AMENDED ORDER
This matter is before the Court on Plaintiffs’ Motion for Preliminary Injunction, pursuant to 5 U.S.C. § 705 and Fed. R.Civ.P. 65. For the following reasons Plaintiffs’ motion is granted.
BACKGROUND
Plaintiffs filed suit in this Court on March 14, 2003. On April 25, 2003, Plaintiffs filed their First Amended Verified Complaint, seeking damages and other relief, for various claims, including breach of contract, breach of the duty of loyalty and violations of the federal Copyright Act, 17 U.S.C. § 101, and the federal Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, 17 U.S.C. § 1030. Plaintiffs contend that Defendants were former employees who have now wrongly solicited customers, dealers, and employees and who have appropriated confidential trade secrets in violation of non-solicitation agreements entered into by the parties.
Plaintiffs are all legally distinct, but affiliated entities involved in the engineering, design, manufacture, and marketing of
steel buildings. Plaintiffs’ products are available to the general public through a network of authorized dealers. Defendants each formerly held a position of employment with either Plaintiff Rockford Manufacturing or Plaintiff Rockford Acceptance. Plaintiffs originally alleged that Defendants Supreme Steel Buildings, Inc. and Supreme Building Systems are the apparent and current employers of some or all of the individual Defendants. Plaintiffs, however, have recently dismissed without prejudice Defendant Supreme Steel Buildings, Inc.
Plaintiffs contend that as sales employees, Defendants had significant access to confidential, proprietary and trade secret information, including, but not limited to:
(1) confidential dealer lists; (2) confidential vendor lists; (3) confidential client lists; (4) confidential cost, estimating and pricing data; and (5) confidential information concerning manufacturing processes and practices.
Plaintiffs contend that Defendants signed agreements containing restrictive covenants regarding non-solicitation, nondisclosure, and non-competition. Plaintiffs allege further that in violation of such agreements, Defendants have (1) established a web-site, which allegedly plagiarizes information from Plaintiffs’ website;
(2) obtained illegal access to Plaintiffs’ computer systems by fraud and have used such access to misappropriate highly protected trade secrets; and (3) solicited Plaintiffs’ dealers, vendors, customers, contacts, and employees.
DISCUSSION I. Preliminary Injunction
The Fourth Circuit outlined the analytical framework, which courts must employ in determining whether to grant preliminary relief, in Direx Israel, Ltd. v.
The two most important factors are the probable irreparable harm to the moving party if an injunction is not issued and the probable harm to the non-moving party if an injunction is issued.
Blackwelder,
A. Balance of Harms
Plaintiffs contend simply that they will suffer irreparable injury because their “confidential information, dealer lists, completed building lists, price lists and pricing information, and detailed customer information that Plaintiffs have spent years developing ... is invaluable in the hands of Plaintiffs’ competitors .... ” (Pis’ Mot. at 11.) Plaintiffs have made a significant attempt to quantify the cost associated with developing what they consider their most important; asset: a network of dealers who sell Plaintiffs’ steel buildings products. (See Wirth Aff. at 2-6.) Notwithstanding their ability to quantify a portion of the potential injury they face, Plaintiffs contend that if Defendants are permitted to interfere in their dealer network, much of the injury would be irreparable insofar as there would be a resultant loss of good will and inability to restore dealer relationships. Plaintiffs have submitted the affidavit of Michael Wirth in support.
In contrast, Defendants have come forward with no evidence as to the potential harm they might face if the injunction were to lie. Plaintiffs contend that Defendants would suffer no harm because abiding by the Agreement not to solicit Plaintiffs’ customers, employees, or dealers in no way prohibits them from other meaningful work. (See Wirth Aff. at 6-7.)
On this evidence, however, the Court cannot conclude that the balance of harms tips decidedly in Plaintiffs’ favor. The Court is not convinced of the degree of irreparability as Plaintiffs contend. As a result, the burden on Plaintiffs to establish a likelihood of success on the merits becomes considerably greater.
