There are three central issues in this appeal. First, we must decide whether the district court abused its discretion in entertaining a declaratory judgment action regarding a noncompetition agreement (“NCA”) filed by William S. Manuel against Convergys Corporation and its subsidiaries (collectively “Convergys”). Second, we must decide whether the district court erred in ruling that Georgia has sufficient contacts with the declaratory judgment action to justify application of Georgia law to the NCA. Under Georgia law, the NCA is invalid and unenforceable. Third, we must decide whether the district court properly applied Georgia law in dismissing Convergys’s trade secret 'counterclaim. Finding no reversible error, we AFFIRM.
I. BACKGROUND
A large, publicly traded company with its principal place of business in Ohio, Con-vergys offers information management and customer management services worldwide. A subsidiary sells outsourced human resource services for large public and private employers (“HR outsourcing”). In 1999,
Pursuant to the promotion in 2003, Manuel signed the NCA. This agreement prohibits Manuel from competing with Con-vergys or soliciting its customers for two years following the termination of his employment. The NCA contains a choice-of-law provision requiring the application of Ohio law and states that any disputes related to the NCA may be brought in the state and federal courts of Hamilton County, Ohio.
On 12 March 2004, Manuel interviewed with Mellon Financial Corporation (“Mellon”) for a position with its HR outsourcing sales team, working either in Atlanta, Georgia or Charlotte, North Carolina. While there is some factual dispute as to whether Manuel first chose to work in North Carolina, he eventually was offered the job in Georgia. As to the NCA, Manuel advised Mellon that he did not believe Convergys would view Mellon as a competitor and would not challenge his employment. Nevertheless, Manuel and Mellon discussed the possibility that Convergys might sue to enforce the NCA.
Manuel subsequently sought counsel. His newly hired lawyer concluded that the NCA constituted an illegal restraint of trade under Georgia law and that Manuel should therefore be free to work for Mellon in Georgia. Manuel’s lawyer warned, however, that if Convergys obtained an Ohio judgment validating the NCA, a Georgia court would likely enforce it. The lawyer therefore recommended that “the only thing [Manuel] could do to prevent this scenario would be to file first in Georgia.” R3-17, Exh. F at 3.
After accepting Mellon’s offer on 5 April 2004, Manuel met with the Georgia lawyers who would file this action. On 8 April 2004, Manuel resigned from Convergys, although he agreed to stay on until the middle of the month. During that time, Manuel told Convergys that he was not going to work for a competitor and that he had not accepted a job with another company. On 9 April 2004, Manuel signed an apartment lease in Georgia and obtained a Georgia driver’s license. On 20 April 2004, Manuel filed suit against Convergys in Georgia seeking a declaration that the NCA was illegal, invalid, and unenforceable.
Six days later, a senior executive at Con-vergys told Manuel that he might be able to structure his job with Mellon so that he would not violate the NCA. Nevertheless, the lawsuit against Convergys proceeded. On 10 May 2004, Convergys removed the case to the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia. On the same day, Convergys filed suit against Manuel and Mellon in an Ohio state court for violation of the NCA and misappropriation of trade secrets. Subsequently, Con-vergys filed a counterclaim in this action that alleged misappropriation of trade secrets. The company also requested that the district court defer ruling on Manuel’s motion for summary judgment pending resolution of the Ohio action. The district court denied Convergys’s motion and granted both Manuel’s motion for summary judgment and Manuel’s motion to dismiss Convergys’s counterclaim.
II. DISCUSSION
A. The Declaratory Judgment Action
The decision to hear a declaratory judgment action is reviewed for abuse of discretion.
Wilton v. Seven Falls Co.,
The factors relevant in deciding whether to hear a declaratory judgment action are equitable in nature.
See Kerotest Mfg. Co. v. C-O-Two Fire Equip. Co.,
Where two actions involving overlapping issues and parties are pending in two federal courts, there is a strong presumption across the federal circuits that favors the forum of the first-filed suit under the first-filed rule.
See, e.g., United States Fire Ins. Co. v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co.,
In determining whether compelling circumstances exist, we have recognized that for declaratory judgment actions “one equitable consideration ... is whether the ... action was filed in apparent anticipation of the other pending proceeding.”
Ven-Fuel, Inc. v. Dep’t of the Treasury,
In this case, Convergys argues that Ohio is the proper forum for full resolution of this action. Convergys’s two central objections to the Georgia forum are (1) that Manuel lied to Convergys about his employment with Mellon to surreptitiously win a race to the courthouse, and (2) that Manuel engaged in improper forum shopping and selected a forum with a slight and manufactured connection to the controversy. Central to our analysis is the fact that Georgia was the forum in which this action was filed first.
See Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith,
As to the first objection, Convergys alleges that Manuel purposely lied about where he was going to work so that he could file suit in Georgia before Convergys was able to directly threaten him with imminent litigation in Ohio. In Conver-gys’s view, Manuel won an illicit race to the courthouse and the district court thereby erred in rewarding him with a declaratory judgment action. While Manuel’s behavior was not exemplary, it does not rise to a level that would require us to conclude that the district court abused its discretion.
See Keener v. Convergys Corp.,
Additionally, the district court’s conclusion that Manuel’s filing was not improperly anticipatory has support in the record. Distinguishing
Vevr-Fuel,
which upheld a decision to dismiss a declaratory judgment action when the action was filed the day after receipt of a letter promising judicial proceedings if an assessed penalty was not paid “forthwith,” the district court reasonably concluded that a similar threat was not present in this case.
See Ven-Fuel,
Even if Manuel were directly threatened, our precedent does not stand for the proposition that the district court was required to dismiss a declaratory judgment action when the action was filed in apparent anticipation of another proceeding.
See Ven-Fuel,
As to the second objection, Convergys argues that the filing in Georgia constituted improper forum shopping. We agree with the district court that there is nothing inequitable in Manuel seeking legal advice and later choosing to work in a state that shared his view that the NCA was invalid and unenforceable.
See McCuin v. Texas Power & Light Co.,
In contrast, several considerations disfavor the Ohio forum. The NCA was not executed in Ohio. Manuel did not have an office in Ohio. The alleged breach of the contract did not take place in Ohio. The location of documents and the ease of access to sources of proof do not favor Ohio. Furthermore, the district court noted that there were serious questions as to whether the Ohio has personal jurisdiction over Manuel. Additionally, the choice of law clause requiring application of Ohio law is of dubious relevance to this analysis, because this court has already ruled in a previous case against Convergys that this clause is not enforceable ’in Georgia.
Keener,
In short, the range of considerations available to the district court in
B. NCA
Convergys alleges that Georgia has no significant contacts with the parties or
Applying Keener, the district court did not err in concluding that the NCA was contrary to Georgia public policy and that Georgia law therefore applied. See id. at 1267-68. Under Georgia law, the court correctly held that the NCA was unenforceable due to its overbreadth and indeterminate geographic reach. See id. Con-vergys does not dispute that the NCA is unenforceable under Georgia law.
C. Convergys’s Trade Secrets Counterclaim ■
On a motion to dismiss, the standard of review “is the same for the appellate court as it was for the trial court.”
Spain v. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp.,
Convergys pleaded its one-count trade secrets counterclaim under both Georgia and Ohio law. The claim alleges that Con-vergys entrusted Manuel with the following kinds of trade secret and confidential business information: (1) pricing; (2) price lists; (3)' programs and processes sold, licensed, or developed by Convergys; (4) technical data, plans, and specifications relating to present and future development projects; (5) financial and marketing data; (6) computer programs, systems, and software; (7) processes; (8) improvements; (9) designs; and (10) redesigns. Conver-gys further alleges that Manuel will inevitably use this confidential information during his employment with Mellon. Under the liberal pleading standards of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 8(a), Convergys contends that it satisfied the requirement for a short and plain statement of the claim showing that the 'pleader is entitled to relief and it argues that the district court therefore erred in dismissing its counterclaim for failure to state a claim.
Convergys raises three issues regarding the trial court’s dismissal of its counterclaim. First, it argues that district court erred in applying only Georgia law to its counterclaim because Manuel’s misappropriation may occur outside of Georgia. Second, it argues that the district court misapplied the Georgia law on misappropriation of trade secrets. Third, it argues that the district court improperly resolved questions of fact regarding whether Manuel retained only personal knowledge of information that Convergys regards as protected. We address each of these issues in turn.
As to the first issue, a federal court sitting in diversity will apply the choice of law rules for the state in which it sits.
Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Elec. Mfg. Co.,
As to the second issue, the district court, applying
Avnet, Inc. v. Wyle Laboratories, Inc.,
In
Avnet,
the Georgia Supreme Court affirmed a trial court’s application of the Georgia Trade Secrets Act, O.C.G.A. § 10-1-760
et seq. Id.
