Plant-N-Power Services, Inc. v. JRE Field Services, LLC Tex David Simoneaux, Jr., JRE Industrial Services, LLC ( 2023 )


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  •                                       STATE OF LOUISIANA
    COURT OF APPEAL
    FIRST CIRCUIT
    2022 CA 1225
    GU
    r                     PLANT -N -POWER SERVICES, INC.
    VERSUS
    JRE FIELD SERVICES, LLC, TEX DAVID SIMONEAUX, JR., AND
    JRE INDUSTRIAL, LLC
    JUDGWNr RENDERED:       MAY 3 17023
    Appealed from the Twenty -Third Judicial District Court
    Parish of Ascension • State of Louisiana
    Docket Number 131445 • Division B
    The Honorable Cody M. Martin, Presiding Judge
    Phillip W. Preis                                COUNSEL FOR APPELLANTS
    Caroline P. Graham                              DEFENDANTS— JRE Field Services,
    Baton Rouge, Louisiana                          LLC; JRE Industrial, LLC; and Tex
    David Simoneaux, Jr.
    Barbara Lane Irwin                              COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE
    Timothy E. Pujol                                PLAINTIFF— Plant- N- Power Services,
    Gonzales, Louisiana                             Inc.
    BEFORE: WELCH, PENZATO, AND LANIER, JJ.
    WELCH, J.
    Defendants appeal the trial court' s judgment that granted Plaintiff' s cross
    motion for partial summary judgment. For the following reasons, we maintain the
    appeal. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    The plaintiff, Plant -N -Power Services, Inc. (" Plant -N -Power"),                 provides
    industrial boiler maintenance and repair services in Texas, Louisiana, and other
    states along the Gulf Coast. Plant -N -Power' s former president is Tex David
    Simoneaux, Jr., who was also an owner of Plant -N -Power' s predecessor, Plant -N -
    Power, L.L.P.
    The 2015 Areement
    In December 2015, Mr. Simoneaux and the other owners of Plant -N -Power,
    L.L.P. sold their equity in Plant -N -Power, L.L.P. to Plant -N -Power.' As part of the
    sale, Mr. Simoneaux entered into an employment and non -competition agreement
    with Plant -N -Power, effective December 31, 2015 (" 2015 Agreement"). The 2015
    Agreement contained other restrictive covenants including non -disclosure,                      non-
    solicitation, and non -disparagement provisions. Mr. Simoneaux remained employed
    by Plant -N -Power, and eventually served as its president, until he resigned his
    employment on April 5, 2019.
    Following his resignation, Plant -N -Power discovered that Mr. Simoneaux was
    working with one of its competitors,               JRE Field Services, LLC (" JRE Field
    Services"), in violation of the 2015 Agreement. Plant -N -Power also averred that Mr.
    Simoneaux formed a staffing company, Ascension Staffing, LLC, to disguise his
    involvement with JRE Field Services. Plant -N -Power filed suit to enforce the 2015
    Agreement in federal district court in Illinois.z Later, JRE Field Services filed suit
    Industrial Service Solutions, Inc. (" ISS") is the parent corporation of Plant -N -Power and a third -
    party beneficiary to the Settlement Agreement.
    2 Plant -N -Power alleged that Mr. Simoneaux breached the 2015 Agreement' s non -competition
    covenant by secretly serving as an investor and manager of Plant -N -Power' s direct competitor,
    2
    against Plant -N -Power in the Twenty -Third Judicial District Court (" 23rd JDC")                    for
    the Parish of Ascension, State of Louisiana.3
    The 2020 SettlementAgreement
    Thereafter,          Plant -N -Power,     Mr.       Simoneaux,     JRE     Field   Services,   and
    Ascension Staffing entered into a Settlement Agreement, effective March 19, 2020,
    to settle the Illinois federal litigation and Louisiana state court litigation. The
    Settlement Agreement defined the " Simoneaux Parties" as Mr. Simoneaux, JRE
    Field Services,       Ascension Staffing,         and "     any other person in which JRE Field
    Services, [ Mi.] Simoneaux,            or Ascension [ Staffing] has a direct or indirect interest."
    The Settlement Agreement set forth that the parties' 2015 Agreement was "                       binding
    and enforceable."        The Settlement Agreement further provided:
    Mr.]      Simoneaux         violated     the    restrictive    covenants
    contained       in    the   Restrictive     Covenant      Agreements,
    including       the     non -compete,          non -disclosure,     non-
    solicitation,    and non -disparagement provisions therein,
    through his involvement with JRE Field Services and
    Ascension Staffing both before and after his resignation
    from    employment with [ Plant -N -Power]                on    April   5,
    2019[.]
    The Simoneaux Parties agreed to pay $ 1. 25 million to Plant -N -Power for
    release of its claims brought in the federal and Louisiana state court litigation.' In
    response to and for the purpose of funding the Settlement Agreement,                                  Mr.
    Simoneaux formed JRE Industrial Services, LLC (" JRE Industrial") with John
    Evans and Rebecca Evans Mouk.S
    JRE Field Services, while he was still employed by Plant -N -Power. See Plant -N -Power Services,
    Inc. v. Simoneaux, No. 1: 19CV03268 ( N.D. Ill. May 4, 2019).
    3 See JRE Field Services, LLC v. Plant -N -Power Services, Inc., et al., Docket No. 126887, Div.
    E," 23rd JDC, Parish of Ascension, State of Louisiana.
    4 Defendants aver that this amount has been paid in full to Plant -N -Power.
    s Mr. Simoneaux alleged that Luis Alvarado, Paola Alvarado, and Kerry Ponthier owned 40% of
    JRE Field Services and refused to relinquish their ownership in the company despite repeated
    requests during the Settlement Agreement negotiations. Their refusal necessitated the formation
    of JRE Industrial to fund the Settlement Agreement. We note that Mr. Simoneaux owns 49%                of
    JRE Industrial.
    3
    The Simoneaux Parties further agreed to certain non -disclosure,                 non-
    competition, and non -solicitation covenants in the Settlement Agreement. Section
    5( b) of the Settlement Agreement contained the non -competition covenant:
    For a period that runs for two ( 2) years from the Effective
    Date of the Agreement, the Simoneaux Parties shall not
    directly or indirectly, on their own behalf or the behalf of
    any third party...   solicit, request, seek, obtain, or perform
    for the benefit of the Simoneaux Parties or any third party,
    boiler   field   services   work    for    any [ Plant -N -Power]
    Customer [ as defined in the Agreement]... .
    Exhibit D to the Settlement Agreement listed twenty-six customers that the
    Simoneaux Parties were prohibited from providing boiler field services work for
    within the defined geographic area of the twenty-three parishes listed in Exhibit E.
    Section 8( d) provided that the two-year period following the effective date of the
    Settlement Agreement "     shall restart and run for the full period upon each breach by
    any of the Simoneaux Parties of the covenants"           contained in Section 5( b). Section
    5( e) provided for liquidated damages of at least $ 50,000. 00 for each breach of the
    covenants contained in Section 5( b). Section 14 provided for costs and attorney' s
    fees to a prevailing party in an action establishing a breach of the Settlement
    Agreement.
