Showing posts with label Kansas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kansas. Show all posts

Thursday, September 7, 2017

Judicial Engagement and Non-Compete Litigation

The lack of judicial engagement is a serious thing - particularly in competition disputes.

What do I mean by judicial engagement? For simplicity, I mean a bridge between judicial activism and judicial restraint. It's a method of evaluating and deciding cases, plain and simply.

The term is somewhat in vogue in libertarian circles (which I inhabit) and used when litigants challenge economic regulations on the grounds that they are irrational or impinge on personal liberties.

So when a government enacts a law that restricts economic freedom - say, an occupational licensing requirement - those who favor judicial engagement do not want courts to abdicate their roles. That is to say, courts should not simply defer to whatever the legislature says is a rational justification for the law.

Rather, courts must engage with the evidence and ensure that it supports the need for the law. And on that score, advocates for judicial engagement would argue that protectionism is never a valid governmental interest. Unfortunately, the black-letter rules that attend government economic regulation all but invite trial judges to defer entirely to whatever the legislature says. An overreading of these black-letter principles leads courts to the wrong results, in which they often time rely on theoretical assumptions or abstract hypotheticals.

***

The same decisional framework, judicial engagement, applies to non-compete cases because the applicable legal rule already demand a searching analysis without granting undue deference to the party in whose favor a non-compete runs. So that seems easy enough and a perfectly reasonable analogue to the traditional playing field for the theory of judicial engagement.

I digress for a second, but only a second. As my colleague Jonathan Pollard writes in a recent post, non-competes are first and foremost restraints of trade. Unless we are discussing a negotiated agreement (such as in a sale of business) with real consideration, non-competes are not traditional contracts. They may not even be contracts at all.

When an employer involves the government, here the judiciary, the same liberty concerns arise - with just as much force as an irrational, generally applicable regulation that the legislature passes. The problem that has vexed courts, lawyers, and litigants is how to engage or grapple with the facts in a non-compete dispute. To be sure, judicial restraint is no method of deciding such cases at all.

But many courts employ a burden-shifting approach that all but requires an employee to prove the impossible: that the employer lacks a legitimate business interest in enforcing a restraint. Allowing employers, for instance, simply to mouth some variant of a "legitimate business interest" is not the proper way for a judge to sanction a restraint and impede someone's livelihood.

Let me be clear: nothing in the philosophy of judicial engagement calls upon courts usurp their roles. Just as it is crucial for courts to assess the rationale for governmental regulations of economic activity, it is a moral imperative for them to scrutinize an employer's attempt to enforce through court order a restraint of trade. This is particularly so given the dead weight that enforced and unenforced non-competes have on the economy and productivity.

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Let's take an example of judicial abdication, rather than engagement. The Kansas case of Servi-Tech, Inc. v. Olson is as bland of a non-compete case as you can get. I've handled some variation of this dispute for 20 years, and this fits within the most basic of fact-patterns, summarized (for simplicity as follows):


  • Employee signs a non-compete agreement, containing a broad 2-year market-based restraint wherever the company's clients are located;
  • Employee's non-compete also contains a 2-year restriction against soliciting clients with whom he had contact;
  • Employee works for 2 years before the company terminates him;
  • Employee receives nothing but his job for signing the agreement;
  • Employee is assigned 10 clients when he starts;
  • Employee's friends and family then comprise 5 additional clients after he starts;
  • After being fired, employee stays in the same field and works only with his 5 "friends-and-family" contacts.
The district court enforces the non-solicitation agreement against the employee and includes within the injunction the 5 new clients that joined the company because of their relationship with the employee.

I am simplifying the case for purposes of this discussion. And there are elements of the court's ruling that are proper (if not in reasoning then certainly in result). For instance, the court found the market-based restraint unenforceable, which seems fairly obvious.

But I am concerned about the reasoning in the injunction opinion, particularly its lack of engagement with the facts. On this score, the court seems just to be accepting at theoretical value whatever the employer has said in defense of its broad restraint.

For instance, in discussing the employer's proof of a legitimate business interest, the court said this:

"Olson received some special crop consulting and agronomy training from Servi-Tech, so Servi-Tech has a legitimate business interest to enforce the non-competition clause to protect its investment in him. This, coupled with Servi-Tech's interest of not losing customers, justifies the non-solicitation provision ... that prevents Olson from contacting customers he had worked with as a Servi-Tech employee."

