MEMORANDUM DECISION AND ORDER
International Business Machines Corporation (“IBM” or the “Company”) commenced this diversity action against David L. Johnson, formerly IBM’s Vice-President of Corporate Development, asserting claims for breach of a non-competition agreement and misappropriation of trade secrets. On June 1, 2009, IBM sought a preliminary injunction enjoining Mr. Johnson from violating the purported non-competition agreement and from continuing his employment as Senior Vice President of Strategy at Dell Inc. (“Dell”), a competitor of IBM. At a hearing before Judge Kenneth M. Karas, to whom this action was assigned originally, doubt was raised as to whether the alleged non-competition agreement had been duly executed by Mr. Johnson. As a result, Judge Karas scheduled a preliminary injunction hearing for June 22, 2009, to permit the parties to engage in expedited discovery and file legal memoranda on New York contract law. Judge Karas also permitted Mr. Johnson to commence his employment at Dell but restricted him from advising Dell on any matter concerning the business strategy of Dell or IBM and enjoined him from disclosing any of IBM’s confidential information in his possession. Subsequently, the case was transferred to this Court, which held the preliminary injunction hearing on June 22, 2009. 1
For the reasons set forth in this opinion, the Court denies IBM’s request for a preliminary injunction.
I
BACKGROUND
The following recitation of the facts is based upon the affidavits, submitted in lieu of live direct testimony, of Mr. Johnson, J. Randall MacDonald, 2 and other witnesses; the in-court cross-examination and re-direct examination of those witnesses; and the exhibits received into evidence during the June 22, 2009, hearing. 3
Until his resignation a few weeks ago, Mr. Johnson had worked for IBM for more than twenty-seven years. For the last nine years, he held the position of Vice President of Corporate Development, reporting directly to Mark Loughridge,
In 2005, IBM began requiring its most senior executives, including Mr. Johnson, to execute non-competition agreements. In consideration for the promise not to compete, 5 employees were eligible to continue qualifying for certain equity grants— grants that they had qualified to receive before the implementation of the non-compete regime. Mr. Johnson received the form non-competition agreement in March 2005, and IBM asked him to execute the agreement and return it within a few months.
By May 2005, Mr. Johnson had yet to execute the agreement, and he received an e-mail from MacDonald. The e-mail explained that Mr. Johnson’s agreement had not yet been received by IBM and warned him that his 2005 equity award would not take effect until the non-competition agreement was signed and received. MacDonald’s e-mail also notified Mr. Johnson that IBM had set a deadline of June 1, 2005, for return of the executed non-competition agreement.
Mr. Johnson nevertheless was reluctant to enter into a non-competition agreement with IBM. In 2001, Mr. Johnson had foregone an opportunity to become the chief executive officer of another technology company based upon assurances that he would be considered for a promotion to a General Manager position at IBM within two years. In 2004, Mr. Johnson had approached Loughridge, IBM’s CFO, who assured Mr. Johnson that he would be considered for a General Manager position. Loughridge prepared an Annual Development Plan for Mr. Johnson in September 2004, which indicated that Mr. Johnson’s next position would be in General Management.
Despite the representations of Lough-ridge and other IBM executives, Mr. Johnson was concerned that his growth possibilities at IBM were limited. Mr. Johnson therefore contacted Randy MacDonald and asked him whether IBM would consider him for a General Manager position. MacDonald told Mr. Johnson that he would look into the matter and get back to him by the end of June 2005.
IBM, however, had set a June 1, 2005, deadline for return of the executed non-competition agreement. Thus, in an effort to extend the time during which he could consider whether to enter into such an agreement, Mr. Johnson purposefully signed the non-competition agreement on the signature block designated for IBM.
6
Mr. Johnson’s gambit appears to have worked just as he envisioned. In the Fall of 2005, IBM returned to Mr. Johnson the original version of the improperly signed agreement and told him that his signature was on the wrong line. Randy MacDonald testified that he was the IBM executive in the United States designated to sign the non-competition agreements and the executive with final responsibility for binding the company to non-competition agreements. MacDonald testified that he had signed hundreds of other non-competition agreements on IBM’s behalf, but he never signed Mr. Johnson’s agreement. Concurrent with its return of the original, improperly signed agreement, IBM sent to Mr. Johnson a blank agreement and asked him to execute and return it.
