Kelly Services, Inc. v. Dale De Steno

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 10, 2019
Docket18-1118
StatusUnpublished

This text of Kelly Services, Inc. v. Dale De Steno (Kelly Services, Inc. v. Dale De Steno) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kelly Services, Inc. v. Dale De Steno, (6th Cir. 2019).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 19a0011n.06

No. 18-1118

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT FILED KELLY SERVICES, INC., ) Jan 10, 2019 ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk Plaintiff-Appellee, ) ) v. ) ON APPEAL FROM THE ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT DALE DE STENO; JONATHAN PERSICO; ) COURT FOR THE EASTERN NATHAN PETERS, ) DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN ) Defendants-Appellants. ) )

BEFORE: BATCHELDER, GIBBONS, and ROGERS, Circuit Judges

ROGERS, Circuit Judge. Defendants signed one-year noncompete agreements with their

employer, plaintiff Kelly Services, and later left Kelly’s employ to join one of Kelly’s competitors.

Kelly sued, and obtained preliminary injunctive relief that lasted long enough to prevent

defendants from working for the competitor for the duration of their noncompete clauses. The

only remaining relief sought by Kelly was attorneys’ fees, which the district court awarded

pursuant to provisions in the noncompete agreements. Defendants appeal the attorneys’ fee award,

arguing that they did not violate their contractual noncompete obligations in the first place, and

that the contractual attorneys’ fees in any event could not be awarded without a jury trial under the

Seventh Amendment. Neither argument, however, precludes the award of attorneys’ fees in this

case. No. 18-1118, Kelly Servs., Inc. v. De Steno

I

Defendants were employees of a division of Kelly Services, a staffing and consulting

company, in Minneapolis. They each signed employment agreements when they were hired.

Defendant Dale De Steno’s employment agreement contained a noncompete provision,

under which De Steno agreed that he would “not compete against Kelly . . . for one year after [he]

leave[s] Kelly in any market area in which [he] worked.” The agreement also contained an

attorneys’ fees provision:

If I break this Agreement, Kelly is entitled to recover as damages from me the greater of the amount of the financial loss which Kelly suffers as a result or the amount of the financial gain which I receive. I will pay Kelly’s reasonable attorney’s fees and costs involved in enforcing this Agreement.

(Emphasis added.) The agreement contained a choice of law provision selecting Michigan law.

Defendants Jonathan Persico and Nathan Peters signed similar employment agreements.

Like De Steno’s, these agreements contained year-long noncompete provisions and attorneys’ fees

provisions. The attorneys’ fees provisions read as follows:

6. Remedies/Damages. I agree that the Company’s remedies at law for any violations of this Agreement are inadequate and that the Company has the right to seek injunctive relief in addition to any other remedies available to it. Therefore, if I breach this Agreement the Company has the right to, and may seek issuance of a court ordered temporary restraining order, preliminary injunction and permanent injunction, as well as any and all other remedies and damages, including monetary damages. I further agree to pay any and all legal fees, including without limitation, all attorneys’ fees, court costs, and any other related fees and/or costs incurred by the Company in enforcing this Agreement.

(Emphasis added.) These agreements also contained a Michigan choice of law provision.

In early 2016, defendants accepted offers from a competitor of Kelly’s. According to

defendants, the offers were “for the same or similar staffing position in the same Minneapolis

market area.” Kelly sued. Kelly asserted three state law causes of action, including breach of the

non-competition provisions and a common law claim for breach of duty of loyalty. In its

-2- No. 18-1118, Kelly Servs., Inc. v. De Steno

complaint, Kelly alleged that it had suffered “damages” as a result of the two breaches of its

contracts, including “lost profits and attorneys’ fees.” Defendants removed the case to the federal

court below, and Kelly moved for a preliminary injunction. The district court held a hearing, and

on May 2, 2016, entered an order granting Kelly’s motion for a preliminary injunction.

The district court found first that Kelly had “made an initial demonstration that irreparable

harm may occur” if no injunction was granted. Next, the court found that the harm to Kelly from

not issuing an injunction outweighed the harm to defendants. Third, the district court found that

Kelly had “shown that it would likely prevail on the merits.” The district court wrote:

The Defendants are almost certainly in violation of their non-compete agreements with Kelly. The Defendants’ only argument would be that the non-competes are void. They have not alleged any fraud or other defect in the signing of the agreements, so the Defendants’ only legal option is to contend that the non- competes are unreasonable. Reasonable non-compete agreements should be enforced as a matter of policy.

The agreements in question had a duration of one year, apply to the markets in which the Defendants worked or had responsibility, and forbid the Defendants from working in Kelly’s line of business, staffing services . . . . The Defendants have not provided compelling authority explaining why the outcome here should not be identical [to cases upholding the enforceability of identical agreements.]

The Defendants are working for staffing companies in the same market they serviced for Kelly within weeks, even days, of leaving Kelly. The Court is especially troubled by the Defendants’ suggestion that they were working in IT, and not engineering, staffing . . . . Kelly has presented unrebutted evidence that at least one of the Defendants has solicited for multiple positions in the engineering industry. The attempt to argue otherwise would indicate that the Defendants know they are violating their non-compete agreements . . . . In sum, because the agreements are reasonable, and the Defendants have almost certainly violated them, Kelly has demonstrated a likelihood of success on the merits.

(Citations omitted.) Finally, the court found that the public interest was slightly more favorable to

Kelly. The court enjoined the defendants “from violating their noncompete agreements until the

dispute is resolved and the Court ends the injunction.” A subsequent more specific order, entered

on May 29, 2016, broadly prohibited defendants from working for any competitors of Kelly in

-3- No. 18-1118, Kelly Servs., Inc. v. De Steno

Minneapolis, and was to last for sixty days, at the end of which Kelly could “request entry of a

further injunction.” Defendants filed an interlocutory appeal challenging the preliminary

injunction.

On July 25, 2016, with the injunction set to expire in three days, Kelly requested a sixty-

day extension. On August 30, the court extended the injunction “indefinitely until the Sixth Circuit

rules on the defendants’ interlocutory appeal.” That ruling never came: Defendants voluntarily

dismissed the interlocutory appeal a few weeks later, on September 21. Defendants did not move

the court to withdraw the injunction, and the court did not address the matter on its own. February

1, 2017 marked the one-year anniversary of defendants’ exit from Kelly. Were it not for the

indefinitely running preliminary injunction, the defendants would have been free to work for any

competitor of Kelly under the terms of their agreements after that date. But litigation proceeded,

and neither defendants nor Kelly sought to lift the injunction. Nor did Kelly or the defendants

move the court to dismiss the proceeding as moot.

On June 2, 2017, the court entered a “Mediation Order,” retroactively lifting the

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