Case Information
*1 Before McMILLIAN, WOLLMAN, and LOKEN, Circuit Judges.
___________
LOKEN, Circuit Judge.
Vigoro Industries, Inc., commenced this unfair competition action against former employees of its farm supply store in Marvell, Arkansas, and the competitor that hired them away, Cleveland Chemical Company. Vigoro's former manager, Kenneth Crisp, counterclaimed for money allegedly owing under Vigoro's incentive compensation plan. Following a one-week bench trial, the
district court awarded Vigoro $75,000 against Crisp for breach of his [1]
employee's duty of loyalty. The court dismissed Vigoro's claims against the other defendants and awarded Crisp $36,788.40 on his counterclaim. Vigoro appeals, arguing primarily that clearly erroneous findings of fact have produced a grossly inadequate damage award. Crisp cross appeals. We affirm the disposition of Vigoro's claims, reverse the award in favor of Crisp on his counterclaim, and remand for entry of an amended final judgment.
I. Background.
We will only briefly summarize the relevant facts, which are set out
in detail in the district court's thorough published opinion, Vigoro
Industries, Inc. v. Cleveland Chemical Co.,
Crisp managed a successful farm supply store in rural Marvell for twenty-four years. After Vigoro acquired the store in 1986, Crisp often considered leaving. Finally, in late 1992, he approached Cleveland Chemical, a wholesale supplier that had expressed an interest in entering the retail market in the Marvell area. In February 1993, Crisp purchased commercial property in Marvell. In May, he committed to join Cleveland Chemical, offered his property as the site for a new Cleveland Chemical store, and began detailed discussions concerning facilities, equipment, and personnel. Crisp provided Cleveland Chemical with estimated salaries and wages, drawing on his knowledge and experience as a Vigoro farm store manager.
On July 16, 1993, Crisp sent a letter of resignation to Vigoro management, advising that he would stay on for a short time to ease the transition. Shortly before resigning, Crisp invited the other The HONORABLE GARNETT THOMAS EISELE, United States District 1
Judge for the Eastern District of Arkansas.
Marvell employees to join him at the new Cleveland Chemical store. His co- workers responded favorably, and Crisp stated in his resignation letter that all of the Marvell employees would be leaving with him. Critical among the dozen who left were three salesmen, appellees Dennis Cavette, Don Scarbrough, and Donald Washburn, who had valuable relationships with nearly all of Vigoro's farmer-customers. On July 28, 1993, Crisp sent a letter to the farmers he considered Vigoro's best customers. Addressed to "our valued customers," the letter advised that the employees would soon leave Vigoro for Cleveland Chemical, apologized for any inconvenience, and stated, "we feel this change will enable us to offer you better services in the future. As always, we look forward to serving any needs you might have."
Crisp left Vigoro on August 7, 1993, and began working for Cleveland Chemical. The other Marvell employees joined him later that month. Though Vigoro brought in a new manager and sales force as quickly as possible, it lost some seventy percent of its Marvell customers to its new competitor, and the Marvell Farmarket began operating at a substantial loss. Vigoro sued the former employees, Cleveland Chemical, and Cleveland Chemical's principal officers, asserting claims for misappropriation of trade secrets, breach of fiduciary duties, conspiracy to breach those duties, and intentional interference with business expectancies. On appeal, Vigoro challenges the inadequate damage award against Crisp and the dismissal of its claims against the Cleveland Chemical defendants and former salesmen Cavette, Scarbrough, and Washburn. [2]
II. Claims Against Kenneth Crisp.
Crisp was an at-will employee at Vigoro. He signed no agreement or covenant not to compete with Vigoro if he left.
Vigoro dismissed claims against the non-sales employees at 2
the close of its case at trial.
