Filed 9/13/21 Howroyd-Wright Employment Agency v. Springboard Solutions CA4/2
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION TWO
HOWROYD-WRIGHT EMPLOYMENT AGENCY, INC., E074188 Plaintiff and Respondent, (Super.Ct.No. RIC1800076) v. OPINION SPRINGBOARD SOLUTIONS LLC,
Defendant and Appellant.
APPEAL from the Superior Court of Riverside County. Daniel A. Ottolia, Judge.
Affirmed.
Carlsbad Law Group, David P. Hall and Vanoli V. Chander for Defendant and
Appellant.
K.P. Roberts & Associates, Kenneth P. Roberts, Ryan P. Tish, and Kevin Y.
Kanooni for Plaintiff and Respondent.
1 Defendant Springboard Solutions, Inc. appeals from a grant of summary judgment
in favor of plaintiff AppleOne Employment Services,1 a temporary staffing agency, in its
suit for breach of contract. The dispute involves a placement fee provision in AppleOne’s
staffing agreement that requires Springboard to pay a set amount if it hires any of
AppleOne’s temporary employees or causes another staffing agency to hire them.
AppleOne filed this lawsuit after Springboard caused over 30 of AppleOne’s employees
to transfer to a different staffing agency and refused to pay the corresponding placement
fee of $308,626.
Both parties filed motions for summary judgment based on undisputed facts.
AppleOne argued Springboard had breached the staffing agreement by refusing to pay the
placement fee, and Springboard argued the placement fee provision is unenforceable on
two independent grounds—that it is an unlawful restraint of trade under Business and
Professions Code section 16600, as well as an unlawful penalty under Civil Code section
1671. The trial court denied Springboard’s motion and entered summary judgment in
AppleOne’s favor. On appeal, Springboard reasserts its contentions that the placement
fee provision is unenforceable. We disagree and affirm.
1 AppleOne is the dba of Howroyd-Wright Employment Agency, Inc., the named plaintiff in this lawsuit. 2 I
FACTS
A. The Staffing Agreement and Placement Fee Provision
Springboard is a company that provides debt solutions to individuals and
businesses. In 2013, it sought AppleOne’s staffing services and signed its “Conditions of
Service” (the staffing agreement). The relevant provisions of that agreement are
paragraphs 7 and 8.
Paragraph 7 provides: “[Springboard] understands that AppleOne employees are
assigned to [Springboard] to render temporary service and, absent an agreement to the
contrary, are not assigned to become employed by [Springboard]. [Springboard]
acknowledges the considerable expense incurred by AppleOne to advertise, recruit,
evaluate, train and quality control its employees. [Springboard] will not, without prior
written authorization by AppleOne, hire an AppleOne employee, interfere with the
employment relationship between AppleOne and its employee, or directly or indirectly
cause an AppleOne employee to transfer to another temporary help service.” (Italics
added.) Under paragraph 8, Springboard agreed that if it did cause an AppleOne
employee to transfer to another staffing agency, it would “pay AppleOne a fee in
accordance with AppleOne’s direct hire placement standard fee schedule, stipulated at
1% per $1,000 of such person’s annualized wage or salary, up to a maximum fee of 30%
of such person’s annualized wage or salary. (By way of example, for a $21,000 annual
salary, the fee would be computed as follows: 1% x 21 (the # of 1,000s in $21,000) x
3 $21,000 = $4,410 fee.) [SPRINGBOARD] AGREES THAT IT FULLY
UNDERSTANDS THIS FEE CALCULATION AND, IF UNSURE, [SPRINGBOARD]
WILL ASK APPLEONE’S REPRESENTATIVE TO EXPLAIN IT.”
After Springboard signed the staffing agreement, AppleOne sent it a letter setting
out its service fees for temporary employees and the direct-hire fee (in the event
AppleOne wanted to employ a temporary employee on a permanent basis). The letter
explained there was no direct-hire fee for temporary employees who had completed 520
hours of service at Springboard. At no point in their staffing relationship did Springboard
ask for lower service rates or ask to renegotiate the terms of the staffing agreement.
