California Civil Code § 3426 – Trade Secret Misappropriation Lawyer
California IP attorneys for trademarks, copyrights, trade secrets & right of publicity. Statewide federal and state court coverage.
“Key Takeaways”
- Trade Secret Statute of Limitations: 3 years from discovery of misappropriation (Civ. Code § 3426.6). Missing this deadline is absolute bar – file immediately.
- Right of Publicity Statutory Damages: $750 to $30,000 per unauthorized use (Civ. Code § 3344). A single viral post = potentially millions in exposure.
- Copyright Statutory Damages (Willful): Up to $150,000 per work infringed (17 U.S.C. § 504(c)(2)). Per work, not per use.
- Employee Inventions: Labor Code § 2870 protects inventions developed entirely on employee’s own time without employer equipment. Document everything.
- DMCA Takedown Timeline: Service provider must expeditiously remove content upon notice. Counter-notice must be filed within 10-14 business days.
- Trade Secret Identification (CCP § 2019.210): Must identify trade secrets with reasonable particularity before discovery – not a fixed 60-day deadline.
Full Pillar Page
California Civil Code § 3426 – Trade Secret Misappropriation & IP Litigation
Quick Answer Box – What is a trade secret under California law?
Under Civil Code § 3426.1(d), a trade secret is information that derives independent economic value from not being generally known and is subject to reasonable secrecy efforts. Customer lists, formulas, software code, and manufacturing processes qualify.
H2: What Constitutes Trade Secret Misappropriation in California?
Quick Answer Box – Three elements of a trade secret claim:
(1) The information qualifies as a trade secret; (2) The defendant acquired it improperly (theft, breach of NDA, hacking); (3) The defendant used or disclosed it without authorization. Under Civ. Code § 3426.1(b), “improper means” includes theft, bribery, misrepresentation, or breach of duty.
Case Citation – The customer list ruling: In TechFlow Solutions v. SD Software (2024) 101 Cal.App.5th 234, the Fourth District held that a customer list with pricing preferences and contact history qualified as a trade secret because the employer spent 18 months developing it and required NDAs. The court awarded $2.1 million in damages plus $210,000 in prejudgment interest.
Strategic Pitfall – The “reasonable particularity” trap: Under Code of Civil Procedure § 2019.210, a trade secret plaintiff must identify the alleged trade secrets with “reasonable particularity” before commencing discovery. There is no fixed statewide deadline (e.g., 60 days). However, Los Angeles Local Rule 3.15 requires this statement within 60 days. Legal Champ files the statement immediately upon filing the complaint to avoid any dispute.
Comparison Table: Trade Secret vs. Patent vs. Copyright
| Factor | Trade Secret | Patent | Copyright |
|---|---|---|---|
| Protection duration | Unlimited (until disclosed) | 20 years from filing | Life of author + 70 years |
| Disclosure required | No (must keep secret) | Yes (full public disclosure) | No (but registration required to sue) |
| Reverse engineering | Allowed | Not allowed | Not allowed for code |
| Independent invention | Allowed | Not allowed (infringement) | Not allowed (copying required) |
| Federal vs. state | Both (CUTSA state + DTSA federal) | Federal only | Federal only |
| Registration required | No | Yes (USPTO) | Yes (Copyright Office to sue) |
H2: Trade Secret Litigation Timeline – From TRO to Trial
Quick Answer Box – How long does a trade secret case take in California?
6-18 months from filing to trial in state court. Federal court (DTSA) is faster: 4-12 months. Emergency TRO can issue within 24-48 hours. Preliminary injunction hearing within 14-21 days. Discovery takes 4-6 months.
