Picker International, Inc., plaintiff in the case below, appeals the district court’s *259 grant of directed verdicts in favor of John Parten, Daniel Parten, and PPX Imaging on claims of breach of a covenant not to compete, breach of a confidentiality agreement, and fraud.
I. BACKGROUND OF THE CASE
Picker International, Inc., (“Picker”), appellant in this case, is a New York corporation with its principal place of business in Ohio. Picker manufactures, sells, installs, and services radiological diagnostic equipment such as angiocons, i.e., machines which provide moving images of the human circulatory system. Picker maintains a field office in Birmingham through which it services most of the Picker equipment in Alabama.
John Parten worked as a “field service engineer,” or repairman, at Picker from 1959 until 1988 with the exception of a three-and-a-half year period during which he worked elsewhere. In the spring of 1988, Picker decided it needed to reduce its work force in the Birmingham office and asked John Parten to take early retirement. He retired in June 1988. His son, Daniel Parten, also worked in equipment repair at Picker. Daniel Parten began working at Picker in 1982. At the time he was hired, he executed an “Employee Invention and Confidential Information Agreement.” 1 Later, in April 1984, he also signed a “Service Engineer Confidentiality Agreement.” 2 As part of his duties at Picker, Daniel Parten serviced the angiocon at the University of Alabama at Birmingham (“UAB”). He worked at Picker for approximately six years, quitting in September 1988.
During the summer of 1988, after John Parten was unable to find employment with another medical equipment service company in the Birmingham area, he decided to start his own business. On July 18, he placed his name on UAB’s vendor list. On August 2, he submitted a bid to UAB for a one-year service contract on the angi-ocon to begin in September 1988 for $50,-400. Picker’s bid was $61,526. John Par-ten was awarded the contract. On September 1, John and Daniel Parten formed a partnership called “PPX Imaging.” On September 2, Daniel Parten resigned from Picker and went to work with his father at PPX. On September 6, Daniel Parten went through an exit interview with his supervisor at Picker and signed the “Termination Agreement” portion of “Employee Invention and Confidential Information Agreement” he had executed in 1982, certifying that he had returned to Picker all price lists, blueprints, manuals and other materials which Picker had entrusted to him. His supervisor signed a “termination checklist” in which he acknowledged receipt of all Picker tools and other property in Daniel Parten’s possession.
On October 31, 1988, after becoming aware that Daniel Parten was working on the UAB angiocon, corporate counsel for Picker wrote to Daniel Parten, charging him with disclosing confidentialities and vi- *260 dating the covenant not to compete contained in the 1984 agreement. The counsel demanded written assurance from Daniel Parten that he would not violate his agreements with Picker in the future. Daniel Parten wrote a letter on November 10 to Picker’s counsel, stating that he intended to abide by the agreements. He then informed UAB that he could not personally service the angiocon. Nevertheless, he continued to service it.
When PPX’s one-year contract with UAB expired in August 1989, both Picker and PPX placed bids. Picker bid $45,000; PPX bid $47,880. Despite Picker's lower bid, UAB awarded the contract to PPX at the request of a UAB radiology professor who had been displeased with Picker’s service but pleased with PPX’s. Following loss of the bid, Picker filed suit in district court against Daniel Parten, John Parten, and PPX, premising jurisdiction on diversity. Picker sought injunctive relief and damages, alleging breach of Daniel’s agreements and fraud. In August 1990, the parties filed cross motions for summary judgment which were later denied. The case proceeded to trial in September 1990. At the conclusion of the evidence, the court granted the defendants’ motions for directed verdicts. Picker now appeals.
II. ANALYSIS
The standard by which this Court reviews a district court’s disposition of a motion for directed verdict was articulated in
Boeing Co. v. Shipman,
On motions for directed verdict and for judgment notwithstanding the verdict the Court should consider all of the evidence — not just that evidence which supports the non-mover’s case — but in the light and with all reasonable inferences most favorable to the party opposed to the motion. If the facts and inferences point so strongly and overwhelmingly in favor of one party that the Court believes that reasonable [persons] could not arrive at a contrary verdict, granting of the motions is proper. On the other hand, if there is substantial evidence opposed to the motions, that is, evidence of such quality and weight that reasonable and fair-minded [persons] in the exercise of impartial judgment might reach different conclusions, the motions should be denied, and the case submitted to the jury. A mere scintilla of evidence is insufficient to present a question for the jury. The motions for directed verdict and judgment n.o.v. should not be decided by which side has the better of the case, nor should they be granted only when there is a complete absence of probative facts to support a jury verdict. There must be a conflict in substantial evidence to create a jury question. However, it is the function of the jury as the traditional finder of the facts, and not the Court, to weigh conflicting evidence and inferences, and determine the credibility of witnesses, (footnote omitted).