The trial court in that case determined that so long as the following customer and other business information was merely within the former employees’ minds it did not constitute a protectable trade secret: “the identity of ... suppliers, customers’ identities, customer needs, business practices and patterns which include the type products clients purchase, the products sold but not delivered, specific client relations problems, client preferences, cost pricing, sales volume information, the amount clients are willing to pay, cost profit and price computation information as well as employee compensation capabilities and performances.”
Id.
at 303. The plaintiffs appealed the portion of the trial court’s order that allowed the former employees to use information “in their minds” that was gained through their former employment.
Id.
at 303, 304. In upholding the trial court’s determination, the Georgia Supreme Court concluded that the holding in
Taylor Freezer Sales Co. v. Sweden Freezer E. Corp.,
Several recent Georgia cases have applied the same rule.
See, e.g., DeGiorgio v. Megabyte Int’l, Inc.,
The Northern District of Georgia case of
Servicetrends, Inc. v. Siemens Medical Systems,
Under
Avnet,
parties may contract above and beyond the protections of Georgia law with a valid nondisclosure agreement.
See Avnet,
As to the third issue, Convergys claims that the district court improperly accepted Manuel’s representation that he retained only personal knowledge of Convergys’s trade secrets. Yet, even under the liberal pleading standards of Rule 8(a), Conver-gys’s counterclaim has failed to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. Convergys only alleges general customer and business information that Avnet held cannot be a trade secret if it is only personal knowledge. The counterclaim refers generally to Manuel’s training and experience and does not contain any statement alleging that Manuel physically took protected documents or other tangible, proprietary information when he left his employment with Convergys. 4 As such, we conclude that the district court properly dismissed Convergys’s counterclaim under Georgia law.
III. CONCLUSION
Convergys argues that the district court erred in entertaining Manuel’s declaratory judgment action, voiding the NCA, and
Notes
. Section 1404 factors include (1) the convenience of the witnesses; (2) the location of relevant documents and the relative ease of access to sources of proof; (3) the convenience of the parties; (4) the locus of operative facts; (5) the availability of process to compel the attendance of unwilling witnesses; (6) the relative means of the parties; (7) a forum's familiarity with the governing law; (8) the weight accorded a plaintiff's choice of forum; and (9) trial efficiency and the interests of justice, based on the totality of the circumstances.
See, e.g., Gibbs & Hill, Inc. v. Harbert Int’l, Inc.,
. In fact, the circumstances in
Keener
were arguably more favorable to Convergys, since the employee in
Keener,
unlike Manuel, actually worked for Convergys in Ohio and executed his employment agreement in Ohio before going to Georgia.
See id.
at 1268 n. 2;
see also Keener v. Convergys Corp.,
. There is little "doubt, and the parties do not argue otherwise, that the district court had to apply the Declaratory Judgment Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2201
et seq.,
rather than the state declaratory judgment act, in this action.
See GTE Directories Publ'g Corp. v. Trimen Am., Inc.,
Under Georgia law, a litigant has a right to have his case adjudicated promptly when a defendant attempts to circumvent Georgia laws and public policy by filing a case in a foreign jurisdiction where the judgment could bar the Georgia claim.
See
O.C.G.A. § 9-2-46(a) (stating in relevant part that "Whenever it is made to appear to the judge of any court that any party to a case pending in the court, after the case has been commenced, has instituted proceedings in any court of any other state involving the same controversy ... it shall be the duty of the judge of the court in which the case is pending to set the case specially and ahead of all other business.”);
see also Enron Capital & Trade Res. Corp. v. Pokalsky,
. The following statements are relevant examples of the allegations in Convergys's counterclaim: "As a result of Manuel’s commitment not to compete against Convergys and not to use or disclose its trade secrets and confidential business information, Convergys provided Manuel with extensive training, development, market exposure, experience, and access to its trade secrets and confidential information. As a result of his employment at Convergys, Manuel obtained detailed and highly confidential information and knowledge of, among other things, (a) the quality and scope of services provided by Convergys; (b) the speed and flexibility of implementation of Conver-gys' products and services; (c) the technological strength and weaknesses of Convergys’ products and services; and (d) the pricing of Convergys’ products and services.” Rl-4 at 20 § 33. "In particular, Manuel obtained extensive training and experience in selling HR Outsourcing services to large companies.” Id. at 21 § 34. “Manuel’s knowledge and use of Convergys’ trade secrets would result in competitive advantages to Manuel and/or Mellon. These advantages would include knowledge of Convergys' customers, business and marketing plans or strategies, pricing methods and strategies, and development of new products and services, among other things.” Id. at 25 § 46.
