Dominion Enterprises, F/K/A Trader Publishing Company v. Dataium, LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 27, 2013
DocketM2012-02385-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Dominion Enterprises, F/K/A Trader Publishing Company v. Dataium, LLC (Dominion Enterprises, F/K/A Trader Publishing Company v. Dataium, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dominion Enterprises, F/K/A Trader Publishing Company v. Dataium, LLC, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE September 12, 2013 Session

DOMINION ENTERPRISES, F/K/A TRADER PUBLISHING COMPANY v. DATAIUM, LLC, ET AL.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Davidson County No. 10-311-IV Russell T. Perkins, Chancellor

No. M2012-02385-COA-R3-CV - Filed December 27, 2013

This case involves litigation between two business entities: Dominion Enterprises, f/k/a Trader Publishing Company (“Dominion”), the former employer of six of the seven individual defendants, and Dataium, LLC (“Dataium”), a company subsequently formed by those defendants. Dominion filed a complaint against the defendants, alleging numerous causes of action, including breach of covenants not to compete, breach of fiduciary duty, breach of the duty of loyalty, breach of a non-solicitation agreement, and civil conspiracy. The trial court found that Dataium and two of the individual defendants were liable for breach of contract but dismissed Dominion’s other claims. Dominion appeals. We affirm.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed; Case Remanded

T HOMAS R. F RIERSON, II, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which D. M ICHAEL S WINEY and J OHN W. M CC LARTY, JJ., joined.

Teresa Bult and Katherine Summers Scarbrough, Nashville, Tennessee, and David Phippen, Fairfax, Virginia, for the appellant, Dominion Enterprises, f/k/a Trader Publishing Company.

Mark A. Baugh, Nancy A. Vincent, and Ben H. Bodzy, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellees, Dataium, LLC; Eric Brown; D. Jason Ezell; Mark E. Krabacher; Jeffrey R. Dopp; Aaron West; Michael B. Ghaffari; and John Gerber.

OPINION

I. Factual and Procedural Background

Dominion, a partnership with headquarters in Virginia, provides marketing services to a number of industries. Dealerskins, a subsidiary of Dominion, creates and maintains websites and website solutions for automotive dealers and manufacturers. Dataium is a limited liability company that collects, aggregates, and analyzes data from websites. Defendants Eric Brown, D. Jason Ezell, Mark E. Krabacher, Jeffrey R. Dopp, Aaron West, and Michael B. Ghaffari are employees of Dataium who previously worked for Dealerskins. Defendant John Gerber currently owns an interest in Dataium and was a former investor in Dealerskins.

In 1999, Mr. Ezell co-founded Dealerskins, while Mr. Gerber was involved in its formation, owning an interest therein through a company called Radnor Point. Dealerskins was later sold to Trader Publishing Company (“Trader”), predecessor to Dominion, in April 2005. As part of the sale, Mr. Ezell and Mr. Gerber1 executed non-compete agreements valid until April 2010. Mr. Ezell remained employed with Trader following the acquisition. Two employees of Dealerskins, Defendants West and Dopp, transitioned to Trader with the sale. They signed agreements with Trader containing certain provisions, including that: 1) they would not compete with Trader, 2) they would not solicit employees from Trader, and 3) they would act with loyalty and in good faith. By such agreements they also assigned all inventions or innovations developed in the course of their employment to Trader. Defendant Krabacher, who became an employee of Dealerskins in 2007, signed a similar agreement.

In early 2008, Dealerskins developed a product called “Psychic Sales.” By design, the product could generate sales leads for car dealers by collecting website users’ information and emailing same to the dealer, along with information regarding the types of cars viewed by each user. Defendant Brown accepted the position of general manager of Dealerskins in January 2008, shortly after Psychic Sales was developed. Mr. Brown signed an employment agreement similar to those signed by Defendants West, Dopp, and Krabacher. Mr. Brown’s work included further developing the Psychic Sales product and creating increased demand. Mr. Ghaffari was hired by Dealerskins in May 2008. He apparently never signed an employment agreement.

In March 2008, Mr. Brown and others on the management team at Dealerskins conceptualized a hypothetical “nightmare competitor” that would be able to aggregate, analyze, and report user behavioral data from multiple networked auto dealer websites. Dealerskins then began to explore development of a product that would allow such aggregated data collection and reporting from networked Dealerskins’ websites in order to create additional revenue for Dealerskins.

In March 2009, unknown to higher management of Dealerskins, Mr. Brown and Mr.

1 Mr. Gerber executed the agreement on behalf of Radnor Point.

-2- Ezell began working to develop their own business intended to aggregate and report data from a broad network of websites and online sources. In furtherance of the undertaking, Mr. Ezell introduced Mr. Brown to Mr. Gerber for the purpose of securing financial backing. These steps in the formation of Dataium were not reported to Dealerskins. Mr. Ezell later solicited key employees of Dealerskins, both for employment by Dataium and to develop Dataium’s product. He first approached Mr. West, Dealerskins’ development manager, in May or June 2009. Mr. Ezell later contacted Mr. Dopp, Mr. Ghaffari, and Mr. Krabacher, who were considered some of Dealerskins’ most talented technology employees.

On July 13, 2009, Mr. Brown’s employment was terminated by Dealerskins due to declining performance concerns. Dataium was incorporated in June or July 2009. Mr. Brown and Mr. Ezell continued planning for this new “data mining” product to be offered by Dataium through the fall. A meeting was held at Mr. Brown’s home with the other individual defendants in October 2009. Numerous email messages regarding the formation of Dataium were exchanged between the individual defendants. All individual defendants except Mr. Brown and Mr. Gerber were still employed by Dealerskins as they developed a plan to stagger their resignations so as not to draw attention to their actions. When Mr. Ezell was questioned on two occasions by Dealerskins personnel about rumors that he was launching a new company, he denied the accusations.

Dealerskins became aware of the individual Defendants’ plans on December 16, 2009, when Mr. Brown inadvertently transmitted an email message regarding Dataium to a Dealerskins email account. Dealerskins immediately adopted measures safeguarding its intellectual property, which included terminating the employment of Mr. West, Mr. Ghaffari, and Mr. Krabacher. Consequently, Dealerskins was forced to recruit new employees to replace those who had exited. The company also strove to continue development of planned new products, but development was hampered by the loss of the key employees. On February 25, 2010, Dominion filed suit against Dataium and the individual defendants, alleging numerous causes of action, including breach of covenants not to compete, breach of fiduciary duty, breach of the duty of loyalty, breach of a non-solicitation agreement, and civil conspiracy. Dominion sought compensatory damages in excess of seven million dollars, as well as punitive damages and injunctive relief.

The case was tried from March 28, 2011, to April 5, 2011. The trial court dismissed all claims against Mr. Dopp, Mr. West, Mr. Krabacher, Mr. Ghaffari, and Mr. Gerber. The court assessed compensatory damages of $50,000.00 against Mr. Brown and Dataium for violation of the non-solicitation agreement and $100,000.00 against Mr. Ezell and Dataium for violation of the covenant not to compete. The court dismissed all other claims. The court found, inter alia, that although Dataium’s product was somewhat similar to Dealerskins’ product, the companies were not in direct competition and Dataium had not solicited

-3- Dealerskins’ customers. The court also ordered that Dataium, Mr. Brown, and Mr.

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