Centurion Service Group, LLC v. Eric Wilensky
Civil Action No. 2023-0422-MTZ
COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
August 31, 2023
MORGAN T. ZURN, VICE CHANCELLOR
LEONARD L. WILLIAMS JUSTICE CENTER, 500 N. KING STREET, SUITE 11400, WILMINGTON, DELAWARE 19801-3734
Faegre Drinker Biddle & Reath LLP
222 Delaware Avenue, Suite 1410
Wilmington, DE 19801
Andrea S. Brooks, Esquire
Wilks Law, LLC
4250 Lancaster Pike, Suite 200
Wilmington, DE 19805
RE: Centurion Service Group, LLC v. Eric Wilensky,
Civil Action No. 2023-0422-MTZ
Dear Counsel:
I write to address those aspects of defendant Eric Wilensky‘s motion to dismiss that I did not resolve at oral argument on July 19, 2023.1 We have had occasion to speak several times over the past few months, and this letter is cabined to the enforceability of the restrictive covenants plaintiff Centurion Service Group, LLC (“Centurion“) asserts Wilensky breached. I therefore rely on the parties’ familiarity with the underlying dispute and the Employment Agreement. Wilensky moved to dismiss Centurion‘s single count for breach of Section 5(a) of the Employment Agreement, asserting that the provision is unenforceable and so Centurion failed to state a claim. For the reasons that follow, his motion is granted.
Having reviewed the Illinois law the parties submitted in supplemental briefing, it seems Illinois common law and Delaware common law are mostly in step as to the enforceability of restrictive covenants.7 Illinois law has an additional statutory restriction on the application of restrictive covenants to low wage workers, but this restriction does not apply to Wilensky.8 While Illinois enacted additional restrictions in 2022, these do not apply to Wilensky‘s agreement.9 I see no basis to disturb the Employment Agreement‘s choice of Delaware law. I thank the parties for their supplemental briefing on Illinois law.
Section 5(a) states:
Non-competition. The Executive agrees, in consideration for the obligations of the Company hereunder, including, without limitation, any payments and benefits to be given to the Executive, that during the Restricted Time he will not (other than as a director, officer,
employee, agent or consultant of the Company), directly or indirectly own any interest in, manage, control, participate in (whether as an officer, member, manager, director, employee, consultant, advisor, partner, agent, representative or otherwise), consult with, render services for, or in any other manner engage in any business engaged directly or indirectly in a Competitive Activity in the Restricted Area, including, without limitation, the provision of any other services which the Company was designing, developing, selling or providing, or planning to design, develop, sell or provide, in either case, at any time while the Executive was employed by the Company, nor assist or encourage anyone in doing the same, unless the Executive shall have obtained the prior written consent of the Board, provided, however, that the foregoing restrictions shall not be construed to prohibit ownership by the Executive of not more than five percent (5%) of any class of equity securities of any corporation having a class of equity securities registered pursuant to the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, which are publicly owned and regularly traded on any national securities exchange or over the-counter market if such ownership represents a personal investment and neither the Executive nor any group of persons including the Executive either directly or indirectly in any way manages or exercises control of any such corporation, guarantees any of its financial obligations or otherwise takes part in its business other than exercising his right as an equity holder or seeks to do any of the foregoing.15
Section 1 supplies the following definitions:
(c) “Business” shall mean (i) the buying and selling of medical equipment via auctions and private sales, (ii) providing medical surplus management for healthcare facilities including certified appraisals, trade-in value verification, asset and facility inventories, relocations and closures for such facilities, and (iii) any other business
activities in which the Company, at any time during the Term, is engaged or is actively planning to engage in. (e) “Competitive Activity” shall mean an activity that constitutes being engaged in the Business or engaged in any business that is competitive with the Business in the Restricted Area.
(i) “Restricted Area” shall mean any area within the United States of America, and any other countries within the world where the Company is then actively soliciting and engaging in (or actively planning to solicit and engage in) the Business.