See Direx Israel, Ltd. v. Breakthrough Medical Corp.,
Plaintiffs also contend that there is a strong probability that they will succeed in enforcing the non-solicitation agreements. Restrictive covenants not to compete or solicit, however, are generally disfavored and will be strictly construed against the employer. An agreement’s enforceability depends on whether it
(1) is necessary for the protection of the legitimate interest of the employer,
(2) is reasonably limited in its operation with respect to time and place;
(3) is not unduly harsh and oppressive in curtailing the legitimate efforts of the employee to earn a livelihood;
(4) is reasonable from the standpoint of sound public policy; and
(5) is supported by valuable consideration.
Sermons v. Caine & Estes Insurance Agency, Inc.,
1. Legitimate Interest of the Employer
South Carolina has expressly recognized that the “most important single asset of most businesses is their stock of customers. Protection of this asset against appropriation by an employee is recognized as a legitimate interest of the employer.”
Standard Register Co. v. Kerrigan,
Defendants do not disagree that customers, employers, or dealers are of a legitimate interest to Plaintiffs, but contend that Plaintiffs have no legitimate interest in prohibiting the solicitation of employees, clients, and dealers of “Affiliated Companies” 1 with whom Defendants never had any personal contact and, further, that such overbreadth renders the entire covenant unenforceable.
As an initial matter, the Court is convinced that Plaintiffs may in fact demonstrate that the non-solicitation agreement is properly tailored and not over-broad. The agreement is expressly premised on the understanding and acknowledgment of the employee that “during his employment with the Company he shall have access to certain confidential, proprietary and trade secret information including dealer and Affiliated Company
Defendants contend that South Carolina does not permit courts to “blue pencil” unreasonable provisions of an agreement and enforce reasonable ones. A survey of South Carolina law suggests otherwise.
In
Eastern Business Forms, Inc. v. Kistler,
Some courts have applied the so called “blue pencil test”, that is, if the excessive restraint is severable in terms, it may be disregarded and the remaining part of the contract enforced; but if the contract is not severable in terms, the entire covenant falls. We recognize that some courts apply the rule that if the restrictive covenant as to time or space is unreasonable, even though indivisible in terms, it is nevertheless enforceable for so much of the performance as would be a reasonable restraint. These courts hold that the legality of restraint should not turn on the mere form of the wording but upon the reasonableness of giving effect to the indivisible promise to the extent that would be lawful. We quote the following from the Somerset case which comes from Pollock, Contracts (11th Ed.), page 335:
“A restrictive covenant which contains or may be read as containing distinct undertakings bounded by different limits of space or time, or different in subject matter, may be good as to part and bad as to part. But this does not mean that a single covenant may be artificially split up in order to pick out some part of it that it can be upheld. Severance is permissible only in the case of a covenant which is in effect a combination of several distinct covenants.”
We quote from 17 C.J.S. Contracts § 289a, page 1224, the following:
The severability of the contract must be determined from its language and subject matter; and where the severa-ble character of the agreement is not determinable from the contract itself, the court, in order to uphold the contract, cannot create a new agreement for the parties, for example, so as to make the restraint a partial restraint within a lesser area than that specified in the covenant or for a lesser period of time.
Eastern Business Forms, Inc. v. Kistler,
Eastern and Somerset delineate two important principles for determining the enforceability of non-solicitation clauses. First, as stated, the contract must be severable. Second the severability must be apparent from the contract itself — in language and subject matter.
A covenant is severable only where it “is in effect a combination of several distinct covenants.”
Somerset,
By comparison,
Eastern
involved a covenant that delineated an unreasonable 100-mile radius. The supreme court refused to make “a partial restraint within a lesser area than that specified in the covenant” because to do otherwise would be to “create a new agreement for the parties.”
Eastern,
Such is not the case here, First, the covenant is mechanically divisible. In the structure of the covenant itself, Plaintiffs have manifested an intention regarding each company individually, by choosing to list them by name. Such an expression makes it possible, logistically, to extricate those companies, without a legitimate interest, from the more global intent concerning all “Affiliated Companies,” while leaving intact the covenant as to those companies which do have a legitimate interest, knowing with full confidence that the intention of the parties has been expressed and preserved in the remainder of the abridged covenant. Accordingly, the covenant is potentially severable.
Second, the parties have expressly stated their intent that the covenants be sev-erable. Importantly, the court in
Eastern
focused on whether or not the parties
intended
that the covenant be treated as divisible.
