Kinesis Advertising, Inc. v. Hill

652 S.E.2d 284, 187 N.C. App. 1, 2007 N.C. App. LEXIS 2251
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 6, 2007
DocketCOA06-1224
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 652 S.E.2d 284 (Kinesis Advertising, Inc. v. Hill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kinesis Advertising, Inc. v. Hill, 652 S.E.2d 284, 187 N.C. App. 1, 2007 N.C. App. LEXIS 2251 (N.C. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

WYNN, Judge.

This case stems from a business dispute between Plaintiff Kinesis Advertising, Inc., and Defendants Larry Hill and Dan Robinette, who worked at Kinesis before leaving and founding their own advertising agency, Defendant Altyris Incorporated. Among other issues, a covenant-not-to-compete, non-solicitation agreement, confidentiality agreement, and shareholders’ agreement involving Mr. Hill and Mr. Robinette and Kinesis lie at the heart of this case. After a careful review of the trial courts’ orders dismissing certain counterclaims and granting summary judgment as to other claims and counterclaims, we dismiss in part, reverse in part, and affirm in part.

On 8 January 2004, Kinesis filed a complaint against its two former employees, Mr. Hill and Mr. Robinette, and their new company, Altyris Incorporated (collectively, “Defendants”). The complaint alleged that Mr. Hill and Mr. Robinette had breached a covenant-not-to-compete by leaving Kinesis and starting Altyris, their own advertising agency. Additionally, Kinesis asserted in its complaint claims of breach of confidentiality, trade secrets violation, breach of employee solicitation, breach of fiduciary duty, conversion, tortious interference with contract, constructive trust or unjust enrichment, and unfair and deceptive trade practices. Kinesis sought an accounting from Defendants for their advertising services rendered before and *6 after leaving Kinesis. Kinesis also filed motions for a temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction, which were denied by the trial court.

On 25 February 2004, Kinesis was granted leave to amend its complaint to include information concerning property and confidential information that was allegedly missing after Mr. Hill and Mr. Robinette left Kinesis, as well as contentions that Mr. Hill and Mr. Robinette had engaged in specific acts intended to deplete the company’s cash reserves.

According to the allegations of the complaint, Kinesis issued 3,500 shares of stock to Mr. Hill and five hundred shares to Mr. Robinette in January 2000, as consideration for signing a confidentiality, non-competition, and non-solicitation agreement and a shareholders’ agreement with Kinesis. In September 2003, Mr. Hill and Mr. Robinette resigned from Kinesis and started their own company, Altyris, also engaged in advertising, with offices a block away from those of Kinesis.

Kinesis contends that, before leaving Kinesis and starting Altyris, Mr. Hill and Mr. Robinette engaged in negotiations with other shareholders of Kinesis, namely, Robert and Nancy Adkins, to buy their stock. However, Kinesis alleges that Mr. Hill and Mr. Robinette did not engage in these negotiations in good faith, but rather with the intention of establishing a competing business. Additionally, after Mr. Hill and Mr. Robinette left Kinesis and started Altyris, six of Kinesis’s seven employees left Kinesis within a week and took positions at Altyris; Kinesis asserts that Mr. Hill and Mr. Robinette solicited these employees in violation of the agreements they signed with Kinesis.

On 13 April 2004, Altyris filed an answer to the Kinesis complaint, and set forth the defenses of failure to state a claim, breach of contract, and illegal restraint on trade. On 14 April 2004, Mr. Hill and Mr. Robinette also filed an answer and further asserted counterclaims against Kinesis and additional defendants Robert and Nancy Adkins, Adkins & Associates, and Steve Reavis. Mr. Hill and Mr. Robinette asserted defenses including failure of consideration of the alleged agreements, equitable estoppel, fraud, laches, waiver, and nebulosity with respect to the claim for trade secrets violation.

The counterclaims alleged by Mr. Hill and Mr. Robinette included: common law fraud, rescission of the agreements, piercing the corporate veil, unfair or deceptive trade practices, securities fraud under *7 North Carolina law, fraudulent filing of tax information returns, RICO violations by mailing fraudulent tax returns, interception of wire communications, defamation, violations of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), conversion, violations of the North Carolina Wage and Hour Act, and aiding and abetting fraudulent accounting practices. Mr. Hill and Mr. Robinette then amended their counterclaims to include a claim for civil conspiracy and to seek a declaratory judgment as to the question of the enforceability of the shareholders’ and confidentiality, non-competition, and non-solicitation agreements and their liability for allegedly fraudulent tax returns filed by Kinesis and the Adkinses. Finally, Mr. Hill and Mr. Robinette later added a claim for declaratory judgment as to liability for credit card purchases on a Kinesis Visa card made prior to their departure from the company.

Kinesis moved to dismiss several of Defendants’ counterclaims on 18 May 2004, asserting that they had failed to state a claim for which relief can be granted in their allegations of unfair and deceptive trade practices, RICO violations, ERISA violations, and North Carolina Wage and Hour Act violations. The trial court granted the Kinesis motion on 30 June 2004, dismissing those four counterclaims.

Following extensive discovery by all parties, including depositions, production of documents, and affidavits, as well as numerous other filings by the parties, Defendants moved for summary judgment on 20 January 2006 as to all of the claims asserted by Kinesis. On 30 January 2006, Kinesis likewise moved for partial summary judgment as to the counterclaims for fraud, rescission, piercing the corporate veil, securities fraud, fraudulent filing of tax information returns, interception of wire communications, and defamation. A hearing was held before the trial court on 6 February 2006, and all parties submitted extensive exhibits and other documents for the trial court’s review.

On 16 May 2006, the trial court granted partial summary judgment to both sides of the dispute. Specifically, the trial court granted summary judgment to Defendants on the Kinesis claims for breach of the covenant-not-to-compete, breach of contract on confidential information, and breach of fiduciary duty, as well as for breach of contract on employee solicitation to the extent the claim was based on breach of the non-solicitation agreement and not in tort. Likewise, the trial court granted summary judgment to Kinesis on Defendants’ counterclaims for interception of wire communications, defamation, fraudulent filing of tax returns, securities fraud, rescission, civil con *8 spiracy, and declaratory judgment as to the shareholders’ agreement and tax penalties.

Thus, following the trial court’s 16 May 2006 order, the only claims remaining for Kinesis were for trade secrets violations, breach of contract on employee solicitation if based in tort, conversion, tortious interference with contract, constructive trust/unjust enrichment, unfair and deceptive trade practices, and an accounting. Defendants’ only remaining counterclaims at that point were for common law fraud, piercing the corporate veil, and a declaratory judgment as to the credit card debt.

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Bluebook (online)
652 S.E.2d 284, 187 N.C. App. 1, 2007 N.C. App. LEXIS 2251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kinesis-advertising-inc-v-hill-ncctapp-2007.