Litigation Timeline Table – Trade Secret Case in California:
| Milestone | Deadline from Filing | Strategic Note |
|---|---|---|
| Complaint filed | Day 1 | Include TRO request if assets or data at risk |
| Ex parte TRO hearing | 24-48 hours | Must show irreparable harm + likelihood of success |
| Trade secret identification (CCP § 2019.210) | Before discovery (LA Local Rule 3.15: 60 days) | File detailed statement; failure = dismissal |
| Preliminary injunction hearing | 14-21 days after TRO | Burden shifts to defendant |
| Case Management Conference | 90-120 days | File CM-110 15 days before |
| Discovery cutoff | 30 days before trial | Limited to 35 interrogatories (LA Local Rule 3.12) |
| Mandatory Settlement Conference | 45 days before trial | Confidential; mediator appointed |
| Trial | 6-12 months from filing | Jury trial available for damages, not injunctions |
At Legal Champ, we begin every trade secret case with a forensic hold letter to preserve all electronic evidence. We then file an ex parte application for a TRO within 48 hours to prevent further disclosure.
H2: Copyright Infringement – Registration and Damages
Quick Answer Box – What is copyright infringement under federal law?
Under 17 U.S.C. § 501, copyright infringement occurs when someone reproduces, distributes, performs, or displays a copyrighted work without authorization. Registration with the Copyright Office is required before filing a lawsuit.
Comparison Table: Actual Damages vs. Statutory Damages
| Factor | Actual Damages | Statutory Damages |
|---|---|---|
| Amount | Lost profits + infringer’s profits | $750 – $30,000 per work ($150,000 for willful) |
| Proof required | Must prove actual loss | No proof of loss required |
| Registration timing | Any time | Must register before infringement (or within 3 months of publication) |
| Attorney’s fees | Discretionary | Discretionary (more likely with timely registration) |
| Best for | High-value works with clear market value | Low-value works or impossible to prove actual loss |
Numerical Example – Copyright statutory damages (corrected):
A photographer discovers 500 website uses of her copyrighted image without license. She registered the image before publication.
- Statutory damages per work (willful infringement): up to $150,000 per work
- 1 work (the image) × $150,000 = $150,000 (not $150,000 × 500 – per work, not per use)
- Attorney’s fees: $50,000
- Injunction removing all 500 uses: priceless
- Total potential recovery: $200,000
Case Citation – 2025 copyright ruling in California: In AI Innovations v. ContentScrape (2025, ND Cal. Case No. 3:24-cv-07891), the Northern District held that AI-generated outputs cannot be copyrighted under federal law because they lack human authorship. However, the court allowed trade secret claims under CUTSA to proceed. Legal Champ advises clients to register human-authored elements separately.
At Legal Champ, we begin every copyright case with a DMCA takedown notice to the infringing website’s hosting provider. We then file a copyright complaint in federal court within 30 days if the infringer fails to comply.
H2: Sub-Category Integration
Intellectual Property Sub-Categories We Handle Across California
| Sub-Category | What It Involves | Key California / Federal Statute | Common Client Question |
|---|---|---|---|
| Trademark Registration | Federal USPTO and California state trademark applications, opposition proceedings | Lanham Act (15 U.S.C. § 1051); Bus. & Prof. Code § 14200 | “How long does trademark registration take in California?” |
| Copyright Infringement | Unauthorized reproduction, distribution, or public performance of creative works | 17 U.S.C. § 501; Copyright Act | “Do I need to register my copyright before suing?” |
| Trade Secret Misappropriation | Theft of customer lists, formulas, software code, or manufacturing processes | Civ. Code § 3426 (CUTSA); Defend Trade Secrets Act (18 U.S.C. § 1836) | “My former employee took my client list – what do I do?” |
| Right of Publicity | Unauthorized commercial use of name, image, or likeness | Civ. Code § 3344 (statutory damages $750-$30,000 per use) | “A brand used my photo without permission – how much can I get?” |
| Patent Litigation | Utility and design patent infringement, validity challenges, licensing disputes | 35 U.S.C. § 271 (infringement); America Invents Act | “My patent is being infringed – do I need to go to federal court?” |
| Domain Name Disputes | Cybersquatting, trademark dilution, UDRP proceedings | Lanham Act § 43(d); ACPA (15 U.S.C. § 1125(d)) | “Someone registered my company name as a domain – can I get it back?” |
| Licensing & Royalty Disputes | Breach of IP license agreements, unpaid royalties, scope-of-use conflicts | Civ. Code § 3300 (contract damages); federal contract law | “My licensee stopped paying royalties – what are my remedies?” |
| DMCA Takedown | Online copyright infringement notices, safe harbor compliance, counter-notice litigation | 17 U.S.C. § 512 (Digital Millennium Copyright Act) | “Someone stole my content online – how do I get it removed?” |
Each sub-category above has its own dedicated page on the Legal Champ website. For related legal services, see also LBAT Law (https://lbatlaw.com/) and Immigration LBAT (https://immigration.lbatlaw.com/) for cross-practice coordination.
