Dial Temporary Help Service, Inc. v. Shrock

946 F. Supp. 847, 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17723, 1996 WL 585947
CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedNovember 27, 1996
DocketCivil 95-1242-FR
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 946 F. Supp. 847 (Dial Temporary Help Service, Inc. v. Shrock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dial Temporary Help Service, Inc. v. Shrock, 946 F. Supp. 847, 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17723, 1996 WL 585947 (D. Or. 1996).

Opinion

OPINION

FRYE, District Judge.

The matter before the court is the defendants’ motion for summary judgment (# 16). The defendants, Loren E. Shrock, Betty Jean Shrock, and Alpha Services, Inc., move the court for summary judgment pursuant to *850 Rule 56 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure as to all of the claims filed against them in this action.

UNDISPUTED FACTS

In 1986, Loren and Betty Jean Shrock operated a secretarial service in Wilsonville, Oregon. Peter Szambelan is the president and the sole shareholder, along with his wife, of the plaintiff, Dial Temporary Help Service, Inc. (Dial). A temporary help service places employees in the offices of its employer-customers to perform on a temporary basis various office, clerical, and industrial tasks. In May of 1987, Dial and the Shrocks entered into an oral contract whereby the Shrocks agreed to operate a temporary help service in Wilsonville, Oregon to be known as “Employers Overload.” Although Szambelan later presented two different written contracts to the Shrocks in an effort to memorialize the oral contract, the parties never executed a written contract.

On January 19, 1988, Dial registered the assumed business name, “Employers Overload of Portland.” On March 31, 1988, the Minnesota corporation, “Employers Overload Company,” terminated its operations in the State of Oregon and assigned to Peter Szam-belan all rights to the name, Employers Overload. Later in 1988, Szambelan assigned all of his rights in the name, Employers Overload, to Dial. Thereafter, Dial’s business dealings were transacted under the name, Employers Overload.

Several months after Dial and the Shrocks had entered into the oral contract in May of 1987, the Shrocks leased a larger office space in Wilsonville, Oregon and paid the costs of operating the office. Dial was not a party to the lease and did not pay any of the day-today expenses of maintaining the office. The Shrocks hired the office staff, solicited their employer-customers, and recruited temporary employees whom they placed with their employer-customers.

During the first year of the contract, the Minnesota corporation, Employers Overload Company, provided the billing, payroll and accounting services for the Shrocks’ business, Employers Overload, from its office in the State of Minnesota. When Employers Overload Company from Minnesota terminated its operations in the State of Oregon in 1988, Dial provided the billing, payroll and accounting services for the Shrocks’ business, Employers Overload. Thereafter, all of the office staff and temporary employees of the Shrocks’ business, Employers Overload, were on Dial’s payroll, and their paychecks were written on Dial’s bank account. All unemployment, workers’ compensation, and wage and hour claims were filed against Dial and not the Shrocks. Dial billed the Shrocks for 100% of the employees’ wages. The Shrocks arranged for employee health insurance directly rather than through Dial.

The employer-customers of the Shrocks paid their bills to Dial. From this revenue, the wages for the office staff and temporary employees, plus all payroll taxes, and some miscellaneous expenses such as workers’ compensation insurance were paid. The amount of money remaining in Dial’s account after the payment of wages, payroll taxes, and miscellaneous expenses was called the gross profit. The gross profit was evenly split between the Shrocks and Dial when both the temporary employee and the employer-customer was associated with the Shrocks. The Shrocks received 25% of the gross profit if either the temporary employee or the employer-customer was associated with another office of Employers Overload. From their share of the gross profit, the Shrocks paid their normal operating expenses, such as the costs for the telephone, advertising, rent, office supplies, and accounting.

Peter Szambelan provided the Shrocks with certain Employers Overload forms, job applications, and job testing materials when the Shrocks started their Employers Overload business. The Shrocks made some changes to these forms over the years. Business files and records of the temporary employees and the employer-customers of the Shrocks were created and maintained by the Shrocks in their office.

On January 26, 1995, the Shrocks notified Szambelan that they were terminating their contract with Dial and were going to stop operating their business under the name of *851 Employers Overload because they believed that Szambelan was competing with them in their territory. Shortly thereafter, the Shrocks notified their employer-customers and their temporary employees that they were no longer contractually required to operate as Employers Overload.

The Shrocks changed the name of their business to Quest Temporary Services. The Shrocks told their employer-customers and their temporary employees that each was free to do business with whomever they wished. The temporary employees of Employers Overload who stayed with the Shrocks under their new business name of Quest Temporary Services were supplied by Quest Temporary Services with applications for employment, W-4 forms, 1-9 forms, and new time cards for use the following week.

Prior to January 26, 1995, 171 temporary employees worked for the Shrocks’ business, Employers Overload, servicing 25 employer-customers. A week after the Shrocks terminated their contractual relationship with Dial, 34 temporary employees and five employer-customers remained with Dial’s business, Employers Overload of Portland. The others had signed up with Quest Temporary Services, the Shrocks’ new business.

In May of 1987, when the Shrocks began their business, Employers Overload, they continued to use the telephone number that they had obtained for their secretarial service. Because both Dial and the Shrocks had placed advertisements that listed the telephone number as the telephone number of Employers Overload, the Shrocks obtained a new and separate telephone number when they ended their relationship with Peter Szambelan and Dial and when they stopped operating as Employers Overload. The Shrocks instructed the telephone company to intercept all calls to their former telephone number and to provide the callers with a message advising them as follows: “Thank you for calling. You have reached 682-1278. We aré now Quest Temporary Services in Wilsonville, and our new number is 682-9292. For the Employer’s [sic] Overload office near Washington Square, the number is 624-8000.” Affidavit of Geoffrey Hunnicutt, p. 2.

Before the action was removed to this court from the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Washington, Judge Milnes held an evidentiary hearing prior to issuing provisional process. He made the following findings on,.March 3, 1995: (1) the Shrocks were the agents of Dial until January 26, 1995; (2) the office records are the property of Dial; and (3) the office records contain trade secrets.

CONTENTIONS OF THE PARTIES

Dial contends that the conduct of the Shrocks constituted the torts of theft of trade secrets and theft of confidential files.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
946 F. Supp. 847, 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17723, 1996 WL 585947, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dial-temporary-help-service-inc-v-shrock-ord-1996.