Around the same time, Loughridge initiated a discussion with Mr. Johnson regarding the General Manager position. Loughridge explained to Mr. Johnson that he did not see Mr. Johnson as a General Manager and expressed shock that Mr. Johnson wanted to move into that position. According to Loughridge, finance people at IBM never moved into General Manager positions. Mr. Johnson reminded Loughridge about the conversation that he had had with Loughridge in 2004, and other IBM executives in 2001, regarding his desire to move into a General Manager position. Mr. Johnson testified that Loughridge had indicated that these conversations never occurred and then stated that he was offended that Mr. Johnson suggested otherwise.
Thereafter, Mr. Johnson was not willing to enter into the non-competition agreement, and he refused to sign the blank agreement that IBM had sent to him. Mr. Johnson testified that, over the next year, personnel from IBM’s Human Resources Department regularly called his office and sent him e-mails asking that he sign and return the non-competition agreement. Indeed, in February 15, 2006, Teri Wood, Staff Counsel to the Human Resources Law Group, wrote an e-mail to Barbara Brickmeier, Vice President of Human Resources, explaining that Mr. Johnson had “still not signed his non-compete on the employee line.” Def. Exh. 1 at 1. Deb Cannone, a paralegal who was copied on the e-mail exchange between Wood and Brickmeier, handwrote the following on a printed copy of the e-mail: “Dave Johnson signed on Corporate line. When asked to resign on employee line, he refused.” Id.
On May 10, 2006, Donna Riley, Vice President of Human Resources, wrote an e-mail to Mr. Johnson stating: “Hi Dave. A while ago we had talked about the need for you to re-sign the standard non-compete agreement for SLT members since your original had been signed on the wrong line. We are about to go through an update for new I & VT members, so you will receive a fresh copy of the agreement that you can sign and return during that cycle.” Def. Exh. 2 at 1. Still several months later, on July 18, 2006, Riley again wrote to Mr. Johnson:
Hi Dave. Hate to be a pest, but we’re still working on getting all of the non-compete agreements signed and filed and yours isn’t booked since the original was signed in the wrong plaice. I’m asking my team to have a hard copy put in your mail today since anyone who hasn’t returned theirs to Chris Gregory in North Castle by the end of Friday will receive a personal call from Randy regarding the status of their equity grant.
Def. Exh. 4 at 1 (emphasis added). Despite this threat of sorts and despite continuing to refuse to sign the non-competition agreement, Mr. Johnson testified that he never received a subsequent call from MacDonald or any other IBM employee regarding the status of his equity grants.
Mr. Johnson also testified that he discussed his improper signature of the non-competition agreement with Don Rosenberg, IBM’s General Counsel. During this conversation Mr. Johnson told Rosenberg that he purposefully had signed on the wrong line and that he thought that meant that the agreement was not binding. According to Mr. Johnson, Rosenberg expressed doubts about whether this was the case. Mr. Johnson then told Rosenberg that IBM employees had pursued him to sign another version of the agreement. Rosenberg’s eyebrows went up — a signal that, according to Mr. Johnson, conveyed the meaning that Rosenberg did not believe that the agreement was binding — and he (Rosenberg) told Mr. Johnson to “save the documentation to demonstrate that there had been repeated efforts where [Mr. Johnson] didn’t respond.” Preliminary Injunction Hearing Transcript (“Prelim. Inj. Hr’g Tr.”) 28-31, June 22, 2009.
On September 15, 2006, Cannone sent an e-mail to Margaret Sohr, who was working with Reily on the administrative aspects of booking the non-competition agreements, informing her that Mr. Johnson’s agreement was among those still outstanding. Cannone’s e-mail explained that Mr. Johnson “did not sign last year and you sent him another [20]05 [agreement] to sign.” Def. Exh. 7 at 1 (emphasis supplied). In the same e-mail, she noted that another employee “had signed in the wrong place.” Id.
