Clayton A. WILLIAMS, Appellant,
v.
COMPRESSOR ENGINEERING CORPORATION, Appellee.
Court of Appeals of Texas, Houston (14th Dist.).
*470 Andrew Wooley, Maurita N. Shedlock, Houston, for appellee.
Jim Sitgreaves, Susan Allinger, Thomas Clarke, Houston, for appellant.
Before J. CURTISS BROWN, C.J., and SEARS and ELLIS, JJ.
OPINION
J. CURTISS BROWN, Chief Justice.
This is an appeal from a judgment granting a permanent injunction to enforce the noncompetition and nondisclosure provisions of an employment contract entered into by Appellant Clayton A. Williams (Appellant or Williams) and Appellee Compressor Engineering Corporation (Appellee or Compressor). We affirm the judgment of the trial court.
Appellant, as employee, and Appellee, as employer, entered into the contract on July 6, 1982. Pursuant to its terms, Appellant was hired as manufacturing manager for Appellee, which is engaged in the manufacture and repair of compressor valves and valve parts. During his employment and for three years thereafter, Appellant was not to become involved with or employed by any business in competition with Appellee and was to maintain the confidentiality of any of Appellee's trade secrets or other proprietary information as long as such remained secret or proprietary. Appellant resigned his position with Appellee after seventeen months and took a similar position with Texcentric, a corporation engaged in the same type of work as Appellee, selling to the same group of customers as Appellee, and in the same geographic markets. Appellant's job description and responsibilities at Texcentric were substantially the same as they were with Appellee.
Appellee applied for temporary and permanent injunctions, seeking to enjoin Appellant from working for Texcentric or any of Appellee's competitors according to their contract and to enforce the contractual provisions relating to the nondisclosure of trade secrets. At the hearing on the merits for the permanent injunction, four special issues were presented to the jury. It found Appellee did have trade secrets, such trade secrets had been disclosed to Appellant, and Appellant probably would disclose the trade secrets to competition in the future. However, it answered the fourth special issue that Appellee would not suffer irreparable injury from such disclosure. The trial court overruled Appellant's Motion for Judgment and granted Appellee's Motion to Disregard Finding on Special Issue No. 4. It entered judgment for Appellee granting the injunctive relief it sought.
Appellant presents seven points of error on appeal. In the first six, he claims trial court error in its finding of irreparable injury as a matter of law pertinent to Special Issue No. 4. In the seventh, he claims the trial court modified the scope of the original covenant not to compete and therefore erred as a matter of law in granting attorney's fees to Appellee. Appellee also presents two cross points which we do not need to consider in affirming the judgment.
Appellee objected at trial to the submission of Special Issue No. 4 on the ground that the jury's affirmative answers to Special Issues Nos. 1, 2, and 3 established the existence of threatened irreparable injury as a matter of law; therefore, submission of the fourth issue, which was predicated on the preceding affirmative answers, would constitute a duplicate submission of the issue likely to create a conflict in the jury's answers. It objected further on the ground that disclosure of trade secrets constitutes irreparable injury as a matter of law. We agree with the trial court's disregarding of the answer to the issue and its ruling that where the uncontradicted evidence shows that a former employee is working for a direct competitor, no finding of irreparable injury is necessary to support a permanent injunction to protect trade secrets. The jury's affirmative answers to Special Issues Nos. 1-3 established *471 irreparable injury as a matter of law. Appellant does not challenge the findings on Special Issues Nos. 1-3 on appeal.
In reviewing the ruling of a trial court on a permanent injunction, the appellate court as a court in equity must review the contract in question together with all the evidence to determine whether the ruling was correct. The trial court's construction of a restrictive covenant and remedies for its breach are matters of law for our decision. Electronic Data Systems v. Powell,
The record reveals that Appellant had thirty years experience in various machine and engineering industries but no prior experience in the compressor valve industry. He was responsible for Appellee's manufacturing activities and testified that he has a photographic memory and is able to observe the way something is made and then copy it.
Appellee's president testified it was impossible to identify or quantify the injury that had been or would be caused by Appellant's disclosure of Appellee's trade secrets and other confidential information. Further, the market for replacement of its product, poppet valves, was a one-time sale market with no opportunity for repeat sales. Thus, prevention of the disclosure of their methods and processes was extremely important in attracting one-time sales. Appellee included the nondisclosure and noncompetition clauses in its employment contracts so that its techniques could not be duplicated by a competitor quickly and without the developmental costs incurred by Appellee in its twenty years of business. The president testified three years was the average length of time required to develop the methods they considered secret. He admitted he did not know if Appellee had lost sales or customers because of Appellant's departure and had no specific information regarding any injury suffered by Appellee due to Appellant's employment at Texcentric.