Therefore, the district court ruled that Crisp had a right to leave and was
free to notify his fellow workers and Vigoro customers of his intent to
leave. However, before leaving, Crisp had a duty of loyalty which
precluded him from soliciting other employees or customers to leave Vigoro
with him. We agree with this analysis. Arkansas law strikes a careful
balance between an employer's right to employee loyalty, and an employee's
right -- absent contrary contractual commitment -- to resign and pursue his
career with a competing employer. See Witmer v. Arkansas Dailies, Inc.,
It is, however, a common occurrence for corporate fiduciaries to resign and form a competing enterprise. Unless restricted by contract, this may be done with complete immunity because freedom of employment and encouragement of competition generally dictate that such persons can leave their corporation at any time and go into a competing business. They cannot while still corporate fiduciaries set up a competitive enterprise . . . or resign and take with them the key personnel of their corporations for the purpose of operating their own competitive enterprise. But they can, while still employed, notify their corporation's customers of their intention to resign and subsequently go into business for themselves, and accept business from them when offered to them.
See also Evans Lab., Inc. v. Melder,
Applying this standard, the district court found that Crisp had
breached his duty of loyalty to Vigoro in two respects. First,
*5
his July 28 letter to key Vigoro customers "crosse[d] the line from simple
notification to an active solicitation at a time when Mr. Crisp was still
working for Vigoro."
Vigoro of course takes no issue with these findings that Crisp breached his duty of loyalty, though it casts Crisp's conduct in a far more sinister light than did the district court. Crisp, on the other hand, argues that the district court's findings of breach of duty are clearly erroneous. We disagree. The findings that Crisp's pre-resignation solicitation of co-workers and Vigoro customers breached his duty of loyalty are well supported in the record. That brings us to the crucial issue on this appeal, the district court's award of $75,000 damages for that breach.
III. Damages for Crisp's Misfeasance.
Vigoro attacks the district court's damage award at three levels. First, claiming that Crisp's breach of duty decimated Vigoro's workforce and purloined seventy percent of its customer base, Vigoro argues that the court should have adopted one of Vigoro's "uncontested" five-year damage estimates -- $2.19 million lost going concern value, $3.5 million unjust enrichment to Cleveland Chemical, or $4.7 million lost profits to Vigoro. Second, Vigoro argues that the court should have assessed additional damages because Crisp misappropriated trade secrets and confidential customer information. Third, Vigoro argues that the district court improperly ignored specific additional items of damage. We will take up these points in that order.
A. Lost Profit Damages for Breach of Duty.
The district court
rejected Vigoro's damage theories as without factual support. The court
found that the other Marvell employees were loyal to Crisp
*6
and would have left Vigoro to join him at Cleveland Chemical if Crisp had
waited until after he resigned before soliciting them. After carefully
surveying competitive conditions in the Marvell local market, the court
further found that most of Vigoro's customers would have chosen to do
business with Crisp at Cleveland Chemical if he had not solicited them
before leaving Vigoro. Thus, the court found that Vigoro's damages should
be limited to the harm caused immediately after Crisp's departure by his
pre-resignation soliciting. The court estimated this damage at $75,000.
See
"In a bench trial, ascertaining the plaintiff's damages is a form of
factfinding that can be set aside only if clearly erroneous." Hall v. Gus
Constr. Co.,
B. Damages for Misappropriation of Confidential Information. Vigoro claims that Crisp is liable under the Arkansas Theft of Trade Secrets Act, Ark. Code Ann. § 4-75-601 et seq., and the
common law doctrine that protects an employer's confidential business
information, see Tlapek v. Chevron Oil Co.,
Although confidential and valuable customer information that would
be costly and time consuming to duplicate qualifies for trade secret
protection, readily ascertainable customer information does not. Compare
Allen v. Johar, Inc., 823 S.W.2d 824, 827 (Ark. 1992), and United
Centrifugal Pumps v. Cusimano,
All the information [plaintiff] tries to wrap in the [Trade Secret] Act's mantle is nothing more than the kind of knowledge any successful salesman necessarily acquires through experience. In the Act's terms, it is information 'readily ascertainable by proper means' . . . . Nothing prevents such an employer from guarding its interests by a restrictive covenant. But it would really be unfair competition to allow the employer without such a covenant to obtain trade secret status for the fruits of ordinary experience in the business, thus compelling former employees to reinvent the wheel as the price for entering the competitive market.
We affirm the district court's determination that Crisp did not misappropriate trade secrets or confidential customer information.
