DocketNumber: No. 322014
Citation Numbers: 1995 Conn. Super. Ct. 5264
Judges: LEVIN, JUDGE.
Filed Date: 5/12/1995
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/17/2021
The plaintiff is a Delaware corporation with a principal place of business in Fairfax, Virginia. It has a plant at which it assembles its machines in Naugatuck, Connecticut. It has similar plants in Flint, Michigan and in Riverside, California.
Tomra is a Norwegian company. It is a "support organization", according to its president, which has various "profit centers", in the nature of divisions or subsidiaries, in various parts of the United States.
The defendant Robert Lincoln joined the plaintiff Envipco in May 1987 as its New York Salesman. He was later promoted to vice president for sales and marketing and then promoted to senior vice president. For several years he was the plaintiff's "face" in the northeast. On September 29, 1988, Lincoln signed an "Employee Nondisclosure Agreement", the terms of which are not applicable here. Lincoln became familiar with all of the plaintiff's northeast customers on a personal basis. He was involved in the plaintiff's marketing strategy, familiar with its research and development initiatives, aware of its price structure, knowledgeable about how the plaintiff's machines worked and how they could be cheated. In 1993, his annual salary was $135,000 with a potential for a bonus as high as $50,000. He was one of the plaintiff's most highly paid, if not the most highly paid, employee. On December 29, 1993, Lincoln signed the confidentiality agreement at issue here. That agreement, which superseded the 1988 agreement, was a standard agreement for all employees. It was drafted by the plaintiff, although the employee was left to choose the jurisdiction whose laws would govern the contract. Lincoln, who lived in the Georgetown section of Washington, D.C. and who worked at the plaintiff's corporate offices in Fairfax where he signed the agreement, chose Virginia as the state whose laws would govern the contract.
Before March of 1992, Lincoln worked for the plaintiff in New York, although he had an office in Fairfax, Virginia. Other executives of Envipco wanted Lincoln to work out of Fairfax so that he could be involved in strategic planning. Lincoln acceded. Mike Lavin, who had been forced to sign the same confidentiality contract that Lincoln signed in December 1992, assumed Lincoln's responsibilities in the northeast market.
In March 1994, the plaintiff was urging Lincoln to seek a graduate degree in business administration so that he would, in the wording of an agreement entered into between the plaintiff and Lincoln, "be a more CT Page 5266 valuable executive after such training is completed." Lincoln, too, was eager to obtain an MBA. That agreement further provided that Envipco "acknowledges Bob Lincoln's right to attend the graduate school of his choice, but management believes that the interests of the Company would be best served if he were to remain in the Washington, D.C. area where he would be able to function as part of the management team. Therefore, if Bob Lincoln chooses to relocate his family outside of the D.C. area, he must do so at his own expense."
Lincoln studied for the graduate entrance examination. Subsequently, he was admitted to Columbia University's Executive MBA Program in New York City. That program required that the student's sponsoring employer or organization continue to pay him his full salary while he was engaged in the program. Envipco agreed and Lincoln relocated his family to New York City. He agreed to give up any claim to bonuses while at Columbia, where his education would cost Envipco $80,000.00.
In early 1995, Envipco's Board of Directors met in Fairfax, Virginia and deposed the president and chief executive officer of the company. Dale Everett was installed as the new president and CEO. With Lincoln out of state, Everett stormed through the plaintiff's offices rhetorically asking why he needed to pay Lavin as well as Lincoln such high salaries. These events were communicated to Lincoln by a friend and executive, Charles Rigby. In early 1995, Lincoln met with Everett, who was very hostile. Everett informed Lincoln that (1) Lavin was going to be fired, (2) Lincoln would have to take a pay cut, (3) Lincoln could not go to graduate school, and (4) Lincoln would not be president of the northeast region.
In March 1995, Lincoln, who at all times was an employee at will, told Everett he was resigning and going to work for Toma. Everett told Lincoln he would not try to stop him.2
At Toma, Lincoln's responsibility is to develop toma's [Toma's] business over the entire United States. In this capacity, he has met with representative of Envipco's and Toma's mutual customers, in Massachusetts and Michigan, both alone and with another Toma employee. These meetings have not been within a 100 mile radius of Envipco's Naugatuck plant. However, Lincoln plans to call on customers within a radius of 100 miles from Naugatuck. Lincoln's primary responsibility is pursuing strategic matters, focusing outside of the Northeast.
