No."].)

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                                Page 24
         That Lake Travis Hospital did not have an operator. (CR2 5368-69

          ("Q: Are you aware of anybody at Lake Travis – telling or providing

          information to [Lakeway or Surgical Development] that Lake Travis,

          the facility, didn't have an operator? A: No. During the period of

          time of the fall '09 and the spring of '10, was it true that Lake Travis

          didn't have an operator? A: No."].)

         That Lake Travis Hospital did not have an operational staff. (CR2

          5369 ["Q: To your knowledge, did anyone at Lake Travis ever tell or

          provide information to [Lakeway or Surgical Development] that Lake

          Travis did not have an operations or medical staff? A: No. Q: Was

          it true during the period fall '09 and the spring of '10 that Lake Travis

          didn't have an operational or medical staff?          A: No, to either

          question."].)

         That Lake Travis Hospital did not have a list of interested physicians.

          (CR2 5369-70 ["Q:       Are you aware of anybody at Lake Travis

          providing information to [Lakeway or Surgical Development] that

          Lake Travis did not have a list of interested physicians? A: No. Q:

          Was it true that Lake Travis did not have a list of interested physicians

          in the period of the fall '09 to the spring of '10? A: No."].)

         That the City of Lakeway would need to approve any physical

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                            Page 25
            conversion changes from and LTCH to a general acute care hospital.

            (CR2 5370 [Q:      Are you aware of anyone at Lake Travis who

            provided information to [Lakeway or Surgical Development] that the

            City of Lakeway would need to approve any modifications or

            construction changes that were made to Lake Travis, converting from

            an LTCH to a general acute care hospital? A: No. Q: Was it true

            that the City of Lakeway would need to approve any physical

            conversion changes from an LTCH to a general acute care hospital for

            Lake Travis? A: No."].)

The summary judgment evidence, therefore, was that – according to the admissions

in Lake Travis's CEO's sworn testimony – Sossi's statements conveyed in the May

10 Email were not only not true, they were not communicated by Lake Travis to

Lakeway, Surgical Development, or Sossi.

      H.    Lake Travis's Other Evidence Did Not Suggest Lawyer Appellees'
            Use of Its Trade Secrets.
      With one exception, the May 10 Email is the only evidence of

communication of supposed "trade secrets" argued by Lake Travis to have been

communicated to HUD by the Lawyer Appellees. The exception is a fax from

Sossi to two HUD litigation attorneys dated June 21, 2010. ((Lake Travis Brief at

6-7, 26; CR2 8108-10.) But this document supports summary judgment for the

Brennan Firm and Sossi.

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                          Page 26
      The letter starts out with Sossi writing:

      We have contacted the City of Lakeway and they have provided the
      attached letter. As indicated in the letter the City has been told the
      [Lake Travis Hospital] was to be a long term acute care hospital and
      has not been qualified in the City for general care services. Any
      modifications as needed to provide those services instead of "long-term
      acute care services" have not been vetted by the City and to date there
      are no definitive plans for the conversion that have been approved by
      the City. [CR2 8109.]

      So the information about Lake Travis's conversion issues with the City of

Lakeway did not come from any "trade secret" of Lake Travis, but from

information in the possession of the City of Lakeway. But even more significant is

the "attached letter" from the Mayor of Lakeway, Dave DeOme, to Lakeway's

Chairman Sam DeMaio, M.D. It is worth quoting nearly in full, as it eliminates the

possibility of any genuine issue of material fact regarding the claimed "trade

secrets" and their "disclosure" and "use":

      Thank you for sending me a copy of a letter from Abe Kuczaj attorney
      for the Lake Travis Transitional Medical Center to Roger Miller, U.S.
      Department of Housing and Urban Development, regarding the Section
      242 HUD guarantee of the loan to the Lakeway Regional Medical
      Center dated June 11, 2010.

      This letter asserts that the Lake Travis Transitional Medical Center "is
      slated to open in the fall of 2010" and that "Lake Travis is an acute
      care hospital". Finally, the letter asserts that the Lakeway C-1 zoning
      expressly includes an Acute Care Hospital. * * *

      The letter seems to imply that the Lakeway City Council approved a
      General Development Plan for an "acute care hospital". * * * I
      remember the discussion as being one that discussed a long-term care
      facility. A document in our files from Abbe Engineering Co., the

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                            Page 27
      developer's engineer, describes that Lakeway Transitional Medical
      Center as "a 46-bed long-term acute care hospital."

      Let's first be specific as to what exists in Lakeway today. Today there
      is an unfinished building that has been under construction for over two
      years. I do not believe that the incomplete facility behind the Post
      Office currently qualifies as a provider of acute care service to this
      community and at the current space construction, I don't see how it can
      be "open in the fall". This is especially true if extensive modifications
      have to be made. If modifications are planned it would need to be
      discussed with the City.

      This construction site is active but the pace of work is slow relative to
      other ongoing construction projects. Please be aware that the records
      of the City of Lakeway have shown and continue to show this
      unfinished building is intended to be a long term acute care hospital.
      There has not been any official or unofficial communication to the City
      of Lakeway by any representative of the Lakeway Transitional
      Medical Center at the business plan for this building has substantially
      changed.

      In fact, just the opposite is true. Roughly a month ago, City staff
      contacted the developer to ask about the slow pace of construction and
      to determine the developer's current expectations. The developer
      specifically told our staff that there were no changes in the original
      plans. [CR2 8111; emphases supplied.]

      Summarizing this evidence, which was sponsored by Lake Travis in its

summary judgment opposition below and its Brief here:

            (1)    Lake Travis's counsel himself was communicating with HUD

      on topics it is now charging Lakeway's counsel with having "used" and

      "disclosed" as a trade secret.

            (2)    The City of Lakeway was under the impression that Lakeway

      was still slated to become an LTACH – information received from and

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                             Page 28
      confirmed by Lake Travis, not the Lawyer Appellees.

             (3)    Lake Travis's engineering firm provided information to the City

      of Lakeway, available in the public file, regarding the facility's use and

      number of beds. This information was therefore not a trade secret disclosed

      by the Lawyer Appellees, and not even disclosed to Lakeway by Lake

      Travis.

             (4)    Lakeway itself, on the evidence of its Mayor's own eyes (and

      not any "trade secret"), had concluded that the facility was not going to open

      in the fall of 2010.

      The second paragraph of Sossi's June 21 letter describes his communication

with Health Care REIT concerning Lake Travis's counsel's June 11 letter,

commenting on the same topics raised in Lake Travis's letter. No trade secrets,

use, or disclosure. (CR2 8109-10.)

      Viewed in the context of the entire communication, Sossi's statement in the

third paragraph that "[t]he existence of the plans for [Lake Travis Hospital] were

discussed in detail with the HUD Client Service Team," relied on by Lake Travis

here and below, appears for what it is. It is not itself a trade secret disclosure, and

the "plans" and other items Sossi mentions in that paragraph were known in detail

to the City of Lakeway and Health Care REIT (and not through any disclosure by

Sossi or the Brennan Firm) and the subject of communications from Lake Travis's

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                               Page 29
counsel himself. 4

      The only other communications referred to in the Lake Travis Brief (at 26)

are in-person meetings and calls in which Sossi participated. But the record

citations (CR2 7777-80, 7813, 7815) are from Frank Sossi's deposition and do not

reflect any communication of any Lake Travis information, "secret" or not, to

HUD or anyone else.