    Current Litigation
    Approximately one year later, Plant -N -Power filed a petition for preliminary
    and permanent injunctive relief, liquidated damages, actual damages, declaratory
    judgment, and attorney' s fees and costs against Defendants— Mr.           Simoneaux, JRE
    Field Services, and JRE Industrial --     on May 12, 2021. Plant -N -Power alleged that
    after the   Settlement Agreement' s March          19,   2020 effective date, Defendants
    engaged in conduct in breach thereof. Plant -N -Power contended that Defendants
    performed prohibited boiler field services work for at least ten of the twenty- six
    Plant -N -Power customers that Mr. Simoneaux, JRE Field Services, and Ascension
    Staffing were prohibited from providing boiler field services work for within the
    4
    defined geographic area of the twenty-three parishes listed in the Settlement
    Agreement.'
    Defendants answered Plant -N -Power' s petition and raised several affirmative
    defenses. Pertinent to the instant appeal, Defendants argued that JRE Industrial was
    not a party to the Settlement Agreement and could not be liable for any breach of the
    Settlement Agreement by the parties thereto, nor could JRE Industrial be liable for
    liquidated damages, loss profits, or attorney' s fees. Defendants argued that the non-
    competition covenant contained in the Settlement Agreement did not comply with
    La. R.S. 23: 921 and was null and void. Specifically, Defendants argued that the non-
    competition covenant extended two years beyond the date of termination of Mr.
    Simoneaux' s employment, in violation of La. R.S. 23: 921( 0). Defendants contended
    that the last date that a non -competition agreement could be enforced against Mr.
    Simoneaux was April 5, 2021— i.e., two years after he resigned from Plant -N -Power
    on April 5, 2019.
    Mr. Simoneaux and JRE Industrial also filed a reconventional demand against
    Plant -N -Power. JRE Industrial alleged that Plant -N -Power violated Louisiana
    antitrust law, La. R.S. 51: 122, et seq.,      and Louisiana' s Unfair Trade Practices Act,
    La. R.S. 51: 1401, et seq. (" LUTPA',).7 To the extent the trial court found it was a
    party to the Settlement Agreement, JRE Industrial sought attorney' s fees as provided
    for in the Settlement Agreement. Against Plant -N -Power, Mr. Simoneaux alleged
    breach of contract, bad faith breach of contract, and sought attorney' s fees under the
    Settlement Agreement. Mr. Simoneaux also requested to inspect Plant -N -Power' s
    corporate documents as one of its shareholders.
    6 JRE Field Services admitted to performing boiler field services work for at least one of Plant -N -
    Power' s customers in violation of the Settlement Agreement' s non -competition covenant.
    JRE Industrial further alleged that Plant -N -Power is liable for the willful and intentional acts of
    its employee, Kodi J. Wiggins, through the doctrine of respondeat superior. However, the
    reconventional demand is not at issue in this appeal.
    5
    Defendants later filed a motion for partial summary judgment seeking the
    dismissal of Plant -N -Power' s claims, with prejudice, and a judgment declaring: JRE
    Industrial is not a party to the Settlement Agreement; that if any Defendant is found
    to have violated the Settlement Agreement, Plant -N -Power is prohibited from
    seeking liquidated damages against that Defendant pursuant to La. R.S. 23: 921( H),
    which allows for recovery of "damages for the loss sustained and the profit of which
    he has been deprived" for violations of non -competition agreements; and, that the
    Settlement Agreement' s non -competition covenant may not extend beyond the two-
    year period set forth in La. R.S. 23: 921( 0). In support of its motion for partial
    summary judgment,          Defendants attached the affidavit of Mr. Simoneaux; the
    affidavit of Ms. Mouk; the Settlement Agreement; and the 2015 Agreement.'
    Plant -N -Power opposed Defendants' motion for partial summary judgment. 9
    Plant -N -Power also filed a cross motion for partial summary judgment° and sought
    a judgment, finding: that La. R. S. 23: 921, in its entirety, is not applicable to the
    Settlement Agreement; that JRE Industrial is included in the definition of the
    Simoneaux Parties"        and is therefore a party to and bound by the Settlement
    Agreement; that Plant -N -Power is entitled to seek liquidated damages under the
    terms of the Settlement Agreement; granting Plant -N -Power' s cross motion for
    partial summary judgment and denying Defendants' motion for partial summary
    judgment; assessing all costs against Defendants; and for all other legal and equitable
    relief to which Plant -N -Power may be entitled. In support of its motion, Plant -N -
    Power    attached    its   petition;   Defendants'   answer,   affirmative    defenses,    and
    e The Settlement Agreement and 2015 Agreement were attached to and authenticated by Mr.
    Simoneaux' s affidavit.
    s Defendants filed a reply to Plant -N -Power' s opposition to their motion for partial summary
    judgment.
    io Defendants opposed Plant -N -Power' s cross motion for partial summary judgment. Plant -N -
    Power filed a reply to Defendants' opposition.
    1
    reconventional demands; and a motion to compel filed by Plant -N -Power on January
    24, 2022.
    Following a hearing on the two motions, the trial court took the matters under
    advisement. Thereafter, the trial court signed a judgment on June 6, 2022, which
    denied Defendants'       motion for partial summary judgment and granted Plant -N -
    Power' s cross-motion for partial summary judgment, holding: JRE Industrial was a
    party to the Settlement Agreement; La. R.S. 23: 921 does not apply to the Settlement
    Agreement; and La. R.S. 23: 921( H)           does not apply to damages for any alleged
    breaches of the Settlement Agreement. The trial court issued written reasons for its
    judgment.
    Defendants filed a motion to amend the June 6, 2022 judgment to certify that
    judgment as final under La. C.C.P. art. 1915( B)( 1). In a judgment signed on August
    15, 2022, the trial court granted Defendants' motion to amend the judgment. The
    trial court amended its June 6, 2022 judgment and designated that judgment as final
    under La. C. C. P. art. 1915( B)( 1),   giving reasons for its designation. Defendants now
    appeal"   the portion of the trial court' s June 6, 2022 judgment that granted Plant -N -
    Power' s cross- motion for partial summary judgment. 12
    APPELLATE JURISDICTION
    Under La. C. C. P.     art.   1915( A)(3),    the granting of a motion for summary
    judgment is a final, appealable judgment, except for a summary judgment rendered
    pursuant to La. C. C.P. art. 966( E), i. e., "   dispositive of a particular issue, theory of
    recovery, cause of action, or defense, in favor of one or more parties, even though
    the granting of the summary judgment does not dispose of the entire case as to that
    party or parties."   The June 6, 2022 grant of summary judgment in favor of Plant -N -
    Power is a partial summary judgment under La. C.C.P. art. 966(E) and falls squarely
    1 Defendants timely filed a motion for devolutive appeal on August 29, 2022. The trial court
    signed an order of appeal on August 31, 2022, notice of which was transmitted by the clerk of
    court to the parties on September 6, 2022.
    12 Defendants do not appeal the trial court' s denial of their motion for partial summary judgment.
    7
    within the parameters of La. C. C. P. art. 1915( B). As required under La. C. C.P. art.
    1915( B)( 1),
    the trial court designated its June 6, 2022 partial summary judgment as
    final and gave reasons for its designation.
    Although the trial court designated the partial summary judgment as a final
    one under La. C.C. P. art. 1915( B), that designation is not determinative of this
    Court' s jurisdiction. Van ex rel. White v. Davis, 2000- 0206 ( La. App. I" Cir.
    2116/ 01), 
    808 So. 2d 478
    , 480. Thus, this Court' s jurisdiction to decide this appeal
    hinges on whether the certification was appropriate. Because the trial court gave
    explicit reasons in certifying the appeal, we are to review the certification applying
    the abuse of discretion standard. R.J. Messinger, Inc. v. Rosenblum, 2004- 
    1664 La. 312105
    ), 
    894 So. 2d 1113
    , 1122.