Let's examine this further.

First, the court never describes any aspect of this "training" that the employee, Olson, received. Training if an oft-asserted, rarely convincing "interest" in need of protection. Would companies fail to train people if they lacked non-competes? Does all training incentivize performance or build goodwill? Hardly. The interest is easy to state in the abstract but it often falls apart under even the most basic level of scrutiny. More problematically, the court in Servi-Tech never explains why the particular training received justifies a 2-year work ban (to be fair, it later found the non-compete unreasonable on other grounds). Put differently, the court abdicated its role to assess the proper fit between the asserted interest and the scope of the restriction. 

Second, the interest in "not losing customers" is hardly one to justify a restraint of trade. True, there may be something special about a particular customer relationship - exclusivity, large up-front capital investment - that could justify a customer-based restraint. But no business wants to lose customers. Classifying this as an interest, much less a proven rationale, is judicial abdication and the product of undue deference to whatever the employer says.

Third, the court uses this purported interest to justify a restraint on all customers Olson had worked with at Servi-Tech. But what about the five family members who came to Servi-Tech because of Olson. What does the court say about them: "...they still became Servi-Tech's clients - not Olson's. Once they became Servi-Tech's clients, Servi-Tech was entitled to the benefits of doing business with them." True. That only is relevant, though, for the time Olson worked there. Nothing indicates that Servi-Tech did anything to create goodwill with those small group of personal contacts Olson had. Perhaps they would have come even if Servi-Tech had a poor marketplace reputation. In all likelihood, their fealty was to Olson himself. The court simply used an overbroad rationalization - "they're the employer's clients" - to justify a restraint that limits not just Olson's rights, but those of the clients themselves.

This is not to say, of course, that enforcement of all non-solicitation covenants leads to the same analytical problem. All I am asking for is for courts to engage and not defer. Engage with the facts, as well as the logical conclusions and implications of what the employer alleges.

***

So what must judges do to engage, rather than defer or abdicate? Here are some preliminary suggestions and steps:

(1) Hold the employer to a strict burden of proof. In some states, this is not an option for judges. Unless the legislature has made a qualitative judgment concerning this burden, the employer must bear it at all times.

(2) Evaluate the fit between the asserted business interests, the evidentiary facts, and the scope of the restriction. It is not enough for the employer simply to state an interest it deems worthy of protection. The court must demand hard evidence that supports an interest over and above protectionism. And the employer must demonstrate the logical relationship between the interest and the restraint's reach.

(3) Disaggregate special skills, training, or customer relationships from those that are ordinary or common. Too often, we see employers recasting easily acquired industry knowledge (even if through day-to-day work experience) as trade secrets. And training that is conventional on-the-job training, or gained via everyday work experience, is often something that employers provide regardless of having a signed non-compete. 

(4) Examine the time period of the restraint and assess its fit to the asserted interest. It is insufficient for courts to point to some case 20 years ago where a durationally similar non-compete was enforced. That is not engagement - that's punting.

***

Of course, these are just starting points. I have advocated, too, other approaches such as "quick-look" hearings on adequacy of consideration or facial validity of the agreement. Those may have some utilitarian, pragmatic benefit. But if we're constrained at this point to evaluate all non-compete cases individually, then judges really need to start doing so. No more deference to the employer. No more blind acceptance of allegations that have some theoretical appeal. And no more forgiveness of evidentiary lapses.

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Narrow Injunction Issued Against Graphic Arts Sales Manager (Oldham Graphic Supply v. Cornwell)


The case of Oldham Graphic Supply v. Cornwell is one of those non-compete opinions that has just about everything. Nothing is particularly earth-shattering or consequential about the decision itself. But it provides a great template for lawyers and clients to see how a court resolves a fairly typical case.

Though the case originates from Kansas, Illinois law applied to the non-compete contract. David Cornwell was a long-time Wichita-based salesman in the competitive field of graphic arts and printing equipment. Prior to joining Oldham Graphic Supply in 2004, Cornwell had vast industry experience and cultivated important client relationships - a fact that is crucial under Illinois law. When Cornwell started with Oldham in 2004, the company had no real presence in Wichita. But as a result of an acquisition, Oldham penetrated the Wichita market and brought Cornwell aboard to grow it.

