Texas Noncompete Agreements: Difference Between Buy/Sell Agreements and Employer/Employee Agreements


In the context of one company purchasing another company, a non-compete agreement is far more enforceable than it would be in an employer/employee situation.  That's hornbook law.  A good explanation for this was given in a Texas Supreme Court case:
 

In the case of covenants not to compete incident to the sale of a business, the seller's promise not to compete with the buyer increases the value of the business to the buyer.  Without such a covenant the value of the business would be reduced, lessening the likelihood that businesses would be purchased.  In employee covenants, the special training or knowledge acquired by the employee through his employer is valuable consideration and often enhances the value of the employee to other firms.  To allow employees to use or sell this valuable training or knowledge upon leaving a firm would create a disincentive for employers to train or educate employees.

Thus, in buy/sell situations, covenants not to compete are understandably easier to enforce, and their scope can be much broader than employer/employee covenants can be.



 

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Texas Trade Secret Litigation: "What if the secrets are all in my head?"


Very often, a departing employee won't take customer lists or other confidential documents with him, but a lot of the information he has memorized will be considered by his former employer to be confidential.  Customer names and contact information, for example, are routinely memorized by sales representatives.  Nevertheless, the sales representative's employer typically contends that such information is confidential.

Some states have adopted the so-called "memory rule," according to which the departing employee may use anything that's in his head to memory.  Thus, as long as the employee didn't take the customer list with him, he may use the information from that list that he has committed to memory.

In Texas, though, authority exists for the proposition that whether the information is contained on a document the employee has taken or in the employee's head, trade secret protection may attach to the information.  The key inquiries are:  (a) whether the information is really secret (e.g., whether it is widely known in the industry); and (b) what steps did the employer take to keep the information secret?

 

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Texas Confidentiality Agreements and Protective Orders: Is Attorneys Eyes Only Information Reviewable By In-House Counsel?


In trade secret cases, the parties routinely produce confidential and proprietary information to each other.  Typically, a protective order is entered that permits the parties to designate information as confidential (which means, inter alia, that it can only be used in the litigation) and states how the information is to be treated. 

Super-sensitive information can be designated as "Attorneys Eyes Only," which means that the attorneys, but not their clients, may review the information.

But what about in-house counsel?  Are they permitted to see the information?  As the attached article indicates, the answer to this question is not always obvious.
 

 

 

http://www.hartfordbusiness.com/news1383.html


 

 

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Noncompete Agreements in Texas: In Non-Compete Cases, Suing Only Individual Defendant Can Be Risky Strategy


Company X's employee (who is bound by a non-compete agreement) resigns and begins working for Company Y (a competitor of Company X).  Company X sues its former employee for violating his non-compete.  Months later, they reach a settlement, and a final judgment is entered.

Company X can then sue Company Y for tortiously interfering with the non-compete agreement between Company X and its former employee, right?  Maybe not.

In KForce, Inc. v. Surrex Solutions Corp., 436 F.3d 981 (8th Cir. 2006), the federal Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals, applying Missouri law, held that filing a second suit (against the new employer) would result in the plaintiff being compensated twice for the same injury.  Thus, the second suit was barred.

Time will tell whether Texas courts adopt the holding in KForce.  However, just as in Missouri, it is the law in Texas that an injured party cannot be compensated twice for the same injury.  Thus, it's possible that the KForce rationale would apply here.

Lesson:  Be careful about settling with your former employee before you add his new employer as a defendant (unless you have no intention of ever doing so).  If you settle with the former employee, you may not be able to pursue the new employer.  The safest course, if you are inclined to seek relief (including injunctive relief) from both parties, is to name the ex-employee and his new employer as defendants from the outset.
 

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Potential Criminal Liability for Trade Secret Theft


Misappropriation of trade secret lawsuits usually focus on potential civil remedies that might be recovered.  However, a businessman who worked near Lufkin, Texas, was recently sentenced to seven years in prison for allegedly stealing company trade secrets.  The full story is here:
 

http://www.news-journal.com/news/content/region/ETtoday/stories/2007/03/02/mcclain_sentence.html 

 

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Texas Breach of Fiduciary Damages: Can Recover Damages Even Though Not Actually Harmed

An employee may be liable for breach of fiduciary duty to his employer—even if his employer suffers no actual damages as a result of the offending conduct.  So learned an employee in a recent case.

In that case, the employee, a Project Manager for a general construction contractor, was responsible for locating potential subcontractors for the project, soliciting bids from them, and directing the work of the subcontractors that were actually hired.

At one point, the Project Manager hired a subcontracting company owned by his mother-in-law and father-in-law.  Unbeknownst to his employer (the general contractor), the Project Manager and his wife personally profited in excess of $300,000 as a result of his wife’s parents being awarded the subcontracting work.  When the general contractor subsequently learned what the Project Manager had done, it sued the Project Manager for breach of fiduciary duty.  A bench trial verdict in the general contractor’s favor was affirmed on appeal.

Lessons:

1.   The court of appeals noted that a “fiduciary” is a person “who occupies a position of peculiar confidence towards another.”  The court added that a fiduciary relationship is characterized by “integrity and fidelity,” and it contemplates “fair dealing and good faith.”  The court concluded that the Project Manager’s duties were sufficiently important to make him a fiduciary of the general contractor.

2.   In a principal/agent fiduciary relationship, the duties owed by the agent include:  the duty to account for profits arising out of his employment, the duty not to act as (or on account of) an adverse party without the principal’s consent, the duty not to compete with the principal on his own account or for another in matters relating to the subject matter of the agency, the duty to deal fairly with the principal in all transactions between them, and the duty to deal openly and to fully disclose to his employer information that affects his employer’s business.

3.   In this case, the Project Manager argued that his use of his mother-in-law and father-in-law’s subcontracting company was for the general contractor’s benefit (and that the general contractor was not in any way harmed).  But the court held that the Project Manager’s failure to inform his employer that he personally benefited from using the subcontractor company constituted a breach of his fiduciary duty, and the Project Manager had to account for all profits he earned as a result of his breach.  The court held that it was “beside the point” that the general contractor may have suffered no damages; the Project Manager’s betrayal of trust warranted the verdict against him.

Daniel v. Falcon Interest Realty Corp., 190 S.W.3d 177 (Tex. App. Houston [1st Dist.] 2005, no pet.).

 

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