Eastern,
Accordingly, the Court finds that Plaintiffs have demonstrated a strong probability that the Court can enforce an otherwise overly broad covenant as to only those companies which have a legitimate interest.
2. Reasonably Limited in Time and Place
The covenants at issue in this case are for a two year duration. Covenants of comparable duration have been regularly upheld as reasonable.
See, e.g., Standard Register Co. v. Kerrigan,
The covenants at issue also impose client and employee based restrictions — to wit, Defendants are prohibited from soliciting Plaintiffs’ employees or clients — -rather than geographical restrictions. While “the general test is that contractual prohibitions must be geographically limited to what is reasonably necessary to protect the employer’s business ... [prohibitions against contacting existing customers can be a valid substitute for a geographic limitation.”
Caine & Estes Ins. Agency, Inc. v. Watts,
3. Whether the Covenant is Unduly Harsh on the Employee Defendants’ Ability to Earn a Livelihood
Plaintiffs contend that the restrictions are narrowly drawn so as not to be unduly harsh on Defendants’ ability to earn a living. The Court agrees that Plaintiffs will likely be -able to demonstrate that the covenants do not prohibit employment with any of Plaintiffs’ competitors and that because there is no geographical limitation, Defendants can still solicit busi
Finally, the restrictive covenants appear reasonable from the standpoint of sound public policy and are supported by consideration (in exchange for at-will employment). Defendants have not come forward with any public policy which would call the covenants into question, other than their arguments concerning the alleged over-breadth of the covenants. The covenants were concomitant to enforceable employment agreements, which the state has an interest in enforcing. There is no indication that the agreements were made under duress.
4. Whether the Covenant is Supported by Valid Consideration
Defendants do challenge whether there is valuable consideration to support the non-solicitation agreement as against Defendant Bennet. The South Carolina Supreme Court has stated that “a covenant not to compete may be enforced where the consideration is based solely upon the at-will employment itself.”
Riedman Corporation v. Jarosh,
Although at the hearing Defendants argued that certain Defendants did not sign the non-solicitation agreements until a day after they started work, Defendants have
only submitted an Affidavit of Defendant Herald to that end. Rather, in their memorandum in opposition, Defendants focus primarily on Plaintiffs’ alleged failure to pay Defendant Bennett upon his termination and argue that such a failure renders the provisions of the non-solicitation agreement unenforceable. Defendants cite
Williams v. Riedman,
CONCLUSION
It is, therefore,
ORDERED, for the foregoing reasons that Plaintiffs’ Motion for Preliminary Injunction is GRANTED. Specifically, Defendants are ENJOINED from (1) using all electronic files, data, and documents taken from Plaintiffs Rockford Manufacturing, LTD, and Rockford Dealer Acceptance Corp. and destroying or altering such materials; (2) using Plaintiff Rockford Manufacturing, LTD.’s or Plaintiff Rockford Dealer Acceptance Corp’s confidential information, as delineated and contemplated in the Confidentiality provision of the parties’ respective Employment Agreements; (3) soliciting or accepting business from any of Plaintiff Rockford Manufacturing, LTD.’s or Plaintiff Rockford Dealer Acceptance Corp’s dealers, vendors, clients, or customers whose identity was obtained through use of confidential information taken from Plaintiff Rockford Manufacturing, LTD. or Plaintiff Rockford Dealer Acceptance Corp. (any such business previously solicited shall be
AND IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The non-solicitation agreement prohibits the solicitation of employees, customers, and dealers of Rockford Manufacturing or any "Affiliated Company.” "Affiliated Company” is defined as
"any and all companies and/or other entities which, directly or indirectly, in whole or in part, own, manage, and/or are managed by the Company, and any and all companies and/or entities which, directly or indirectly, in whole or in part, are related to the Company as a result of common ownership, and/or common control and/or common management. Currently, the 'Affiliated Companies' include Wedg-Cor, Inc., Sunward Corporation, Rockford Manufacturing, Ltd. WedgCor Acceptance Corporation, Gold Seal Steel Buildings, Inc., Rockford Dealer Acceptance Corporation, Sunward Trucking Incorporated, Advertising Incorporated, Plus 50 Delaware Corporation and Certified Components Corporation .... ”
(Agreement at 1.)