      HUD's chief representative and Lakeway contact Robert Deen testified that

to his knowledge no one associated with Lakeway or Surgical Development (that

is, Sossi) "disclose[d] any substantive information regarding [Lake Travis or Lake

Travis Hospital] to HUD other than" the foregoing communications and others not

raised by Lake Travis in its brief. (CR2 5540-41.)

      I.     Lakeway Hospital Opens; the Lake Travis Hospital Does Not.
      Lakeway Hospital opened in April 2012.

      While Lakeway considered whether to acquire the HCN Interra/Lake Travis

lease, Berry and McDonald continued to search for investors. They were not

successful. Health Care REIT would not support the project unless Berry and

McDonald found a partner with general acute care hospital experience. This

search was also unsuccessful. Lake Travis defaulted under the lease, and it was

      4
         Sossi also discussed the contents of this letter with HUD attorney Perrin Wright
and Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael Widenback, although not with HUD's Robert Deen.
(CR 5552.)

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                                 Page 30
terminated. ((Lakeway Appellants' Brief at 8-9, second and third full paragraphs

with record citations; Rule 9.7, Tex.R.App.P.)

      J.    HUD Did Not Rely on Any "Trade Secrets" Communicated by
            the Lawyer Appellees in Issuing Lakeway's Loan Guaranty.
      HUD's Robert Deen testified:

      (1)   That HUD became aware "that the owners wanted to get a State of

Texas acute care license but wanted to care for long-term acute patients from a

February 20th, 2009 newspaper article in the Lake Travis View." (CR2 5546.)

The article quoted Berry as to the planned use of the hospital. (CR2 5547.)

      (2)   He had no recollection of any discussion of Lake Travis or Lake

Travis Hospital in any telephone conversation he ever had with Sossi, and no other

written communications than the ones already discussed above.         (CR2, 5549,

5548.)

      (3)   HUD issued the original commitment of mortgage insurance on

March 17, 2010. (CR2 5538.) Then:

      Q.    [P]rior to the issuance of the construction loan and mortgage guaranty
            in favor of [Lakeway], did any person associated with [Lakeway or
            Surgical Development] disclose any information to HUD regarding
            Lake Travis?

      A.    No.

      Q.    [P]rior to the issuance of the construction loan and mortgage guaranty
            in favor of [Lakeway], did any person associated with [Lakeway or
            Surgical Development] disclose any information to HUD regarding
            Lake Travis Specialty Hospital?

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                               Page 31
      A.     No. [CR2 5539.]

(The testimony in context is clear that the Lawyer Appellees are "associated with"

Lakeway or Surgical Development in Deen's understanding of the question.)

      It is therefore an undisputed material fact that HUD issued its guaranty

before any Defendant communicated any information about Lake Travis or Lake

Travis Hospital to HUD. To aid HUD's confirmation of the propriety of that

guaranty, the Lawyer Appellees used information that was either public or not

acquired from Lake Travis – and, according to Lake Travis's Berry, not even a

correct portrayal of the Lake Travis project.

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                           Page 32
                       SUMMARY OF THE ARGUMENT
Q.    What specific trade secret of [Lake Travis] do you believe was disclosed to
      HUD that HUD relied on to determine whether or not to issue a guarantee to
      [Lakeway]?

A.    I will not answer that question.       (CR2 5381-82; form objection and
      instruction not to answer omitted.)

                                     *   *    *

Q.    * * * And when is the first time that you believe that Frank Sossi
      disclosed any [Lake Travis] trade secret to anybody?

A.    I would not – I'm not able to – I'm not going to share that information with
      you as that is privileged. (CR2 5377.)

             --    from the deposition of Lake Travis CEO, Managing Member,
                   and co-principal Robert Berry

      Those quotes sum up the Lawyer Appellees' argument: (1) there was no

cognizable evidence of trade secrets; (2) or of misappropriation or (3) disclosure;

(4) or of any injury to Lake Travis from any of the (very few and brief)

complained-of communications. The Lawyer Appellees' motion only needed to

negate one element of Lake Travis's cause of action with material facts as to which

there was no genuine issue, and it negated all four of them.

      Lake Travis's trade secret misappropriation claim against the Lawyer

Appellees was entirely made up. After its weaknesses were exposed in discovery,

Lake Travis doubled down on its fallacious legal theory by insisting that a "Project

File" created long after the petition in this case was filed, claimed to contain all

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                             Page 33
available information about Lake Travis and Lake Travis Hospital, was itself a

unique "compilation" and thus, in its entirety, a trade secret. In fact, its expert

witness testified that the entire Lake Travis project, already well underway with

financing and a building under construction, was a trade secret.            Its theory

erroneously attempted to import its claim against the Hospital Appellants for

breach of the confidentiality provisions of the LOI into its trade secrets claim

against the Lawyer Appellees, but the whole effort was square-peg/round-hole. It

failed and failed dramatically, as the above quotes illustrate .

      Lake Travis has erroneously overreached on its "the whole project and

pretend 'Project File' is a trade secret" claim for three reasons: First, it is used to

excuse Lake Travis's inability to identify and qualify any particular information as

a trade secret. Second, it is used to claim as a "trade secret" any communication

mentioning Lake Travis, no matter how innocuous or well-known. Third, it leads

to gross inflation of claimed trade secret damages, since the "trade secret" is

identified as the entirety of the project. Lake Travis, however, may not define

itself out of its summary judgment burden by dropping 2,033 pages on the Court's

desk and swearing that there are disclosed trade secrets in there somewhere – or

rather, that the whole "unique" post-complaint "compilation" is a trade secret.

      Scintillae are not measured by the pound. The trial court's dismissal of the

trade secrets case against the Lawyer Appellees should be affirmed.

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                               Page 34
                                    ARGUMENT

I.    SUMMARY JUDGMENT STANDARD: TO DEFEAT SUMMARY
      JUDGMENT, LAKE TRAVIS WAS REQUIRED TO SHOW THAT
      THE FACTS IN QUESTION WERE MATERIAL, AND THE ISSUES
      GENUINE.
      Lake Travis produced an enormous amount of verbiage in its disclosures, its

interrogatory answers, and its affidavits attempting to show that it really did have

trade secrets and they were really used by the Lawyer Appellees. Resistance to

summary judgment, however, is not evaluated by the syllable or the pixel.             The

sheer repetitive stacking of unsupported assertions says nothing about whether a

litigant has raised a genuine issue, or whether the facts it disputes are material.

      A defendant may move with or without supporting affidavits for summary

judgment. (Rule 166a(b), Tex.R.Civ.P.) With respect to traditional summary

judgment, Rule 166a(c), Tex.R.Civ.P. provides:

      The judgment sought shall be rendered forthwith if (i) the deposition
      transcripts, interrogatory answers, and other discovery responses
      referenced or set forth in the motion or response, and (ii) the pleadings,
      admissions, affidavits, stipulations of the parties, and authenticated or
      certified public records, if any, on file at the time of the hearing, or
      filed thereafter and before judgment with permission of the court, show
      that, except as to the amount of damages, there is no genuine issue as
      to any material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a
      matter of law on the issues expressly set out in the motion or in an
      answer or any other response.