On August 16, 2017, Springboard’s senior vice president sent AppleOne an email
entitled, “Notification of Conversions,” to inform AppleOne that Springboard had signed
a staffing agreement with another employment agency and that “[m]eetings will be held
with [AppleOne’s temporary employees] advising them they will be converted to [the]
new agency or hired directly.” The email contained a list of the AppleOne temporary
employees who would be transferred to the new staffing agency and identified which of
those employees had reached the 520-hour mark. It was clear from the email that the vice
president had misunderstood the 520-hour promotion and mistakenly believed employees
who had reached the 520-hour mark could be transferred to another staffing agency at no
cost.
AppleOne responded the following day and informed Springboard of its three
options under the staffing agreement. Springboard could (1) hire the temporary
4 employees directly and pay the corresponding direct-hire fee for those who had not
reached the 520-hour mark; (2) release the employees from their assignment (in which
case they would return to AppleOne and be placed with other clients); or (3) transfer the
employees to another staffing agency and pay the corresponding placement fee, as set out
in paragraph 8 of the staffing agreement. Springboard’s vice president replied the next
day saying she understood that the 520-hour promotion was limited to direct hire and did
not include transfer.
The following month, 33 of AppleOne’s temporary employees transferred to a
staffing agency called G&M Hire Enterprises, LLC (@Work) and continued to work for
Springboard on a temporary basis, under a contract with that agency. Springboard did not
end up hiring any of these 33 employees on a permanent basis.
After the transfers, AppleOne informed Springboard that it owed $308,626 in
placement fees for the 33 employees. It reached this number using the formula set out in
paragraph 8 of the staffing agreement. For each employee, it multiplied their salary by the
number of $1,000 in the salary and multiplied that product by .01 (1%).
B. AppleOne’s Lawsuit and Summary Judgment
When Springboard refused to pay the placement fee, AppleOne filed this lawsuit
seeking $308,626 in damages for Springboard’s breach of paragraphs 7 and 8 of the
staffing agreement. As noted, both parties filed motions for summary judgment.
AppleOne argued the undisputed evidence satisfied the elements for breach of contract. It
submitted the staffing agreement, rates and fees letter, correspondence between the
5 parties about the transfers, and documentation of the 33 employees’ salaries. It also
submitted deposition testimony from Springboard’s vice president in which she admitted
Springboard understood the placement fee formula in paragraph 8.
In its motion, Springboard argued AppleOne could not prove a breach of contract
claim because the placement fee provision was unenforceable. First, it argued the
placement fee provisions was a restraint of trade and therefore void under Business and
Professions Code section 16600 (section 16600). Citing Edwards v. Arthur Andersen LLP
(2008) 44 Cal.4th 937 (Edwards), Springboard argued that California employs a zero-
tolerance approach to contractual agreements that restrain lawful trade, and the staffing
agreement does so by “restrict[ing] an [AppleOne] employee’s ability to work for another
competitor.” Second, Springboard asserted the placement fee provision was an unlawful
penalty (or unreasonable liquidated damages clause) under Civil Code section 1671. To
support this argument, Springboard submitted the declaration of Paul Zimmerman, a
CPA, who opined that the provision was a penalty because it imposed a fee well beyond
what AppleOne’s actual damages would be were Springboard to directly hire the 33
employees. Specifically, Zimmerman concluded that AppleOne’s actual damages were
$0 because all of the employees who transferred to @Work had reached the 520-hour
mark.
After a hearing, the trial court denied Springboard’s motion and granted
AppleOne’s. On October 16, 2019, the trial court entered judgment in the amount of
$308,626 in favor of AppleOne. Springboard timely appealed.
6 II
ANALYSIS
Springboard argues the trial court erred by rejecting its arguments that the
placement fee provision is unenforceable as a matter of law, and as a result, it is entitled
to summary judgment in its favor. We disagree.
A. General Principles and Standard of Review
A trial court properly grants summary judgment when there are no triable issues of
material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. (Code Civ.
Proc., § 437c, subd. (c).) “The purpose of the law of summary judgment is to provide
courts with a mechanism to cut through the parties’ pleadings in order to determine
whether, despite their allegations, trial is in fact necessary to resolve their dispute.”
(Aguilar v. Atlantic Richfield Co. (2001) 25 Cal.4th 826, 843 (Aguilar).)