According to IBM’s internal protocols for handling non-competition agreements, when an employee signed the agreement, it then had to “be signed by Randy MacDonald or an appropriate country representative, as designated by Legal.” Def. Exh. 24 at 1. After MacDonald’s signature, the Company’s protocols required that “the original signed versions of the [non-competition agreements] [be] sent to Deb Cannone of the [Human Resources Legal Group]. The HRLG [would] maintain the original versions of the agreements.” Id. at 2. IBM obviously did not follow these protocols with Mr. Johnson’s non-competition agreement. Neither MacDonald nor any other .IBM representative signed the agreement,- and IBM did not retain an original copy of the agreement.
Despite not having properly signed the non-competition agreement, Mr. Johnson received yearly equity awards from 2005 through 2008 — awards which he had been receiving annually from IBM since 1992. In order to accept the awards for 2005 and 2006, Mr. Johnson had to complete an electronic equity award acceptance form containing the following language:
IBM’s grant to you of stock options and the Long-Term Investment Program Award (the “LTIP Award”) are not effective until, and are conditioned upon (1) your accepting the terms and conditions of the award agreements and the Long-Term Performance Plan (“LTPP”) under which these equity awards are granted, including those provisions relating to the cancellation and rescission of awards and (2) your agreeing to the terms and conditions of the Noneompetition Agreement, which you have received under a separate cover....
... By pressing the ACCEPT button, you also agree that the grant of these awards by IBM is subject to the condition that, and your acceptance of such awards is not effective until, you agree to the terms and conditions of the Non-competition Agreement by signing and returning the agreement as directed.
Def. Exh. 15 at 1 (holding in original; italicization supplied); see also Def. Exh. 15 at 3. MacDonald was the executive at IBM with the authority to rescind equity awards due to an employee’s failure to execute and return a non-competition agreement, and he also had the discretion not to rescind the awards despite an employee’s failure to do so. See Def. Exh. 22 at 1-2; Prelim. Inj. Hr’g Tr. 56.
Mr. Johnson received the 2005 award on March 8, 2005, approximately two months before the non-competition agreement was due, and he received the 2006 award on May 8, 2006, almost one-year since he had submitted the improperly executed agreement. By 2007 and 2008, however, IBM had dropped the language conditioning acceptance of the equity awards on the employee’s execution of the non-competition agreement.
In late 2008, a recruiter contacted Mr. Johnson concerning an employment opportunity at Dell. After several rounds of negotiations, Mr. Johnson agreed to join Dell as Senior Vice President of Strategy. In that capacity, Mr. Johnson will help Dell set a strategic vision, mission, and goals based upon its existing resources and internal capabilities.
IBM contends that it will suffer irreparable harm should the Court not enjoin Mr. Johnson from violating the purported non-competition agreement. According to IBM, Mr. Johnson is aware of IBM’s past, present, and future business strategies and all acquisitions, transactions, and divestitures that IBM is considering. Because of his work as head of IBM’s Corporate Development group, Mr. Johnson knows IBM’s strategies for growth, and its method of evaluating future business needs and companies as candidates for acquisition. In addition, IBM contends that Mr. Johnson is aware of IBM’s assessment of its clients’ needs, its competitors’ strategies, its opportunities, and its own strategies for carrying out its business objectives. Mr. Johnson knows in which areas, companies, and technologies IBM will invest, at what times, and with what expected rates of return. Statements by Michael Dell, IBM notes, demonstrate that Dell intends to expand its presence in the server, storage, and enterprise areas — three areas in which IBM and Dell compete and about which Mr. Johnson has confidential information. Finally, Dell will pay Mr. Johnson his full salary — well over $1 million — even if Mr. Johnson is forced to comply with the purported non-competition agreement.
Mr. Johnson disputes IBM’s contention that he possesses a great deal of IBM’s confidential information or trade secrets. For example, Mr. Johnson notes that as a member of the IVT, he attended only thirteen meetings between 1996 and January 2009, and he does not recall any IVT meeting focusing on IBM’s competitors, development plans for unannounced products or trade secret information regarding hardware, software, or services. Mr. Johnson also explains that he never attended the meetings of the Technology Committee, which is the forum for internal discussions about IBM’s research and development. According to Mr. Johnson, his ability to identify potential acquisitions was not based on IBM’s confidential or proprietary information, but rather on analyses of other companies from publicly available sources.
