ORDER
Prudential Insurance Company of America (“Prudential”) has sued one of its former sales agents in this action for conversion of its property, breach of fiduciary duty, tortious interference with contract, and breach of a contract of employment. The defendant now moves to dismiss the complaint. Jurisdiction in this case is predicated upon diversity of citizenship between the parties. Both a temporary restraining order and a preliminary injunction have been granted in favor of Prudential.
Prudential asserts that because its requested injunctive relief was granted, this precludes the grant of a motion to dismiss. This argument, based on the stringent requirements for injunctive relief, is merit-less. By definition, such relief is granted in an expedited manner in order to preserve the status quo, pending a meaningful investigation into the merits. A motion to dismiss, on the other hand, tests the legal sufficiency of the complaint. Material extraneous to the complaint is not considered unless the court elects to convert the motion to dismiss into one for summary judgment. Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b).
In a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim under Rule 12(b)(6), the allegations of the complaint and all reasonable inferences from the facts alleged must be taken as true.
Cruz v. Beto,
I. Breach of contract
A. Noncompetition and nonsolicitation provisions
The defendant argues generally that the contract provisions on which the Prudential bases its claim for breach of contract are unenforceable and void. “By both constitutional and legislative provision, Georgia prohibits contracts or agreements in general restraint of trade.”
Howard Schultz & Associates of the Southeast, Inc. v. Broniec,
The Sales Manager’s Agreement (“Agreement”), which is the source of the restrictive covenants in question, is appended as exhibits “A” and “B” to the com *469 plaint. In particular, the noncompetition and nonsolicitation provisions are found at section 5(2) and provide as follows:
The Sales Manager Agrees: ...
(2) That for a period of two years from the termination date of this Sales Manager’s Agreement, I shall not directly or indirectly:
a. sell to or solicit from any company or subsidiary contractholder who became known to me during my employment, on behalf of any other person or organization, any insurance policy, contract, or any other financial service or product that competes with those sold by the Company or its subsidiaries; or
b. do anything to cause or encourage anyone to reduce, discontinue, or terminate any Company or subsidiary policy, contract, service, or product of any kind; or
c. do anything to cause or encourage any Company or subsidiary employee to either:
(1) terminate his or her employment with the company for any reason; or
(2) to sell or solicit services or products on behalf of any other company which are in any way similar to those sold by the Company or its subsidiaries.
These contract provisions contain no territorial limitation on the employment restraints whatsoever. The absence of such geographical limitations renders a noncom-petition covenant void.
Fuller v. Kolb,
B. Nondisclosure provisions
The defendant also challenges the enforceability of the nondisclosure clauses found at section 1(h), which reads:
Under these amended provisions I agree to:
(1) treat all information which either identifies or concerns contractholders of the Company or any of its subsidiaries, including but not limited to, contract values, or beneficiary information, as Company property, confidential, and of special value to the Company; and therefore, the Sales Manager agrees not to provide at any time to any person outside the Company’s employ, any such information which would be used to solicit for sales on behalf of another company or organization.
(2) Deem as exclusively Company property, all supplies, documents, records, and all contractholder information or product information from any source relating to any Company or any subsidiary product; and therefore the Sales Manager agrees that all such property, including all copies thereof, shall be delivered only to a proper Company representative.
(3) Deliver to the Company promptly upon termination of my Agreement, either by myself or the Company, all Company property including that mentioned above as well as all Company monies, equipment and the like then in my custody-
Complaint, Exhibit “B.”
Nondisclosure covenants are subject to reasonableness requirements because they affect the dissemination of information necessary to free competition among businesses.
See Nasco, Inc. v. Gimbert,
(1) whether the employer is attempting to protect confidential information relating to the business, such as trade secrets [sic], methods of operation, names of customers, personnel data, and so on — even though the information does not rise to the stature of a trade secret; and (2) whether the restraint is reasonably related to the protection of the information.
Id.
at 564,
The plaintiff’s principal argument that section 1(h) does not constitute a nondisclosure provision is that this part of the contract merely fixes title to property. Prudential cites
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith v. Stidham,
1. All records of Merrill Lynch, including the names and addresses of its clients, are and shall remain the property of Merrill Lynch at all times during my employment with Merrill Lynch and after termination for any reason of my employment with Merrill Lynch, and that none of such records nor any part of them is to be removed from the premises of Merrill Lynch either in original form or in duplicated or copied form, and that the names, addresses, and other facts in such records are not to be transmitted verbally except in the ordinary course of conducting business for Merrill Lynch.
Id. at 1099. The court of appeals characterized this provision as “no more than an agreement between parties (1) fixing title to physical documents and (2) requiring confidentiality during employment.” Id. at 1102. It further held that “the perpetuality of the title agreement is not offensive nor is the confidentiality agreement unreasonable.” Id.