The standard of review for summary judgment is well established. A moving
defendant bears the initial burden to show a cause of action has no merit by establishing
that one or more elements of a cause of action cannot be established or that there is a
complete defense. (Code Civ. Proc., § 437c, subds. (a), (p)(2).) Once the defendant clears
this hurdle, the burden shifts to the plaintiff to demonstrate a triable issue of material fact.
(Aguilar, supra, 25 Cal.4th at pp. 850-851.) We independently review an order granting
summary judgment, and if the issue involves a question of fact, we view the evidence in
the light most favorable to the nonmoving party. (Miller v. Department of Corrections
(2005) 36 Cal.4th 446, 460.)
7 B. Restraint of Trade
Springboard argues the trial court erred by failing to follow Edwards and instead
applying a reasonableness test to determine whether the placement fee provision is a void
restraint of trade under section 16600. According to Springboard, the California Supreme
Court abolished the reasonableness test in Edwards, in favor of a zero-tolerance approach
to provisions like the one at issue here. Springboard is incorrect. As we’ll explain,
whether a provision restricting trade is invalid per se or subject to a reasonableness test
depends on the type of restraint at issue.
With certain exceptions not relevant here, section 16600 provides that “every
contract by which anyone is restrained from engaging in a lawful profession, trade, or
business of any kind is to that extent void.”2 In Ixchel Pharma, LLC v. Biogen, Inc.
(2020) 9 Cal.5th 1130 (Ixchel), a recent case from our Supreme Court regarding “the
proper standard governing alleged restraints of trade under section 16600,” the court
explained that although the language of section 16600 is broad and seemingly absolute,
our courts have never treated it as such. (Ixchel, at p. 1149.) Instead, we take a dual
approach, depending on whether the restraint of trade is (i) an agreement between an
employer and an employee not to compete upon the termination of employment or upon
the sale of interest in a business (a noncompete agreement) or (ii) an agreement between
2 Section 16600 makes exceptions for certain noncompetition agreements upon the sale of goodwill or of ownership interest in a business (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 16601) and upon the dissolution or dissociation from a partnership (Id., § 16602) or limited liability corporation (Id., § 16602.5). 8 businesses to restrain certain operations or commercial dealings (a business restraint).
The former are invalid per se whereas the latter are subject to a reasonableness test.
“Over time, our case law has generally invalidated agreements not to compete
upon the termination of employment or upon the sale of interest in a business without
inquiring into their reasonableness, while invalidating other contractual restraints on
businesses operations and commercial dealings only if such restraints were
unreasonable.” (Ixchel, supra, 9 Cal.5th at p. 1151.) The rationale for this dual approach
is to promote “‘open competition and employee mobility.’” (Id. at p. 1158.) Taking a
zero-tolerance approach to agreements retraining an individual’s right to choose where
they work and who they work for “ensures that every citizen shall retain the right to
pursue any lawful employment and enterprise of their choice.” (Ibid. [cleaned up].) “It
protects the important legal right of persons to engage in businesses and occupations of
their choosing.” (Ibid. [cleaned up].)
But a zero-tolerance approach to “all contracts that limit the freedom to engage in
commercial dealing” would not necessarily safeguard competition. “In certain
circumstances, contractual limitations on the freedom to engage in commercial dealings
can promote competition. Businesses engaged in commerce routinely employ legitimate
partnership and exclusive dealing arrangements, which limit the parties’ freedom to
engage in commerce with third parties. Such arrangements can help businesses leverage
complementary capabilities, ensure stability in supply or demand, and protect their
research, development, and marketing efforts from being exploited by contractual
9 partners.” (Ixchel, supra, 9 Cal.5th at pp. 1160-1161.) As Ixchel explains, our courts have
“decline[d] to construe section 16600 to call such arrangements into question simply
because they restrain trade in some way.” (Id. at p. 1161.) Instead, “we have long applied
a reasonableness standard to contractual restraints on business operations and commercial
dealings,” which “asks whether an agreement promotes or suppresses competition by
considering the circumstances, details, and logic of [the] restraint.” (Id. at p. 1159
[cleaned up].) “The reasonableness of contracts which tend to restrain trade is measured
by a number of factors, including the appropriateness of the restraint to advancing the
interests to be protected; the availability of less harmful alternatives; the nature of the
interest interfered with; the intent of the parties or the tendency of the restraint to create a
monopoly; and the social or economic justification for any monopoly, if it does result.”