II
DISCUSSION
The Court begins with the legal standards governing the issuance of a preliminary injunction — “one of the most drastic tools in the arsenal of judicial remedies.”
Hanson Trust PLC v. SCM Corp.,
Within the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, a party seeking a preliminary injunction
7
generally must establish two elements: (1) the likelihood of irreparable injury in the absence of an order or injunction; and (2) either (a) likelihood of success on the merits or (b) sufficiently serious questions going to the merits to make them a fair ground for litigation plus a balance of hardships “tipping decidedly” in the movant’s favor.
Fed. Express Corp. v. Fed. Espresso, Inc.,
The Second Circuit has defined “irreparable harm” as “an injury that is not remote or speculative but actual and imminent, and ‘for which a monetary award cannot be adequate compensation.’ ”
Tom Doherty Assocs., Inc. v. Saban Entm’t, Inc.,
Moreover, where an applicant for a preliminary injunction cannot establish a likelihood of success on the merits, a court nevertheless may grant injunctive relief if it determines that the applicant “has raised questions going to the merits so serious, substantial, difficult, and doubtful, as to make them a fair ground for litigation and thus for more deliberate investigation.”
Hamilton Watch Co. v. Benrus Watch Co.,
Regardless of which preliminary injunction standard is applied, the Court is cognizant of the Second Circuit’s “continuing admonishments that interim- injunctive relief is an ‘extraordinary and drastic remedy which should not be routinely granted.’ ”
Buffalo Forge Co.,
A. Whether IBM and Mr. Johnson Entered Into a Non-Competition Agreement
IBM submits that it and Mr. Johnson entered into a binding non-competition agreement. It points out that Mr. Johnson signed the agreement and returned it to IBM without disclosing to anyone at the Company his motivation for signing the agreement on IBM’s signature block. According to IBM, Mr. Johnson’s actions— viewed objectively — manifested assent to the non-competition agreement. IBM also contends that its conduct indicated that it believed that Mr. Johnson had assented to the non-competition agreement. IBM allowed Mr. Johnson, for example, to continue to remain eligible for, and indeed paid to him, substantial equity awards. 9 IBM permitted Mr. Johnson continuous access to the Company’s confidential information. IBM also argues that its signature was not required to create a legally enforceable obligation because the non-competition agreement did not contain an explicit dual signature requirement.
IBM submits that even if there was no express contract created between it and Mr. Johnson, Mr. Johnson nevertheless
After setting forth the applicable principles of contract law, the Court shall return to IBM’s arguments.
1.
The formation of a valid, express contract under New York law requires an offer, acceptance, consideration, mutual assent, and intent to be bound.
Register.com, Inc. v. Verio, Inc.,
Under New York law, “an acceptance ‘must comply with the terms of the offer and be clear,
unambiguous and unequivocal.’ ” Krumme v. WestPoint Stevens Inc.,
Whether an acceptance is ambiguous or equivocal — that is, an acceptance that a reasonable person could view as assent, rejection, or an invitation to bargain further,
see Topps Co. v. Cadbury Stani S.A.I.C.,
Where an offeree communicates to an offeror an ambiguous acceptance, it is the offeror’s reaction to that ambiguous acceptance that controls whether the parties entered into a contract. As Professor Samuel Williston has stated:
[B]y their nature, equivocal responses are capable of being understood either as the offeree apparently intends them ... or as the offeror might apparently understand them.... To the extent that either interpretation is plausible, the offeree can hardly complain if the offeror understands the communication as the offeree apparently intended; and the offeror who reasonably treats an equivocal response as an acceptance may hold the offeree to a contract. This rule ... operates to protect the offeror who acts reasonably in relation to what it supposes is intended to operate as an acceptance, yet provides the offeror with significant flexibility as the master of the offer. In short, how the offeror treats the offeree’s language will, assuming that treating the language either as language of acceptance or treating it as language requiring further discussion isreasonable, determine the language’s effect.