    Historically, our courts have had a policy against multiple appeals and
    piecemeal litigation. Louisiana Code of Civil Procedure article 1915 attempts to
    strike a balance between the undesirability of piecemeal appeals and the need for
    making review available at a time that best serves the needs of the parties. Thus, in
    considering whether a judgment is properly designated as final pursuant to La.
    C. C.P. art. 1915( B), a court must consider judicial administrative interests as well as
    the equities involved. R.J. Messinger Inc., 894 So. 2d at 1122. Factors to be
    considered by a trial court, although not exclusive, when determining whether a
    partial judgment should be certified as appealable include: 1)         the relationship
    between the adjudicated and unadjudicated claims; 2) the possibility that the need
    for review might or might not be mooted by future developments in the trial court;
    3) the possibility that the reviewing court might be obliged to consider the same issue
    a second time; and 4) miscellaneous factors such as delay, economic and solvency
    considerations, shortening the time of trial, frivolity of competing claims, expense
    and the like. Nevertheless, the overriding inquiry for the trial court is whether there
    is no just reason for the delay. R.J. Messinger, Inc.,   894 So. 2d at 1122- 23.
    8
    Applying these precepts, we find no abuse of the trial court' s discretion in
    certifying the partial summary judgment as a final judgment pursuant to La. C. C.P.
    art.   1915( B).   Through its cross motion for partial summary judgment, Plant -N -
    Power sought a determination of whether the Settlement Agreement is governed by
    La. R. S.      23: 921   and whether JRE Industrial was a party to the Settlement
    Agreement. Once these issues are decided, the merits of Plant -N -Power' s claims will
    be resolved, with only the issue of damages and attorney' s fees remaining. Future
    developments in the trial court in deciding damages, attorney' s fees, or in deciding
    the merits of Defendants' reconventional demands would not moot this Court' s
    decision on whether La. R.S. 23: 921 applies to the Settlement Agreement and
    whether JRE Industrial was a party thereto, nor would this Court be obliged to
    consider those same issues a second time. A decision on these issues would prevent
    delays, shorten the time of trial, and considerably lower costs in the trial court.
    Applying these precepts, we find no abuse of the trial court' s discretion in certifying
    the partial summary judgment as a final judgment under La. C. C.P. art. 1915( B).       We
    maintain the appeal.
    SUMMARY JUDGMENT
    A motion for summary judgment is a procedural device used to avoid a full-
    scale trial and secure the just, speedy, and inexpensive determination of every action,
    when there is no genuine issue of material fact. La. C. C. P. art. 966( A)(2); Cypress
    Heights Academy v. CHA Investors, LLC, 2021- 0820 ( La. App. I"            Cir. 6/ 7/ 22),
    
    343 So. 3d 736
    , 741, writs denied, 2022- 01284, 2022- 01247 (La. 11/ 8/ 22), 
    349 So. 3d 574
    ,    576.    A motion for summary judgment is properly granted if,           after   an
    opportunity for adequate discovery,       the motion,   memorandum,    and supporting
    documents show that there is no genuine issue as to material fact and that the mover
    is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. La. C. C. P. art. 966( A)(3);      Cypress
    Heights Academy, 343 So. 3d at 741. A genuine issue of material fact is one as to
    which reasonable persons could disagree; if reasonable persons could reach only one
    9
    conclusion,
    there is no need for trial on that issue and summary judgment is
    appropriate. Hebert v. Louisiana State University System Board of Supervisors
    through Louisiana State University, 2022- 0942 ( La. App. V Cir. 2/ 24/23),
    So. 3d (           
    2023 WL 2196479
     at * 2).
    The burden of proof on a motion for summary judgment rests with the mover.
    La. C.C. P. art. 966( D)( 1).   If the mover will not bear the burden of proof at trial on
    the issue that is before the court on the motion for summary judgment, the mover' s
    burden on the motion does not require him to negate all essential elements of the
    adverse party' s claim, action, or defense. Rather, the mover must point out to the
    court the absence of factual support for one or more elements essential to the adverse
    party' s claim, action, or defense. The burden is on the adverse party to produce
    factual support sufficient to establish the existence of a genuine issue of material fact
    or that the mover is not entitled to judgment as a matter of law. La. C. C. P. art.
    966( D)( 1).
    The legal issue before this Court is whether the Settlement Agreement is
    governed by La. R.S. 23: 921, whether the non -competition covenant contained in
    the parties'   Settlement Agreement is valid and enforceable, and whether JRE
    Industrial is a party to the Settlement Agreement. A party may seek a declaration on
    a legal issue through the summary judgment procedure.             See Cypress Heights
    Academy, 343 So. 3d at 742. In determining whether summary judgment is
    appropriate, appellate courts review evidence de novo under the same criteria that
    govern the trial court' s determination of whether summary judgment is appropriate.
    MN Resources LLC v. Louisiana Hardwood Products LLC, 2016- 0758 ( La.
    App. 1' Cir. 7/ 26/ 17), 
    225 So. 3d 1104
    , 1109, writ denied, 2017- 1748 ( La. 12/ 5117),
    
    231 So. 3d 624
    .
    LOUISIANA NON -COMPETITION AGREEMENTS
    Parties are free to contract for any object that is lawful,        possible,   and
    determined or determinable. La. C. C. art. 1971. In a fee enterprise system, parties
    10
    are free to contract, except for those instances where the government places
    restrictions for reasons of public policy. The state may legitimately restrict the
    parties' right to contract if the proposed bargain is found to contravene some matter
    of public policy. See Blake D. Morant, " Contracts Limiting Liability: A Paradox
    with Tacit Solutions," 69 TuL. L. REV. 715, 718 ( 1995).
    Louisiana has long had a strong public policy disfavoring non -competition
    agreements. Thus, the longstanding public policy of Louisiana has been to prohibit
    or severely restrict such agreements. SWAT 24 Shreveport Bossier, Inc. v. Bond,
    2000- 1695 ( La. 6/ 29/ 01), 
    808 So. 2d 294
    , 298. The Legislature has expressed this
    public policy in La. R.S. 23: 921( A)( 1):
    Every contract or agreement, or provision thereof, by
    which anyone is restrained from exercising a lawful
    profession, trade, or business of any kind, except as
    provided in this Section, shall be null and void. However,
    every contract or agreement, or provision thereof, which
    meets the exceptions as provided in this Section, shall be
    enforceable. [    Emphasis added.]
    Under La. R.S. 23: 921( A)( 1),       every contract or agreement,           or   provision
    thereof, containing a non -competition agreement, covenant, or clause is null and
    void, unless such agreements meet certain exceptions as set forth in La. R.S. 23: 92 1.
    Because non -competition agreements are in derogation of the common right, they
    must be strictly construed against the party seeking their enforcement. Vartech
    Systems, Inc. v. Hayden, 2005- 2499 ( La. App. I"               Cir. 12120/ 06), 
    951 So.2d 247
    ,
    254. 13
    The statutory exceptions to La. R.S. 23: 921( A)( 1) include the sale of the
    goodwill of a business ( La. R.S. 23: 921( B)); the employer- employee relationship
    La. R.S. 23: 921( C) & (        G)); the corporation -shareholder relationship ( La. R.S.
    43 A non -competition agreement is a contract between the parties and should be construed
    according to the general rules of interpretation of contracts provided in La. C. C. arts. 2045- 57. The
    interpretation of a contract is the determination of the common intent of the parties with courts
    giving the contractual words their generally prevailing meaning. La. C. C. arts. 2045, 2047; SWAT
    24 Shreveport Bossier, Inc., 808 So. 2d at 307. When the words of a contract are clear and explicit
    and lead to no absurd consequences, no further interpretation may be made in search of the intent
    of the parties. La. C. C. art. 2046.
