Gray Wireline Service, Inc. v. Larry R. Cavanna, David Gray, Steve D. Gray, Kenneth M. Nester, Sr., Ismael Alvarez, Extreme Wireline Trucks & Equipment, LLC, Andrew E. Hughes, Bruce R. Barnett, and CGN Leasing, LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 12, 2011
Docket10-11-00058-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Gray Wireline Service, Inc. v. Larry R. Cavanna, David Gray, Steve D. Gray, Kenneth M. Nester, Sr., Ismael Alvarez, Extreme Wireline Trucks & Equipment, LLC, Andrew E. Hughes, Bruce R. Barnett, and CGN Leasing, LLC (Gray Wireline Service, Inc. v. Larry R. Cavanna, David Gray, Steve D. Gray, Kenneth M. Nester, Sr., Ismael Alvarez, Extreme Wireline Trucks & Equipment, LLC, Andrew E. Hughes, Bruce R. Barnett, and CGN Leasing, LLC) 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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Gray Wireline Service, Inc. v. Larry R. Cavanna, David Gray, Steve D. Gray, Kenneth M. Nester, Sr., Ismael Alvarez, Extreme Wireline Trucks & Equipment, LLC, Andrew E. Hughes, Bruce R. Barnett, and CGN Leasing, LLC, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

IN THE TENTH COURT OF APPEALS

No. 10-11-00058-CV

GRAY WIRELINE SERVICE, INC., Appellant v.

LARRY R. CAVANNA, DAVID GRAY, STEVE D. GRAY, KENNETH M. NESTER, SR., ISMAEL ALVAREZ, EXTREME WIRELINE TRUCKS & EQUIPMENT, LLC, ANDREW E. HUGHES, BRUCE R. BARNETT, AND CGN LEASING, LLC, Appellees

From the 335th District Court Burleson County, Texas Trial Court No. 26,239

OPINION

This is an interlocutory appeal from three orders that (1) reformed several

employment agreements, (2) compelled arbitration in part and denied a stay of the

balance of the litigation involving third parties during the pendency of the arbitration,

and (3) granted a temporary injunction. See TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REMEDIES CODE ANN. §

51.016 (West 2008). Gray Wireline Service, Inc. complains that the trial court erred by reforming the employment agreements rather than sending those issues to be

determined by the arbitrator in contravention of the employment agreement and by

refusing to stay the pending litigation in the trial court. GWSI further complains that

the trial court erred by granting a temporary injunction in favor of Steve Gray and CGN

Leasing. Because we find that the trial court erred by reforming the employment

agreements but should have sent that issue to arbitration, and erred by denying the

motion to stay the litigation, we reverse the judgments of the trial court and remand to

that court for further proceedings. Additionally, because we find that the temporary

injunction did not comply with the Rules of Civil Procedure, we reverse the order

granting the temporary injunction and order that it be dissolved.

Background

Steve Gray formed GWSI, a cased-hole wireline company, which operated

primarily in Texas. In 2006, the shareholders of GWSI agreed to sell a portion of their

shares to Centre Partners, Inc. and by doing so Centre Partners, Inc. gained control of

GWSI. The new owners entered into employment agreements with Larry Cavanna,

David Gray, Steve Gray, and Kenneth M. Nester, Sr.1 which each contained a non-

compete clause that terminated at various times depending on the reasons for the

individual’s departure, but was generally two years in duration. Each of the four

1 David Gray and Steve Gray are both defendants in the trial court proceedings. On appeal, the issue relating to Steve Gray and CGI Leasing, LLC involves only the temporary injunction. The other issues relating to the reformation, the arbitration, and the stay of proceedings involves David Gray but not Steve Gray. Therefore, in this opinion we will refer to Steve Gray by his full name. References to “Gray” refer to David Gray only.

Grey Wireline v. Cavanna Page 2 departed from GWSI at various times, with Nester being the last to leave, terminating

his employment on August 15, 2009.