WlLLISTON ON CONTRACTS,
SUpra,
§ 6:10 (emphasis supplied);
cf. Kreiss v. McCown DeLeeuw & Co.,
In other words, where an offeree communicates an ambiguous acceptance, the offeree must assume the risk of the offeror’s misinterpretation.
See Russell,
2.
Here, Mr. Johnson’s conduct — at least until he later refused forthrightly to resign a new non-competition agreement— was ambiguous. He signed the non-competition agreement on the signature block designated for IBM and submitted it without disclosing to IBM executives — at first 10 — his intent. Because of his ambiguous conduct, Mr. Johnson assumed the risk of IBM’s misunderstanding, and therefore IBM’s reaction to Mr. Johnson’s conduct controls whether it entered into a contractual relationship with him.
From IBM’s conduct following its receipt of Mr. Johnson’s improperly signed non-competition agreement, it is evident that there are, at the very least, significant doubts as to whether it believed that Mr. Johnson had accepted its offer. After IBM’s receipt of Mr. Johnson’s improperly signed agreement, IBM failed to sign— and, indeed, returned to him — the original copy of the agreement, in contravention of its internal protocols for booking validly executed non-competition agreements. Concurrently, IBM asked Mr. Johnson to re-sign a new copy of the non-competition agreement on the proper signature line— essentially, asking him to clarify his intentions. Mr. Johnson then unambiguously
At no point did IBM take any actions, concurrent with its requests that Mr. Johnson resign the agreement, suggesting that it believed that Mr. Johnson had accepted its offer to enter into a non-competition agreement or that obtaining a properly signed agreement was simply a clerical issue. 11 In fact, on July 28, 2006, Donna Riley, IBM’s Vice President of Human Resources, explicitly told Mr. Johnson that the Company did not consider his ambiguous conduct an acceptance. In an e-mail to Mr. Johnson, Riley acknowledged that she was being a “pest,” presumably by repeatedly contacting Mr. Johnson regarding the non-competition agreement, and explained that Mr. Johnson’s agreement “isn’t booked since the original was signed in the wrong place.” Def. Exh. 4 at 1. Riley then threatened Mr. Johnson, indicating that he would be receiving a call from MacDonald regarding the status of his equity grants. Such a threat, and IBM’s acknowledge that it had not “booked” the agreement, certainly is not suggestive of a belief on IBM’s behalf that Mr. Johnson had accepted its offer.
Mr. Johnson also testified that he discussed his improper signature of the non-competition agreement with Don Rosenberg, IBM’s General Counsel. During this meeting, Mr. Johnson told Rosenberg that he purposefully had signed on the wrong line and that he thought that meant that the agreement was not binding. According to Mr. Johnson, Rosenberg explained to Mr. Johnson that that was not necessarily the case. Mr. Johnson then told Rosenberg that IBM employees had pursued him to sign another version of the agreement. Rosenberg’s eyebrows went up — a signal that, according to Mr. Johnson, conveyed the meaning that Rosenberg did not believe that the agreement was binding — and he (Rosenberg) told Mr. Johnson to “save the documentation to demonstrate that there had been repeated efforts where [Mr. Johnson] didn’t respond.” Prelim. Inj. Hr’g Tr. 28-31. The Court considers it significant that IBM presented no evidence suggesting that this meeting with IBM’s General Counsel did not occur or casting doubt on Mr. Johnson’s interpretation of Rosenberg’s communications.