    11
    23: 921( B), ( E), & ( 1));   the partnership -partner relationship ( La. R.S. 23: 921( E) &
    K));   the franchise -franchisee relationship ( La.     R.S. 23: 921( F));   and the limited
    liability company -individual member relationship ( La. R.S. 23: 921( L)).          Louisiana
    Revised Statutes 23: 921 defines the limited circumstances under which a non-
    competition clause may be valid in the context of each of these relationships.
    Vartech Systems, Inc., 951 So. 2d at 254- 55.
    The statutory exception at issue in the case before us is whether the employer-
    employee relationship, as provided for in La. R.S. 23: 921( 0), in pertinent part, is
    applicable to the non -competition covenant contained in the parties' Settlement
    Agreement:
    Any person, including a corporation and the individual
    shareholders of such corporation, who is employed as an
    agent,     servant,   or    employee   may    agree   with     his
    employer to refrain from carrying on or engaging in a
    business similar to that of the employer and/ or from
    soliciting customers of the employer within a specified
    parish or parishes, municipality or municipalities, or parts
    thereof, so long as the employer carries on a like business
    therein,   not   to   exceed   a period   of two years       from
    termination of employment. [ Emphasis added.]
    Also at issue in the case before us is a limitation on the applicability of La.
    R.S. 23: 921( A) that was enumerated by the Louisiana Supreme Court in Louisiana
    Smoked Products, Inc. v. Savoie' s Sausage & Food Products, Inc., 961716 (La.
    7/ l/ 97), 
    696 So. 2d 1373
    , 1381, wherein the Supreme Court held that La. R.S. 23: 921
    does not apply to non -competition agreements made " between            two corporations on
    equal footing."
    Louisiana Smoked Products, Inc. involved non -competition agreements
    between two corporations that produced and distributed sausage. In 1988 and again
    in 1991, Louisiana Smoked Products, Inc. (" L. S. P.") contracted to market smoked
    alligator and venison sausages that were manufactured by Savoie' s Sausage and
    Food Products, Inc. (" Savoie' s").       Louisiana Smoked Products, Inc., 696 So. 2d at
    1375. In exchange, L. S. P. agreed to process and purchase those products only
    12
    through or from Savoie' s. Id. The contracts between the corporations contained a
    non -competition clause, which provided that the corporations would not compete
    against each other for three years after the agreements terminated. Id. In 1993, after
    the parties mutually terminated the contract, Savoie' s continued to use L.S. P.' s
    recipes for the smoked alligator and venison sausages, manufacturing and selling it
    under its own label. Id. L.S. P.      subsequently sued Savoie' s to enforce the non-
    compete provisions       of the   agreement,   alleging that Savoie' s solicited L.S. P.' s
    customers and undercut L. S. P.' s prices. Id.
    On appeal, the Supreme Court considered " whether the legislature intended
    to prohibit noncompetition clauses executed by two businesses with its enactment of
    the 1989 amendment to La. R. S. 23: 921,"            which implemented the broad " every
    contract or agreement"      language now found in La. R. S. 23: 921( A). Stated another
    way,   the     Supreme Court was       asked to decide " whether the prohibition of
    noncompetition agreements applies to contracts executed by two corporations on
    equal footing."    Id. at 1379.
    The Supreme Court found that the non -competition clause was a valid bargain
    between two corporations on equal footing and thus upheld the agreement, affirming
    the award of damages in favor of L. S. P. and against Savoie' s. Id. at 1380- 81. The
    Supreme Court reasoned that prohibiting two independent corporations from
    executing a non -competition clause would unduly infringe on the parties' freedom
    to contract. Id. at 1381. Furthermore, the Supreme Court reasoned that a non-
    competition clause will be deemed valid and enforceable when the corporations are
    on an equal footing, i.e., ( 1) the non -competition clause was fair to each party in all
    respects: (   a) no disparity in the corporations' bargaining power, (b) both parties were
    equally bound to the non -competition agreement, ( c) neither party had control over
    the other, and ( d) the non -competition was limited in duration; ( 2) both parties
    benefited from the contract; ( 3) the contract was prepared, reviewed, and approved
    by the objecting party' s attorney;       and (     4)   each party consented to the non -
    13
    competition clause and was equally bound to the terms therein. Id. at 1380. The
    Supreme Court ruled that " La. R.S. 23: 921 is not intended to protect independent
    corporations on an equal footing from a bad bargain." Id. at 13 S 1. 14
    DISCUSSION
    In its cross motion for summary judgment,                      Plant -N -Power argued that
    Louisiana' s non -competition statute, La. R.S. 23: 921, in its entirety, is not applicable
    to the Settlement Agreement. Plant -N -Power argued the Settlement Agreement was
    a compromise under La. C. C. art. 3071, et seq. which settled the parties' federal
    litigation and Louisiana state court litigation and was not an agreement incidental to
    employment.       Plant -N -Power further argued that because La. R.S.                   23: 921   is
    inapplicable to the Settlement Agreement, the " restarted" two- year time period for
    the non -competition covenant provided for in Section 8( d) of the Settlement
    Agreement is valid.
    14 In 1989, the Legislature amended La. R. S. 2 3: 92 1 to eliminate the requirement that an employer
    expend substantial sums in training or advertising in order to enter into a valid noncompetition
    agreement with an employee. See 1989 La. Acts No. 639, § Section 1 ( eff. Aug. 1, 1989). The
    Legislature changed the statute to include more objective measures of an agreement' s validity.
    SWAT 24 Shreveport Bossier, Inc., 808 So. 2d at 304. The new statute used language similar to
    that found in the current version of La. R. S. 23: 921( A) and ( C):
    A. Every contract or agreement, or provision thereof, by which anyone is restrained
    from exercising a lawful profession, trade or business or any kind, except as
    provided in this Section shall be null and void.
    C. A person who is employed as an agent, servant, or employee may agree with his
    employer to refrain from carrying on or engaging in a business similar to that of the
    employer and/ or from soliciting customers of the employer within a specified parish
    or parishes, municipality or municipalities, or parts thereof, so long as the employer
    carries on a like business therein, not to exceed a period of two years.
    Id. La. R.S. 23: 921 was amended several times between 1989 and the present; however, none of
    these later amendments have any particular relevance to the instant issue. Id. at 304 n. 8.
    The facts in Louisiana Smoked Products, Inc. primarily dealt with a pre -1989 agreement.
    Consequently, all of the discussion in Louisiana Smoked Products, Inc. concerning corporations
    under amendments to La. R.S. 23: 921 enacted in 1989 and thereafter would technically be dicta.
    However, the Supreme Court analyzed the legislative history of the 1989 amendments to La. R.S.
    23: 921 in great detail. It is presumptuous to conclude that the Supreme Court would choose to
    ignore its own carefully considered research and analysis if faced with a post -1989 non-
    competition contract between two or more corporations. Times -Picayune Publishing Corp. v.
    New Orleans Publishing Group, Inc., 2000- 0748 ( La. App. 4" Cir. 3/ 20/ 02), 
    814 So. 2d 34
    , 38,
    writ denied, 2002- 1064 ( La. 6/ 21102), 
    819 So. 2d 335
    .