(j) “Restricted Time” shall be the Term and the two (2) year period immediately following the Termination Date.
(l) “Term” shall mean the period beginning on the Effective Date and ending upon the first to occur of the Expiration Date or the Termination Date.16
In so many words, Section 5(a) prevents Wilensky from engaging in any business in turn directly or indirectly engaged in i) Centurion‘s business, ii) any business competitive with Centurion‘s business, iii) any business Centurion planned to engage in at any time during Wilensky‘s Term, or (iv) any business competitive with any business Centurion planned to engage in at any time during Wilensky‘s Term, for two years after the Termination Date, anywhere in the United States and any other countries where Centurion is “actively soliciting and engaging in” its actual or planned business.
When evaluating the reasonableness of a restrictive covenant, a court must consider how the temporal and geographic restrictions operate together. The two dimensions necessarily interact. To be barred for five years from working in a single county leaves open opportunities for the former employee in surrounding areas. To be barred from an entire state for a shorter period, such as a year or less, leaves open the possibility that the former employee could live off savings, take a long vacation, or enjoy some garden leave. All else equal, a longer restrictive covenant will be more reasonable if geographically tempered, and a restrictive covenant covering a broader area will be more reasonable if temporally tailored. A restrictive covenant that is maximally broad across both dimensions requires exceptional justification. To examine each dimension individually overlooks the interaction and enables employers to justify restrictions that are unreasonably onerous in combination.17
Here, before analyzing the geographic and temporal scopes together, I must first resolve the parties’ interpretive difference over the geographic scope of the Restricted Area. Wilensky asserts the geographic scope encompasses conduct anywhere in the United States, plus in foreign countries where Centurion is actively soliciting and engaging in its business or planning to do so. Centurion parses the definition of Restricted Area as limited to any area, either in the United
“Area(s)” where Centurion does business are the core of Section 5(a)‘s geographic scope, but not the entirety. “Area” is “amorphous and ill-defined.”20 And the “Restricted Area” mentioned in Section 5(a) encompasses not only areas where Centurion actually engages in or solicits business, but also where Centurion “is then actively planning to solicit and engage in” business.21 And the term “Business” includes “any other business activities in which the Company, at any time during the Term, is engaged or is actively planning to engage in.”22 So,
“Whether the duration of a restrictive covenant is reasonable turns on the specific facts before the Court . . . .”23 Section 5(a) bans Wilensky for two years from competing nationwide, and in any additional “area” in which Centurion conducts, solicits, or plans to conduct or solicit any actual activity or activity planned at any time during Wilensky‘s seventeen-year employment.24 Under a holistic assessment, this geographic and temporal scope is not reasonable.25 The “area” contemplated in Section 5(a) casts a limitless net over Wilensky in both scope of geography and scope of conduct. Wilensky is prohibited from working
Centurion has failed to demonstrate any interest worth protecting with Section 5(a). “[T]his Court has enforced non-competes with a nationwide scope, but only in instances where the competing party agrees, in connection with the sale of a business, to stand down from competing in the relevant industry . . . anywhere . . . for a stated period of time after the sale.”29 This is not such an instance: Wilensky entered into the Employment Agreement in 2018,30 when he was already employed by Centurion.31 Centurion‘s Complaint gives lip service to Wilensky‘s “finding deals” and “foster[ing] relationships,” and to his access to Centurion‘s confidential information including lists of buyers, sellers, and vendors.32 These vague and everyday concerns do not demonstrate Section 5(a) is warranted by a particularly strong economic interest. Centurion offers no facts to support that
I conclude Section 5(a) is unenforceable. I decline to blue pencil it.34
Wilensky‘s motion to dismiss is GRANTED.
Sincerely,
/s/ Morgan T. Zurn
Vice Chancellor
MTZ/ms
cc: All Counsel of Record, via File & ServeXpress