IBM’s payment of equity awards to Mr. Johnson in 2005 and 2006 also does not suggest that it believed that Mr. Johnson had accepted the non-competition agreement. First, IBM’s payment of these awards was not concurrent with Mr. Johnson’s signing of the non-compete. In 2005, Mr. Johnson received the award two months before the non-competition agreement was even due. In 2006, he received the award nearly a year after he had improperly signed the non-competition agreement and within weeks of the date of the e-mail from Staff Counsel to the Human Resources Law Group, which contained a handwritten note that Mr. Johnson had refused to sign a new copy of the agreement. Second, MacDonald testified that he had the discretion to permit the awards despite an employee’s failure to sign a non-
IBM also argues that, even if there was no express contract created between it and Mr. Johnson, Mr. Johnson nevertheless should be equitably estopped from denying the validity of the agreement. It contends that Mr. Johnson’s conduct suggests that he specifically intended to mislead IBM into believing that he had accepted his agreement by the deadline. Although Mr. Johnson certainly was too clever by half, his goal was not to mislead IBM into believing that he had assented to the non-competition agreement, but rather to extend the time that he would have to enter into such an agreement. He was counting on IBM realizing that by improperly signing the agreement he had not assented to its terms. Moreover, having presided over the live, in-court cross- and re-direct examination of Mr. Johnson, this Court believes that he was an extremely credible and reasonable witness. 12
Indeed, the equities in this case go both ways. According to Mr. Johnson, IBM’s conduct, prior to this lawsuit, consistently suggested to him that IBM did not believe that it and Mr. Johnson had a valid non-competition agreement, yet IBM has now changed its position and seeks' to enforce the agreement. Furthermore, Mr. Johnson has submitted evidence suggesting that IBM misled him into believing that he would be considered for a General Manager position, while at the same time it attempted to obtain a one-year non-competition agreement from him.
In short, IBM faces a daunting, if not insurmountable, task in convincing a finder-of-fact that it treated Mr. Johnson’s ambiguous conduct as an acceptance of its offer to enter into a non-competition agreement. Consequently, the Court cannot find, based on the limited record before it, that IBM has established a likelihood of success on the merits of its breach of contract claim.
Moore v. Consol. Edison Co.,
B. The Balance of Equities
Although IBM has not carried its burden of establishing a likelihood of success on the merits, it has an alternative avenue of relief under Second Circuit jurisprudence. The Second Circuit has held that a party may obtain injunctive relief if it shows that (1) there are “questions so serious, substantial, difficult, and doubtful as to make them fair ground for litigation and thus more deliberate investigation”; and (2) the harm that it would suffer is “ ‘decidedly’ greater” than the harm that its adversary would suffer.
Buffalo Forge Co.,
1.
In
Buffalo Courier-Express,
the Second Circuit explained that “ ‘[a] balance of hardships tipping decidedly toward the party requesting preliminary relief must mean real hardship from the denial of relief Pendente lite not merely the showing of difficulty of measurement which may suffice to constitute ‘irreparable damage’ where a plaintiff shows probable success.”
Hamilton
and
Semmes
both presented the risk of dramatic hardship.
13
Later, in
Nemer Jeep-Eagle Inc. v. Jeep Eagle Sales Corp.,
the Second Circuit explained that it did not read the foregoing cases “so narrowly.”
The Court pauses to note that at least one authority has read the Supreme Court’s recent decision in
Winter v. Natural Resources Defense Council,
— U.S. —,
2.
In balancing the hardship as between the parties, the Court begins with a discussion of the harm that IBM would suffer absent an injunctive order. The real or inevitable disclosure of trade secret information is sufficient to establish a real risk of irreparable harm.
Int’l Bus. Mach. Corp. v. Papermaster,
No. 08-cv-9078,
IBM would undoubtedly suffer harm absent an injunctive order. According to IBM, Mr. Johnson is aware of IBM’s past, present, and future business strategies as well as the acquisitions, transactions, and divestitures that IBM is considering. Because of his work as head of IBM’s Corporate Development group, Mr. Johnson knows IBM’s strategies for growth, and its method of evaluating future business needs and companies as candidates for acquisition. In addition, IBM contends that Mr. Johnson is aware of its assessment of its clients’ needs, its competitors’ strategies, its opportunities, and its strategies for carrying out its business objectives. Mr. Johnson knows in which areas, companies, and technologies IBM will invest, at what times, and with what expected rates of return. Mr. Johnson, in short, has inside strategic business information about IBM, and disclosure of that information would harm the Company.
The Court nevertheless believes that IBM has overstated its case. Mr. Johnson does not have the sort of information that is considered quintessential trade secret information — detailed technical know-how, formulae, designs, or procedures.
