George E. Rhymes Jr. and Rhymes Industrial Filtration & Consulting, LLC v. Filter Resources, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 14, 2016
Docket09-14-00482-CV
StatusPublished

This text of George E. Rhymes Jr. and Rhymes Industrial Filtration & Consulting, LLC v. Filter Resources, Inc. (George E. Rhymes Jr. and Rhymes Industrial Filtration & Consulting, LLC v. Filter Resources, 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.

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George E. Rhymes Jr. and Rhymes Industrial Filtration & Consulting, LLC v. Filter Resources, Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont ____________________

NO. 09-14-00482-CV ____________________

GEORGE E. RHYMES JR. AND RHYMES INDUSTRIAL FILTRATION & CONSULTING, L.L.C., Appellants

V.

FILTER RESOURCES, INC., Appellee __________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 136th District Court Jefferson County, Texas Trial Cause No. D-194,154 __________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Filter Resources, Inc. (“Filter”) sued George E. Rhymes Jr. (“Rhymes”) and

Rhymes Industrial Filtration & Consulting, L.L.C. (“Industrial”) for breach of

contract, breach of fiduciary duty, and tortious interference. A jury found in favor

of Filter. In eight appellate issues, Rhymes challenges the jury’s verdict, the

1 admission of evidence, and the injunctive relief award. 1 Filter presents two cross-

issues regarding damages and attorney’s fees. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.

Factual Background

According to the record, Rhymes first became employed with Filter in 1998.

James Metcalf Jr., Filter’s chief executive officer and president, testified that

Rhymes was a branch manager and salesman for Filter. There was testimony that

Rhymes had access to confidential information, such as products, prices, contracts,

and financial, vendor, and customer information. In 2000, Filter asked Rhymes to

sign a contract that contained the following clause:

The Employee shall not for a period of one year immediately following the termination of his employment with the Employer, either directly or indirectly:

1. Make known to any person, firm, or corporation the names and addresses of any of the customers of the Employer or any other information pertaining to them; or

2. Call on, solicit, or take away, or attempt to call on, solicit, or take away any of the customers of the Employer on whom the Employee called or with whom he became acquainted during his employment with the Employer, whether for himself or for any other person, firm, or corporation.

The contract also stated:

The Employee during the term of employment under this agreement will have access to and become familiar with various trade secrets, 1 We group Rhymes’s complaints into eight issues. 2 consisting of formulas, patterns, devises, secret inventions, processes, and compliance [sic] of information, records, and specifications, customer lists, vendor lists, marketing strategies, pricing strategies, financial information, and specifications, which are owned by the Employer and which are regularly used in the operation of the business of the Employer. The Employee shall not disclose any of the aforesaid trade secrets, directly or indirectly, nor use them in any way, either during the term of this agreement or at any time thereafter, except as required in the course of his employment. All files, records, documents, drawings, specification, [sic] equipment and similar items relating to the business of the Employer, whether prepared by the Employee or otherwise coming into his possession, shall remain the exclusive property of the Employer and shall not be removed from the premises of the Employer under any circumstances whatsoever without the prior written consent of the Employer.

Rhymes testified that he did not want to sign the contract. According to Rhymes,

his boss stated that it was just paperwork and not to worry; thus, Rhymes believed

he was not bound by the contract. Rhymes admitted knowing that he might be sued

if he competed with Filter.

Bridges testified that Rhymes told him he planned to leave Filter to go into a

different business. Rhymes’s last day of work with Filter was August 17, 2012, but

Rhymes remained on Filter’s payroll through the end of August. Bridges testified

that Rhymes’s Industrial business card listed the same cell phone number that he

used while employed with Filter. Cheryl Rhymes, Rhymes’s wife, testified that this

was Rhymes’s personal phone that he also used for business and that she paid

Rhymes’s phone bill, which Filter reimbursed. Rhymes testified that Filter paid his

3 phone bill and that he still uses the same phone number, but that he had the phone

number before his employment with Filter. Bridges admitted that Rhymes brought

the phone number and a cell phone with him when he began working for Filter. He

testified that Filter subsequently paid for Rhymes’s new cell phone and the cell

phone bill.

Metcalf testified that Rhymes also used a planner to record business

information but that Filter owned the information Rhymes recorded in the planner.

Rhymes admitted taking his planner and some business cards when he left Filter,

but he claimed to have had the planner before he went to work for Filter. Metcalf

opined that Rhymes should not have taken the planner when he left Filter because

the planner contained information that belonged to Filter.

Bridges testified that, within six weeks of leaving Filter, Rhymes was selling

to five of Filter’s customers. He and Metcalf testified that Rhymes’s customers

were all Filter customers. Cheryl testified that Industrial sells the same products as

Filter and is a competitor of Filter. She was unaware that Industrial had any

customers outside of those Rhymes served during his employment with Filter, but

she claimed that each of those customers first contacted Rhymes. Rhymes also

admitted that Industrial is in direct competition with Filter, that all of his customers

are former Filter customers, and that Industrial sells almost all the same products

4 as Filter. He further admitted to calling on, soliciting, and selling products to

Filter’s customers. Rhymes explained that he did not believe he had violated the

non-compete agreement because Filter’s customers contacted him first.

Joshua Crookshank, an area manager for Filter, testified that before Rhymes

left Filter, Rhymes took Crookshank to meet some of Filter’s customers and

Rhymes told the customers he was starting his own business. Alan Clarke testified

that he is the president of Jonell, a company that manufactures filter elements.

Rhymes told Clarke that he intended to go into the distribution business with a

concentration on the natural gas market, which Clarke believed to be different from

Filter’s business. Rhymes told Clarke that he chose a different market because he

had a non-compete agreement with Filter. At some point, Clarke became aware

that Rhymes was ordering parts from Jonell on behalf of some of Filter’s

customers. Rhymes told Clarke that he spoke with an attorney and that the non-

solicitation clause was not worth a “s---.”

Harold Doucet, Filter’s account manager, testified that Filter has a

consignment agreement with Total Refining and that he learned of Rhymes’s

attempts to circumvent that agreement. He explained that a part Filter provides to

Total, through the consignment agreement, had not been replenished by Filter but

5 had been replaced by Rhymes. He also testified that he saw Rhymes’s business

card on the desk of another one of Filter’s customers.

According to Metcalf and Bridges, after Rhymes left, Filter’s sales

decreased by over a million dollars. Doucet testified that sales declined monthly

and he could not recoup all the lost sales. Clarke testified that Filter does more

business with Jonell than Rhymes but that Jonell’s sales to Filter were “continually

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George E. Rhymes Jr. and Rhymes Industrial Filtration & Consulting, LLC v. Filter Resources, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-e-rhymes-jr-and-rhymes-industrial-filtration-consulting-llc-v-texapp-2016.