Not surprisingly, Cornwell migrated to Oldham about 50 accounts. He later became the general manager of Oldham's branch office in Springfield, Missouri but only spent about one day per month there. The rest of the time he worked from his home office. Like most managers, he supervised other salespersons' accounts and managed some of his own, and he was paid by way of salary and commission.

Cornwell signed a two-year non-compete barring competitive employment within 200 miles "of each Oldham Graphic Supply office." He also agreed to a two-year customer non-solicitation covenant covering clients with whom he had contact while employed at Oldham. This necessarily captured Cornwell's pre-existing relationships.

Over the past couple of years, Cornwell's compensation structure at Oldham became decidedly less favorable. His commission percentage was reduced and he lost other benefits. Eventually, Cornwell had enough and (with a little urging from a supervisor) found another job - a competitive one with Xpedx. Prior to his departure, he encouraged a few of his customers to move with him and transfer their graphic arts business to Xpedx.

Though this may not have been the most advisable thing to do, Cornwell was careful in other respects when leaving Oldham. His new employer crafted his sales territory to avoid the 200-mile radius restriction in the non-compete, and it doesn't appear Cornwell took or used any proprietary documents.

The court first addressed whether Oldham had a protectable interest to enforce by way of a covenant not to compete. Though the opinion is somewhat meandering, it eventually found that Oldham did have such an interest in some limited confidential business information for certain accounts Cornwell developed solely on Oldham's dime - particularly cost information for those accounts where Kodak was the original supplier. The court properly noted that some of the business information in which Oldham tried to claim a protectable interest (e.g., customer pricing and information for his long-time customers) was really not confidential or unique, particularly given well-known industry customs, the rate at which such operational information becomes stale, and Cornwell's vast experience.

But the more salient part of the court's opinion concerns the reasonableness test - the second part of the inquiry after a court examines whether there is anything legitimate to protect at all. The court found that the covenant had to be modified to make it reasonable. Most importantly, the court noted that Cornwell's pre-existing accounts were not protectable and the injunction could not extend to them. However, for accounts he developed first while working for Oldham (there were only a few), the court did find that Oldham's request for injunctive relief was appropriate.

The court also rejected Oldham's core argument that the 200-mile non-compete clause should extend from Cornwell's "home office." The court construed the agreement's questionable ambiguity (it really wasn't ambiguous at all) against Oldham and held that the branch office to which the non-compete language applied was the Springfield, Missouri office. Since his Wichita contacts fell outside the 200-mile radius, Oldham basically could claim victory through the narrow reading of the non-compete. Apart from having to avoid a few customers until next year (the court also pared back the non-solicit from 2 years to 1, given the fluctuating nature of the graphic arts business), Cornwell can continue working for Xpedx with only minor inconvenience.

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Court: United States District Court for the District of Kansas
Opinion Date: 9/17/09
Cite: Oldham Graphic Supply, Inc. v. Cornwell, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 85214 (D. Kan. Sept. 17, 2009)
Favors: Employer
Law: Illinois

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Kansas Court Takes Broad View of Protectable Customer Relationships (Fee Insurance Group v. Martin)


A recent appellate decision out of Kansas illustrates the importance of analyzing the permissible breadth of protectable interests under non-compete law.

As I've written before, states vary widely in their application of the general rule that non-competes - to be valid - must support a protectable (or, legitimate) business interest. In Kansas, a protectable interest can include "customer contacts." In Fee Insurance Group v. Martin, the employee (an insurance sales representative) signed a one-year non-compete clause that prohibited him from competing for any customer belonging to Fee Insurance Group at the time his employment ended.

In many states (Illinois, for one), this clause arguably would be overbroad and invalid as extending beyond an employer's legitimate business interest. Martin, in fact, argued as such, reasoning that the prohibition could not extend to all 4,500 of his ex-employer's accounts. (He tacitly conceded that those accounts with whom he had a relationship were proper subjects of a valid non-compete clause).