See American Airlines,
The Court believes that forcing Mr. Johnson, a 55-year old man who is at the peak of his career, to abstain from plying his trade for a year would cause him not insubstantial harm. Due to the nature of his qualifications and skills, Mr. Johnson must deal with information that changes rapidly and requires constant attention. Indeed, given that Mr. Johnson does not have detailed technical know-how regarding technology products, his ability to stay
au courant
with industry rumors and developments is fundamental. Without monitoring the external factors that guide and mold the technology industry — through access to daily contact with insiders, reports, surveys, and analyses conducted industry-wide' — -Mr. Johnson’s skill set might well become obsolete. Moreover, Mr. Johnson has developed a large personal network of investment bankers, consulting groups, and chief information officers with whom
New York’s public policy, which “strong[ly] disfavor[s] ... non-competition covenants in employment contracts,” is another factor in determining that the balance of equities here does not tip decidedly in favor of IBM.
17
Ginett v. Computer Task Group, Inc.,
In sum, given IBM’s failure to show a likelihood of success on the merits, the significant hardship that Mr. Johnson would suffer from the issuance of an injunctive order, and New York’s public policy disfavoring non-competition agreements, this Court cannot find that the balance of equities tips “decidedly” in favor of IBM.
CONCLUSION
Following its receipt of Mr. Johnson’s improperly executed agreement, IBM’s actions raise significant doubts as to whether it believed that Mr. Johnson had accepted its offer to enter into a non-competition agreement. After receiving the improperly signed agreement, IBM failed to sign— and, indeed, returned' — -the original copy of the agreement, in contravention of its internal protocols for booking validly signed non-competition agreements. IBM asked Mr. Johnson to re-sign a new copy of the agreement on the proper signature line— essentially, asking him to clarify his intentions — and he refused. A senior IBM executive then told Mr. Johnson that IBM had not “booked” his agreement because “the original was signed in the wrong place.” Def. Exh. 4 at 1. Rosenberg, IBM’s General Counsel, also suggested to Mr. Johnson that IBM did not consider his improperly signed agreement to be an acceptance of the Company’s offer. Accordingly, the Court cannot find, based on the limited record before it, that IBM has established a likelihood of success on the merits of its breach of contract claim.
See Moore,
Although this case presents “questions so serious, substantial, difficult, and doubtful as to make them fair ground for litigation and thus more deliberate investigation,”
see Buffalo Forge Co.,
638 F.2d at
Consequently, the Court denies IBM’s motion for a preliminary injunction, and Judge Karas’ Order June 4, 2009, along with this Court’s extension of that Order, is vacated. The parties are directed to submit a proposed Rule 16 scheduling order.
It is so ordered.
Notes
. IBM has since filed an Amended Complaint, adding causes of action for breach of contract and breach of fiduciary duty. Amended Complaint (“Am. Compl.”) ¶ 61-72.
. MacDonald is currently employed by IBM as its Senior Vice President of Human Resources, and he was IBM’s designee, pursuant to Rule 30(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, to discuss the circumstances surrounding Mr. Johnson’s non-competition agreement. Despite being so designated, MacDonald testified that, at the time that he drafted his affidavit, he had not been shown numerous IBM documents related to the Company's handling of Mr. Johnson's non-competition agreement, particularly those supporting Mr. Johnson’s position. Preliminary Injunction Hearing Transcript ("Prelim. Inj. Hr’g Tr.”) 72-78, June 22, 2009; see also infra note 12.
.Fed. R. Crv. P. 65(a)(2)(“Even when consolidation is not ordered, evidence that is received on the motion and that would be admissible at trial becomes part of the trial record and need not be repeated at trial. But the court must preserve any party's right to a jury trial.”).
. The IVT was the successor group to the Senior Leadership Team ("SLT”), of which Mr. Johnson became a member in 1996.
. The agreements provided for a one-year term of non-competition and world-wide geographic scope. Second Supplemental Declaration of J. Randall MacDonald (“MacDonald DecL”) Exh. 4 at ¶¶ 1(b), 2(d).
.The following signature blocks appear immediately below the last paragraph of the non-competition agreement:
Name:
Date:
INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MACHINE CORPORATION
By: -
Name:
Title:
MacDonald Deck Exh. 4 at 7.
