MEMORANDUM DECISION AND ORDER
INTRODUCTION
Before the Court is Defendant Battelle Energy Alliance, LLC’s Motion for Summary Judgment (Docket No. 29.) Oral argument was held on August 25, 2010, and the motion is at issue. For the reasons expressed below, the Court will grant Battelle’s Motion for Summary Judgment.
BACKGROUND
Plaintiff AMX International, Inc. operates a business and information technology consulting company. It contracts with private companies and government entities to provide software and other computer, consulting, support, and training services. The services AMX offers include the provision of technology support staff. AMX hires IT professionals, and then subcontracts their services to its clients.
When hired, all AMX employees sign non-competition agreements that prohibit them from “[djirectly or indirectly working as or for an Active Client” for a period of 12 months following employment with AMX. See, e.g., William R. Newland Non-Competition Agreement, Dkt. 29-18. An Active Client is: “a person, business or entity that AMX has sent an invoice to or concerning within the prior 24 months and who is listed in the invoice as the ‘client’ or under the ‘Bill to.’ ” Id.
In March 2006, AMX began providing its employees’ IT services to Battelle. Typically, AMX service contracts contain an Employment Recruitment provision prohibiting the client from soliciting or hiring AMX employees. But Battelle has a policy against the inclusion of such clauses in its services contracts, and AMX never requested that its standard no-hire pro
It is undisputed that former AMX employees applied for jobs working directly for Battelle and were hired. In 2008, AMX filed a suit against former employee Trevor Ball to enforce Ball’s covenant not to compete. The state court denied AMX’s request for preliminary injunctive relief, and AMX withdrew its complaint.
AMX now alleges that Battelle tortiously interfered with its employee non-competition agreements by “hir[ing] away AMX employees assigned to work at the BEA worksite.” Am. Compl. ¶ 29, Dkt. 20. AMX complains that Battelle’s conduct— recruiting and inducing AMX employees to breach their non-competition agreements — “has deprived AMX of no less than $2 million in fees to date.” Id. ¶ 24. Battelle seeks summary judgement on AMX’s claim.
LEGAL STANDARD
One of the principal purposes of the summary judgment “is to isolate and dispose of factually unsupported claims .... ”
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
The evidence must be viewed in the light most favorable to the non-moving party, and the Court must not make credibility findings.
Id.
at 255,
The moving party bears the initial burden of demonstrating the absence of a genuine issue of material fact.
Devereaux v. Abbey,
This shifts the burden to the non-moving party to produce evidence sufficient to support a jury verdict in her favor.
Id.
at 256-57,
However, the Court is “not required to comb through the record to find some reason to deny a motion for summary
ANALYSIS
Four elements must be proven in order to establish a prima facie case of tortious interference with contract. The plaintiff must show that 1) there was a contract in existence; 2) the defendant knew of the contract; 3) the defendant intentionally interfered with the contract, causing a breach; and 4) injury to the plaintiff resulted from the breach.
Magic Valley Truck Brokers, Inc. v. Meyer,
In this case, AMX asserts that Battelle tortiously interfered with the AMX employees’ noncompete agreements. To prevail on this claim, AMX must prove that Battelle, with knowledge of the agreements, engaged AMX employees to perform work that violated their noncompete agreements.
Magic Valley Truck Brokers v. Meyer,
1. Battelle Was a Stranger to the Non-compete Agreements.
A claim for tortious interference with contract, however, also requires proof that the defendant is a stranger to the contract with which the defendant allegedly interfered and to the business relationship giving rise to the contract.
BECO Constr. Co., Inc. v. J-U-B Engineers,
In
BECO,
the Idaho Supreme Court applied the “stranger to the contract” doctrine in a suit by a general contractor for a city development project against the city and the project engineer hired by the city to monitor the project’s progress.
Application of BECO here is unclear. If Battelle had been acting as an agent of AMX or of AMX’s employees, BECO would clearly dictate granting summary judgment in favor of Battelle. But Battelle was neither an agent of AMX or AMX’s employees. In an effort to accommodate the facts of this case, it urges the Court to take a more expansive view of the court’s holding in BECO. It contends that under Idaho law, an entity that “has any beneficial or economic interest in, or control over” the business relationship underlying the allegedly disrupted contract, is not a stranger to the contract and cannot be held liable for interference with that relationship. Battelle Br. at 6 (emphasis in original).
