Ed Hamilton, Inc. v. Rubsamen

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 8, 2021
DocketCUMcv-21-141
StatusUnpublished

This text of Ed Hamilton, Inc. v. Rubsamen (Ed Hamilton, Inc. v. Rubsamen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ed Hamilton, Inc. v. Rubsamen, (Me. Super. Ct. 2021).

Opinion

ST ATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT CUMBERLAND, ss CIVIL ACTION DOCKET NO. CV-21-141

ED HAMILTON INC.,

Plaintiff v. ORDER

SUSANNE RUBSAMEN,

Defendant

Before the court is a motion for a temporary restraining order and a preliminary injunction

filed by plaintiff Ed Hamilton Inc. (EH!) seeking an order directing defendant Susanne Rubsamen

to immediately cease working for Charter Experts LLC d/b/a Virgin Island Sailing (VI Sailing)

because, EHI alleges, Rubsamen's employment with VI Sailing violates the terms of a non­

competition agreement with EHi.

Legal Standard

In ruling on a motion for a preliminary injunction, the court must consider four factors: (!)

whether the plaintiff will suffer in-eparable injury in the absence of a preliminary injunction; (2)

whether that injury outweighs any haim which granting injunctive relief would inflict on the

defendant, (3) whether plaintiffs have demonstrated a likelihood of success on the merits ( at most,

a probability; at least, a substantial possibility); and (4) whether the public interest would be

adversely affected by granting the injunction. Bangor Historic Track Inc. v. Department of Agriculture, 2003 ME 140 ~ 9, 837 A.2d 129; Ingraham v. University of Maine, 441 A.2d 691,

693 (Me. 1982).

With respect to the enforcement of non-solicitation, confidentiality, and noncompetition

agreements, employers are entitled to protect the good will that exists by virtue of their ongoing

relationship with customers and are entitled to protect business information that is confidential and

that is not publicly available. However, the reasonableness of such restrictive covenants is a

question of law. "Proper restrictive covenants cannot preclude [a former employee] from following

any trade or calling for which he is fitted and from which he may earn his livelihood or from

exercising the skill and general knowledge he has acquired or increased through experience or

even instructions while in employment." Bernier v. Merrill Air Engineers, 2001 ME 17 ~ 17, 770

A.2d 97, quoting Roy v. Bolduc, 140 Me. 103, 107, 34 A.2d 479, 481. "To be enforceable, the

agreement must impose no undue hardship upon the employee and be no wider in its scope than is

reasonably necessary for the protection of the business of the employer." Id. Accord, Sisters of

Charity Health System Inc. v. Farrago, 2011 ME 62 ~ 10, 21 A.3d 110.

For purposes of the pending motion the relevant facts derived from the submissions of the

parties are the following:

Rubsamen 1 accepted a job with EHi, a booking agency for yacht charters, on March 5,

2018 as a yacht charter agent/broker. She had previous experience in the yacht charter business.

On the date she was hired Rubsamen signed a non-competition, non-solicitation, and non­

1The supplemental McCrea affidavit attaches emails and employment records relating to "Susan Jervis." From the context, and in the absence of any contradiction from defendant, the cou11 assumes that Susan Jervis and Susanne Rubsamen are the same person

2 disclosure agreement that is annexed as Exhibit 1 to the April 13, 2021 affidavit of Stephen

McCrea, president of EHL

That agreement provides, inter alia, that during Rubsamen's employment and for a period

of 12 months following her separation from employment, she shall not engage in any employment

in any business in which EHi is engaged and which is competitive with EHL It provides that during

the 12 months following separation from employment Rubsamen shall not solicit or divert any

EHi customer with whom she had any contact within 12 months of her separation from EHI's

employ. In addition, it provides that Rubsamen shall not disclose EHi trade secrets or confidential

business information at any time following separation from employment.

The yacht charter business was significantly affected by the pandemic beginning in early

2020. In response, EHi first reduced siaff hours and pay. April 13, 2021 McCrae Affidavit ~ 19.

According to Rubsamen, she was cut from a salary of $60,000 to a salary of $35,000 plus

commissions in June 2020. There is some dispute on this issue,2 but it is evident that this change

sharply curtailed Rubsamen's income.

It is undisputed that McCrae laid Rubsamen off on August 24, 2020. In his affidavit

McCrae describes this as a temporary layoff. However, although McCrae told Rubsamen that he

would consider rehiring her once the travel industry returned to normal, McCrae made no promises

or undertakings to that effect. He also asked her to return her company laptop and telephone, which

she did. McCrae did not contact Rubsamen again after she was laid off.

2 EHi submitted a second May 27, 2021 McCrae affidavit attaching emails and asse1ting that it had always been contemplated that Rubsamen would at some point be moved from her existing salary to compensation based on salaty plus commissions. However, given that yacht chatters had fallen off during the pandemic- which would significantly reduce the potential for commission income - the result was to reduce Rubsamen's compensation, consistent with the statement in the April 13, 2021 McCrae affidavit that in response to the pandemic EHi had first reduced staff pay.

3 Rubsamen was therefore effectively terminated. At that point she was receiving only $

275 a week in unemployment compensation from the State of Florida. To make ends meet, she

and her husband incurred credit card debt and borrowed from her husband's 401 k account,

depleting retirement savings.

Rubsamen began attempting to find· new employment in the travel industry and was

unsuccessful until January 2021 when she accepted a job with VI Sailing as a charter booking

agent, a job similar to her work for EHi and similar to work she had done for other employers prior

to her job with EH!. In her affidavit she states that she took the VI Sailing job because she could

not continue to support herself on $275 a week in unemployment benefits.

Rubsamen's employment with VI Sailing is the first ground on which EHi alleges a breach

of her noncompetition agreement. EHi also alleges that at VI Sailing she solicited one of EHI's

customers based on an email from that customer that appeared in Rubsamen's EHi email account

in February 2021. Rubsamen denies solicitation of any EHi customers, stating that the customer

referred to by EHi had instead contacted her and had been a customer for whom she had booked

11 charters before she ever went to work for EHI.

EHi also contends that Rubsamen disclosed confidential EHi marketing strategy because

in January 2021, after the date when Rubsamen began employment with VI Sailing, it had received

a complaint from VI Sailing that EHI was using the term "Virgin Island Sailing" in a way that

infringed VI Sailing's trademark. EHi infers that Rubsamen had disclosed to her new employer

that EHi was using that term in its advertising. For her part, Rubsamen states that she had not

known EHi was using the term "Virgin Island Sailing" in its advertising, has not disclosed any

EHi marketing strategy to VI Sailing, and first learned about EHI used the term "Virgin island

Sailing" when she received EHI's complaint in this action.

4 Discussion

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Ingraham v. University of Maine at Orono
441 A.2d 691 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1982)
Bangor Historic Track, Inc. v. Department of Agriculture
2003 ME 140 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2003)
Bernier v. Merrill Air Engineers
2001 ME 17 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2001)
Sisters of Charity Health System, Inc. v. Farrago
2011 ME 62 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2011)
Roy v. Bolduc
34 A.2d 479 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1943)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Ed Hamilton, Inc. v. Rubsamen, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ed-hamilton-inc-v-rubsamen-mesuperct-2021.