. A typical preliminary injunction is prohibitory, and it seeks to maintain the status quo pending a trial on the merits. If the preliminary injunction seeks to "alter the status quo by commanding some positive act," however, it is a mandatory injunction.
Tom Doherty Assocs., Inc. v. Saban Entm't, Inc.,
. In
Winter,
the Supreme Court explained that "[a] plaintiff seeking a preliminary injunction
must establish that he is likely to succeed on the merits,
that he is likely to suffer irreparable harm in the absence of preliminary relief, that the balance of equities tips in his favor, and that an injunction is in the public interest."
. On June 25, 2009, Mr. Johnson filed a number of documents suggesting that, subsequent to the filing of this action, IBM placed a permanent hold on Mr. Johnson's equity awards and arguing that such action represents an admission on IBM's behalf that it did not believe that it and Mr. Johnson had entered into a non-competition agreement. In response, IBM contends that this hold is routine, temporary, and simply a matter of recordkeeping. This dispute does not factor into the Court’s decision to deny IBM's motion for a preliminary injunction, and therefore it need not be resolved at this point.
. As discussed in more detail below, Mr. Johnson disclosed to Don Rosenberg, IBM’s General Counsel, his intent in signing the non-competition agreement on the signature block designated for IBM.
. Brickmeier testified that ‘‘[a]t some point in 2006, we decided to stop asking Mr. Johnson to re-execute his existing non-compete because he had already signed the agreement, and the placement of his signature was just a minor record-keeping issue.” Declaration of Barbara Brickmeier ("Brickmeier Decl.”) ¶ 20. In the limited record currently before the Court, however, there is little documentary support for this testimony, and, in fact, IBM's conduct throughout all of 2006 belies this position.
. In contrast, the Court found much less persuasive MacDonald's testimony because, despite being IBM's designee under Rule 30(b)(6) to discuss matters related to Mr. Johnson’s signing of the non-competition agreement, MacDonald had not been shown or reviewed all the documents in IBM's possession, particularly those supporting Mr. Johnson's position. See supra note 2. Rule 30(b)(6) clearly states that the person "designated must testify about information known or reasonably available to the organization.” The Court finds it troubling that MacDonald was proffered as IBM’s Rule 30(b)(6) witness without being provided with enough information to fulfill that mandate.
. In
Hamilton,
the denial of an injunctive order would have brought the movant under the control of a direct competitor, which may have led to drastically reduced competition in the market.
. See also Moore et al., supra, § 65.22[5][b] ("Confusion has also resulted from the suggestion that the threat of irreparable harm must be greater under the second prong of the test than under the first. The Supreme Court has clarified this matter by stating that the party seeking injunctive relief must establish a likelihood of success on the merits and that irreparable injury is likely in the absence of an injunction; a possibility of either is insufficient”).
. Specifically, courts look to the following factors to determine whether information constitutes a trade secret: (1) the extent to which the information is known outside of the business; (2) the extent to which it is known by employees and others involved in the business; (3) the extent of measures taken by the business to guard the secrecy of the information; (4) the value of the information to the business and its competitors; (5) the amount of effort or money expended by the business in developing the information; and (6) the ease or difficulty with which the information could be properly acquired or duplicated.
See N. Atl. Instruments, Inc.,
. For instance, IBM contends that Mr. Johnson possesses a "deep knowledge of virtually all of IBM’s technological innovations and initiatives,” and it then provides a laundry list of technological products that IBM sells. Supplemental Declaration of Mark Lough-ridge ("Loughridge Supp. Decl.”) ¶ 15. Notably absent, however, is any indication of what specific details Mr. Johnson possesses about these products or product areas or how much technical detail his mergers and acquisitions work for IBM required him to know.
See American Airlines,
. The Second Circuit has explained that although its “settled preliminary injunction standard does not explicitly mention the public interest, as do other Circuit's standards, we have recognized that, as a court of equity, we ‘may go much further both to give or to withhold relief in furtherance of the public interest than where only private interests are involved.' "
Standard & Poor’s Corp., Inc. v. Commodity Exch., Inc.,