Once the movant produces evidence entitling it to summary judgment, the burden

shifts to the nonmovant to present evidence that raises a fact issue.

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                                 Page 35
(Phan Son Van v. Pena, 990 S.W.2d 751, 753 (Tex. 1999).)

      With respect to a no-evidence summary judgment motion, Rule 166a(i),

Tex.R.Civ.P. provides:

      After adequate time for discovery, a party without presenting summary
      judgment evidence may move for summary judgment on the ground
      that there is no evidence of one or more essential elements of a claim
      or defense on which an adverse party would have the burden of proof
      at trial. The motion must state the elements as to which there is no
      evidence. The court must grant the motion unless the respondent
      produces summary judgment evidence raising a genuine issue of
      material fact.

The fact issue offered by a summary judgment opponent must be genuine; she

must produce tangible admissible evidence, not merely argument or conclusions, to

avoid a properly supported motion for summary judgment. (Liggett v. Blocher,

849 S.W.2d 846, 852 (Tex.App. – Houston [1st Dist] 1993, no writ) (for a non-

movant to raise a fact issue, there must be evidence to support her assertions; mere

assertions are not enough); Brownlee v. Brownlee, 665 S.W.2d 111, 112 (Tex.

1984).)

      The Lawyer Appellees below sought summary judgment on both traditional

and no-evidence grounds, characterized in the Texas cases as a "hybrid motion."

Both parties offered summary judgment evidence; "therefore, the differing burdens

are immaterial and the ultimate issue is whether a fact issue exists" with respect to

the elements of the cause of action or defense. (Neely v. Wilson, 2013 Tex. LEXIS

511, **10-11 (Tex. 2013); see also Buck v. Palmer, 381 S.W.3d 525, 527 n. 2

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                              Page 36
(Tex. 2012) ("Both parties brought forth summary judgment evidence in the

context of this hybrid no-evidence and traditional motion, so the differing burdens

of the two forms of summary judgment motion are of no import here. The ultimate

question is simply whether a fact issue exists").)

II.   THE MATERIAL FACTS AS TO WHICH THERE ARE NO
      GENUINE ISSUES ALLOW ONLY THE CONCLUSION THAT
      LAKE TRAVIS DID NOT ESTABLISH ANY ELEMENT OF ITS
      CLAIM AGAINST THE ATTORNEY APPELLEES FOR TRADE
      SECRET MISAPPROPRIATION.
      Those elements are well-established:

      The elements of a claim for misappropriation of a trade secret are "(1)
      the trade secret existed; (2) the trade secret was acquired through
      breach of a confidential relationship or was discovered by improper
      means; (3) the defendant used the trade secret without authorization;
      and (4) [the plaintiff] suffered damages as a result." Twister B.V. v.
      Newton Research Partners, LP, 364 S.W.3d 428, 437 (Tex. App.—
      Dallas 2012, no pet.); Rusty's Weigh Scales & Serv., Inc. v. N. Tex.
      Scales, Inc., 314 S.W.3d 105, 109 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2010, no pet.).
      [Lamont v. Vaquillas Energy Lopeno, Ltd., 421 S.W.3d 198, 210
      (Tex.App. - San Antonio 2013, no pet.).]

The failure of any one of these elements required summary judgment for the

Lawyer Appellees. The genuinely undisputed evidence negated every one of them.

      A.     First Element: There Was No Evidence of the Identity or
             Existence of Any Claimed "Trade Secrets."
      Lake Travis went to great lengths to keep its claimed "trade secrets" secret

even from the trial court.

      When asked to identify the trade secrets claimed to have been

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                            Page 37
misappropriated – not just generic categories relating to every scrap of data

associated with the Lake Travis venture, but actual competitively meaningful

secrets meeting the common law definition – Lake Travis not only had no answer,

but testified that the only items of information seemingly at issue were not

conveyed to Lawyer Appellees and/or untrue, or were privileged.

      There is no dispute over what Texas law defines to be a "trade secret" for

purposes of the misappropriation tort: it is "any formula, pattern, device or

compilation of information which is used in one's business and presents an

opportunity to obtain an advantage over competitors who do not know or use it."

(In re Bass, 113 S.W.3d 735, 739 (Tex. 2003).)5         The Supreme Court has also

adopted the Restatement of Torts' six-factor test, permitting examination of:

      (1) the extent to which the information is known outside of his
      business; (2) the extent to which it is known by employees and others
      involved in his business; (3) the extent of the measures taken by him to
      guard the secrecy of the information; (4) the value of the information
      to him and to his competitors; (5) the amount of effort or money
      expended by him in developing the information; (6) the ease or
      difficulty with which the information could be properly acquired or
      duplicated by others. [Id.]

However, the Court also cautions that these elements are "the factors are relevant,

but not dispositive," noting the Restatement's own caution and calling particular

      5
         Only the Texas common law applies to Lake Travis’ trade secret claim, because
the case's allegations all predated the effective date of the Texas Uniform Trade Secret
Act.

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                                Page 38
attention to the requirement that the information at issue be definite:

      It is not possible to state precise criteria for determining the existence
      of a trade secret. The status of information claimed as a trade secret
      must be ascertained through a comparative evaluation of all the
      relevant factors, including the value, secrecy, and definiteness of the
      information as well as the nature of the defendant's misconduct. [Id.;
      emphasis supplied.]

      This passage highlights the fatal problem Lake Travis had in the trial court,

and has here: These tests cannot even be applied, or the remaining elements of the

tort satisfied, until a tangible item or specific information claimed to be an actual

trade secret is identified. In pressing its trade secret misappropriation claim, Lake

Travis has attempted to elide this requirement by conflating its claim against the

Hospital Appellants for breach of the confidentiality provisions of the LOI – which

defines "Proprietary Information" as everything – "all information" – either party

conveyed to the other, with its claim against all Defendants for trade secret

misappropriation. Thus, Lake Travis claims that the entire "Project File" is a trade

secret and "expert" Halligan refers to the LOI and the generic interrogatory

categories to identify trade secrets.

      This is an admission of defeat for the misappropriation claim. The LOI

definition and interrogatory answers tell us nothing about whether any particular

item communicated is a trade secret. Subsection I(A) of the Statement of Facts

chronicles the Lawyer Appellees' efforts to discover exactly what trade secrets they

were accused of misappropriating. Lake Travis resisted those efforts and never

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                              Page 39
produced anything tangible, admissible, or even credible.

      The 2,033-Page "Project File" (Statement of Facts, Subsection I(A)).

Lake Travis has capitalized the phrase to make it seem like something that actually

existed as evidence in the operative facts of this case, and called it a "compilation"

in an attempt to bring it within the Supreme Court trade secret definition. (Lake

Travis Brief at 13: The Project File is "a compilation of all the documentary

evidence reflecting LTT’s trade secrets and proprietary information.") But it was

no such thing – it was a confection whipped up by Lake Travis after its

interrogatory answers on "trade secret" were challenged by Lawyer Appellees'

motion to compel interrogatory answers, and after its trade secrets "expert" R.

