Heartwood Home v. Huber

2020 UT App 13, 459 P.3d 1060
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedJanuary 24, 2020
Docket20170221-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 2020 UT App 13 (Heartwood Home v. Huber) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heartwood Home v. Huber, 2020 UT App 13, 459 P.3d 1060 (Utah Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

2020 UT App 13

THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS

HEARTWOOD HOME HEALTH & HOSPICE LLC, Appellant, v. RITA HUBER AND GLENNA MOLYNEUX, Appellees.

Opinion No. 20170221-CA Filed January 24, 2020

Third District Court, Salt Lake Department The Honorable John Paul Kennedy No. 120907379

Gary R. Guelker and Janet I. Jenson, Attorneys for Appellant Robert H. Wilde and Michael S. Wilde, Attorneys for Appellees

JUDGE GREGORY K. ORME authored this Opinion, in which JUDGES DAVID N. MORTENSEN and DIANA HAGEN concurred.

ORME, Judge:

¶1 Heartwood Home Health & Hospice LLC (Heartwood) appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Rita Huber and Glenna Molyneux (collectively, Defendants), and the court’s imposition of sanctions against it pursuant to rule 11 of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure. We affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment but reverse its imposition of sanctions. Heartwood Home v. Huber

BACKGROUND 1

¶2 Heartwood “is a licensed home health care agency and hospice that offers care to elderly and homebound patients.” Defendants are Heartwood’s former employees. Huber held the position of nurse care manager and “was responsible for coordinating her patients’ care with Heartwood’s physicians, social workers and home health aides.” Molyneux was employed as a home health aide at Heartwood. She provided personal, at­home care to patients, which included bathing, meal preparation, and minor housekeeping.

¶3 As a condition of their employment by Heartwood, Defendants signed a “Confidentiality/Non­Disclosure Agreement” (the Confidentiality Agreement), which included this provision:

Knowledge of employees and patients is specifically the privilege of your employment here. If your employment should end with [Heartwood], you are prohibited to contact any employee, patient, or other professional relationship that you have that was a result of being an employee of [Heartwood].[2]

1. “In reviewing a district court’s grant of summary judgment, we view the facts and all reasonable inferences drawn therefrom in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party and recite the facts accordingly.” Ockey v. Club Jam, 2014 UT App 126, ¶ 2 n.2, 328 P.3d 880 (quotation simplified).

2. Heartwood has not directed us to, nor have we succeeded in locating, the Confidentiality Agreement in the record. The only portion of the agreement that we have the benefit of examining is that which we have quoted above.

20170221-CA 2 2020 UT App 13 Heartwood Home v. Huber

¶4 In August 2012, Huber left Heartwood for a position with one of its competitors, Good Shepherd Home Care & Hospice, Inc. (Good Shepherd). In the weeks following her departure, Huber met with Molyneux and Heartwood’s director of nursing (Director) for lunch. In October 2012, Director accepted a position at Good Shepherd, and Molyneux followed suit approximately one week later.

¶5 In the four days following Molyneux’s departure, four of her Heartwood patients transferred to Good Shepherd. Believing that Good Shepherd was poaching its patients, 3 Heartwood sent

3. In its opening brief, Heartwood describes three instances that led it to believe that Director and Molyneux were soliciting its patients on Good Shepherd’s behalf. These instances occurred either in the week between Director’s and Molyneux’s resignations or just after Molyneux resigned. First, one of Heartwood’s nursing aides reported encountering Director and Molyneux at a patient’s home wearing Good Shepherd uniforms. Allegedly, the two quickly departed, but left a Good Shepherd business card and refrigerator magnet behind with the patient. Second, Heartwood’s chaplain reported that a patient had informed him that Director and Molyneux had attempted to persuade her to transfer to Good Shepherd. Third, the chaplain claimed to have witnessed a Good Shepherd van leaving the home of another Heartwood patient. All three of these patients who were allegedly solicited by Director and Molyneux remained with Heartwood. Heartwood presented this information to the district court for the first time in its attorney’s affidavit attached to its opposition to Defendants’ motion for sanctions, which Heartwood filed one week after the court granted summary judgment to Defendants. The information was not before the court for consideration on Defendants’ motion for summary judgment. Furthermore, record “evidence” of these instances is limited to the attorney’s affidavit, which constitutes inadmissible hearsay. See Utah R. Civ. P. 56(c)(4) (“An affidavit or declaration used to support or (continued…)

20170221-CA 3 2020 UT App 13 Heartwood Home v. Huber

a cease and desist letter to Good Shepherd, requesting that it advise Defendants and Director to stop contacting Heartwood’s patients and staff. The following day, another of Molyneux’s former patients transferred to Good Shepherd. On the heels of that fifth transfer, Heartwood initiated suit against Defendants, Director, and Good Shepherd. 4 After Heartwood filed its complaint, the flow—or perhaps trickle—of patients from Heartwood to Good Shepherd ceased, with the exception of one other patient of Molyneux’s who transferred to Good Shepherd approximately one week later.

¶6 In relevant part, 5 Heartwood’s complaint alleged that Huber convinced Director and Molyneux to leave Heartwood’s

(…continued) oppose a motion [for summary judgment] must be made on personal knowledge, must set out facts that would be admissible in evidence, and must show that the affiant or declarant is competent to testify on the matters stated.”). Heartwood had not submitted affidavits from the nursing aide or chaplain, and the record shows that Heartwood made the conscious decision not to depose or seek affidavits from any of the patients that either transferred to Good Shepherd or chose to remain with Heartwood.

4. Director and Good Shepherd are not parties to this appeal. Neither joined Defendants’ motion for summary judgment or motion for sanctions, which are the subjects of this appeal. Additionally, Director has since passed away, and the district court entered default judgment against Good Shepherd in the amount of $130,000 following its failure to appear. Accordingly, except where necessary to better understand Heartwood’s claims against Defendants, we have omitted discussion of Heartwood’s claims and allegations against Director and Good Shepherd.

5. Heartwood narrowed its allegations against Defendants at the summary judgment stage of the proceedings.

20170221-CA 4 2020 UT App 13 Heartwood Home v. Huber

employ in favor of Good Shepherd and that Molyneux in turn solicited Heartwood’s patients on Good Shepherd’s behalf. Based on these assertions, Heartwood sued Defendants for (1) breach of the Confidentiality Agreement, (2) breach of the duty of loyalty, (3) breach of the duty of confidentiality, and (4) intentional interference with contractual relations.

¶7 Near the end of discovery, Defendants sought to depose Heartwood’s corporate representative pursuant to rule 30(b)(6) of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure. 6 Heartwood designated its owner, Lee Vasic, to testify on its behalf. At the 30(b)(6) deposition, when asked how he had prepared, Vasic replied that he re-read the complaint and generally discussed what a deposition was with Heartwood’s attorney. Although he acknowledged receiving the list of topics Defendants intended to discuss during the deposition, he did not review Defendants’ depositions nor did he discuss the deposition topics with any current or former Heartwood employee in preparation for the deposition.

¶8 In view of Vasic’s deposition testimony, Defendants served Heartwood with a motion for sanctions pursuant to rule 11 of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure, contending that Heartwood’s complaint lacked factual support.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2020 UT App 13, 459 P.3d 1060, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heartwood-home-v-huber-utahctapp-2020.