A federal court sitting in diversity applies the substantive law of the state in which it sits, including that state’s choice of law.
See Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Elec. Mfg. Co.,
A. Covenant not to Compete
Contracts restraining employment are disfavored in Alabama by statute; such agreements are potentially void.
Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co. v. Cornutt,
The district court, in granting the defendants’ motion for directed verdict, found
Chavers v. Copy Prods. Co., Inc.,
The propriety of the district court’s ruling in regard to the non-competition covenant in the case at bar thus hinges upon whether the covenant was such a blanket prohibition, as it was in Chavers, that no reasonable juror could help but find in favor of the Partens. The two cases are superficially very similar; in both a repairman of highly sophisticated equipment leaves his employer to begin a new business with his father. The actual covenants, however, are very different. Whereas in Chavers the covenant precluded the repairman from working in the employer’s industry in any manner over a broad geographical area, Parten’s covenant merely precluded him from “servicing] any PICKER INTERNATIONAL equipment that [he] did in fact service at any location to which [he] was assigned during [his] employment with PICKER INTERNATIONAL.” See supra n. 2. Parten’s covenant clearly does not bar him from working on all radiological medical equipment in his geographic area; it does not even bar him from working on Picker equipment. Rather, it bars him from working on only those pieces of Picker equipment he was assigned to service during his employment. Trial testimony indicated that Picker has 213 customer sites in the service area of the Picker office in Birmingham. Parten worked at only 37 of these. Though UAB has the only angiocon in Alabama, Parten is free to work on Picker angiocons located in Nashville, Tennessee and Columbus, Georgia. Evidence admitted at trial indicated that he had in fact done so. Thus, the effect of Parten’s covenant is not analogous to that of the repairman in Chavers because it is not a blanket prohibition against working in ah industry over a wide geographic area.
Rather than applying
Chavers
as dispositive of the directed verdict motion, the district court should have asked, under the
Boeing
standard, whether there was “substantial evidence” presented which might lead fair-minded jurors to different conclusions on the issue of the reasonableness of the covenant as to “territory, duration and subject matter.”
See Nationwide,
First, an employer has a protectable interest “if an employee [was] in a position to gain confidential information, access to secret lists, or to develop a close relationship with clients.”
Id.
at 1143. “A protectable interest can also arise from the employer’s investment in its employee, in terms of time, resources and responsibility.”
Nationwide,
Second, under DeVoe the covenant restriction must be reasonably related to the protection of Picker’s interest. Parten was barred from servicing only the Picker *263 equipment of customers he had served while employed by Picker. These are the customers with whom he had an opportunity to develop a special or close relationship. He was not barred from servicing the equipment of the Picker customers he had not personally served while working for Picker, nor was he barred from servicing the non-Picker equipment of the customers he had served while working for Picker or the Picker equipment he had not actually serviced at the sites where he had performed services. Thus, substantial evidence exists which would allow a fair-minded jury to conclude that the covenant was reasonably related to the protection of the interest.
Likewise, Parten’s covenant must be also adjudged reasonable under the third prong of
DeVoe, i.e.,
in terms of time and place. As pointed out in
Nationwide,
the length of the prohibition may be geared to the length of the typical contract in the industry in question.
Nationwide,
Finally, in order for the covenant to be reasonable, it must not cause “undue hardship.” As
Nationwide
points out, “[i]n nearly every Alabama ‘undue hardship’ case ..., enforcement of the restraint would have prohibited a worker from engaging in
the only trade he knew and could rely upon to support his dependents.
”
Nationwide,
In sum, there was substantial evidence presented which could have led fair-minded jurors to find in favor of Picker on the reasonableness of the covenant not to compete. We therefore hold that the district court erred in granting the directed verdict in favor of the defendants on this issue.
