Chris Hipps v. CBRE, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 15, 2024
Docket05-24-00056-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Chris Hipps v. CBRE, Inc. (Chris Hipps v. CBRE, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chris Hipps v. CBRE, Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

REVERSE and REMAND and Opinion Filed August 15, 2024

S In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-24-00056-CV

CHRIS HIPPS, Appellant V. CBRE, INC., Appellee

On Appeal from the 95th District Court Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. DC-23-20605

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Smith, Miskel, and Breedlove Opinion by Justice Breedlove In this suit to enforce a noncompetition covenant, the trial court granted a

temporary injunction for plaintiff/appellee CBRE, Inc. In four issues,

defendant/appellant Chris Hipps contends the trial court abused its discretion by

granting the injunction because CBRE failed to show its entitlement to injunctive

relief, the injunction is overbroad and violates the Texas Covenants Not to Compete

Act, and the injunction order does not meet the requirements of rule 683, Texas

Rules of Civil Procedure. Concluding that the injunction is overbroad in its geographical scope but is otherwise enforceable, we remand to the trial court for

further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

BACKGROUND

Hipps was employed as a “Senior Managing Director” for Dallas/Fort Worth

at CBRE when he resigned in December 2023 to accept a position as “Texas

Managing Principal” at CBRE’s competitor Cushman & Wakefield. At the time of

his resignation, two agreements were in force between Hipps and CBRE: (1) a 2021

“Employment Agreement–Manager” (EA) containing a one-year non-solicitation

period and a provision for protection of confidential information for two years after

termination of Hipps’s employment, and (2) a 2021 Restrictive Covenants

Agreement (RCA) containing a noncompetition clause:

1.4 Non-Competition. During your employment by any member of the Company Group and, solely if, prior to December 31, 2025, you are terminated by the relevant Company Group member with Cause or you resign without Good Reason, during the Restricted Period, you will not directly or indirectly, (a) become a principal, partner, member, investor, joint venturer, officer, director, or shareholder of any Restricted Business, or (b) manage, control, or operate any Restricted Business, or (c) serve as an employee, consultant, contractor, advisor, representative (or any other capacity) of, to or for a Restricted Business (except to the extent you serve in any such capacity that is unrelated to the products or services that are competitive with products or services provided by the Company Group). . . . If your employment terminates at any point after December 31, 2025, then this Section 1.4 will no longer apply.

The RCA further defines a “Restricted Business” as “any entity or person that

provides products or services that are competitive with products or services provided

by the Company Group within 24 months prior to your Termination Date.” The RCA

–2– broadly defines the “Company Group” as CBRE Group, Inc. and each of its

subsidiaries and affiliates. The “Restricted Period,” applicable to both the

noncompete and non-solicitation obligations, is the period of twelve months

following Hipps’s termination.

Similarly, the EA prohibits solicitation of “CBRE’s clients whom [Hipps]

solicited or with whom [he] dealt or became acquainted while [he] was employed

with CBRE” and solicitation of CBRE’s salespeople or employees for one year

following termination of Hipps’s employment with CBRE.

The RCA includes a recital of the consideration CBRE promised to provide.

In addition to access to “new and additional” training, clients, and client information,

CBRE promised to pay Hipps a $1 million “Retention Incentive.” Hipps received

the Retention Incentive but denies that there was any change to the training and

information he had always received while employed at CBRE.

Shortly after Hipps’s resignation, CBRE filed this suit for breach of contract

and sought injunctive relief. The trial court granted CBRE a temporary restraining

order, then held a hearing on CBRE’s request for temporary injunctive relief. The

trial court heard testimony from Hipps and from Brooke E. Armstrong, CBRE’s

President.

At the hearing, CBRE offered evidence that on December 11, 2023—Hipps’s

first day at Cushman—Hipps was already working to refer “a potential property

management opportunity in Southern California” with Dallas-based Granite

–3– Properties to Cushman’s California office. CBRE also offered evidence that Hipps

had corresponded with Greg Fuller, Granite’s President and Chief Operating Officer,

the previous week about the same opportunity, referring Fuller to Mike Mrozek,

CBRE’s “Property Management COO.” CBRE also offered evidence that Hipps

exchanged text messages with Fuller earlier on December 11, informing Fuller that

“I should have you connected with the appropriate Cushman PM person by day’s

end.”

Hipps testified, however, that Fuller had already planned to contact both

CBRE and Cushman about the opportunity, and Hipps was “merely connecting Mr.

Fuller with the right person” in Cushman to do so, as “a courtesy” based on his

“long-standing” friendship with Fuller. Fuller initiated the text message exchange

on December 9, and Hipps explained that “[t]here were no other motives in me trying

to help Mr. Fuller find the right person at a company he had already planned to reach

out to and in fact had already gotten the name for.” He also testified that his contacts

with Granite pre-dated his employment with CBRE, and that Granite “did not do

property management and leasing business” with CBRE, “[b]ecause Granite self-

manages and self-performs leasing.” Armstrong, however, testified that “CBRE has

had business relations with Granite as long as they’ve been in business,” although

she provided no more specific information.

Hipps also testified that he had “responded to clients of CBRE reaching out

to me” after the press release announcing his move to Cushman, and had spoken

–4– with “about 45 or 50 CBRE employees” during the same time period. He denied

having “affirmatively reach[ed] out to any of those individuals,” however, or doing

“anything to solicit business from any of those individuals,” and did not encourage

any employees either to leave CBRE or to join Cushman. He admitted that Cushman

offered him inducements including repayment of the $1 million Retention Incentive,

payment of his legal fees in litigation with CBRE, and payment of his salary even if

he had “to sit out” for the duration of the RCA’s one-year period. But he testified

that it is “career-changing if you are absent from this industry for a year,” and

explained that he could work at Cushman while maintaining the confidentiality of

CBRE’s information and not soliciting CBRE’s clients.

Armstrong admitted that other than Hipps’s contacts with Granite, CBRE had

no “facts to indicate” that Hipps solicited any other CBRE client or prospective

client. She also testified that when she joined CBRE in 2021, she was able to comply

with the confidentiality and non-solicitation obligations she owed to her previous

employer.

By order dated January 2, 2024 (Order), the court granted a temporary

injunction prohibiting Hipps from working at Cushman for twelve months, working

for any competitor of CBRE’s for twelve months,1 “communicating with any CBRE

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