Mark Halligan was not able to identify any trade secrets that Lake Travis claimed

to have been misappropriated or even received by Defendants.            Lake Travis

maintained that the trade secrets in question were contained in the Project File, but

it never identified any particular trade secret claimed to have been misused. Of

course, Lake Travis was also logically unable to take the position that the Project

File had been conveyed to Lawyer Appellees. The Project File sure is big, but as

far as evidence of "trade secrets," it's nothing.

      The undisputed facts of the Project File's mid-discovery birth eliminate all of

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                              Page 40
the cases cited by Lake Travis on how a "compilation" can be a trade secret.6

Those cases stand for the proposition that the unique arrangement of information

that may not be a trade secret or may be public can be a trade secret. Agreed. But

that "compilation" had to have been "compiled" by the plaintiff and displayed to,

or stolen by, the defendant in the form of the allegedly protectable "unique"

"compilation," not created by counsel long after the tort is alleged to have occurred

and the complaint filed.

       Lake Travis's other cases also look nothing like their claim here, as they

dealt with actual documents actually purloined by former employees. Gonzales v.

Zamora, 791S.W.2d 258, 265 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi 1990, no writ) (hard-

copy forms and manuals stolen by defendants); Bertolli v. C.E. Sheperd Co., 752
S.W.2d 648, 654 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 1998, no writ) (employee who

copied two briefcases full of documents and absconded to start a competing

business); Cudd Pressure Control, Inc. v. Roles, 328 Fed.Appx. 961, 965 (5th Cir.

2009) (employee used employer's hard-copy financial statements).

       Even on appeal, Lake Travis has not abandoned the fiction that the Project

File is, in its entirety, a trade secret. Appendix 7 to the Lake Travis Brief is the

Declaration of Robert Berry, which states in Paragraph 7 (CR2 7609): "Because

       6
            Bishop v. Miller, 412 S.W.3d 758, 767 (Tex.App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2013, no
pet.); Southwestern Energy Prod. Co. v. Berry-Helfand, 411 S.W.3d 581, 597 (Tex. App.–Tyler
2013, pet. granted); Metallurgical Indus., Inc. v. Fourtek, Inc., 790 F.2d 1195, 1202 (5th Cir.
1986).

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                                       Page 41
the trade secret comprised of the body of knowledge illustrated by the Project File

is reflected in its unique combination, it is not discoverable by inspection. The

same is true for the vast majority of its constituent parts."        With due regard for

comity, that statement is false.    The "combination" and anything "unique" about

the Project is a litigation-purposed invention of Lake Travis and its counsel created

long after the parties terminated their flirtation and Lake Travis filed suit. There is

one thing true about Berry's statement – its trade secret status was not

"discoverable by inspection" because there was nothing – nothing "unique,"

nothing that was a "combination," nothing that was a "compilation" – that existed

to "inspect" ever in this case. Its expert didn't even inspect it.

      The Berry Deposition (Statement of Facts, Subsection I(B)).                 When

questioned at his deposition on Sossi's May 10 Email – almost the only evidence

on "disclosure" or "use" (explored in greater detail in Subsection (C) next) offered

by Lake Travis – on each of the items listed there, he testified that each one of

them was either never conveyed to the Defendants, or was false, or both.

Combine that with Berry's deposition testimony that he never spoke with Sossi

about anything other than the LOI negotiation and you have no evidence of trade

secrets or misappropriation.

      The collapse of Lake Travis's trade secret claim at Berry's deposition

continued when he refused to identify any misappropriated trade secrets on

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                                 Page 42
privilege grounds (reviewed in more detail in Subsection (C) below).

      Trade Secret "Expert" Halligan (Statement of Facts, Subsection I(C)).

After the challenged interrogatory answers, artificial Project File, and amazing

Berry deposition, Lake Travis offered up Mark Halligan to testify that everything

identified by Lake Travis counsel, in the form of the Project File and beyond to the

entire Project itself – Lake Travis's theory in the trial court and here – was a trade

secret and misappropriated. Repeating our due regard for comity, it is not unkind

to say that Halligan was thoroughly discredited at both parts of his deposition. The

rejection of his opinions by the trial court is a rejection of Lake Travis's theory of

this case.

      Halligan reviewed almost nothing, he knew almost nothing, because the

theory that everything was a trade secret did not require him to do so. He was

there only to testify that the fact that Lake Travis had listed general categories of

information in its interrogatory answer, and that the LOI identified all information

as subject to its confidentiality provisions, made any item of information

comprehended by those categories a trade secret, irrespective of what the

information actually was. He didn't have to review any information in order to

testify expertly that it was a trade secret. The trial court's order said, in effect, that

Halligan's theory – which is still Lake Travis's theory – was wrong, that he was

forbidden to testify that "(a) the information provided by [Lake Travis] to

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                                  Page 43
Defendants constituted trade secrets, or (2) that Defendants misappropriated

[Lake Travis's] trade secrets." (CR3 12262.)

      The failure of the Project File, Berry's live testimony, and expert Halligan

left Lake Travis with nothing with which to resist summary judgment. In response

to the Lawyer Appellees summary judgment motion7, Lake Travis filed the

Declaration of Robert Berry ("Berry Declaration") (CR2 7604ff). They have

also attached it to their Lake Travis Brief as Appendix 7, although they have

omitted its exhibits. With respect to Texas law's requirements for trade secrets,

here's what Berry has to say about the Project File:

      I have reviewed each of the documents in the Project File. The Project
      File contains information that [Lake Travis] used in its business that
      provided [Lake Travis] with an advantage over competitors who did
      not know or use it. Much of the information in the Project File is or
      reflects confidential and proprietary information that provided [Lake
      Travis] with a competitive advantage, and [Lake Travis] considered
      this information a trade secret. [CR2 7607.]

      [Lake Travis] owned the trade secrets contained in the Project File and
      used them in its business. These trade secrets in the Project File were
      not generally known or readily available to the public. [CR2 7608.]

      The trade secrets contained in the Project File are valuable to [Lake
      Travis]. [Lake Travis] spent a great deal of time, energy, and money
      developing the information. [Description follows of time and money
      spent developing Lake Travis, but not any specific identified trade
      secret information.] [CR2 7609-10.]
      7
           Lawyer Appellees note that "Plaintiffs' Amended Response to Brennan, Manna &
Diamond, LLC . . . and Frank T. Sossi's Amended Traditional and No-Evidence Motion for
Summary Judgment" does not appear to have been included the appellate record, although the
joint appendix it filed in support of all Defendants' motions is present. (CR2 7598ff.)

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                                  Page 44
Berry's affidavit endlessly repeats that trade secret information was disclosed to

Defendants and that it was located in the Project File. How difficult, then, would it

have been for Berry to cite to some of it? How difficult to identify it in answers to

interrogatories? How difficult for expert Halligan to have pointed to it when

asked? It's not in Berry's affidavit and it's not in Halligan's deposition; it's not

anywhere. There was no way for the Lawyer Appellees to defend themselves by

negating the trade secret characterization of the claimed disclosures.

      Which is why a non-movant cannot resist summary judgment with

generalized, conclusory statements of the sort that Berry offered in his declaration.