B. Confidentiality Agreement
The district court also granted a directed verdict in favor of the Partens on the claim that Daniel Parten had breached the 1982 agreement which requires that he not “disclose or use ... any secret or confidential inforniation relating to Picker’s business” and that he return all Picker property entrusted to him. See supra n. 1. The district court found that there had *264 been no evidence presented to support this claim.
On appeal, Picker claims that Daniel Par-ten acquired information regarding the bidding process for the UAB angiocon service contract while at Picker and then used it to win the contract. Picker claims that he learned when Picker’s contract would expire and “what to bid,” though Picker does not explain whether Parten knew what to bid because he discovered the amount Picker intended to bid or whether he merely got a general feel for what would be a reasonable price while he worked at Picker. John Parten correctly points out, however, that the only testimony regarding acquisition of information about the bidding process concerned John, not Daniel Parten. John Par-ten testified that he, not Daniel, acquired information about bidding while employed at Picker. The possible breach of any confidentiality agreement Picker might have had with John Parten is not at issue in this case. Thus, the district court was correct in finding that the evidence supporting this claim was too insubstantial to avert a directed verdict.
Picker also argues that it presented evidence that Daniel Parten used trade secrets in his servicing of the UAB angiocon. In Picker’s view, Daniel Parten used its manuals and the training it had provided him in working on the angiocon. In order for information to be defined as a trade secret in Alabama, however, there must exist “a substantial element of secrecy” in the information.
Drill Parts & Serv. Co., Inc. v. Joy Mfg. Co.,
Picker also claimed that Daniel Par-ten breached his agreement by not returning all Picker property entrusted to him. Close to the time that the Partens began their new business, their accountant asked them to deliver a list of all inventory with which they were starting out. Daniel Parten gave the accountant a list of equipment and its retail prices. All of the equipment was used. On that list are items manufactured only by Picker. Picker claims it did not sell the Partens or PPX these items and therefore Daniel Parten must have taken them with him when he left Picker. The Partens, however, presented testimony showing that Daniel Parten had obtained one of the Picker manufactured items, the “625 changer rollers,” from UAB. These were rollers which had been replaced in UAB’s angiocon. UAB allowed Daniel Parten to keep the discarded rollers and attempt to recondition them and use them as spare parts. Another item listed was “receiver magazines,” also a part used in angiocon servicing. The Par-tens presented testimony, however, that they had obtained these parts from an uncle who worked for Picker in Atlanta. The parts were rusted and were to be thrown away. With permission, the uncle retrieved them and later gave them to Daniel Parten. Moreover, the “SFD kit” in Daniel Parten’s possession had similarly been given to him by a supervisor because it was defective and therefore not suitable for *265 Picker’s use. The “micro aid” Daniel Par-ten listed, another piece of equipment used with the angiocon system, was on loan from UAB. The testimony explaining the source of these items was uncontroverted. The record does not reveal any “substantial evidence” indicating that the items on the inventory list were wrongfully taken from Picker. The district court therefore correctly directed a verdict in favor of the Partens on the claim that Daniel Parten had breached his agreement to return the property entrusted to him.
C. Fraud
Picker finally claimed that Daniel Parten committed fraud when he represented to Picker in the November 10 letter that he would abide by the covenant not to compete in consideration of Picker’s forbearance in filing a lawsuit. The district court directed a verdict in favor of the Partens on the fraud claim because the claim was based upon the non-competition agreement which the court considered void. In the district court’s view, the only detriment Picker could have suffered as a result of Daniel Parten’s breach of his promise in the November 10 letter was that Picker delayed seeking an injunction to stop him from servicing the UAB angiocon. But because the district court believed that no court would issue such an injunction under Chavers, it found that Picker suffered no detriment. Because we find the district court’s application of Chavers to be incorrect, we must reexamine the directed verdict on the fraud claim.
In the November 10 letter, Daniel Parten in essence made a promise regarding his future acts. Under Alabama law, one alleging fraud pertaining to the non-performance of future acts must show that the defendant not only intended to deceive, but “at the time the representation was made, the defendant had an intention not to perform, and the representation must have been made with the intent not to perform.”
Lake Martin/Ala. Power Licensee Ass’n, Inc. v. Alabama Power Co., Inc.,
D. John Parten’s Directed Verdict
John Parten was sued as the co-general partner of PPX which benefitted by the alleged breaches of contract and as a coequal participant with Daniel Parten in fraud. The district court granted directed verdicts in favor of John Parten because, in the court’s words, “[h]e could be liable only to the plaintiff if his son, Daniel Parten, was liable for breaching his agreement. And since I have held as a matter of law that that agreement is void under Alabama law, then John Parten could not be liable.” (R2:6).
