Bird Electron Beam Corp. v. Gamage

526 A.2d 1, 11 Conn. App. 67, 1987 Conn. App. LEXIS 935
CourtConnecticut Appellate Court
DecidedMay 26, 1987
Docket4908
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 526 A.2d 1 (Bird Electron Beam Corp. v. Gamage) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Appellate Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bird Electron Beam Corp. v. Gamage, 526 A.2d 1, 11 Conn. App. 67, 1987 Conn. App. LEXIS 935 (Colo. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

Dupont, C. J.

The plaintiff claims that the trial court erred (1) in concluding that the defendant is not disclosing or using confidential information in his new employment, (2) in failing to rule at all on its claim of law that the new employer was a “conflicting organization” within the terms of the agreement and that, therefore, the employment was per se a breach of the agreement, and (3) in admitting hearsay evidence.

The trial court, in a lengthy opinion, found a number of facts which it had carefully sifted from the evidence. The plaintiff corporation is a “job shop,” a service business which makes electron beam welding applications to products manufactured by others; the plaintiffs customers include the present employer of the defendant; the plaintiffs welding schedules are confidential; the defendant had access to the plaintiffs welding schedules; the defendant is using the welding [70]*70schedules of his new employer in its in-house welding jobs; the new employer cannot successfully compete with job shops; the defendant is performing the techniques of his new employer and not the techniques of the plaintiff; the defendant is a production welder in his new job and does not work on jobs similar to that of the plaintiff.

From those facts, the court concluded that the defendant was not disclosing or using confidential information learned from the plaintiff in his new employment. This conclusion is supported by the facts found which were, in turn, based on the evidence presented. See Pandolphe’s Auto Parts, Inc. v. Manchester, 181 Conn. 217, 221-22, 435 A.2d 24 (1980).

The plaintiff’s major argument centers about his claim that the court did not specifically find whether the new employer of the defendant was a “conflicting organization.” See footnote 1, supra. The plaintiff contends that since the court found the agreement to be enforceable, the failure to address the question of whether the defendant had breached the agreement by employment with a “conflicting organization” was reversible error, requiring a new trial. The plaintiff claims that if the second employer were a “conflicting organization,” the defendant’s employment would be, per se, a violation of the agreement even if he was not disclosing confidential information learned from his employment with the plaintiff. The alleged failure to rule on this issue is a failure, according to the plaintiff, to rule on each claim of law raised by it, a violation of Practice Book § 4059 (formerly § 3060B). The plaintiff argues that the consequence of a lack of a decision on its claim mandates reversal by this court of the trial court’s judgment.

The plaintiff’s argument assumes that the trial court did not rule on the defendant’s claim that the present [71]*71employer is a “conflicting organization” and did not rule on whether the defendant had breached his agreement by virtue of his present employment. The plaintiff reads the trial court’s memorandum as deciding only that the defendant had not breached his agreement by disclosing confidential information.

The court, in addressing the defendant’s special defense that the agreement violated the Connecticut Anti-Trust Act; General Statutes §§ 35-24 through 35-45; concluded that the purpose of the agreement was the protection of the confidentiality of the plaintiff’s welding schedules. As such, the court found that the agreement’s restraint on subsequent employment for a particular time and within a particular area was not illegal per se. It further concluded that the defendant’s new employment would have been a breach of the agreement if the defendant were disclosing confidential information. Thus, the court apparently viewed the provisions of the agreement relating to prohibitions against disclosure and against subsequent employment as being intertwined. In the plaintiff’s view, however, the contractual prohibition against disclosure is independent of its claim that the defendant was per se prohibited from working for a “conflicting organization.”

The plaintiff’s latter claim was clearly raised by the plaintiff and was not specifically ruled on by the court. The court, however, may have impliedly found that the second employer was not a “conflicting organization”2 since it found that the employer was not engaged in work similar to that of the plaintiff, that the defendant was not using techniques of the plaintiff, that the defendant was a production welder who did not work on jobs similar to those performed by the plaintiff and that the second employer could not successfully com[72]*72pete with the plaintiff. On the basis of the court’s apparent reading of the contract, namely that the provisions against disclosure and against subsequent employment were intertwined, the court may have, in effect, found facts sufficient to support a conclusion on the issue raised without, however, actually making the conclusion.

Practice Book § 4059 (formerly § 3060B) provides in pertinent part: “[T]he court shall . . . state its decision on the issues in the case .... The court shall include in its decision its conclusion as to each claim of law raised by the parties.” The purpose of the section is to enable this court as well as the parties to understand the basis of a trial court’s decision. Rompe v. King, 185 Conn. 426, 433 n.2, 441 A.2d 114 (1981). If the trial court fails to articulate that basis sufficiently, this cotut may remand the case for further articulation under Practice Book § 4051 (formerly § 3082).

The problem here is that even if it can be assumed that the memorandum of decision makes it clear that the court sub silentio ruled that the defendant was not working for a “conflicting organization,” it remains unclear whether the court considered that conclusion irrelevant to its decision. The corut stated as its final statement, before the rescript, “that the NonDisclosure Agreement was effective to preclude the defendant from working for [the second employer] if the defendant had been engaged in disclosing confidential information of the plaintiff as alleged by the complaint.” This statement might mean that as long as the defendant did not disclose confidential information he could work for a “conflicting organization” without breaching the agreement.

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Related

Busa v. Busa
589 A.2d 370 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 1991)
Bird Electron Beam Corp. v. Gamage
533 A.2d 231 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 1987)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
526 A.2d 1, 11 Conn. App. 67, 1987 Conn. App. LEXIS 935, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bird-electron-beam-corp-v-gamage-connappct-1987.