The Kansas court, however, had little trouble in rejecting Martin's argument. Its court precedent allows employers to draft customer non-compete (or non-solicit) clauses to protect all customer relationships, not just those the employer facilitated or cultivated.

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Court: Court of Appeals of Kansas
Opinion Date: 8/14/09
Cite: Fee Insurance Group v. Martin, 2009 Kan. App. Unpub. LEXIS 620 (Kan. Ct. App. Aug. 14, 209)
Favors: Employer
Law: Kansas

Thursday, May 14, 2009

Royalty Injunction Not Appropriate for Knowing Misappropriation of Trade Secrets (Progressive Products v. Swartz)


The Court of Appeals of Kansas recently rendered an opinion on a somewhat obscure issue of law under the Uniform Trade Secrets Act. The question involved application of a royalty injunction, under which a party found to have misappropriated trade secrets can still utilize them as long as a reasonable royalty is paid to the non-infringing party.

The case arose out of a fairly typical departing employee fact pattern. Progressive Products is engaged in the manufacture and sale of Ceram-Back, a ceramic coating for pipe elbows that lengthens the life of a pipe. Several employees left to form a competitor which manufactured the identical product under a different name. The evidence adduced at trial indicated the defendants took the formula for Ceram-Back, its mixing process, a pricing method related to the sale of Ceram-Back, price lists, and customer lists. The court of appeals was unwilling to overrule the trial court's factual determination that the information taken constituted trade secrets and that Progressive Products demonstrated misappropriation under the uniform act.

The tougher issue concerned the remedy. The trial court did not award Progressive Products any damages and refused to issue a prohibitory injunction against the defendants. Instead, it issued a royalty injunction, which conditioned the defendants' future use of the trade secrets on payment of a 20 percent royalty to Progressive Products for three years.

This remedy is found in the uniform act, which varies slightly from state to state. The court of appeals reversed this aspect of the judgment and remanded for the trial court to determine the extent of a prohibitory injunction. In Kansas, the trade secrets law allows for a royalty injunction to issue under "exceptional circumstances." That has been interpreted to include either: (a) an overriding public interest; or (b) acquisition of a trade secret in good faith, with prejudice resulting to the innocent misappropriator should a prohibitory injunction issue.

In this case, the court found the defendants could not qualify as innocent misappropriators. It disagreed with the trial court's rationale that a royalty injunction was appropriate given the interest in competition, Progressive Products' culpability in failing to protect its secrets, and the need for some trade secret protection. As a matter of law, the trial court's rationale failed to meet the applicable standard.

Had the defendants acquired the formulas and other product information innocently or in good faith, perhaps from a party who had misappropriated them, a royalty injunction might have been appropriate. But it was not in a situation involving knowing misappropriation.

In Illinois, the uniform act is not as broad and only permits a royalty injunction to issue when there is an "overriding public interest."

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Court: Court of Appeals of Kansas
Opinion Date: 4/17/09
Cite: Progressive Products, Inc. v. Swartz, 2009 Kan. App. LEXIS 167 (Kan. Ct. App. Apr. 17, 2009)
Favors: Employer
Law: Kansas

Friday, February 13, 2009

Kansas Court Enforces 2-Year, 250-Mile Non-Compete Agreement (Chem-Trol v. Christensen)


Often times, when a court enforces a non-compete agreement, the restraining order or injunction won't match up with the language of the covenant. This usually is the result of the blue-pencil or judicial reformation doctrine. In a previous post, I outlined where each of the 50 states stands on the ability of courts to pare back, or sever, overbroad non-compete covenants.

However, on other occasions, a court will issue an injunction where a non-compete is modified but there is no discussion of the blue-pencil doctrine whatsoever. And that's what happened in Chem-Trol v. Christensen. In that case, Chem-Trol was engaged in the vegetation management services business, servicing utilities and rural electric cooperatives in maintaining right-of-ways and utility easements.

The plaintiff, Lyle Christensen, was clearly a key employee for Chem-Trol, serving as Area Manager for the Iowa facility. He was discharged in August of 2008, and after a few months, began servicing his former customers, doing business as Midwest Spray Team & Sales, Inc. Chem-Trol filed suit, seeking preliminary injunctive relief.