Based on a careful review of
BECO,
the Court does not believe the Idaho Supreme Court intended to articulate such a broad rule. The
BECO
opinion must be construed in light of its facts.
Hash v. U.S.,
Every decision cited by
BECO
to support its holding is equally inapplicable.
Jenkins v. Boise Cascade Corp.,
Given the absence of any clear directive from the Idaho Supreme Court extending the “stranger to the contract” defense beyond parties to the contract or their agents, this Court cannot find that Battelle should be immune from a tortious interference claim simply because it had some interest in the employment relationships at issue here.
2. The Doctrine of Quasi-Estoppel Does Not Apply.
Nor is the Court persuaded by Battelle’s argument that AMX should be es-topped from asserting a tortious interference claim against Battelle. According to Battelle, AMX’s failure to request the inclusion of its standard no-hire provision in its service contract with Battelle precludes AMX from now changing its position and pursuing a claim against Battelle for tortious interference with the noncompete agreements.
Quasi-estoppel prevents a party from reaping an unconscionable advantage, or from imposing an unconscionable disadvantage upon another, by taking a position inconsistent with a previous position.
Gamer v. Bartschi,
First, it is questionable whether AMX “changed its positions” by not requesting a no-hire provision and then later asserting its legitimate tort remedies. AMX has consistently required that its employees sign noncompete agreements preventing them from working for Active Clients, such as Battelle, upon leaving AMX’s employ. This suggests AMX has maintained a constant position regarding Battelle’s right to hire AMX employees — not that it has taken inconsistent positions.
Second, even assuming AMX changed positions, AMX’s conduct did not rise to the level of being unconscionable. At best, AMX simply abandoned its contractual remedies. But AMX did not need a belt- and-suspenders approach to protect itself against Battelle’s allegedly tortious hiring of AMX employees. Even in the absence of a no-hire provision, Idaho law still prohibits a party from knowingly engaging an employee to work for him in an activity that would violate the employee’s noncompete agreement.
Magic Valley Truck Brokers v. Meyer,
BatteUe puts forth a third argument — that AMX’s tortious interference claims fails as a matter of law because its employee noncompete agreements are void and unenforceable. AMX responds that the enforceability of the noncompete agreements is irrelevant because a claim for tortious interference with contract does not require the existence of an enforceable contract.
AMX is correct to an extent— “[protection is extended against unjustifiable interference with contracts even though the contract is voidable or unenforceable in an adversary proceeding.”
Barlow v. International Harvester Co.,
No Idaho court has squarely answered this question. The Court must therefore predict how the Idaho Supreme Court would resolve the issue.
Air-Sea Forwarders, Inc. v. Air Asia Co.,
Under Idaho law, “a contract is usually void ab initio if its subject matter is in some manner opposed to public policy so that the law will not aid in upholding it.”
Southern Idaho Realty of Twin Falls, Inc.-Century 21 v. Larry J. Hellhake and Associates, Inc.,
This conclusion is consistent with other jurisdictions addressing this issue.
See, e.g., NCH Corp. v. Share Corp.,
The Court finds the reasoning of
NCH Corp.
persuasive. In Idaho, like Texas, unreasonable noncompete agreements violate public policy and are thus void. Additionally, the Court finds that the social interest in competition that underpins the prohibition against unreasonable noncompete agreements equally justifies protecting defendants who do business with former employees unfairly shackled
This leaves the question of whether the noncompete agreements at issue here are unreasonable and unenforceable as a matter of law. “Covenants not to compete in employment contracts are ‘disfavored’ and ‘strictly construed against the employer.’ ”
Intermountain Eye & Laser Ctrs., P.L.L.C. v. Miller,
The Court must first determine whether AMX has a legitimate interest worthy of protection.
Freiburger,
Next, the Court must consider whether the noncompete agreements are a reasonable means of protecting AMX’s legitimate business interest. To be expected, Battelle argues that the noncompete agreements are overly broad. Specifically, it challenges the provision prohibiting former AMX employees from “[djirectly or indirectly working as or for an Active Client of AMX.” This restriction, says Battelle, is not a reasonable means of protecting AMX’s interest in the client relationships its employees helped to develop because the clause is not limited to clients with whom the AMX employees actually interacted.