      Defects in the substance of an affidavit are not waived by the failure to
      obtain a ruling from the trial court on the objection, and they may be
      raised for the first time on appeal. Brown v. Brown, 145 S.W.3d 745,
      751 (Tex. App.-Dallas 2004, pet. denied). An affidavit that is
      conclusory is substantively defective, and the failure to object or obtain
      a ruling on an objection does not waive the substantive defect. Id.
      Conclusory affidavits do not raise fact issues. Ryland Group, Inc. v.
      Hood, 924 S.W.2d 120, 122 (Tex. 1996); Trejo v. Laredo Nat'l Bank,
      185 S.W.3d 43, 50 (Tex. App.-San Antonio 2005, no pet.). A
      conclusory statement is one that does not provide the underlying facts
      to support the conclusion. Trejo, 185 S.W.3d at 50; Brown, 145
S.W.3d at 751. [Paragon General Contractors, Inc. v. Larco Constr.,
      Inc., 227 S.W.3d 876, 883-884 (Tex.App. -- Dallas 2007, no pet.)
      (summary judgment affirmed).]

This is as true in trade secret cases as it is generally. (Game Sys. v. Forbes Hutton

Leasing, Inc., 2011 Tex. App. LEXIS 4098, **75-76 (Tex.App.- Fort Worth 2011,

no pet.) (affirming summary judgment against trade secret misappropriation claim;

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                              Page 45
"[t]he assertions in Weaver's affidavit that Tronics took Game Systems's source

code are conclusory. Weaver does not offer any facts showing a basis for

knowledge that Tronics took Game Systems's source code. He does not state why

he believes that Tronics took Game Systems's property; he does not describe what

source code he refers to or how it came into Tronics's possession" [footnote

omitted]); Alliantgroup, L.P. v. Solanji, 2014 Tex.App. LEXIS 2961 (Tex.App. -

Houston [1st Dist.] 2014, no pet.) (summary judgment affirmed in trade secret

breach of contract case); General Insulation Co. v. King, 2010 Tex. App. LEXIS

490 (Tex. App. - Houston [14th Dist.] 2010, no pet.) (summary judgment affirmed;

evidence showed that while information may have been "confidential," it was not a

trade secret); Parker Barber & Beauty Supply, Inc. v. Wella Corp., 2006 Tex.App.

LEXIS 8841 (Tex. App. - Austin 2006, no pet.) (summary judgment affirmed;

same); Security Telecom Corp. v. Meziere, 2000 Tex. App. LEXIS 1818 (Tex.App.

– Dallas, no pet.) (summary judgment affirmed; no showing of trade secret).)

      The point bears repeating, because the fundamental fallacy of Lake Travis's

position appears throughout its evidence – especially the Berry Declaration and

expert Halligan's testimony – and Brief:      Its insistence that every fact, every

observation, every opinion about the Lake Travis project, no matter how un-secret,

obvious, or speculative, was a trade secret – that the project as whole, itself, was a

trade secret. Never mind the empty shell of a building out off Farm-to-Market 620

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                              Page 46
behind the post office; never mind the newspaper articles; never mind Health Care

REIT providing detailed information to the Lawyer Appellees before they knew

anything about Lake Travis; never mind the visibility of the parking lot; never

mind the information openly provided to and on file with the City of Lakeway;

never mind Lakeway's own considerable knowledge of the medical services market

and what it takes to run an acute care facility; never mind the obviousness of the

proposition that an empty building and a nonoperating enterprise probably has

neither an operator nor a staff – if an observation or opinion had anything to do at

all with Lake Travis project, a cone of silence was expected to descend over the

communicator.

      B.     Second Element: There Was No Evidence Attorney Appellees
             Received "Trade Secrets" from Lake Travis, or Through Breach
             of a Relationship or Otherwise Improper Means; the Lake Travis
             Brief's Record Citation Is to Its Own Summary Judgment Brief in
             the Trial Court Which Itself Does Not Cite to the Record.
      The first element – the existence of any trade secrets at all – is closely tied

to all the rest: Lawyer Appellees' receipt from Lake Travis (or wrongful receipt

from another), and their disclosure and use by the Lawyer Appellees. If there are

no qualified Lake Travis trade secrets, it follows that there was no

misappropriation, disclosure, use, or injury.

      But putting aside the failure to identify trade secrets, much less qualify

them as such under Texas law, consider:         Berry's affidavit says time after time

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                               Page 47
after time that Lake Travis communicated trade secrets to the "Defendants,"

mentioning the usual broad categories of documents.          There is no evidence,

however, that any of it was communicated to the Lawyer Appellees. That Project

File has over four reams of paper in it, scannable, copyable hard copy, but Lake

Travis has not produced one email attaching documents, not one transmittal letter,

not one hand-delivery receipt or air express bill, suggesting that any of it was

provided to the Lawyer Appellees.

      Faced with this hole in its evidence, Lake Travis has resorted to an

extraordinary tactic in this appeal.         The centerpiece of its claim of

misappropriation is a lengthy quote (at 14-15) reciting Bates numbers for

documents Lake Travis claims to have provided to "Defendants." But that long

excerpt is not from any sworn evidence – it is a quotation from Lake Travis's

response to the Hospital Appellants' summary judgment motion. Turning to those

pages from the Lake Travis brief below in the appellate record (CR3 11919-

11920), we see that that excerpt contains no citation to the record. It is completely

incompetent summary judgment evidence and – again respectfully begging the

Court's pardon for any offense to comity – it is grossly improper for Lake Travis

to have cited it as though it were record evidence of a genuine issue of material

fact supporting reversal. Like most of Lake Travis's "evidence," it's lengthy and

detailed, but ultimately empty of evidence to create a genuine issue of fact.

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                                 Page 48
       In fact, the only piece of specific information shown to have been provided

to Defendants is attached as Exhibit 1-C to Berry's Declaration (omitted from

Appendix 7 to the Lake Travis Brief). It's "inspection comments" (not attached to

the exhibit, by the way, so we don't know what they are) sent by an Interra

development entity to a number of individuals – but not to the Lawyer Appellees.8

(CR2 7631.) Basically, nothing.

       This leaves only Robert Berry's ispe dixit claims. Like all the other elements

of the tort, a fact issue on misappropriation may not be based on conclusory

affidavits.

        Rimkus' relied exclusively on the affidavit of Ralph S. Graham, its
       senior vice-president, to substantiate its claim that Dupre
       misappropriated its trade secrets. The affidavit, however, fails to
       indicate which trade secrets Dupre allegedly misappropriated. * * *
       Affidavits which contain conclusory statements that fail to provide the
       underlying facts to support the conclusion are not proper summary
       judgment evidence. [Rimkus Consulting Group, Inc. v. Dupre, 2001
       Tex.App. LEXIS 6170, **10-11 (Tex.App. - Houston [14th Dist.]
       2001, no pet.) (citation omitted; emphases supplied).]

       Lake Travis's improper self-vouching by citing the text of its own

unsupported brief below eloquently eliminates this element of its misappropriation

cause of action.

       8
           The Lake Travis Brief (at 17) also cites an email from Sossi to Health Care REIT
dated January 14, 2011. (CR2 8015-16.) But that letter shows Sossi warning Health Care REIT
about Lake Travis's possible violation of the LOI, and does nothing but describe the LOI
provisions at issue. It is not evidence of the Lawyer Appellees' receipt or use of identified
Texas-qualified trade secrets.