In its conclusions of law, the trial court found that profits lost by Appellee because of Appellant's disclosure of trade secrets were not susceptible of accurate ascertainment, Appellant's use or disclosure of such trade secrets would constitute irreparable injury to Appellee because their secrecy could never be restored, and Special Issue No. 4 referring to irreparable injury was an immaterial issue that should not have been submitted because the question was established as a matter of law by the undisputed evidence and the jury's findings on Special Issues Nos. 1-3. Additionally, it found enforcement of the noncompetition agreement was not a greater restraint on Appellant than was reasonably necessary for Appellee's protection and would not impose undue hardship on Appellant.
Both Appellant and Appellee acknowledge there is no Texas case which specifically requires proof that the disclosure of trade secrets by a former employee to his new employer will irreparably harm the former employer as a prerequisite to a permanent injunction. In two federal cases, threatened disclosure or use of trade secrets has been held to constitute irreparable injury as a matter of law. FMC Corp. v. Varco Int'l, Inc.,
Texas courts clearly recognize the right of an employer to insist that the nondisclosure provisions of his contract with an employee be specifically enforced. A trade secret case is premised on a breach of contract or wrongful disregard of confidential relationships. K & G Oil Tool & Service Co. v. G & G Fishing Tool Service,
Appellant argues that irreparable harm is a necessary element of this cause of action. He depends on Parkem Industrial Services v. Garton,
When the term "irreparable injury" is used with "no adequate remedy at law" the former term is a misnomer, because if an injury is irreparable, there is no remedy for it, adequate or inadequate. 6 Lowe, Texas Practice Remedies § 114 (2nd ed.1973). The fact that the injury or damage is incapable of ascertainment is more reason for the court in equity to intervene. Id. "Irreparable injury" is best defined as occurring when the injured party cannot be adequately compensated in damages or the damage resulting from it cannot be measured by any pecuniary standard. Id.; Armintor v. Community Hospital of Brazosport,
Two other cases cited by Appellant as support for his argument are distinguishable from the current situation. The court in May v. Lee,
A trial court may disregard a special issue jury finding that is without support in the evidence or is not material. C & R Transport, Inc. v. Campbell,
A court may not strike jury answers on the basis of a fatal conflict among them if there is any reasonable basis upon which they can be reconciled. Bender v. Southern Pacific Transportation Co.,
Applying this test to the jury's answers in this case, we find no fatal conflict. The answer to Special Issue No. 4 by itself does not entitle Appellant to judgment; the answers to Special Issue Nos. 1-3 with which No. 4 is allegedly in conflict, entitle Appellee to judgment. In effect, the answers to Nos. 1-3 rendered immaterial an answer to No. 4. See Marshbank,
Appellant also argues that Special Issue No. 4 could not have been immaterial because it was tried by implied consent. Camco, Inc. v. Evans,
In the seventh point, Appellant alleges the trial court erred as a matter of law in granting attorney's fees to Appellee where the court modified the scope of the original agreement. The employment contract stipulated that the employee agreed not to compete with Appellee "in the State of Texas and in any other geographic area in which employee has worked during the terms of his employment." In its conclusions of law the trial court limited the scope of the geographical area described in the employment contract to the State of Texas and stated that prohibition of competition in the state is "reasonably necessary to protect the business, trade secrets and good will of plaintiff." It is apparent Appellant's argument is based on the failure of the trial court to extend the injunction "to any other geographic area" as stated in the contract; thus, he claims a modification of the contract's term. Testimony reveals Appellant made only two trips outside Texas in connection with his job. These were to Chicago & California to call on vendors from whom Appellee considered buying equipment for its Houston operation. Appellee's president testified that Appellant worked primarily in Texas during his employment.
Appellant cites Weatherford Oil Tool Co. v. Campbell,
Before trial Appellee and Appellant stipulated to a "reasonable" amount of attorney's fees as $20,000. They also agreed to submit to the court the question of whether Appellee was entitled to recover such fee. Appellee alleged it was entitled to recover its attorney's fees in its First Amended Original Petition. The trial court's award was based on the stipulation of the parties; therefore, no error was committed. We overrule the seventh point of error.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
NOTES
Notes
[1] Formerly this was TEX.REV.CIV.STAT.ANN. art. 2226.
