Brandon Mounce v. Jeronimo Insulating, LLC

2021 Ark. App. 195, 625 S.W.3d 367
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedApril 28, 2021
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2021 Ark. App. 195 (Brandon Mounce v. Jeronimo Insulating, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brandon Mounce v. Jeronimo Insulating, LLC, 2021 Ark. App. 195, 625 S.W.3d 367 (Ark. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Cite as 2021 Ark. App. 195 Elizabeth Perry ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS I attest to the accuracy and integrity of this document DIVISION III 2023.06.26 15:50:21 -05'00' No. CV-20-113 2023.001.20174 Opinion Delivered April 28, 2021 BRANDON MOUNCE AND UNIQUE GUTTERING & APPEAL FROM THE WASHINGTON INSULATION, LLC COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT APPELLANTS [NO. 72CV-19-3236]

V. HONORABLE BETH STOREY JERONIMO INSULATING, LLC, BRYAN, JUDGE D/B/A G&S INSULATING

APPELLEE AFFIRMED

N. MARK KLAPPENBACH, Judge

This is an interlocutory appeal of the circuit court’s grant of a temporary restraining

order (TRO) pending trial against a former employee of an insulation and construction

business. Such an interlocutory order is specifically appealable under Ark. R. App. P.-Civ.

2(a)(6) (2020). The December 2019 order temporarily prohibited appellants, Brandon

Mounce and his company, Unique Guttering & Insulation, LLC (collectively “Mounce”)

from contacting the customers of appellee, Jeronimo Insulating, LLC, d/b/a G&S Insulating

(hereinafter “Jeronimo”) or engaging in any disparaging communications about Jeronimo,

limiting the prohibition as to Jeronimo’s Northwest Arkansas operations. Mounce asserts

that the circuit court committed reversible error in entering the TRO because (1) the circuit

court wrongly applied Arkansas Code Annotated section 4-75-101 (Supp. 2019) to

Jeronimo’s request for a TRO because common law applies, and (2) the non-compete agreement that Mounce signed during his employment was unenforceable. Mounce has

failed to establish reversible error. We affirm.

Mounce worked for Jeronimo between January 2009 and November 2019 and was

employed at its regional office in Springdale, Arkansas. Mounce worked as a sales

representative and later was promoted to sales production manager. Mounce entered into a

“Non-Competition and Non-Disclosure Agreement” with Jeronimo, which was dated

January 5, 2009. As relevant here, Mounce agreed not to compete with Jeronimo in its

insulation business activities, not to use or share any of Jeronimo’s trade secrets, not to use

or reveal Jeronimo’s confidential information (to include customer information, pricing,

procedures, etcetera), and not to act in any way that would cause a termination of any

business relationship with Jeronimo’s customers. The agreement was to last until the

expiration of one year following Mounce’s separation from Jeronimo and cover a one-

hundred-mile radius of Jeronimo’s offices in Little Rock and Springdale. The agreement

contained a severability clause permitting excision of any provision or part judicially

determined to be illegal, invalid, or unenforceable so that the remainder of the agreement

would be fully valid, legal, and enforceable. The agreement also provided that any breach

by Mounce would cause irreparable injury to Jeronimo and entitle Jeronimo to seek an

injunction as well as any other remedy available.

Jeronimo alleged in its December 2019 complaint that Mounce started his own

competing business based in Springdale while still employed with Jeronimo. Jeronimo

appended the agreement that Mounce signed as an employee of Jeronimo. Jeronimo alleged

that Mounce was wrongly siphoning off Jeronimo’s customers and related jobs; abusing his

2 access to customer contacts and relationships; disparaging Jeronimo to its customers; and

creating confusion in the marketplace that was damaging to Jeronimo’s business reputation.

These wrongful acts allegedly dated back to 2014 and continued after Mounce’s departure

from Jeronimo. 1 In addition to money damages, Jeronimo sought injunctive relief and any

other relief available under the law.

Jeronimo sought a TRO against Mounce pending trial. Jeronimo presented an

affidavit to the circuit court in support of this request, averring in part that Mounce was

given access to company files including client contact information; that irreparable harm

could occur if Mounce took customers away; that Mounce had communicated negatively

about Jeronimo, which could affect Jeronimo’s business reputation; and that injunctive relief

was warranted to keep Mounce from soliciting Jeronimo’s customers “and talking badly

about our company which will be harm that we will not be able to reverse, as once

customers are gone, [it] is nearly impossible to get them back.”

The circuit court issued an emergency TRO on December 9, 2019, a few days after

the complaint had been filed. Jeronimo’s attorney prepared the emergency TRO. Therein,

the circuit court prohibited Mounce from the following activities pending trial: performing

1 There were seven counts alleged in the complaint including conversion (stealing Jeronimo’s income, materials, and business resources while Mounce was still an employee), breach of contract (failing to repay Jeronimo for a loan and breaching the employment agreement by stealing money from Jeronimo’s jobs), breach of fiduciary duty (leading to money damages), tortious interference with Jeronimo’s contractual relationships and Jeronimo’s business expectancy, misappropriation of trade secrets under the Trade Secrets Act (including customer information, entitling Jeronimo to injunctive relief under Ark. Code Ann. § 4-75-604), unjust enrichment warranting the imposition of a constructive trust, and a civil action for felonious theft greater than $25,000. We attempt here to summarize and simplify the allegations but provide proper context to the interlocutory order that is on appeal.

3 business related to insulation, guttering, or installation of fireplaces within one hundred miles

of Jeronimo’s main office in Little Rock and its regional office in Springdale; contacting and

soliciting Jeronimo’s customers in order to perform such business; communicating

Jeronimo’s pricing of its products; or engaging in any communications that would damage

Jeronimo’s reputation and business. The emergency order set a December 18 full hearing

on the request for a TRO.

At the hearing, Jeronimo’s owner, Jeronimo Lopez, testified in line with the

allegations of the complaint stating the Mounce had been specifically trained for this job,

had been treated as a trusted employee, and had access to password-protected customer and

pricing lists. Mr. Lopez believed that Mounce had already harmed his business’s reputation

and that Mounce’s continued contact would further harm its reputation and wrongly permit

Mounce to steal its clients. The office manager and the secretary of the Springdale office

testified to the confusion and loss of business that was attributable to Mounce’s contacting

Jeronimo’s customers. Their testimony confirmed that the customer lists were kept on the

computer, that a hard copy was kept in a file cabinet in the office, and that very few people

had access to that information. Jeronimo wanted the court to issue an order preventing

Mounce from, among other things, contacting Jeronimo’s customer base and disparaging

Jeronimo’s business. The circuit court made clear in its evidentiary rulings at this hearing

that any allegations that could be remedied with money damages were not relevant to the

request for a TRO.

Mounce testified in his own defense generally and specifically denying the allegations.

Mounce’s arguments centered on his denials that Jeronimo’s customer lists or pricing

4 information were protected interests, denials that he learned any particular trade secrets or

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