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                                     Page 49
      C.     Third Element: There Was No Evidence that the Lawyer
             Appellees "Disclosed" or "Used" any "Trade Secret."
      As noted, Lake Travis's interrogatory answers, the only sworn source of

information on what Lake Travis planned to claim as trade secrets (until expert

Halligan's spectacular collapse), identified only broad categories of information,

but no particular trade secret claimed to have been disclosed or used.         So

Defendants were eager to test Lake Travis CEO Robert Berry on these categories

in deposition to nail down the identity of the documents or other information

involved – information critical to a defense of Lake Travis's claims.

      The result was unexpected and stunning. As chronicled in detail in

Subsection I(B) of the Statement of Facts, Berry refused to answer any questions

respecting disclosure of any trade secret information belonging to any of the

categories identified in his sworn interrogatory answers. Berry was Lake Travis's

CEO, Managing Member, and co-principal, but he claimed the only information he

had on misappropriation and the identity of trade secrets was known to him

through his lawyer and therefore privileged. In answer to Lawyer Appellees'

counsel's direct questions on misappropriation and disclosure, Berry refused to

identify any instances with respect to Lake Travis's

            trade secrets generally (twice);

            architectural plans;

            program design;

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                           Page 50
            financial information;

            hospital organization;

            mission;

            staff recruitment and retention;

            sources and uses of funds and other cost-based information;

            preliminary financial feasibility;

            projected revenues and costs;

            and preliminary financial feasibility ratios and other information about

             projected key operational ratios. (CR2 5375, 5377-80.)

Berry was no more forthcoming when asked about the identity of any trade secrets

Lake Travis claimed HUD relied on with respect to the loan guaranty. He twice

refused to answer "what specific trade secret of [Lake Travis]" was disclosed to

HUD and relied on by it to issue the loan guaranty. (CR2 5381-82.)

      Not only do these answers – rather, non-answers – sink Lake Travis's

misappropriation claim, they are especially meaningful when considered in light of

Lake Travis's claims about Sossi's May 10 Email to HUD, discussed in detail in the

Statement of Facts, Section II(G). The May 10 Email was certainly well-known to

Berry and not in any way privileged, but he did not identify it as a disclosure or use

of Lake Travis's trade secrets. Indeed, he testified that the following assertions or

opinions in the May 10 Email were either not communicated to Defendants, or

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                              Page 51
were false, or both:

             That Lake Travis missed a deadline.

             That Lake Travis hospital had code violations.

             That conversion of Lake Travis Hospital to a general acute-care

              hospital would be costly.

             That it would be difficult to expand Lake Travis Hospital in the

              future.

             That Lake Travis had no physician support or a list of interested

              physicians.

             That Lake Travis Hospital would not open in summer 2010.

             That Lake Travis Hospital did not have an operator.

             That Lake Travis Hospital did not have an operational staff.

             That the City of Lakeway would have approve the conversion of Lake

              Travis Hospital from a long-term to general acute care facility.

Thus, in answering as he did Berry himself plainly did not regard the May 10

Email as a damaging disclosure of trade secrets, or, indeed, as a disclosure of trade

secrets at all.

       The only other communication of any substance cited by Lake Travis is

Sossi's June 21, 2010, letter to two government attorneys, described in detail in the

Statement of Facts, Subsection II(G), which we incorporate here. That description

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                                  Page 52
demonstrates that far from evidence of trade secret misappropriation, it shows

Lake Travis's own lawyer communicating with HUD on project matters, and

support's Sossi's testimony on the non-secret provenance of the information he was

communicating. In citing this letter, Lake Travis is required to take the impossible

position that its lawyer can communicate with HUD – which, from the context,

dealt with Lake Travis's plans, its progress, conversion, and the like, which it now

claims to be "secret" – but that the same subject matter in Sossi's hands was a trade

secret that he could not use to correct (by his lights) Lake Travis's counsel's

misstatements. Sossi's communication here was backed up by the very public

Mayor of Lakeway relying on very public records and the very public appearance

of the shell of what Lake Travis hoped someday would be the Lake Travis

Hospital.

      The Lawyer Appellees have no quarrel with the general principles set forth

in Lake Travis's cases reciting that "[t]rade secret information disclosed pursuant to

negotiations for the sale of a business are disclosed under a duty of confidence."

(H.E. Butt Grocery Co. v. Moody’s Quality Meats, Inc., 951 S.W.2d 33, 36 (Tex.

App.–Corpus Christi 1997, pet. denied), cited at Lake Travis Brief at 18-19.) But

they apply only if there's a trade secret at issue, which, in this case, Lake Travis has

not only failed, but refused, to establish. In H.E.Butt, for example, the appellate

court threw out the trial court verdict for the trade secret plaintiff for failure to

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                                Page 53
establish trade secret status of the information conveyed during the business

negotiation.    In Daniels Health Sciences, LLC v. Vascular Health Sciences, LLC,

710 F.3d 579, 584 (5th Cir. 2013), also cited, there was an identifiable trade secret

– the formula for a vascular health supplement. In Hyde Corp. v. Huffines, 314
S.W.2d 763 (Tex. 1958), also cited, the trade secret was an intricate patent-pending

design for a "compressor mechanism for refuse truck." Contrast these cases with

Lake Travis's, where its chief witness refused to answer the fundamental questions

about disclosure and use.

      There was no admissible evidence of improper disclosure or use of any Lake

Travis trade secret. The third element of the tort fails.

      D.       Fourth Element: There Was No Evidence that Lake Travis's
               Failure Had Any Connection with Any Activity by Lawyer
               Appellees.
      The final element of a misappropriation claim is that the plaintiff must have

suffered damages as a result of the claimed misappropriation.            There is no

misappropriation injury "in the air"; in trade secret cases, as in any other, "in order

to recover any type of damages, a plaintiff must produce evidence from which the

jury may reasonably infer that the damages sued for have resulted from the conduct

of the defendant." (Rusty's Weigh Scales & Serv., Inc. v. N. Tex. Scales, Inc., 314
S.W.3d 105, 111 (Tex. App. - El Paso 2010, no pet.) (affirming judgment for trade

secret defendant for plaintiff's failure to satisfy fourth element of damage caused

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                               Page 54
by misappropriation).) While misappropriation injury need not be precisely

quantified, as to causation it cannot be speculative where numerous other

competitive risks are present:

      Profits which are largely speculative, as from an activity dependent on
      uncertain or changing market conditions, or on chancy business
      opportunities, or on promotion of untested products or entry into
      unknown or unviable markets, or on the success of a new and
      unproven enterprise, cannot be recovered. Factors like these and others
      which make a business venture risky in prospect preclude recovery of
      lost profits in retrospect. [Lamont v. Vaquillas Energy Lopeno, Ltd.,
      421 S.W.3d 198, 225 (Tex. App. - San Antonio 2013, pet. denied)
      (citation omitted; emphasis supplied) (trade secret case; trial evidence
      held sufficient).]

      There is no doubt that Lake Travis Hospital failed – indeed, never even got

underway -- but there is similarly no doubt that Lake Travis failed to adduce a

scintilla of evidence that its woes resulted from any misappropriation of Lake

Travis's trade secrets.