GWSI originally filed suit in mid-October of 2009 against Larry Cavanna, David

Gray, Steve Gray, Kenneth M. Nester, Sr., Ismael Alvarez, Extreme Wireline Trucks &

Equipment, LLC, Andrew E. Hughes, Bruce R. Barnett, and CGN Leasing, LLC seeking

a temporary restraining order and asserting various causes of action based on violations

of the employment agreement, including tortious interference, breach of fiduciary duty,

breach of contract, civil conspiracy, unjust enrichment, unfair competition, violation of

Penal Code Chapter 33, conversion, and trespass against the various defendants. The

trial court issued a temporary restraining order, which was subsequently extended by

agreement of the parties so that they could conduct limited expedited discovery.

Shortly after the issuance of the temporary restraining order, Steve Gray and CGN

Leasing, LLC filed a demand for arbitration in accordance with Steve Gray’s

employment agreement, and included a cause of action for a declaratory judgment in

the arbitration demand. GWSI ultimately withdrew its request for a temporary

injunction the day before the scheduled hearing. Cavanna, David Gray, and Nester

then filed a “Motion to Reform and Alternate Motion for Determination” seeking

reformation of the non-compete clause pursuant to Section 15.51(c) of the Business and

Commerce Code or alternatively a determination that they were in full compliance with

the employment agreements. GWSI subsequently filed its own demand for arbitration

as to Steve Gray, Cavanna, David Gray, and Nester with the American Arbitration

Grey Wireline v. Cavanna Page 3 Association as well as a motion to stay the litigation pending the arbitration with the

trial court.

After a hearing on the motions, the trial court denied the motion to compel

arbitration relating to the motion to reform and by separate order granted the motion to

reform and reformed the employment agreements of Cavanna, David Gray, and Nester.

The trial court then granted the motion to compel arbitration but denied the motion to

stay the trial court’s proceedings pending the arbitration as to all of the defendants

except for Cavanna, David Gray, Nester, Steve Gray, and CGN Leasing. The trial court

did stay the pending litigation against them until the completion of the arbitration.

The Non-Compete Agreements

Each of the employment agreements contained the following language which

Cavanna, Gray, and Nester sought to modify in the motion to reform:

Geographic Limitation. The geographic limitation for the Non-Compete Obligations is any state, province (or substantially equivalent designation of a geographic area within a foreign country), or Outer Continental Shelf region (A) in which the Company provided its products, services, or activities during the twenty-four (24) months prior to the date of termination of Executive’s employment with the Company, (B) in which the Company had plans to provide or contemplated providing its products, services, or activities during the twenty-four (24) months prior to the date of termination of Executive’s employment, or (C) in which a customer or client of the Company, with whom Executive had or made contact or had access to information and/or files about during Executive’s employment with the Company or within the twelve (12) months prior to the date of termination of Executive’s employment with the Company, is located.

Acknowledgments. Executive acknowledges and agrees that:

Grey Wireline v. Cavanna Page 4 (g) the restricted period set forth is a material term of this Agreement and that the Company is entitled to Executive’s compliance with these terms during that full period. Therefore, Executive agrees that the restricted period will be tolled during any period of non-compliance by Executive. If the Company must seek injunctive relief or judicial intervention to enforce this Agreement, the restricted time period set forth herein does not commence until Executive is judged by a court of competent jurisdiction to be in full compliance with this Agreement; ….

The trial court reformed the first paragraph to include the language “as

evidenced by existing memoranda, minutes, or other correspondence (including,

without limitation, internal or external presentations)” in paragraph (B) of the

geographic restriction section. The trial court also reformed the tolling paragraph to

delete the last sentence and to add the following: “If the Company must seek injunctive

relief or judicial intervention to enforce this Agreement, the restricted time period set

forth herein does not commence until a court of competent jurisdiction deems it should

commence.”

Arbitration

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Gray Wireline Service, Inc. v. Larry R. Cavanna, David Gray, Steve D. Gray, Kenneth M. Nester, Sr., Ismael Alvarez, Extreme Wireline Trucks & Equipment, LLC, Andrew E. Hughes, Bruce R. Barnett, and CGN Leasing, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gray-wireline-service-inc-v-larry-r-cavanna-david-gray-steve-d-gray-texapp-2011.