The Court shares the concern that the noncompete agreements are more restrictive than necessary according to the standards set forth in Freiburger, supra. In Freiburger, a civil engineer employed by J-U-B signed a covenant not to compete that prohibited him from providing any services to J-U-B’s clients without regard to whether he had any contact with these clients. Ill P.3d at 103. When Freiburger resigned from J-U-B, he took a job with a competing engineering firm, which asked him to market to a current J-U-B client that Freiburger had “nurtured” while employed with J-U-B. Id. J-U-B sought to enforce its covenant against Freiburger. Id. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Freiburger, finding the covenant not to compete unenforceable as a matter of law, and J-U-B appealed. Id.
The Idaho Supreme Court affirmed. It held that the covenant was “clearly an overbroad means of protecting J-U-B’s legitimate interest” because it prohibited Freiburger from: (1) contacting past or current J-U-B’s clients “regardless of whether Freiburger helped to develop JU-B’s goodwill effort toward that client”; (2) providing any services to J-U-B’s clients without defining “services”; and (3) contacting “pending” clients without defining “pending” and without any goodwill limitation. Id. at 107.
Moreover, the court refused to reform the parties’ agreement because reformation would have required more than adding
The Idaho Supreme Court reached a similar result in
Pinnacle.
As in
Freiburger,
the
Pinnacle
court affirmed the trial court’s decision to grant summary judgment in favor of the employee.
Freiburger and Pinnacle control here. There is no dispute that AMX did not limit the restrictive covenants to only those clients with whom its employees had prior contact. There is no dispute that AMX failed to define the “work” its employees were prohibited from performing. There is no dispute that AMX failed to restrict the geographic area to those areas where the AMX employee provided services or had a significant presence or influence. Cf. Idaho Code 44-2407(3). This is sufficient under Freiburger and Pinnacle to make the noncompete agreements unenforceable as a matter of law.
AMX has not shown, and indeed it cannot show, any goodwill with the customers with whom the AMX employee had no contact and who are outside the territories where the AMX employee provided services. Also, AMX has no protectable interest in prohibiting AMX employees from providing services that AMX does not provide to its clients.
Furthermore, the Court will not blue pencil the noncompete agreements. AMX cast its net too wide when it drafted the noncompete agreements, and reforming the agreements to make them reasonable would require a substantial rewrite of the contracts, which the Court declines to do.
See Freiburger,
AMX, however, urges the Court to refrain from deciding this issue on summary judgment. Relying on
Miller, supra,
Miller involved a non-compete agreement between physicians, which prohibited the departing physician, Dr. Miller, from practicing medicine within Ada and Canyon County unless he paid a $500,000 practice fee to the ophthalmology firm. The court held factual questions existed regarding (1) the nature and scope of the legitimate business interests the firm sought to protect, (2) the reasonableness of the practice fee; and (3) the degree the doctor-patient relationship affected the extent of the firm’s protectable interests.
See Miller,
Moreover, the combination of factors presented in Miller convinces the Court that the case is readily distinguishable. In this case, unlike in Miller, there is no dispute regarding the nature and scope of AMX’s protectable interests. See AMX Resp. at 16. Second, this case does not present the same questions at issue in Miller regarding the reasonableness of a practice fee. Finally, in Miller, the court wrestled with novel questions regarding the enforceability of noncompete agreements between physicians. In contrast, this case involves a standard noncompete provision between an employer and an employee, and none of those questions relating to physician noncompete agreements arise in that context.
In short, Miller does not dictate the conclusion that the reasonableness of the noncompete provisions at issue here must be determined by the fact finder. To the contrary, the noncompete agreements in this ease more closely approximate the covenants in Freiburger and Pinnacle— which the Idaho Supreme Court found unenforceable as a matter of law. Accordingly, AMX’s claim for tortious interference with contract will be dismissed.
ORDER
IT IS ORDERED that Battelle Energy Alliance, LLC’s Motion for Summary Judgment (Docket No. 29) is GRANTED.