      Instead, the undisputed evidence is that the Lake Travis project was

extremely uncertain of viability before the Brennan Firm or Frank Sossi ever heard

of it. Its sole financier Health Care REIT was gravely concerned about the effect

of the Medicaid and SCHIP Extension Act of 2007 on Lake Travis's ability to

succeed, and the evidence is undisputed that it – not Lake Travis – reached out to

Surgical Development and Lakeway for a potential lifeline that Lake Travis's

principals Berry and McDonald eagerly grasped. That Lakeway eventually took a

pass as did every other investor (other than Health Care REIT) who looked at the

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                            Page 55
project cannot be laid at Lawyer Appellees' door.

      Unlike almost every other trade secret case in the Texas reporters, this was

not a case where Lake Travis was charging the Lawyer Appellees with using the

claimed "trade secrets" in their own business or to aid the business operation of the

Lakeway Hospital, or with wrongfully disclosing them to the public. Rather, the

summary judgment evidence related exclusively to the Lawyer Appellees'

communications with HUD, who was not in competition with Lake Travis.

      But Lakeway's pursuit of a HUD loan guaranty had nothing to do with Lake

Travis or any "trade secrets."      As noted, the evidence was undisputed that

Lakeway was under development prior to and independently of any contact at all

between Lake Travis or its worried landlord Health Care REIT. Lakeway and

Surgical Development, aided by their attorneys Lawyer Appellees, never stopped

their efforts to develop Lakeway nor were they required to do so because Surgical

Development entered into the LOI. The evidence is undisputed that:

             (1)   HUD's Robert Deen testified that HUD received no information

      from Lawyer Appellees on Lake Travis or Lake Travis Hospital prior to the

      issuance of its commitment to guaranty Lakeway's loan.

             (2)   He also testified that he did not discuss Lake Travis or Lake

      Travis hospital with Sossi in any telephone conversation.

             (3)   He learned of the Lake Travis development through a Lake

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                              Page 56
      Travis View newspaper article from February 2009 in which Berry himself

      was the source for the information that the facility was intended for long-

      term acute care patients.

      We have discussed Sossi's post-loan-commitment contacts with HUD in

defense of the loan commitment in detail above and will not repeat that discussion

here. For purposes of this element of Lake Travis's claim however, we note that

these communications were prompted by a complaint by a third-party health-care

competitor (Westway Hospital) who provided (obviously non-trade-secret)

information to HUD calling into question whether the geographic area in question

was underserved for general acute care.      The information that Lake Travis was

still holding itself out as a planned long-term acute care facility and that it had no

visible prospects of opening soon was not in any way secret, as demonstrated by

the communication from Lakeway's Mayor DeOme attached to Sossi's May 10

Email. Despite extensive discovery from HUD in this case, Lake Travis offers no

evidence that if Sossi had never had a single contact with HUD (1) HUD would

have withdrawn its guaranty of Lakeway's loan or (2) that if it had, Lake Travis

would have had any greater success in attracting investors or (3) opening and

operating profitably.

      As with the foregoing elements, a fact issue on causation cannot be

generated simply by asserting its existence. In a case similar to this one, plaintiff

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                              Page 57
in Am. Steel & Supply, Inc. v. Commercial Metals, Inc., 2010 Tex.App. LEXIS

1776, *5, **17-18 (Tex.App. - Corpus Christi 2010, pet. denied) alleged that the

defendant had expressed an interest in purchasing plaintiff's business and in the

course of due diligence had received plaintiff's trade secrets, which it used to

plaintiff's competitive harm.

      Ward's original affidavit provided no factual context for any of its
      conclusions. With respect to causation, the affidavit merely states
      "[a]fter the events at issue," certain events occurred, including that
      American Steel lost business and American Steel's customers
      purchased structural steel from Commercial Metals. Nowhere,
      however, does the affidavit explain what those events were, or how
      they caused American Steel to lose business. We hold that these
      statements do not constitute more than a scintilla of evidence to
      support causation, and the trial court did not err in granting the motion
      for summary judgment.

See also Speedemissions, Inc. v. Capital C Enters., 2008 Tex.App. LEXIS 7303,

**17-19 (Tex.App. - Houston [1st Dist.] 2008, no pet.) (trade secret case; summary

judgment affirmed where plaintiff presented only "bare legal conclusions" as to

damage and injury); Plotkin v. Joekel, 304 S.W.3d 455, 487 (Tex.App. - Houston

[1st Dist.] 2009, no pet.) ("[c]onclusory affidavits are not enough to raise fact

issues" in that "[t]hey are not credible, nor [are they] susceptible to being readily

controverted") (summary judgment on tortious interference claim affirmed);

Cuidado Casero Home Health of El Paso, Inc. v. Ayuda Home Health Care Servs.,

LLC, 404 S.W.3d 737 (Tex. App. - El Paso 2013, no pet.) (same; trade secret

summary judgment affirmed).)

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                              Page 58
      If there is no evidence of injury resulting from wrongdoing, it follows that

there is no evidence of damages caused thereby. Nevertheless, we briefly consider

Lake Travis's arguments on damages. (Lake Travis's Brief at 27-30.) It claims a

sufficient summary judgment showing with respect to either loss of market value,

benefits obtained by Lakeway, or "reasonable royalty."

      Lake Travis's "reasonable royalty" cases show the absurdity of its claim

here. First up is Univ. Computing Co. v. Lykes-Youngstown Corp., 504 F.2d
518 (5th Cir. 1974). This decision applies Georgia, not Texas, law. Putting that

aside, the stolen trade secret there was an actual thing, a "retail inventory control

system" called AIMES III, for Automated Inventory Management Evaluation

System. (Id. at 709.)     In Southwestern Energy Prod. Co. v. Berry-Helfand, 411
S.W.3d 581, 587 (Tex. App. Tyler 2013), the trade secret was once again

something someone would pay a royalty for, an exhaustive, unique, highly

technical and unquestionably identifiable analysis of oil prospects in the James

Lime formation. Lake Travis's final "royalty" case is Bohnsack v. Varco, L.P., 668
F.3d 262, 267 (5th Cir. Tex. 2012), where an actual invention was stolen, the "Pit

Bull," "a portable pumping machine that reduces the volume of cuttings that

remain in [oil] tanks after the mud passes through" and separates the mud from the

drilling fluids, that saves days in the drilling process.

      Contrast these cases where there was a true theft and commercial use of

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                              Page 59
unique, highly proprietary, and valuable information or designs – tangible items

with obvious royaltyable value -- with what Lake Travis is claiming.         The only

claimed disclosure (disputed by Lawyer Appellees, but let's just say) was the May

10 Email, which "discloses" or "uses," if that is the word for it, that Lake Travis

missed a deadline, had code violations and insufficient parking, would be costly

and difficult to expand, lacked physician support, an operator, and a staff, and

wouldn't be open in summer 2010. This is simply not royaltyable information –

there is no "willing buyer/willing seller" hypothetical to pursue here. Another way

of saying this is that you at least have to have an identified, Texas-qualified trade

secret – information, invention, something – to which a royalty might be attached,

and Lake Travis does not. It only values the "Project File," which isn't even real.

