Title: Loss of Multiple Key Employees Prevention and Remedies
1Loss of Multiple Key Employees - Prevention and
Remedies
- Robert J. Wood, Jr.
- Tuesday, October 7, 2008
2THE PROBLEM MULTIPLE EMPLOYEES LEAVING FOR
COMPETITOR
- Possible legal remedies against ex-employee and
new employer - Preventive measures
- DISCLAIMER State laws vary greatly (must know
which law governs your situation)
3PREDATORY HIRING CLAIMS
- Violation of Sherman Antitrust Act
- Actual Monopolization (Actual Harm)
- Attempted Monopolization (Potential Harm)
4ACTUAL MONOPOLIZATION ELEMENTS
- Ds possession of monopoly power in relevant
market - Willful acquisition of such power
- Causation
5UNIVERSAL ANALYTICS CASE (9th Cir. 1990)
- Plaintiff and Defendant in aerospace technology
field - Defendant had 90 of market
- Plaintiff had 5 of market
- Defendant hired 5 of Plaintiff's key employees
- Employees difficult to replace required two
years to train - Court assumed first prong (possession of monopoly
power) met
6UNIVERSAL ANALYTICS CASE Cont.
- Second prong Whether talent hired not for using
it but to deprive competitor - Must prove subjective intent to engage in
exclusionary conduct - The "we wound UAI again" memo
- Court primary motivation was to obtain
productive employee - Defendant put the employees to work
7ATTEMPTED MONOPOLIZATION ELEMENTS
- Predatory or exclusionary conduct
- Specific intent to monopolize
- Dangerous probability of achieving monopoly power
8AMERICAN PROFESSIONAL TESTING CASE (9th Cir. 1997)
- Defendant offered BAR/BRI in 46 states
- Plaintiff competed in 4 states
- Defendant hired Plaintiff's instructor, "crippled
plaintiff's effort to compete in Florida" - Monopoly Power new rivals can't enter market,
existing competitors can't expand - Plaintiff Defendant's high-quality courses
entry barrier - Court not enough
9EMPLOYEE RAIDING
- Claim not widely accepted
- Hiring to cripple competition rather than to
obtain services
10BREACH OF FIDUCIARY DUTY (DUTY OF LOYALTY)
- Competing while still employed (bad)
- Preparing to compete (okay)
- Possibility of obtaining injunctive relief
11ABETTER CASE (Tex. App. 2003)
- Plaintiff owned trucking fleet Defendant was key
employee - Defendant prepared to start competing company
- Defendant mentioned his plans to Plaintiff's
customer - Defendant told Plaintiff about his plans
Plaintiff's other employees inquired - Defendant left followed by 12 of Plaintiff's
other employees - No breach of fiduciary duty
12GRESHAM CASE (Ga. App. 2004)
- Defendant revealed plans to start new company to
co-employees - Arranged for new employee's 401(k) loan to be
re-paid - Other employees simultaneously resigned
- Breach of fiduciary duty
13MISAPPROPRIATION OF TRADE SECRETS
- Must tighten security/treat information as secret
- Secret not in public domain
- Secret not in public domain
- Customer and pricing information
- General knowledge
- Specific knowledge
- Employee may use general skills and knowledge
- Inevitable versus threatened disclosure
14TORTIOUS INTERFERENCE VS. NEW EMPLOYER
- Departed employee bound by non-compete agreement
- Inducing versus merely hiring (with knowledge of
non-compete) - Claim based upon hiring at-will employee
15TORTIOUS INTERFERENCE VS. DEPARTED EMPLOYEE
- Based upon solicitation of employers
customers/employees - Difference between tortious interference and fair
competition?
16REEVES CASE (Cal. 2004)
- Senior partners in law firm
- Abruptly resigned, left no status reports
- Destroyed client computer files and documents
- Misappropriated confidential information
- Solicited law firm's clients
- Cultivated employee discontent
- Offered jobs to law firm's at-will employees
- Tortious interference
17FOOT LOCKER CASE (S.D. Ind. 2006)
- Defendant systematically hired Plaintiff's
employees - Needed the employees
- "Hit the competition where it hurts" memo
- Court "Offhand remarks"
- No tortious interference
18MEMORIAL GARDENS CASE (Colo. 1984)
- Plaintiff and Defendant sold preneed funeral
contracts - Defendant made random telephone calls
- Defendant told Plaintiff's customers they could
cancel contracts - Defendant completed and mailed cancellation forms
- Tortious interference
- Customers not at-will
19CONSTRUCTION MANAGEMENT (8th Cir. 2002)
- Defendant long distance telephone company
- Plaintiff cable inspector for Defendant
- Defendant sought bids for cable services
- Plaintiff chose difference vendor
- Plaintiff ? Defendant's inspectors Seek
employment with other companies - No tortious interference
20NON-COMPETE AGREEMENTS
- Consideration required
- Reasonableness of scope
- Judicial modification
- No one size fits all agreements
- Need to update agreements
- Binding incumbent and departing employees
- Providing (creating) new confidential information
- "Stale" information not confidential
- Choice of Law/Forum Selection provisions
- California
21NON-SOLICITATION AND NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS
- Non-solicitation versus non-compete agreements
- Difficulty of proving "solicitation
- Use of broader terms (e.g., "communication")
- Non-disclosure agreements more enforceable
22PRACTICAL TIPS WHEN EMPLOYEES LEAVE
- Exit interviews to determine their intentions
- Remind of obligations
- Confiscate company property
- Search emails
23AVOIDING RAIDING ACCUSATION
- Use job postings
- Headhunters
- Obtain copies of agreements signed by prospective
employees - Prevent employees bound by non-solicitation
provisions from recruiting - Direct new employees to comply with agreements
and not disclose information
24DISCLAIMER
- State laws vary greatly
- Must determine law applicable to your situation