    14
    AssiLnment of Error No. 1
    In their first assignment of error, Defendants argue the trial court erred as a
    matter of law when it determined that La. R.S. 23: 921— and specifically, the two-
    year restriction provided for in La. R.S. 23: 921( C) -- was not applicable to the
    Settlement Agreement at issue.         Defendants aver that the trial court erred by
    reasoning that the non -competition covenant in the Settlement Agreement must be
    interpreted in accordance with Louisiana Smoked Products, Inc."
    The trial court, in its reasons for granting Plant -N -Power' s cross motion for
    summary judgment, stated that the trial court was tasked with determining "                if a
    Settlement Agreement resulting from the resolution of a previously alleged breach
    of    an
    underlying    agreement[,]     which     was     entered    into     through    an
    employer/ employee relationship[,] should be interpreted under the auspices of [La.]
    R. S. 23: 921 or under the [ Louisiana Smoked Products, Inc.] progeny of cases."
    The trial court found that this matter was " analogous to [ Louisiana Smoked
    Products, Inc.]" in that " all of the parties to the Settlement Agreement had
    substantially equal bargaining power." The trial court further noted that at the time
    the parties entered into the Settlement Agreement, none had an employer- employee
    relationship; all parties were bound equally; the terms were " agreed          to in detail and
    in writing between the parties;" all parties were " represented by legal counsel;"         and
    all parties " reaped benefits from entering into the Settlement Agreement."
    The non -competition agreement analyzed by the Supreme Court in Louisiana
    Smoked Products, Inc. was part of a contract between two corporations. In the case
    before us, however, the non -competition covenant is part of a contract between a
    corporation on one side and two companies and an individual on the other side.
    Based on the Supreme Court' s discussion, Louisiana Smoked Products, Inc. would
    The issue, as set forth in Plant -N -Power' s cross motion for summary judgment, is the
    applicability of La. R.S. 23: 921 to the non -competition covenant contained in the Settlement
    Agreement. We note that the validity and enforceability of the non -competition covenant is a
    separate issue.
    15
    not invalidate the applicability of La. R.S. 23: 921 as to any individual who was a
    party to the contract. See, e.g., Security Alarm Financing Enterprises, Inc. v.
    Green, No. CIV. A. 05- 0911 ( W.D. La. July 21, 2008) ( 
    2008 WL 2812959
     at * 7)
    unpublished);«      S. E. Auto Dealers Rental Association, Inc. v. EZ Rent To Own,
    Inc.,   2007- 0599 ( La. App. 4"      Cir. 2127108), 
    980 So. 2d 89
    , 98, writ denied, 2008-
    0684 ( La. 4118108),     
    978 So. 2d 355
    ; 1 Communication & Technology Industries,
    Inc. v. Global Hunter Securities, Inc., 2012- 861 (              La. App.    511 Cir. 5116113), 
    116 So. 3d 917
    , 921.' $   Accordingly, we must tailor our analysis of the applicability of La.
    16 SAFE, a corporation that sells, installs, and monitors residential security systems entered into a
    contract with CCI, a corporation that provides security services. The contract included several
    restrictive covenants, including non -solicitation and non -competition provisions. Jayne Green
    signed the contract on behalf of CCI, and a vice-president from SAFE signed the contract. Id. at
    1. SAFE later filed suit against Mrs. Green, alleging that she, as an officer and shareholder of
    CCI, violated the contract' s non -solicitation provision. Mrs. Green filed a motion for summary
    judgment arguing that the non -solicitation provision was unenforceable under La. R.S. 23: 921.
    The federal district court granted Mrs. Green' s motion; however, the Fifth Circuit reversed,
    applying the analysis of Louisiana Smoked Products, Inc., finding that La. R.S. 23: 921 does not
    apply to the contract if SAFE and CCI were companies on equal footing. Id, at * 2.
    After the Fifth Circuit' s decision, SAFE amended its complaint, and the case was consolidated
    with two related cases. The first was an action by SAFE against Central Security ( the company
    started by Mrs. Green' s son), Chad Burford ( the son of Mrs. Green and principal of Central
    Security), and Robert Green ( a former principal of CCI, husband of Mrs. Green, and step -father to
    Mr. Burford). The second case was an action originally brought in bankruptcy court by Mark
    Sutton, Trustee, on behalf of Central Cellular against Mrs. Green, Central Security, and Mr.
    Burford. The consolidated defendants moved for summary judgment on all claims. Id.
    In analyzing the enforcement of the non -competition provision as to Mrs. Green, Mr. Burford, and
    Mr. Green, the Security Alarm court declared that when a non -compete agreement is part of a
    contract between a company on one side and a company and individuals on the other, Louisiana
    Smoked Products, Inc. does not invalidate La. R.S. 23: 921 as it applies to the individuals. Id. at
    7. However, the court noted that neither Mrs. Green, Mr. Green, nor Mr. Burford were parties to
    the contract in their individual capacities; furthermore, none of the pending causes of action sought
    damages against the individuals under a contract theory of recovery. The court dismissed
    consolidated plaintiffs' contract claims against the individuals, to the extent any contract claims
    were asserted. Id.
    17 S. E. Auto Dealers Rental Association, Inc. (" SEADRA"),           an association of rent -to -own
    automobile dealers, filed a petition for damages and injunctive relief against EZ Rent To Own,
    Inc. (" EZ Rent"),   a rent -to -own automobile dealer, after EZ Rent ceased making payments to
    SEADRA under the parties' commercial license agreement. The Fourth Circuit held that La. R.S.
    23: 921' s prohibition against non -competition agreements did not apply to invalidate the non-
    competition provision in the commercial license agreement between SEADRA and EZ Rent
    because the agreement and non -competition provision were fair to each party; the parties did not
    have an employer- employee relationship; there was no disparity in bargaining power between the
    parties; both parties derived monetary benefits from the agreement; the provision was reasonably
    limited in duration to a two- year period and geographically limited; and it was not necessary for
    the parties to perform identical tasks in order to enforce the provision. Id. at 96- 97.
    18 The Fifth Circuit held that a non -solicitation provision of a Master Services Agreement that
    entitled an I.T. services provider (Communication and Technology Industries, Inc., " Commtech")
    to payment if its client ( Global Hunter Securities, LLC) hired Commtech' s employee was valid
    and enforceable against Global. Global hired Commtech' s former employee as an I.T. technician.
    R.S. 23: 921 to the Settlement Agreement as it applies to Mr. Simoneaux,                        an
    individual, versus JRE Field Services and Ascension Staffing, two companies.
    Mr. Simoneaux
    In reviewing Plant -N -Power' s claims against Mr. Simoneaux, we need look
    no further than the plain language of the statute to decide whether La. R.S. 23: 921
    is applicable to Mr. Simoneaux' s non -competition covenant with Plant -N -Power.
    Section 5( b) of the Settlement Agreement contains the non -competition covenant
    that restrains Mr. Simoneaux from performing boiler field services work for the
    twenty- six Plant -N -Power customers specifically listed in Exhibit D to the
    Settlement Agreement,        within the defined geographic area of the twenty-three
    parishes listed in Exhibit E. There is no dispute that Section 5( b) is a non -competition
    covenant contained in the parties'         Settlement Agreement. Thus, under the plain
    language of La. R.S. 23: 921( A)( 1),        the Settlement Agreement is a "         contract   or
    agreement, or provision thereof, by which anyone is restrained from exercising a
    lawful profession, trade, or business of any kind."             We therefore find that La. R.S.
    23: 921 is applicable to the Settlement Agreement as to Mr. Simoneaux.