This opinion, which charts a course not taken by any Georgia court to date, is factually distinguishable from the case at bar. The first part of the clause at issue in Stidham stated that various records, including client lists, were to remain the property of and in the possession of the plaintiff. This fact supports the appellate court’s conclusion that such a contract clause merely fixes title to property, thereby constituting what the plaintiff characterizes as a “proprietary covenant.” In the case sub judice, however, subsection (1) of section 1(h) prohibits disclosure of “all information which either identifies or concerns contractholders, ... including but not limited to, contract values, or beneficiary information____” Subsection (2) further prohibits disclosure of “all contractholder information or product information from any source____” Finally, subsection (3) refers to “all Company property including that mentioned above____,” and is thus integrated with subsections (1) and (2). These requirements are substantially more extensive than a contract provision merely prohibiting removal of records from the premises or the verbal transmission of their contents. In addition, Stidham reaches its result without construing Geor *471 gia law. 1 The ruling in Stidham, expressly referring to the contract provision in question as a “nondisclosure clause,” does not abrogate the common law rule in Georgia requiring such covenants to be reasonable. See Quittmeyer, Trade Secrets and Confidential Information Under Georgia Law, 19 Ga.L.Rev. 543, 666-67 & nn. 187, 192 (1985) (suggesting that Stidham upheld a nondisclosure covenant lacking time limitations because the misconduct in that case occurred during the defendants’ employment). While it may have been possible for Prudential to draft subsections (2) and (3) in order to create a “proprietary” covenant merely fixing title to its property, it did not so cleverly draft these clauses. 2
This distinction brings the instant case within the line of Georgia authority governing nondisclosure covenants. As discussed above, the absence of any restriction upon the duration of the nondisclosure provision renders it unenforceable. Even if this flaw failed to defeat its enforceability, the provision is also unreasonable because it is overbroad. Nondisclosure covenants adjudged overbroad are considered an unfair restraint upon competition.
See e.g., Rollins Protective Services Co. v. Palermo,
C. Trade Secrets
Even though the court considers all the clauses of section 1(h) of the Agreement unenforceable, there is another basis on which to prohibit the disclosure of certain business information. The Georgia courts will provide injunctive relief to protect against disclosure of trade secrets notwithstanding an unenforceable nondisclosure covenant; this protection is an “implied term” in an employment contract.
Thomas v. Best Manufacturing Co.,
Prudential does not specifically argue that trade secrets in the conventional sense are at stake in this case. But the Georgia courts have suggested that certain specialized, as opposed to general, confidential customer information may be protectible as a trade secret.
Rollins Protective Services Co. v. Palermo,
Furthermore, some items of confidential business information not qualifying as trade secrets, “non-specialized customer lists and other general confidential business and customer information,” may be protectible if the defendant garnered them by “improper means or otherwise disclosed without privilege, as in violations of relationships of confidence.”
Durham
II. Tortious interference with contract
The defendant challenges Prudential’s allegations of tortious interference with contract. This challenge does not rest on the sufficiency of the elements required to state a cause of action. Rather, it rests on the. argument that Prudential has alleged a complete defense to the cause of action on the face of the complaint. Competitive privilege is such a defense, and its elements have been stated as follows:
(a) the relation concerns a matter involved in the competition between the actor and the competitor; (b) the actor does not employ improper means; (c) the actor does not intend thereby to create or continue an illegal restraint of competition; and (d) the actor’s purpose is at least in part to advance its interests in its competition with the other.
Orkin Exterminating Co. v. Martin Co.,
While the Court agrees that Prudential has interlaced its complaint with elements of this privilege, dismissal cannot be ordered because facts are alleged negating the second element of the defense. Paragraph eighteen of the complaint states that “defendant has acted improperly and without privilege.” Furthermore, paragraph *473 sixteen, which is incorporated by reference at paragraph seventeen, states that the defendant used “information improperly and wrongfully obtained.” These allegations satisfy the pleading requirements for this cause of action.
III. Breach of fiduciary duty
The defendant challenges the cause of action stated in count two of the complaint. The Court agrees that because of its findings regarding the unenforceability of the restrictive covenants, no contractual basis for a fiduciary duty exists. While an implied, noncontractual fiduciary duty may exist, such a duty generally ends when severance of an agent’s employment with his principal occurs.
Wight v. Brown,
Under certain circumstances, however, the duty may survive severance of the employment relationship.
‘It may be generally stated that one having completed his office as agent or in good faith severed his relationship is free to begin negotiations on his own behalf and may operate adversely to the interests of his former principal as fully as any other individual. Due to the previous trust relationship, however, such subsequent transactions will be subjected to a rigorous examination to see that the former agent did not abuse his position of trust and influence, or in any way fail in his attitude as agent during the agency. An agent will not be permitted to terminate an agency in order to take advantage of his principal’s condition or to profit by information resulting from his agency.’ ... See, in this connection, Stein v. National Life Assn.,105 Ga. 821 [32 S.E. 615 ],...
Id.
at 378-79,
The defendant argues vigorously that this claim should fall because customer lists and general customer information do not constitute trade secrets, as stated in
Thomas v. Best Manufacturing Corp.,
IV. Conversion
The defendant argues that Prudential has failed to include allegations of all elements of its conversion claim in the complaint. Citing
Wood v. Sanders,
The Court finds the defendant’s argument overly technical. The form of complaint for conversion shown in the Georgia Civil Practice Act supports this conclusion. O.C.G.A. § 9-11-111 (Supp.1985) suggests that a pleading need only state that the defendant “converted to his own use” the property in issue.
See Charles S. Martin Distributing Co. v. Indon Industries, Inc.,
V. Effect of this order
The Court has granted the defendant’s motion to dismiss Prudential’s claim for breach of contract to the extent that it relies on the noncompetition and nondisclosure sections of the Agreement. The claims remaining in this case are those for tortious interference with contract, breach of loyalty, and conversion.
In sum, the defendant’s motion to dismiss is GRANTED in part and DENIED in part.
Notes
. Since this court sits in diversity, it is bound by the decisions of Georgia courts.
Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Electric Manufacturing Co.,
. This is precisely what distinguishes the instant case from Prudential Insurance Co. of America v. Rhodes, No. C85-4075A (N.D.Ga. January 15, 1986), which upheld, "summarily and without discussing the case authority or evidence cited by the defendant," the following covenant:
That all books, records, and supplies furnished to me by the Company shall be the property of the Company; and that, upon termination of this Agreement, 1 will hand over said books, records, and supplies to a proper representative of the Company.
Id., slip op. at 2 (attached to the plaintiffs supplementary brief).