The non-compete agreement at issue prohibited Christensen for two years from going "into business alone or in conjunction with one or more others, or in the employ of any other person or legal entity where the business of such employment shall be the same or similar to that of [Chem-Trol], within a 250 mile radius of Hamlin, Iowa."

The court enforced the covenant, finding it reasonable and supportive of a legitimate business interest. The latter issue was easy to resolve: Christensen had long relationships with key accounts, and he himself was Chem-Trol's face in Iowa. Moreover, the scope of the non-compete did not appear unreasonable under the facts: the 250-mile radius - though wide - was reasonable because the nature of vegetation management services frequently stretched hundreds of miles per job. The two-year term also did not appear problematic since Christensen testified that it takes one to two years to form solid customer relationships in his business.

(Parenthetically, the fact Christensen was terminated involuntarily did not matter in this case - Kansas precedent (which the court did not cite) makes no distinction in cases where an employee is terminated and faces a non-compete obligation. Other states, like New York and Illinois, view that issue differently.)

What was odd, though, was the court's conflation of the non-compete terms with a separate non-solicitation of customers covenant. The injunction order only prevented Christensen from soliciting or providing services to Christensen's Chem-Trol accounts (which was not, apparently, disputed), as long as those accounts were within 250 miles of Hamlin, Iowa.

However, the non-solicitation clause - on which the court remarked - had no 250-mile restriction on it. It was a separate paragraph in the agreement, and its scope was very broad; it barred Christensen from contacting any Chem-Trol account, not just his own. Also, the non-compete clause containing the geographic limit purported to bar Christensen from working for any entity or providing any competitive services, whether those activities concerned Chem-Trol accounts or not. In other words, it seems as if the court lost track of two separate covenants it was analyzing.

That said, the ruling makes some sense. Chem-Trol, for its part, did not appear hell-bent on putting Christensen out of work in the industry as long as he avoided his accounts. Given his key role in the company, that seemed to be a reasonable position to take. The end result was the non-compete was not really enforced, and the non-solicitation clause was enforced, but under the geographic scope written into the non-compete clause.

If that makes sense...

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Court: United States District Court for the District of Kansas
Opinion Date: 2/10/09
Cite: Chem-Trol, Inc. v. Christensen, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9894 (D. Kan. Feb. 10, 2009)
Favors: Employer
Law: Kansas

Saturday, January 24, 2009

Kansas Court Sides With Narrow Application of Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (Us Bioservices v. Lugo)

Another court has weighed in on whether the federal Computer Fraud and Abuse Act can be applied to essentially federalize trade secrets claims. The answer, in the case of US Bioservices v. Lugo, was a resounding "no."

In granting the defendant's motion to dismiss the CFAA claim, the court adopted a narrow reading of the predicate act giving rise to liability under the statute. Though the CFAA has a number of different provisions, the touchstone of liability is that a defendant must use a protected computer without authorized access or in a manner which exceeds the access granted to him.

The Lugo case is based on a fairly typical of fact-pattern under the CFAA. An ex-employer claims that an employee downloaded or accessed confidential business information while on her work computer, e-mailed that to another location (usually a home account), and then permitted a new employer to use or obtain the benefit of the stolen data.

Does this activity equate to unauthorized access?

Lugo held no, noting along the way that federal courts are split on the issue. There are a number of factors supporting this narrow reading of the authorization language:

(1) the CFAA is at heart a criminal statute, and the rule of lenity applies
(2) "without authorization" is not defined but means, basically, "without permission" and there was no dispute that the employee had permission to access the information, irrespective of whether she misused it later
(3) the focus of the CFAA is wrongful procurement of data, not wrongful use of it

The court rejected the reasoning applied in other jurisdictions that principles of agency law can be grafted onto the CFAA. Under cases like the influential Citrin decision from the Seventh Circuit, an employee's "access" to his work computer ends when he is in breach of a duty of loyalty. Therefore, in those jurisdictions where Citrin is the prevailing rule, it is much easier to state a claim under the CFAA for cases involving misuse of data.

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Court: United States District Court for the District of Kansas
Opinion Date: 1/21/09
Cite: Us Bioservices Corp. v. Lugo, 595 F. Supp. 2d 1189 (D. Kan. 2009)
Favors: Employee
Law: Federal