Girtman & Associates, Inc. v. Stephen St. Amour

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 27, 2007
DocketM2005-00936-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Girtman & Associates, Inc. v. Stephen St. Amour (Girtman & Associates, Inc. v. Stephen St. Amour) 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
Girtman & Associates, Inc. v. Stephen St. Amour, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE May 24, 2006 Session

GIRTMAN & ASSOCIATES, INC. v. STEPHEN ST. AMOUR, ET AL.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Davidson County No. 04-2344-III Ellen Hobbs Lyle, Chancellor

No. M2005-00936-COA-R3-CV - Filed on April 27, 2007

A commercial dealer in doors and associated hardware sued a former employee for breach of a non- compete agreement. The dealer asked the court to award it either injunctive relief or liquidated damages in the amount of $321,500. After a bench trial the trial court concluded that the non- compete agreement was unenforceable under the circumstances and dismissed the claim for liquidated damages. The court did, however, award the plaintiff nominal damages of $200 on its claim of unfair competition based on use of a proprietary form, as well as punitive damages of $3,000 on the same claim. The dealer appealed. We affirm the trial court.

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

PATRICIA J. COTTRELL, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which WILLIAM C. KOCH , JR., P.J., M.S., and FRANK G. CLEMENT , JR., J., joined.

Phillip Byron Jones, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Girtman & Associates, Inc.

Gregory L. Cashion, S. Joseph Welborn, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellees, Stephen St. Amour, and Isenhour Door Products, Inc.

OPINION

I. A COVENANT NOT TO COMPETE

Plaintiff Girtman & Associates (“Girtman”) is a family-owned vendor of doors and associated hardware for commercial construction. Its business includes a local sales division in Nashville and a national accounts division that operates all the over the country. An associated business, Girtman Total Openings (GTO), installs many of the doors that Girtman sells.

Girtman does no residential work. Its clients are primarily large institutions and businesses. In Nashville, Girtman has furnished its products to the Country Music Hall of Fame and the Schermerhorn Symphony Hall among others. Its national clients include Wal-Mart, Marriott Hotels, HCA Hospitals and Circuit City.

Defendant Stephen St. Amour is a high school graduate with two years of college but no degree. During the first seven years of his working life, he held down a variety of jobs. In 1993, he was hired by Girtman as a salesperson. He had no prior experience in the door industry at the time, and his employer had him take some general courses to familiarize him with its products and processes. He apparently performed well in the job, and in 1997 or 1998 he was promoted from salesman to manager of the company’s local sales division.

Girtman published an employee manual. All employees, including Mr. St. Amour, were required to execute its signature page. A portion of the manual relevant to one claim in this case reads, I am aware that during the course of my employment confidential information will be made available to me, i.e., product designs, marketing strategies, customer lists, pricing policies and other related information. I understand that this information is critical to the success of Girtman Group and must not be given out or used outside of Girtman Group’s premises or with non-Girtman Group employees. Upon termination of employment whether voluntary or involuntary, I hereby agree not to utilize or exploit this information with any other individual or company.

On June 1, 1998, Mr. St. Amour’s supervisors presented him with the agreement that is the primary basis of this lawsuit and asked him to sign it. The proof shows that all of Girtman’s estimators and project managers were required to sign the same basic agreement. The document, entitled “Estimator Agreement,” stipulated that Girtman would send the employee to certain specialized training courses and pay all the costs associated with such courses. But, in consideration for that opportunity,

Estimator expressly agrees that after termination of his or her employment with Nodak,1 for whatever reason, he or she will not, directly or indirectly, as an employee, officer, owner, partner or otherwise for a period of two (2) years solicit any customer to whom Girtman sold goods or services within the three (3) years preceding the date of this Agreement or any period after the date of this Agreement. After termination of Estimator’s employment, for whatever reason, Estimator will not, for a period of two (2) years alone or in association with any individual or any entity carry on, be engaged or employed by or take part in, consult or advise, or own, share in the earnings or invest in the stock, bonds or other securities of any entity in the State of Tennessee or any adjacent state which is engaged in the sale, fabrication or installation of metal doors, frames, hollow metal door products and associated

1 The Estimator Agreement recites that “Nodak” is a Tennessee limited liability company licensed as an employee leasing company, and that pursuant to an agreement between Girtman and Nodak, Mr. St. Amour was an employee leased to Girtman by Nodak.

-2- hardware or related services or any business substantially similar to or which is in competition with the business of Girtman . . . .

Paragraph 8 of the document states that if the Estimator violates the agreement and the courts decline to award Girtman specific performance “with respect to confidentiality and trade secrets and non-competition, Estimator must pay Girtman liquidated damages equal to fifty (50%) percent of the gross revenue from all transactions in breach of these provisions,” and further states “that amount is liquidated damages and not a penalty.”

After Mr. St. Amour signed the document, he attended a number of week-long courses in four different cities. Girtman paid all the expenses associated with the training, including airfare, hotels, meals, fees and dues. Completion of a series of these courses prepares the student for a professional examination that can result in certification by the Door and Hardware Institute. Such certifications are highly-valued in the industry, with some organizations making the presence of certified individuals on the staff of vendors a bidding requirement. As Matthew Harris, the general manager of Girtman & Associates and a key witness in this case testified, “the certifications lend great credibility to an individual and to an organization.” When Mr. St. Amour received certification as an Architectural Hardware Consultant in September of 2001, Girtman awarded him a $5,000 raise, effective immediately.

Mr. St. Amour’s training and skills developed to the point where he became capable of shepherding a project from start to finish, including bidding, estimating, project management and detailing. As a result of his efforts, he was elevated to the position of a vice president of Girtman & Associates in 2002. He was earning $36,000 a year at the time he signed the Estimator Agreement. By the time he was terminated from the company, his annual salary had increased to $70,000.

Although his colleagues respected his technical skills, friction apparently developed between Mr. St. Amour and the other members of Girtman’s management team. According to Mr. Harris, as Mr. St. Amour became more knowledgeable and skilled, he also became more opinionated and less capable of compromise when other members of the team did not agree with his ideas as to the best way to run the company. According to Mr. St. Amour, he was successfully operating his own division of the company, but other managers whose divisions were less successful tried to reorganize the work in a way that was counter-productive and damaging to the integrity of the company’s efforts.

The friction apparently worsened, but Mr. St. Amour testified that he was never given any kind of written reprimand or letter of discipline. On March 19, 2003, Mr.

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