Hilb, Rogal and Hamilton Co. v. DePew

440 S.E.2d 918, 247 Va. 240, 10 Va. Law Rep. 981, 1994 Va. LEXIS 29
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedFebruary 25, 1994
DocketRecord 930493
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 440 S.E.2d 918 (Hilb, Rogal and Hamilton Co. v. DePew) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hilb, Rogal and Hamilton Co. v. DePew, 440 S.E.2d 918, 247 Va. 240, 10 Va. Law Rep. 981, 1994 Va. LEXIS 29 (Va. 1994).

Opinion

JUSTICE WHITING

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This action by an employer against its former employee raises issues of (1) the timeliness of the employer’s nonsuit of one count of its motion for judgment, and (2) the correctness of the trial court’s action in striking the employer’s evidence on the remaining counts. Since the court struck the employer’s evidence, we will “view the evidence and all reasonable inferences deducible therefrom in the light most favorable to the plaintiff.” Karim v. Grover, 235 Va. 550, 553, 369 S.E.2d 185, 186-87 (1988).

On September 7, 1990, Hilb, Rogal and Hamilton Company of Richmond (HRH), an insurance sales firm, bought the tangible and intangible assets of The James River Financial Group, Inc. (James River), an employee benefits business. HRH continued the operation of James River’s former pension division, which administered pension plan accounts. HRH, as administrator, was compensated at a rate determined by the size of the account.

James River had employed Timothy R. Rash as the “person in overall charge” of this business, Edward Franklin DePew as the head of the pension division of the business, and Edward T. Menster as a salesman in the pension division. HRH employed Rash, DePew, and Menster in the same capacities. DePew and Menster signed employment contracts, each of which contained the following pertinent provisions:

5. EMPLOYEE COVENANTS. Employee recognizes that over a period of many years the Employer (specifically including for purposes of this paragraph 5 any predecessors of Employer or entities from which it might have acquired insurance accounts) has developed, at considerable expense, relationships with, and knowledge about, customers and prospective customers which constitute a major part of the value of the Employer. During the course of his employment by Employer, Employee will have substantial contact with these customers and prospective customers. In order to protect the value of the Employer’s business, Employee covenants and agrees that, in the event of the termination of his employment,... he shall not directly or indirectly as an owner, stockholder, director, employee, partner, agent, broker, consultant or other participant, for a period of two (2) years from the date of such termination:
*243 (a) approach, contact or solicit, or continue to allow himself to be approached or contacted by, any individual or firm, which was a Customer ... (as hereinafter defined) of the Employer ... for the purpose of offering, obtaining, selling, diverting or receiving, to or from said individual or firm, services in the field of insurance or any other business engaged in by the Employer during Employee’s term of employment;
As used herein, “Customers” shall be limited to those for whom there is insurance coverage in force as of the date of termination of employment.

As the manager of HRH’s pension plan division, DePew had close and almost exclusive contact with many of its customers. The customers involved in this litigation all had contracts with HRH terminable at the will of the customers.

On one of their periodic visits to service an HRH pension plan customer, Womancare, P.C., DePew and Menster persuaded a principal of Womancare, Dr. Camilla M. Buchanan, to withdraw $20,000 of Womancare’s pension trust and invest it in International Trading Associates (ITA), a general partnership operated by them.

On March 25, 1991, DePew gave Rash the contractually required 30-day notice that he would terminate his employment in late April. Rash instructed DePew not to advise HRH’s pension plan customers of his expected termination. However, during this 30-day period, DePew told one of the customers that he was leaving HRH and also told another customer that he was establishing his own pension plan business.

DePew terminated his employment with HRH on April 24, 1991. After he left HRH, he operated his own pension trust business. 1 Within two years after DePew terminated his employment with HRH, he executed contracts to provide pension plan services to five companies that had been pension plan customers of HRH at the time DePew terminated his employment.

Menster also terminated his employment with HRH at approximately the same time as DePew. Shortly thereafter, he became an “independent contractor” for DePew. At the request of Technology *244 Associates, Inc. (TAI), one of HRH’s customers, in June 1991, Menster and DePew visited TAI in an effort “to attract their business.”

HRH filed a motion for judgment against DePew and Menster containing the following four counts: (I) breach of the employment contract; (II) conspiracy to interfere with HRH’s contractual relations with its pension plan customers; (III) intentional interference with HRH’s business relations with its pension plan customers; and (IV) breach of fiduciary duties as HRH employees. 2

Menster filed a petition in bankruptcy after HRH’s action was filed, and the action was stayed as to him. At a bench trial, after HRH presented its case-in-chief, the court sustained DePew’s motion to strike all counts but Count I.

The court then turned its attention to Count I and said:

The provisions of the contract give me some trouble.
In paragraph (a) you say that they won’t do these things and they restrict it to that which was a customer hereinafter defined. It says for obtaining, selling, diverting, receiving or from services in the field of insurance. The field of insurance is so broad that I don’t have any idea what kind of insurance you’re talking about, whether it’s automobile insurance, homeowner’s insurance, life insurance, accident insurance. In fact, I don’t even know exactly what fields of insurance the plaintiff operates in or any other business engaged in by the employer.
You say the customer and you give a definition of a customer for those for whom there is insurance coverage in force at the date of termination of employment. If you read the whole contract together, what you come up with is that he could not solicit business from a customer and that is someone who has insurance coverage in force and insurance coverage in force is not defined. I don’t know what kind of insurance coverage we’re talking about. To say that an annuity is insurance coverage on the basis that it guarantees an interest rate, seems to me to stretch the point quite a bit.

Just after the court made this statement, HRH moved to nonsuit its breach of contract claim. The court replied that it had already ruled that DePew had not violated the provisions of paragraph 5(a) of the *245 employment contract (the noncompetition clause) because “he can’t be guilty of soliciting the business from the plaintiff since there is no evidence that the ones who left fit the definition of a customer.” Therefore, it denied the motion to nonsuit that part of Count I.

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Bluebook (online)
440 S.E.2d 918, 247 Va. 240, 10 Va. Law Rep. 981, 1994 Va. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hilb-rogal-and-hamilton-co-v-depew-va-1994.