    Pursuant to La. R.S. 23: 921( A)( 1),            the non -competition covenant contained
    in Section 5( b) of the Settlement Agreement is null and void, unless it falls under
    one of the exceptions to the general prohibition on non -competition agreements. In
    the instant case, the question then becomes whether the non -competition covenant
    falls under the employer-employee exception and complies with the provisions of
    La. R.S. 23: 921( 0): 1) a two-year maximum duration; 2) a specific list of areas in
    which the former employee is restrained from competing with the employer' s
    business; and 3) competition between the former employee and employer.
    The Fifth Circuit held that the employee was not prevented from exercising his trade, profession,
    or business, and, thus, La. R.S. 23: 921 was inapplicable. Citing Louisiana Smoked Products,
    Inc., the Fifth Circuit reasoned: " Commtech and Global are two businesses that chose to enter into
    an agreement, and La. R.S. 23: 921 is not intended to protect independent corporations on an equal
    footing from a possibly bad bargain" Id. at 921.
    17
    There is no dispute that at the time Mr. Simoneaux and Plant -N -Power signed
    the Settlement Agreement on March 19, 2020, Mr. Simoneaux was not employed by
    Plant -N -Power. Mr. Simoneaux resigned from Plant -N -Power on April 5, 2019.
    There was no employer- employee relationship between Mr. Simoneaux and Plant -
    N -Power at the time the parties entered into the Settlement Agreement. Louisiana
    Revised Statutes 23: 921( C) applies to " any person ... who is employed as an agent,
    servant, or employee" who agrees "          with his employer to refrain from carrying on
    or engaging in a business similar to that of the employer...." (              Emphasis added).
    Based on the plain language of La. R.S.                  23: 921( 0), the employer- employee
    exception applies to current employers and employees, not former employers and
    employees. 19 Thus, the non -competition covenant contained in the Settlement
    Agreement is not valid and enforceable as one of the exceptions to La. R. S.
    23: 921( A)( 1)'   s prohibition on non -competition agreements.
    As provided for in the severability clause found Section 18 of the Settlement
    Agreement, the parties may excise the offending language without doing undue
    damage to the remainder of the Settlement Agreement. See SWAT 24 Shreveport
    Bossier, Inc.,     808 So.2d at 308- 09 ( a severability clause makes it possible to excise
    offending language from a non -competition clause in an agreement without doing
    undue damage to the remainder of the agreement).
    For these reasons, we find that the trial court erred, in part, in granting partial
    summary judgment in favor of Plant -N -Power and finding that La. R.S. 23: 921 does
    not apply to the Settlement Agreement as to Mr. Simoneaux.
    19 See Setpoint Integrated Solutions, Inc. v. Kiteley, 2021- 322 ( La. App. 3rd Cir. 1126122),
    So. 3d , (     
    2022 WL 225093
    ), writ denied, 2022- 00632 ( La. 6122/ 22), 
    339 So. 3d 639
    , where
    the Third Circuit found that a non -competition agreement included in the parties' Separation
    Agreement was not enforceable because the employment terminated before the agreement was
    executed: "   The Separation Agreement, and by extension the non -competition agreement, was
    entered into to resolve issues related to a severance payment, waiver of rights, and an extension of
    the earlier non -competition agreement that had expired." 
    Id.
     at _,   
    2022 WL 225093
     at * 8. The
    Separation Agreement included a general release of any claims or causes of action the employee
    had or may have had against his former employer— in exchange for separation pay— and thus, had
    elements of a compromise.
    18
    JRE Field Serviees and Ascension Staffing
    To determine whether JRE Field Services and Ascension Staffing' s non-
    competition covenant with Plant -N -Power falls under the limitation on the
    applicability of La. R.S. 23: 921( A) set forth by the Louisiana Supreme Court in
    Louisiana Smoked Products, Inc., we must determine whether JRE Field Services,
    Ascension Staffing, and Plant -N -Power are companies that are " on equal footing"
    based on the factors listed in Louisiana Smoked Products, Inc., 696 So.2d at 1380.
    Fairness
    The record shows that the Settlement Agreement is fair to all parties. First,
    there is no evidence to show disparity in the parties' bargaining power. The record
    shows that JRE Field      Services,   Ascension Staffing,   and   Plant -N -Power   are
    sophisticated juridical persons whose officers have considerable experience in boiler
    field services work. The record shows that JRE Field Services was owned by W.
    Simoneaux, Ms. Mouk, in addition to at least three others.20 Ascension Staffing is
    member -managed by Mr. Simoneaux. In her affidavit, Ms. Mouk attested that she
    and her family have been involved in the fabrication of parts for boiler repairs in
    Louisiana since 2008, and have been in business in Ascension Parish for over sixty
    years. In his affidavit, Mr. Simoneaux attested that he has over twenty-five years'
    experience in boiler field services work. Mr. Simoneaux became an expert in boiler
    repair in 2015, and was a key employee of Plant -N -Power, served as its president,
    and had obtained considerable ability,     expertise,   and marketing   skills. In his
    reconventional demand, Mr. Simoneaux allged that after its sale in 2015, Plant -N -
    Power retained him as an employee " because of his expertise in boiler repairs and
    his relationships with the customers." Mr. Simoneaux further claimed that PlantN -
    Power " was solely reliant" upon his expertise.
    20 See FN 5, supra.
    19
    Second, the parties were equally bound to the Settlement Agreement and non-
    competition covenant. Third, none of the parties had control over the others— Plant-
    N-Power was a wholly separate company with no shared ownership or operational
    control over JRE Field Services or Ascension Staffing. Further, none of the parties
    had an employer-employee relationship at the time the Settlement Agreement was
    executed. Finally, the prohibition of directly competing with the others' business
    activity was reasonably limited in duration to two years after the effective date of
    the Settlement Agreement, barring breach of the Settlement Agreement. As to the
    two- year "   tolling" provision found in Section 8( d), that provision was solely
    dependent upon and within the control of JRE Field Services and Ascension
    Staffing, and cannot affect the fairness of the Settlement Agreement since the parties
    have the freedom to contract and mutually agreed to include the two-year " tolling"
    provision found in Section 8( d).
    Benert
    The record shows that the Settlement Agreement, by its very terms, benefitted
    JRE Field Services, Ascension Staffing, and Plant -N -Power. JRE Field Services and
    Ascension Staffing received a release of the claims brought against them by Plant -
    N -Power in Illinois federal district court for admitted breaches of the 2015
    Agreement. JRE Field Services and Ascension Staffing obtained the monetary
    benefit of avoiding further litigation costs, attorney' s fees, and the risk of a greater
    judgment being rendered after a trial on the merits.         In return, Plant -N -Power
    received the agreed-upon settlement price and promise by JRE Field Services and
    Ascension Staffing to refrain from boiler field services work with certain Plant -N -
    Power customers in certain geographic areas.
    Contract Preparation, Review, and Approval
    The record shows that the contract was prepared, reviewed, and approved by
    the attorneys for JRE Field Services, Ascension Staffing, and Plant -N -Power. All
    parties were represented by counsel when the Settlement Agreement was drafted and
    r.
    remain represented by those same law firms in the instant matter. Further, Section
    S( b) of the Settlement Agreement provides:
    The drafting and negotiation of this Agreement has been
    undertaken by all Parties hereto and their respective
    counsel. For all purposes, this Agreement shall be deemed
    to have been drafted jointly by all of the Parties hereto with
    no presumption in favor of one party over another in the
    event of any ambiguity.
