State May Not Disclose Trade Secrets Submitted as Part of RFP Response

Friday, May 15, 2015


If you have ever agonized about whether to include certain confidential business information in a bid for a state contract in New Hampshire because of concerns that your competitors might get their hands on it, you should find some comfort in the New Hampshire Supreme Court’s recent decision in CaremarkPCS Health, LLC v. New Hampshire Department of Administrative Services, No. 2014-120.  In 2010, the Department issued a Request for Proposals (RFP) for pharmacy benefit management services for the State of New Hampshire’s health plan.  Caremark submitted a bid and ultimately obtained a contract with the State to perform the work.   

In 2011, the Department received multiple requests to inspect and copy Caremark’s bid and the final contract. Two of the requests were made by Caremark’s competitors. Caremark, after being informed by the Department of the requests, responded that certain confidential information contained in the bid and final contract was exempt from disclosure under the Right-to-Know Law. The Department and Caremark disputed whether certain information was subject to disclosure.  When the parties failed to resolve the dispute, Caremark filed a petition for declaratory and injunctive relief seeking to enjoin the Department from disclosing certain information.
After Caremark prevailed at the trial court level, the Department appealed to the New Hampshire Supreme Court claiming that the Uniform Trade Secrets Act did not trump the public’s right to information under the Right to Know Law.  The Supreme Court disagreed.  The Court concluded that the Department’s disclosure of Caremark’s trade secrets to its competitors would constitute “misappropriation” under the Uniform Trade Secrets Act and therefore constituted an exception to New Hampshire’s Right to Know Law.  It also rejected the Department’s argument that public policy favored disclosure concluding that when the legislature enacted the Uniform Trade Secret Act it “made the policy determination to prohibit the misappropriation of trade secrets.”

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