John Parten claims that Picker in its brief on appeal never raised any issue in regard to him. He asserts that Picker has thereby abandoned appeal of any of the verdicts directed in his favor.
See Federal Sav. & Loan Ins. Corp. v. Haralson,
E. Damages
As a final argument, John Par-ten points out that Picker failed to offer any proof of lost profits resulting from the Partens’ action whereas the Partens offered evidence suggesting that Picker actually lost money on its 1987-88 angiocon service contract with UAB. UAB paid $59,160 for Picker’s services, but Picker spent approximately $58,000 on labor and another $20,000 on parts in performing the contract.
6
In an action for breach of a covenant not to compete, however, the plaintiff need not prove actual damages. “If [the plaintiff is] able to establish that breaches ... occurred, then it [is] entitled to nominal damages even if there was a failure of proof regarding actual damages.”
Kemper,
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we REVERSE the district court’s grant of directed verdict in favor of the defendants on the covenant not to compete issue, but AFFIRM as to all other issues. Daniel Par-ten’s request for attorney’s fees is DENIED. We REMAND for proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Notes
. That agreement contains the following provisions:
In consideration of my employment or continuance of my existing employment by Picker International or by any corporation in which Picker International owns an interest or which owns an interest in Picker International (all referred to in this agreement as “Picker"):
(1) I will not, without Picker’s written consent, disclose or use at any time, either during or after my employment, any secret or confidential information relating to Picker’s business unless required by the discharge of my duties to Picker.
(4) Upon termination of my employment I will promptly deliver to Picker all price lists, customer lists, plans, drawings, blue prints, manuals, letters, notes, notebooks, reports and copies thereof relating to Picker’s business as well as any other property entrusted to me by Picker.
. The 1984 agreement states:
I acknowledge that by virtue of my employment I will acquire information concerning PICKER INTERNATIONAL’S operations, suppliers and customers, and that such information constitutes valuable and confidential information. I agree that for a period of one (1) year from the date of termination of my employment with PICKER INTERNATIONAL, I shall not directly or indirectly service any PICKER INTERNATIONAL equipment that I did in fact service at any location to which I was assigned during my employment with PICKER INTERNATIONAL.
. A professor of radiology who worked with the angiocon wrote a letter to a member of the UAB purchasing department after learning that Picker’s bid for the 1989-90 angiocon service contract was $2,880 lower than that of PPX. He urged that PPX be awarded the contract, stating that Daniel Parten had “demonstrated special knowledge and ability to make the machine run properly" both while at Picker and then later at PPX. The letter contrasted Daniel Parten with the other Picker serviceman assigned to the an-giocon who had apparently not been as successful in working with the machine and who smoked in the angio lab. See Plaintiff's Exhibit no. 25. The letter clearly demonstrates that in the mind of the customer the Picker servicemen are not fungible. It was important enough to the UAB personnel to have a serviceman of demonstrated trustworthiness to pay $2,880 more for the service contract. If Picker had not put Daniel Parten in contact with UAB, he would not have had the opportunity to develop this relationship of trust with the UAB personnel.
. Picker can produce Daniel Parten’s service records only from 1986 to his date of termination in 1988. These records reveal that Daniel Parten provided service at 37 different sites during that time period. (R:4:419). Without proof that Daniel Parten provided service to other customers prior to 1986, Picker cannot enforce the covenant as to any customer other than these 37. Our holding that substantial evidence exists demonstrating that the covenant was reasonable in terms of place is premised on the assumption that the covenant is limited to these 37 customers.
. John Parten did not raise in this appeal the issue of whether he as a general partner in PPX can be held liable for breach of an agreement Daniel Parten entered into individually prior to the formation of the partnership.
. These figures may be deceptive. A Picker employee testified that the $58,000 figure for labor was a "list," i.e., not the actual cost to Picker but a figure generally quoted to customers with a profit already built into it. (R:3:237). Moreover, it is not clear whether the parts figure was "cost” or "list.” Therefore, one cannot necessarily conclude that Picker lost money on the 1987-88 UAB contract.