    Consent
    The record shows that JRE Field Services, Ascension Staffing, and Plant -N -
    Power consented to the non -competition covenant and were equally bound to the
    terms therein. Section S( a) of the Settlement Agreement provides:
    This Agreement is entered into and executed voluntarily
    by each of the Parties hereto and without any duress or
    undue influence on the part of, or on behalf of, any Party.
    Conclusion
    Based on the foregoing, we find that the trial court did not err in granting
    partial summary judgment in favor of Plant -N -Power, finding that La. R.S. 23: 921
    does not apply to the Settlement Agreement as to JRE Field Services and Ascension
    Staffing pursuant to Louisiana Smoked Products, Inc.
    Assignment of Error No. 2
    In its cross motion for summary judgment, Plant -N -Power argued that it is not
    prohibited by La.   R.S. 23: 921( H)   from seeking liquidated damages under the
    Settlement Agreement. The trial court agreed, granting partial summary judgment in
    favor of Plant -N -Power and against Defendants finding that La. R.S. 23: 921( H) is
    not applicable to damages for any alleged breaches of the Settlement Agreement.
    In their second assignment of error, Defendants argue the trial court erred as
    a matter of law when it determined that the liquidated damages provision in the
    Settlement Agreement was enforceable, citing La. R.S. 23: 921( H).
    Mr. Simoneaux
    Louisiana Revised Statutes 23: 921( H) provides, in pertinent part:
    21
    Any agreement covered by Subsection B, C, E, F, G, J, K,
    or L of this Section shall be considered an obligation not
    to do, and failure to perform may entitle the obligee to
    recover damages for the loss sustained and the profit of
    which he has been deprived.
    As stated in our discussion of Defendants' first assignment of error, as to Mr.
    Simoneaux, the non -competition covenant contained in the parties'                 Settlement
    Agreement is not valid and enforceable as one of the exceptions to La. R.S.
    23: 921( A)( 1)'    s   prohibition   on non -competition   agreements;   therefore, the non-
    competition covenant is not an agreement covered by Subsections B, C, E, F, G, J,
    K, or L of La. R.S. 23: 921, Because La. R. S. 23: 921( H)            is applicable only in
    agreements covered by Subsections B, C, E, F, G, J, K, or L, it follows that La. R.S.
    23: 921( H) is not applicable to damages for any alleged breaches by Mr. Simoneaux
    of the non -competition covenant contained in the parties' Settlement Agreement.
    Further, because the non -competition covenant contained in Section 5( b) of
    the parties'       Settlement Agreement is not valid and enforceable as one of the
    exceptions to La. R.S. 23 :921( A)( 1)'       s prohibition on non -competition agreements,
    Section 5( b) is null and void. It follows that Plant -N -Power cannot seek liquidated
    damages from Mr. Simoneaux for an alleged violation of a null and void non-
    competition covenant contained in the parties' Settlement Agreement.
    JRE Field Services and Ascension Staf n
    As stated in our discussion of Defendants' first assignment of error, as to JRE
    Field Services and Ascension Staffing, the non -competition covenant contained in
    Section 5( b) of the parties' Settlement Agreement is not governed by La. R.S. 23: 921
    because it is a non -competition agreement made " between two corporations on equal
    footing" under the Supreme Court' s analysis in Louisiana Smoked Products, Inc.
    Therefore, La. R.S. 23: 921( H) is not applicable to damages for any alleged breaches
    by JRE Field Services and Ascension Staffing of the non -competition covenant
    contained in Section 5( b) of the parties' Settlement Agreement.
    Section 5( e) of the parties' Settlement Agreement provides, in pertinent part:
    22
    T] he Simoneaux Parties agree to pay the [ Plant -N -Power]
    Parties... liquidated damages in an amount not less than
    Fifty    Thousand       and    01100    Dollars ($ 50,000)    per
    violation of the covenants contained in Section 5, which
    amount shall not limit the [ Plant -N -Power] Parties ... from
    recovering any additional damages to which it is entitled.
    The Simoneaux Parties stipulate and agree that the above
    liquidated damages are a reasonable estimate of actual
    damages and that such liquidated damages are not in any
    way      punitive   or   an   unlawful   penalty. [ Emphasis    in
    original.]
    Based on Section 5( e),     Plant -N -Power may seek liquidated damages against
    JRE Field Services and Ascension Staffing for any alleged breaches of the non-
    competition covenant.
    Conclusion
    For these reasons, we find that the trial court did not err in granting partial
    summary judgment in favor of Plant -N -Power and against Defendants finding that
    La. R. S. 23: 92 1 ( H) is not applicable to damages for any alleged breaches of the non-
    competition covenant contained in the parties' Settlement Agreement.
    Assignment of Error No. 3
    In their third and final assignment of error, Defendants argue the trial court
    erred as a matter of law in holding that JRE Industrial was a party to the Settlement
    Agreement. Plant -N -Power argued in its cross motion for partial summary judgment
    that JRE Industrial is a party to the Settlement Agreement.                 The Settlement
    Agreement applied to the " Simoneaux Parties," defined as "          any other person in
    which JRE Field Services, [ Mr.]      Simoneaux, or Ascension [ Staffing] has a direct or
    indirect interest." Mr. Simoneaux owned 49%           of JRE Industrial, meaning he has a
    direct interest in JRE Industrial. Plant -N -Power argued that JRE Industrial is
    included in the definition of "Simoneaux Parties,"         and is therefore a party to and
    bound by the terms of the Settlement Agreement. The trial court agreed, granting
    partial summary judgment in favor of Plant -N -Power and against Defendants finding
    that JRE Industrial was a party to the Settlement Agreement. The trial court reasoned
    that when Mr. Simoneaux signed the Settlement Agreement, he signed it on behalf
    23
    of himself "and on behalf of any other person in which he has a direct or indirect
    interest." The trial court held that "        JRE Industrial is a party to the Settlement
    Agreement because [ Mr.] Simoneaux has a direct interest in JRE Industrial,"             and
    noted that if Mr. Simoneaux " did not intend to bind JRE Industrial[,] he should have
    omitted the language regarding other persons in which [Mr.] Simoneaux has a direct
    or indirect interest."
    As discussed by this Court in Harris v. Union National Fire Ins. Co.,           2019-
    0443 ( La. App.    1St Cir. 1/ 15/ 20), 
    311 So. 3d 1130
    , 1136- 37, writ denied, 2020- 
    00396 La. 6
    / 3/ 20), 
    296 So. 3d 1067
    :
    A compromise is a contract whereby the parties, through
    concessions made by one or more of them, settle a dispute
    or an uncertainty concerning an obligation or other legal
    relationship. La. Civ. Code art. 3071.            An enforceable
    compromise agreement has two essential elements: ( 1)
    mutual intention of preventing or putting an end to the
    litigation and ( 2) reciprocal concessions of the parties to
    adjust their differences. Trahan v. Coca Cola Bottling
    Co. United, Inc., 2004- 0100 ( La. 312105),                
    894 So. 2d 1096
    , 1104. A valid and enforceable settlement may also
    be a compromise if it is reduced to writing. Louisiana
    courts have held that "      settlement"   must be equated with
    compromise in connection with the rules governing
    compromise. See La. Civ. Code art. 3071, 2007 Revision
    Comment ( c).
    A compromise shall be made in writing or recited in
    open    court,   in    which    case   the    recitation    shall   be
    susceptible of being transcribed from the record of the
    proceedings. La. Civ. Code art. 3072....           The purpose of
    the writing requirement is to serve as proof of the
    agreement     and     the   acquiescence     therein.   Sullivan    v.
