Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byAmberlynn Chase Modified over 9 years ago
1
Loss of Multiple Key Employees - Prevention and Remedies Robert J. Wood, Jr. Tuesday, October 7, 2008
2
1 THE PROBLEM: MULTIPLE EMPLOYEES LEAVING FOR COMPETITOR Possible legal remedies against ex-employee and new employer Preventive measures DISCLAIMER: State laws vary greatly (must know which law governs your situation)
3
2 PREDATORY HIRING CLAIMS Violation of Sherman Antitrust Act Actual Monopolization (Actual Harm) Attempted Monopolization (Potential Harm)
4
3 ACTUAL MONOPOLIZATION ELEMENTS D’s possession of monopoly power in relevant market Willful acquisition of such power Causation
5
4 UNIVERSAL ANALYTICS CASE (9th Cir. 1990) Plaintiff and Defendant in aerospace technology field Defendant had 90% of market Plaintiff had 5% of market Defendant hired 5 of Plaintiff's key employees Employees difficult to replace; required two years to train Court assumed first prong (possession of monopoly power) met
6
5 UNIVERSAL ANALYTICS CASE – Cont. Second prong: Whether talent hired not for using it but to deprive competitor Must prove subjective intent to engage in exclusionary conduct The "we wound UAI again" memo Court = primary motivation was to obtain productive employee Defendant put the employees to work
7
6 ATTEMPTED MONOPOLIZATION ELEMENTS Predatory or exclusionary conduct Specific intent to monopolize Dangerous probability of achieving monopoly power
8
7 AMERICAN PROFESSIONAL TESTING CASE (9th Cir. 1997) Defendant offered BAR/BRI in 46 states Plaintiff competed in 4 states Defendant hired Plaintiff's instructor, "crippled [plaintiff's] effort to compete in Florida" Monopoly Power = new rivals can't enter market, existing competitors can't expand Plaintiff = Defendant's high-quality courses = entry barrier Court = not enough
9
8 EMPLOYEE RAIDING Claim not widely accepted Hiring to cripple competition rather than to obtain services
10
9 BREACH OF FIDUCIARY DUTY (DUTY OF LOYALTY) Competing while still employed (bad) Preparing to compete (okay) Possibility of obtaining injunctive relief
11
10 ABETTER CASE (Tex. App. 2003) Plaintiff owned trucking fleet; Defendant was key employee Defendant prepared to start competing company Defendant mentioned his plans to Plaintiff's customer Defendant told Plaintiff about his plans; Plaintiff's other employees inquired Defendant left; followed by 12 of Plaintiff's other employees No breach of fiduciary duty
12
11 GRESHAM CASE (Ga. App. 2004) Defendant revealed plans to start new company to co-employees Arranged for new employee's 401(k) loan to be re- paid Other employees simultaneously resigned Breach of fiduciary duty
13
12 MISAPPROPRIATION OF TRADE SECRETS Must tighten security/treat information as secret Secret = not in public domain Customer and pricing information General knowledge Specific knowledge Employee may use general skills and knowledge Inevitable versus threatened disclosure
14
13 TORTIOUS INTERFERENCE VS. NEW EMPLOYER Departed employee bound by non-compete agreement Inducing versus merely hiring (with knowledge of non-compete) Claim based upon hiring at-will employee
15
14 TORTIOUS INTERFERENCE VS. DEPARTED EMPLOYEE Based upon solicitation of employer’s customers/employees Difference between tortious interference and fair competition?
16
15 REEVES CASE (Cal. 2004) Senior partners in law firm Abruptly resigned, left no status reports Destroyed client computer files and documents Misappropriated confidential information Solicited law firm's clients Cultivated employee discontent Offered jobs to law firm's at-will employees Tortious interference
17
16 FOOT LOCKER CASE (S.D. Ind. 2006) Defendant systematically hired Plaintiff's employees Needed the employees "Hit the competition where it hurts" memo Court: "Offhand remarks" No tortious interference
18
17 MEMORIAL GARDENS CASE (Colo. 1984) Plaintiff and Defendant sold preneed funeral contracts Defendant made random telephone calls Defendant told Plaintiff's customers they could cancel contracts Defendant completed and mailed cancellation forms Tortious interference Customers not at-will
19
18 CONSTRUCTION MANAGEMENT (8th Cir. 2002) Defendant = long distance telephone company Plaintiff = cable inspector for Defendant Defendant sought bids for cable services Plaintiff chose difference vendor Plaintiff Defendant's inspectors: Seek employment with other companies No tortious interference
20
19 NON-COMPETE AGREEMENTS Consideration required Reasonableness of scope Judicial modification No “one size fits all” agreements Need to update agreements Binding incumbent and departing employees Providing (creating) new confidential information "Stale" information not confidential Choice of Law/Forum Selection provisions California
21
20 NON-SOLICITATION AND NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS Non-solicitation versus non-compete agreements Difficulty of proving "solicitation“ Use of broader terms (e.g., "communication") Non-disclosure agreements = more enforceable
22
21 PRACTICAL TIPS WHEN EMPLOYEES LEAVE Exit interviews to determine their intentions Remind of obligations Confiscate company property Search emails
23
22 AVOIDING RAIDING ACCUSATION Use job postings Headhunters Obtain copies of agreements signed by prospective employees Prevent employees bound by non-solicitation provisions from recruiting Direct new employees to comply with agreements and not disclose information
24
23 DISCLAIMER State laws vary greatly Must determine law applicable to your situation
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.