C. Miscellaneous Damage Claims.
Vigoro's remaining damage
contentions do not warrant extended discussion. First, Crisp's breach of
his duty of loyalty does not require him to forfeit compensation already
earned. See Baldwin v. Prince,
For the foregoing reasons, the district court's award of $75,000 damages against Kenneth Crisp is affirmed.
IV. Claims Against the Cleveland Chemical Defendants.
Vigoro argues that the Cleveland Chemical defendants conspired with
Crisp to breach his duty of loyalty to Vigoro and tortiously interfered
with Vigoro's customer and employee expectancies. The district court found
expressly to the contrary -- that Crisp's breach of duty was not done in
concert with any other defendant, and that the actions of the Cleveland
Chemical defendants in hiring Crisp and the other Vigoro employees and in
opening a retail farm store in Marvell constituted proper competition
rather than tortious interference with Vigoro's expectancies. These
findings are not clearly erroneous. Vigoro's claims against the Cleveland
Chemical defendants were properly dismissed. See Fisher v. Jones, 844
S.W.2d 954, 959 (Ark. 1993); Walt Bennett Ford, Inc. v. Pulaski County
Special Sch. Dist.,
V. Claims Against Cavette, Scarbrough, and Washburn. Vigoro claims that Cavette, Scarbrough, and Washburn also intentionally interfered with Vigoro's customer expectancies. Like Crisp, these salesmen were at-will employees of Vigoro, and none had signed a covenant not to compete. The district court found that they had a right to leave Vigoro and join Cleveland Chemical, that they did not induce or participate in Crisp's pre-resignation breach of duty, that they did not disclose any confidential Vigoro information to Cleveland Chemical, and that they merely made proper use of their business skills and experience in competing with Vigoro. These findings are not clearly erroneous and required dismissal of Vigoro's claims against these defendants.
VI. Crisp's Counterclaim.
Because of Crisp's success as a Vigoro store manager, Vigoro provided him the most lucrative incentive compensation plan of any *10 Vigoro farm store manager. However, his 1993 incentive plan permitted Vigoro to deduct "amounts Management deems appropriate as a penalty for mismanagement of total assets of the Farmarket." After Crisp left, Vigoro refused to pay him a bonus for the year in which he resigned, citing this mismanagement provision. Crisp asserted a counterclaim for the bonus that would otherwise have been owing. The district court ruled that Vigoro could not properly refuse to pay a bonus because Crisp had managed the Farmarket assets in Vigoro's best interests. The court awarded Crisp $36,788.40 in 1993 incentive compensation.
On appeal, Vigoro argues that the incentive compensation plan left
this mismanagement issue to its discretion (Vigoro may deduct "amounts
Management deems appropriate"); therefore, the district court erred in
reviewing de novo Vigoro's decision to pay no bonus. We agree. When a
contract term leaves a decision to the discretion of one party, that
decision is virtually unreviewable. See Amant v. Kidde, Inc., 756 F.2d
685, 686 (8th Cir. 1985). At most, courts will step in "when the party who
would assume the role of sole arbiter is charged with fraud, bad faith, or
a grossly mistaken exercise of judgment." Golden v. Kentile Floors, Inc.,
In this case, Vigoro's management decided that Crisp deserved no incentive bonus in a year in which he breached his duty of loyalty by soliciting employees and customers to join him in a competing venture. This cannot be called a bad faith or grossly mistaken exercise of judgment. Cf. O'Madigan v. General Motors Corp., 202 F. Supp. 190, 193 (E.D. Mo. 1961), aff'd, 312 F.2d 250 (8th Cir. 1963). Accordingly, the district court erred in awarding Crisp $36,788.40 on his counterclaim.
VII. Conclusion
We reverse the district court's award of $36,788.40 in favor of Kenneth Crisp on his counterclaim. We otherwise affirm the district court's Amended and Substituted Judgment. The case is remanded for entry of an amended final judgment consistent with this opinion, with interest on that judgment under 28 U.S.C. § 1961 to run from November 4, 1994. See Fed. R. App. P. 37. We award costs on appeal to appellees.
A true copy.
Attest:
CLERK, U. S. COURT OF APPEALS, EIGHTH CIRCUIT.