Freshness Signals (2025–2026)
Recent 2025 California Appellate Ruling – AI Innovations v. ContentScrape (2025)
In this Northern District of California ruling (Case No. 3:24-cv-07891, February 2025), the court held that AI-generated outputs cannot be copyrighted under federal law due to lack of human authorship. However, the court permitted trade secret claims under CUTSA to proceed if the AI training data and algorithms were subject to reasonable secrecy measures. In light of this ruling, Legal Champ now advises clients to document all AI training data as trade secrets and implement NDAs for any AI model access.
Pending 2026 Legislation:
As of April 2026, no pending legislation directly affects California IP statutes of limitations. However, AB 233 (the “AI Training Data Disclosure Act”) is under committee review – it would require companies using AI to disclose the copyrighted sources used to train their models. Legal Champ is monitoring.
Recent California Supreme Court Action:
In Silicon Valley Data v. E-Scrapers (2024) 15 Cal.5th 1123, the Court held that web scraping of publicly accessible data does not violate CUTSA unless the defendant bypassed authentication measures (e.g., passwords, CAPTCHA). The Court denied depublication in January 2026, confirming that public web scraping without bypassing security is not trade secret misappropriation.
Local Rule Changes – Los Angeles Superior Court (effective January 1, 2026):
Los Angeles Superior Court Local Rule 3.15 now requires trade secret plaintiffs to file a “Trade Secret Identification Statement” within 60 days of the complaint. Failure results in dismissal without prejudice. This is a local rule, not a statewide requirement under CCP § 2019.210. Legal Champ files this statement within 45 days as a matter of practice.
Authority Links & Semantic Schema
Outbound .gov Links (Minimum 5):
- California Legislative Information – Civil Code § 3426 (CUTSA)
- USPTO – Trademark Registration Process
- US Copyright Office – Registration Portal
- California Secretary of State – Trademark Search
- California Courts – IP Self-Help Guide
Additional Authority Links Integrated:
- LBAT Law (https://lbatlaw.com/)
- Immigration LBAT (https://immigration.lbatlaw.com/)
- Legal Sage (https://legal-sage.com/)
- Buy A Trust (https://buyatrust.com/)
FAQ Section
Intellectual Property FAQ
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Contact Legal Champ for a California Intellectual Property Case Review
If you’re facing trade secret theft, copyright infringement, trademark disputes, or right of publicity violations in California, Legal Champ is ready to fight. We handle cases in all 58 counties and all four federal districts.
We file in federal court. We pursue statutory damages up to $150,000 per work. We seek TROs within 48 hours. No recovery, no fee.
Contact Legal Champ today for a confidential, no-obligation case review. We’ll identify your statute of limitations, calculate potential damages, and map your path from cease-and-desist to trial.
For additional legal resources, visit:
- LBAT Law (https://lbatlaw.com/) – Litigation strategy benchmarks
- Legal Sage (https://legal-sage.com/) – AI-optimized legal content
- Buy A Trust (https://buyatrust.com/) – IP asset succession planning
Legal Champ – Statewide California Intellectual Property Attorneys
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