(Webb v. West Side District Hospital (1983) 144 Cal.App.3d 946, 953 (Webb).)
In fact, Ixchel expressly rejected the argument Springboard makes here, that
Edwards abolished the reasonableness standard. Edwards involved a standard employee
noncompete agreement. (Edwards, supra, 44 Cal.4th at p. 941.) Thus, by concluding the
agreement was invalid per se, “Edwards simply confirmed our long line of decisions
interpreting section 16600 strictly in the context of noncompetition agreements following
the termination of employment or the sale of interest in a business.” (Ixchel, supra, 9
Cal.5th at p. 1159.) “Nothing about Edwards indicates a departure from that precedent to
also invalidate reasonable contractual limitations on business operations and commercial
dealings.” (Ibid.)
10 Applying these principles to the case before us, we conclude the trial court was
correct to apply a reasonableness test, as it cannot seriously be disputed that the
placement fee provision is a contractual restraint on business operations and not a
noncompete agreement restricting the right of AppleOne employees to engage in
occupations of their choosing. Springboard attempts to avoid this conclusion by casting
the provision as a “no-hire” clause, where one company prohibits another from hiring its
employees. It argues such clauses restrict employee mobility and freedom-of-choice in a
similar manner as employer-employee noncompetition agreements and as a result should
be per se invalid. But no-hire clauses are not per se invalid, they are subject to a
reasonableness test. (E.g., VL Systems, Inc. v. Unisen, Inc. (2007) 152 Cal.App.4th 708,
713-715 [concluding no-hire provision in a short-term computer consulting contract was
unreasonably broad and therefore unenforceable because it applied even to employees the
plaintiff had not provided to work for the defendant under the contract].) And in cases
like this, where the company imposing the restraint is a staffing agency whose entire
business is supplying labor to clients, placement fees protect the company “against the
unfair exploitation of [its] [training and recruitment] services.” (See Webb, supra, 144
Cal.App.3d at pp. 948, 953 [placement fee was reasonable because it protected the
plaintiff, who operated much like a staffing agency, from exploitation and was limited to
employees the plaintiff had provided to the defendant].) We therefore reject plaintiff’s
claim that the court erred by failing to apply an invalid-per-se rule to the placement fee
provision.
11 C. Penalty
Springboard argues the placement fee provision is an unenforceable penalty
because the amount due in this case, $308,626, bears no reasonable relationship to
AppleOne’s actual damages. Again, we disagree.
Under Civil Code section 1671, “a provision in a contract liquidating the damages
for the breach of the contract is valid unless the party seeking to invalidate the provision
establishes that the provision was unreasonable under the circumstances existing at the
time the contract was made.” “A liquidated damages clause will generally be considered
unreasonable,” and thus an unenforceable penalty under Civil Code section 1671, if it
“bears no reasonable relationship to the range of actual damages that the parties could
have anticipated would flow from a breach.” (Ridgley v. Topa Thrift & Loan Assn. (1998)
17 Cal.4th 970, 977.) “The amount set as liquidated damages ‘must represent the result of
a reasonable endeavor by the parties to estimate a fair average compensation for any loss
that may be sustained.’” (Ibid.)
We do not reach the second issue—whether the placement fee formula in
paragraph 8 is reasonable—because we conclude the fee is not a liquidated damage
covered by Civil Code section 1671. “To constitute a liquidated damage clause the
conduct triggering the payment must in some manner breach the contract.” (Morris v.
Redwood Empire Bancorp (2005) 128 Cal.App.4th 1305, 1315; see also McGuire v.
More-Gas Investments, LLC (2013) 220 Cal.App.4th 512, 521 [“The term ‘liquidated
damages’ is used to indicate an amount of compensation to be paid in the event of a
12 breach of contract”], italics added.) “A contractual provision that merely provides an
option of alternative performance of an obligation does not impose damages and is not
subject to [Civil Code] section 1671 limitations.” (McGuire, at p. 522.) The inquiry does
not end there, however, because sometimes the option of alternative performance “is used
to mask what is in reality a penalty.” (Id. at p. 523.)