    Sullivan, 95- 2122 ( La. 4/ 8/ 96), 
    671 So. 2d 315
    , 317; Sims,
    68 So. 3d at 574. ...        Further, the requirement that the
    agreement be reduced to writing necessarily implies that
    the agreement be evidenced by documentation signed b
    both parties. Brasseaux v. Allstate Ins. Co., 97- 
    0526 La. App. 1
     Cir. 418/ 98), 
    710 So.2d 826
    , 829. [           Emphasis
    added.]
    There is no dispute that the parties' Settlement Agreement is a compromise
    governed by La. G.C. art. 3071 to settle the parties' federal litigation in Illinois and
    in Louisiana state court regarding Mr. Simoneaux' s violations of the non -compete,
    non -disclosure,   non -solicitation,     and non -disparagement provisions of the 2015
    24
    Agreement. As such, the settlement was reduced to writing, which is evidenced by
    the Settlement Agreement signed by the parties in March 2020. La. C. C. art. 3072.
    The parties to the Settlement Agreement are:
    Plant -N -Power ("    together with any other direct or indirect subsidiary,
    affiliate[,]   and   parent   company,       collectively referred to as the " PNP
    Parties");"    and
    JRE Field Services, Ascension Staffing, and Mr. Simoneaux
    Mr. Simoneaux, JRE Field Services,           Ascension Staffing, and "      any other
    person in which JRE Field Services, [ Mr.] Simoneaux[,]                     or Ascension
    Staffing] has a direct or indirect interest, [ are] collectively referred to as [ the]
    Simoneaux Parties")".
    The Settlement Agreement was signed by Plant -N -Power through its Chairman
    and CEO, Jim W. Rogers. Mr. Simoneaux signed the Settlement Agreement "                       on
    behalf of himself and on behalf of any other person in which he has a direct or
    indirect interest."   The Settlement Agreement was signed by JRE Field Services by
    its manager, Rebecca Evans Mouk.             The Settlement Agreement was signed by
    Ascension Staffing by its manager, Mr. Simoneaux. There is no dispute that JRE
    Industrial was not listed as a party to the Settlement Agreement, nor did a registered
    agent, officer, manager, or member of JRE Industrial sign the Settlement Agreement
    on behalf of JRE Industrial. As provided for in Section 8( b), there is no evidence
    that counsel for JRE Industrial participated in the preparation, negotiation, drafting,
    review,    and approval of the Settlement Agreement. Furthermore, there is no
    evidence that JRE Industrial, through a registered agent,               officer,   manager,   or
    member consented to the Settlement Agreement.
    Section 1 of the Settlement Agreement, titled " Settlement Paymement,"            states,
    The Simoneaux Parties, in solido, agree to pay [ Plant -N -Power] the total of [$1.          25
    million] ("   Settlement Payment")." Section 1( a) states, " the Simoneaux Parties will
    execute a promissory note ... that provides the Simoneaux Parties are liable in solido
    25
    to [ Plant -N -Power] in the principal amount of [$1. 25 million]." ( Emphasis added).
    The record shows that the promissory note was signed on March 19,                2020. The
    promissory note identifies its makers as Mr. Simoneaux, IRE Field Services, and
    Ascension Staffing and was executed by Mr. Simoneaux, JRE Field Services, and
    Ascension Staffing.
    Section 1( f) of the Settlement Agreement sets forth that on the effective date
    of the    agreement, "   the Simoneaux Parties shall deliver to [ Plant -N -Power' s]
    counsel ...   a consent judgment." ( Emphasis added). The record shows that Mr.
    Simoneaux, IRE Field Services,           and Ascension Staffing prepared a consent
    judgment in accordance with Section 1( f).          The judgment was signed by Mr.
    Simoneaux, IRE Field Services, and Ascension Staffing on March 19, 2020.
    Our de nova review of the record further shows that in response to and for the
    purpose of funding the $      1. 25 million settlement to Plant -N -Power provided for in
    Section 1 of the Settlement Agreement, Mr. Simoneaux formed JRE Industrial with
    John Evans and Rebecca Evans Mouk. Mr. Simoneaux registered IRE Industrial as
    a Louisiana limited liability company on February 26, 2020, approximately one
    month prior to the execution of the Settlement Agreement on March 23, 2020. There
    is no dispute that Mr. Simoneaux owned 49% of IRE Industrial and had a direct
    interest in IRE Industrial.
    A compromise made by one of multiple persons with an interest in the same
    matter is not binding for the others. See La. C. C. art. 3075; Meadows v. Adams,
    2018- 1544 ( La. App.    Vt Cir. 1119120), 
    316 So. 3d 5
    , 13. Furthermore, it is well settled
    that only a party to a contract can be bound by its provisions. O' Hara v. Globus
    Medical, Inc.,   2014- 1436 ( La. App.   1St Cir. 8112/ 15), 
    181 So. 3d 69
    , 79, writ denied,
    2015- 1944 ( La. 11130115),    
    182 So. 3d 939
    . A limited liability company is a juridical
    person to which the law attributes personality; however, the personality of a juridical
    person is distinct from that of its members. La. C. C. art. 24; La. R. S. 12: 1301; Ogea
    v. Merritt, 2013- 1085 ( La. 12/ 10113), 
    130 So. 3d 888
    , 894- 95.
    W,
    Plant -N -Power' s argument that any entity in which Mr. Simoneaux has a
    direct or indirect interest automatically becomes a party to the Settlement Agreement
    would lead to absurd consequences. There is no record evidence showing that JRE
    Industrial is a party to the Settlement Agreement by virtue of Mr. Simoneaux' s direct
    interest in JRE Industrial, nor by JRE Industrial' s alleged classification as one of the
    Simoneaux Parties" under the Settlement Agreement. If JRE Industrial was one of
    the " Simoneaux Parties,"   it follows that JRE Industrial should have executed the
    promissory note and the consent judgment, as was required by the "           Simoneaux
    Parties" under the Settlement Agreement. However, the evidence shows that JRE
    Industrial did not execute the promissory note, nor the consent judgment.
    For all these reasons, we find that the trial court erred in granting partial
    summary judgment in favor of Plant -N -Power and against Defendants finding that
    JRE Industrial was a party to the Settlement Agreement.
    DECREE
    We reverse the portion of the trial court' s June 6, 2022 amended judgment
    that granted partial summary judgment in favor of Plant -N -Power Services, Inc. and
    against Defendants finding that La. R.S. 23: 921 does not apply to the Settlement
    Agreement as to Tex David Simoneaux, Jr.
    We affirm the portion of the trial court' s June 6, 2022 amended judgment that
    granted partial summary judgment in favor of Plant -N -Power Services, Inc. and
    against Defendants finding that La. R.S. 23: 921 does not apply to the Settlement
    Agreement as to JRE Field Services, LLC and Ascension Staffing, LLC.
    We affirm the portion of the trial court' s June 6, 2022 amended judgment that
    granted partial summary judgment in favor of Plant -N -Power Services, Inc. and
    against Defendants finding that La. R.S. 23: 921( H) is not applicable to damages for
    any alleged breaches by Defendants of the non -competition covenant contained in
    the parties' Settlement Agreement.
    27
    We reverse the portion of the trial court' s June 6, 2022 amended judgment
    that granted partial summary judgment in favor of Plant -N -Power Services, Inc. and
    against Defendants, finding that JRE Industrial Services, LLC was a party to the
    Settlement Agreement.
    We assess appellate court costs equally among the parties. We remand this
    matter to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    APPEAL MAINTAINED; JUDGMENT AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED
    IN PART; REMANDED.
    28