II CT Page 5267
The plaintiff seeks a temporary injunction, enjoining Lincoln from working for Toma within a 100 radius of the plaintiff's Naugatuck plant and from disclosing confidential or trade secret information and documents to Toma. There is little appellate case law in Connecticut on the criteria for the granting or denial of an application for a temporary injunction. In Olcott v. Pendleton,
1. The defendant Lincoln signed an agreement at the behest of the plaintiff for whom he already had been working for several years. CT Page 5268
2. By its terms, the agreement is governed by Virginia law. "Contract clauses which require the application of the laws of other states upon breach or dispute are recognized as proper in Connecticut."Syncsort, Inc. v. Indata Services,
3. Prior to the plaintiff having its employees sign the confidentiality agreement, its attorneys advised that legal consideration would have to support the agreement and that such consideration would or could be the employee's year-end bonus. SeeTwohy v. Harris,
4. This court applies Virginia law in order to construe the agreement between the parties. Nationwide Mutual Ins Co. v. Cassin,
5. Paragraph 8 of the agreement provides, in relevant part: "Upon leaving Employer, Employee agrees not to compete directly or indirectly with Employer in a business within a 100 mile radius of Employer for a period of two years." "Employer" is identified in paragraph 1 of the CT Page 5269 agreement as the plaintiff, Environmental Products Corporation. There is no authority which has been cited by the parties or located by the court fixing where, under Virginia law, a corporation exists. "When a decision from the highest state court is lacking, we must anticipate how that court would rule on the question presented." J.M. Lynne Co. v.Geraghty,
6. There is no evidence that Lincoln is competing with the plaintiff within 100 of the plaintiff's Fairfax, Virginia offices. Therefore, Lincoln is not in violation of the covenant not to compete in paragraph 8 of the agreement.
7. Although the defendant Lincoln, since his departure from the plaintiff's employ, has called on the plaintiff's customers on behalf of his new employer, Tomra, the plaintiff has cited no Virginia authority which holds that this is a breach of a common law or statutory duty. "[T]he courts of any State may assume, if a different claim is not made on the trial, that the law of the foreign State is the same as that of the home State." Union New Haven Trust Co. v.Watrous,
9. It is unnecessary for the court to determine whether the defendant Lincoln otherwise possesses confidential information and trade secrets of the plaintiff within the ambit of the agreement or the Uniform Trade Secrets Act, enacted in Virginia. Gach v. Franolich,
9. No basis exists for the court to enter a temporary injunction against the defendant Tomra North America.
The plaintiff has not shown a reasonable degree of probability that it will prevail at the trial of the case. The plaintiff's application for a temporary injunction is denied.
BY THE COURT Bruce L. Levin Judge of the Superior Court
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Union & New Haven Trust Co. v. Watrous , 109 Conn. 268 ( 1929 )
Connecticut State Medical Society v. Connecticut Medical ... , 29 Conn. Super. Ct. 474 ( 1971 )
Wildowsky v. Dudek , 30 Conn. Super. Ct. 288 ( 1972 )
Connecticut Ass'n of Clinical Laboratories v. Connecticut ... , 31 Conn. Super. Ct. 110 ( 1973 )
Torrington Drive-In v. I.A.T.S.E.M.P.M.O Local 402 , 17 Conn. Super. Ct. 416 ( 1951 )
Alston Studios, Inc. v. Lloyd v. Gress & Associates , 492 F.2d 279 ( 1974 )
Republic Systems and Programming, Inc. v. Computer ... , 440 F.2d 996 ( 1971 )
Paramount Termite Control Co. v. Rector , 238 Va. 171 ( 1989 )
Hopkins v. Hamden Board of Education , 29 Conn. Super. Ct. 397 ( 1971 )
Covenant Radio Corporation v. Ten Eighty Corporation , 35 Conn. Super. Ct. 1 ( 1977 )
Richardson v. Paxton Company , 203 Va. 790 ( 1962 )
Deming v. Bradstreet , 85 Conn. 650 ( 1912 )
Moore v. Serafin , 163 Conn. 1 ( 1972 )
Shaw v. Railroad Co. , 25 L. Ed. 892 ( 1880 )
Twohy v. Harris , 194 Va. 69 ( 1952 )
Dennis v. Shaw , 137 Conn. 450 ( 1951 )
New England Fruit & Produce Co. v. Hines , 97 Conn. 225 ( 1922 )
Olcott v. Pendleton , 128 Conn. 292 ( 1941 )