To determine whether a clause provides for alternative performance or imposes a
penalty “we look to substance rather than form.” (Blank v. Borden (1974) 11 Cal.3d 963,
970 (Blank).) If the contract gives the party “the power to make a realistic and rational
choice in the future with respect to the subject matter of the contract,” then the clause
contains a valid “alternative performance.” (Id. at p. 971.) If, however, the purported
alternative “‘is in fact . . . a single, definite performance with an additional charge
contingent on the breach of that performance,’” the provision is a penalty. (Id. at p. 970.)
In other words, a contract imposes a penalty if it “realistically contemplates no element of
free rational choice on the part of the obligor insofar as his performance is concerned.”
(Id. at p. 971, italics added.)
Blank is instructive. There, a withdrawal provision in an exclusive-right-to-sell
agreement allowed the property owner to terminate their listing agreement with the
broker before its expiration so long as they paid a specified fee (6 percent of the selling
price). (Blank, supra, 11 Cal.3d at pp. 966-967.) The court concluded the withdrawal
provision was not a penalty or unreasonable liquidated damages clause because the 6
percent fee was not triggered by a breach of the agreement and the contract gave the
13 owner a choice between two true alternatives. “[I]f, during the term of an exclusive-right-
to-sell contract, the owner changes his mind and decides that he does not wish to sell the
subject property after all, he retains the power to terminate the agent’s otherwise
exclusive right through the payment of a sum certain set forth in the contract.” (Id. at
p. 970.)
The same is true in this case. The conduct that triggers payment of AppleOne’s
placement fee (here, Springboard’s causing 33 AppleOne employees to switch to a
different staffing agency) is not a breach of the staffing agreement. Under its plain terms,
AppleOne agreed to allow Springboard to engage in such conduct and Springboard
agreed to pay a fee determined by an agreed-upon formula if it chose to do so. In other
words, there is no breach that triggers the placement fee. It is for this reason that the
breach AppleOne alleges in its complaint is Springboard’s failure to pay the agreed-upon
placement fee, not its conduct in causing 33 of its employees to switch to a different
staffing agency.
The cases Springboard relies on—Greentree Financial Group, Inc. v. Execute
Sports, Inc. (2008) 163 Cal.App.4th 495, Purcell v. Schweitzer (2014) 224 Cal.App.4th
969, and Vitatech International v. Sporn (2017) 16 Cal.App.5th 796—are distinguishable
because they involve true damage provisions triggered by a breach of contract, not
options for alternate performance. All three cases involved settlement agreements
containing a provision requiring the settling defendants to pay more than the settlement
amount in the event they failed to make timely installment payments on the settlement. In
14 each case, the court deemed the provisions unlawful penalties because the damages due
were significantly more than the total amount the defendants had agreed to pay in
settlement. Perhaps if AppleOne’s staffing agreement contained a clause setting out the
damages for failing to pay a placement fee and those damages were more than the
placement fee itself, then such a clause might constitute a penalty. But that was not the
case.
Additionally, as in Blank, Springboard had a true choice in the matter. It could
have continued to use AppleOne for its temporary staffing needs or it could have
terminated the staffing agreement and hired a different staffing agency. In both of these
scenarios Springboard would have incurred no placement fees. Instead, Springboard
chose to work with a different staffing agency (perhaps their rates were lower) and bring
more than 30 of AppleOne’s temporary employees over to that agency. We agree with
the Blank court when it concluded, “[w]e do not see in this arrangement the invidious
qualities characteristic of a penalty or forfeiture. . . . [W]hat distinguishes th[is] case from
other situations in which a form of alternative performance is used to mask what is in
reality a penalty or forfeiture is the element of rational choice.” (Blank, supra, 11 Cal.3d
at p. 970.) Having made its choice, Springboard cannot avoid the contractual
consequences of its decision by claiming the fee it agreed to is actually a penalty.3
3 Because we conclude the placement fee is not a penalty, we need not address Springboard’s contention that the trial court erred by excluding on relevance and competence grounds Mr. Zimmerman’s declaration opining the fee is a penalty. 15 III
DISPOSITION
We affirm. Springboard shall bear costs on appeal.
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
SLOUGH J.
We concur:
MILLER Acting P. J.
FIELDS J.