Berry's hugely overstated damage calculation is a direct result of Lake Travis's

theory that its entire enterprise is a trade secret, so its market value/purchase price

must be the value of the whole company.

       But Lake Travis's royalty discussion has a more serious problem. It contains

only a single cite to the record, Paragraph 15 of the Berry Declaration. (CR2 7611-

12.)    Paragraph 15 of the Berry Declaration says nothing about a reasonable

royalty for what Berry is claiming to be a trade secret.          In fact, the Berry

Declaration does not contain the word "royalty." Lake Travis's assertion of royalty

damages isn't within shouting distance of a scintilla.

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                               Page 60
        We need then not pause long to consider Lake Travis's position, appended to

its "damages" discussion at 31 (Subsection (d)), that a "royalty damages" theory

reads out of the elements of the tort that the damages had to result from the tort –

couched, in this case, as an assertion that if it asserts a "royalty" theory it need not

show that the Lawyer Appellees' communications about Lake Travis made HUD

do what it did (which is only part of Lake Travis's causation burden in this matter

in any case). There is no support for this odd assertion in the cases (the sole

citation is to Southwestern Energy Prod. Co., 411 S.W.3d at 609, which does not

so hold). "Reasonable royalty" is only one of the possible formulations for trade

secret damages and while it is true that it does not require proof of lost profits,

simply asserting it as a damage theory does not alter the traditional elements of the

tort.

        That leaves loss of market value and benefit to the defendant. As above, the

failure of the other elements of Lake Travis's misappropriation claim – and the

causation element of this fourth element – tie directly to the sub-scintilla status of

Berry's claims here as well. It simply makes no sense to calculate Lake Travis's

loss or Lakeway's gain as Berry has done in his affidavit. There is no evidence that

the single email from Sossi to HUD regarding confirmation of a loan guaranty that

had already been made (and made before the Lawyer Appellees ever had any

communications with HUD mentioning Lake Travis) and the few other (and almost

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                                Page 61
undocumented) communications caused the failure of a project that was already

entirely moribund and vaulted Lakeway to success it would not otherwise have

enjoyed.

      There are a lot of detailed assertions in the Berry Declaration, but they are

all ultimately conclusory (including reference to a damage expert to which Lake

Travis does not cite); like a schoolboy's math exam, he is required to show his

work. "When the failure to attach sworn or certified copies of papers referenced in

the affidavit leaves it conclusory, the affidavit does not raise a fact issue. Tex. R.

Civ. P. 166a(f)[.] A conclusory statement is one that does not provide the

underlying facts to support the conclusion." (Lina T. Ramey & Assocs. v. TBE

Group, Inc., 2015 Tex.App. LEXIS 5089 (Tex.App. - Dallas 2015) (summary

judgment affirmed); see also Plas-Tex, Inc. v. Jones, 2000 Tex. App. LEXIS 3188,

*18 (Tex.App. - Austin 2000, pet denied) ("Hufford's affidavit contains only

conclusory statements regarding the value of intangible assets such as unidentified

trade secrets, tax loss carry forwards, Air Board permits, and goodwill; he provides

no facts to support his evaluations"; summary judgment on breach of fiduciary

duty count affirmed).) And again – when the trade secret has been misidentified as

the whole company, valuing that misidentified trade secret will not result in a

credible damage calculation.

      In the end, Berry's numbers don't matter; Lake Travis offered no evidence

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                              Page 62
that the few and brief communications of which it complains caused it any injury

at all. The fourth element lacked a scintilla of summary judgment support.

                                 CONCLUSION
      Lake Travis's cause of action for trade secret misappropriation against the

Lawyer Appellees failed in a spectacular way. Its theory that "everything's a trade

secret" was moribund in the trial court is no more viable here. It embarrassed both

CEO Berry and "expert" Halligan at their depositions. It was the only theory

available in the absence of specific evidence for any of the elements. The trial

court recognized its nonconformity with Texas law and correctly dismissed it.

      The trial court's order granting the Lawyer Appellees' motion for summary

judgment on Lake Travis's claim against them for trade secret misappropriation

should be affirmed.

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                              Page 63
                                    PRAYER
      For the reasons set forth above, the Lawyer Appellees respectfully request

that this Court issue an order affirming the July 16, 2014, Order of the trial court

dismissing Lake Travis's claims against them with prejudice (7/17 SR 201-02) and

granting them such other relief to which they may be entitled.

                                         Respectfully submitted,

                                         GORDON & REES LLP

                                         By : /s/ B. Ryan Fellman
                                             Robert A. Bragalone
                                             BBragalone@GordonRees.com
                                             Texas Bar No.: 02855850
                                             B. Ryan Fellman
                                             RFellman@GordonRees.com
                                             Texas Bar No.: 24072544

                                             GORDON & REES LLP
                                             Suite 2800
                                             2100 Ross Avenue
                                             Dallas, Texas 75201
                                             Phone: 214-231-4660
                                             Fax: 214-461-4053

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                             Page 64
                      CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE
      The Lawyer Appellees hereby certify that the foregoing brief complies with

the word limitations of Rule 9.4(i)(2)(B), Tex.R.App.P. The program used to

create this brief reports that the applicable sections contain 14,715 words.

                                          /s/ B. Ryan Fellman
                                         B. Ryan Fellman

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                                Page 65
                          CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
       I hereby certify that on the 20th day of November, 2015, the foregoing motion was
served by electronic service and/or email upon the following counsel of record:

 S. Abraham Kuczaj III, Esq.
 akuczaj@scottdoug.com
 Paige A. Amstutz, Esq.
 pamstutz@scottdoug.com
 Steven J. Wingard, Esq.
 swingard@scottdoug.com
 Jane Webre, Esq.
  jwebre@scottdoug.com
 SCOTT, DOUGLASS &MCCONNICO, LLP
 303 Colorado, Suite 2400
 Austin, TX 78701

 Counsel for Appellee/Cross-Appellant Lake
 Travis Transitional LTCH, LLC

 Jeff Cody, Esq.                                  Jessica Z. Barger, Esq.
  jeff.cody@nortonrosefulbright.com               barger@wrightclose.com
 Barton Wayne Cox, Esq.                           Raffi Melkonian, Esq.
 beau.cox@nortonrosefulbright.com                 melkonian@wrightclose.com
 James V. Leito IV, Esq.                          WRIGHT & CLOSE, LLP
 james.leito@nortonrosefulbright.com              One Riverway, Suite 2200
 NORTON ROSE FULBRIGHT US LLP                     Houston, TX 77056
 2200 Ross Avenue, Suite 3600
 Dallas, TX 75201-2784                            Counsel     for     Appellant/Cross-
                                                  Appellee    Surgical   Development
 Joy M. Soloway, Esq.                             Partners, LLC
 joy.soloway@nortonrosefulbright.com
 NORTON ROSE FULBRIGHT US LLP
 1301 McKinney, Suite 5100
 Houston, TX 77010-3095

 Counsel     for Appellants/Cross-Appellees
 Lakeway Regional Medical Center, LLC and
 Surgical Development Partners, LLC

                                        By: /s/ B. Ryan Fellman

BRIEF OF LAWYER CROSS-APPELLEES                                                Page 66