Lamb & Associates Packaging, Inc. v. Troy W. Best; James Best; And Precision Digital Printing, LLC

2020 Ark. App. 62, 595 S.W.3d 378
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 29, 2020
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2020 Ark. App. 62 (Lamb & Associates Packaging, Inc. v. Troy W. Best; James Best; And Precision Digital Printing, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lamb & Associates Packaging, Inc. v. Troy W. Best; James Best; And Precision Digital Printing, LLC, 2020 Ark. App. 62, 595 S.W.3d 378 (Ark. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Cite as 2020 Ark. App. 62 Digitally signed by Elizabeth ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS Perry Date: 2022.08.10 13:29:12 DIVISION IV -05'00' No. CV-19-376 Adobe Acrobat version: 2022.001.20169 Opinion Delivered: January 29, 2020

LAMB & ASSOCIATES PACKAGING, INC. APPEAL FROM THE PULASKI APPELLANT COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT, FIFTH DIVISION [NO. 60CV-18-2961] V. HONORABLE WENDELL TROY W. BEST; JAMES A. BEST; AND GRIFFEN, JUDGE PRECISION DIGITAL PRINTING, LLC APPELLEES AFFIRMED

KENNETH S. HIXSON, Judge

The appellant, Lamb & Associates Packaging, Inc. (Lamb), is a corrugated box

converter in Maumelle. A corrugated box converter receives sheets of unfinished corrugated

box material from its suppliers and “converts” the material into specially designed corrugated

boxes for its customers. In 2017, the company hired appellee Troy Best as an office manager.

As a condition of his employment, Troy signed a “Non-Disclosure, Non-Solicitation, and

Non-Competition Agreement” (Agreement) in which he agreed not to work for a

competitor within two years of his separation from Lamb. Troy also agreed not to disclose

any of Lamb’s confidential information or solicit Lamb employees to work for any

competing converter of corrugated boxes. 1

1 The Agreement defines “Company Business” as “the manufacture, purchase and/or sale of corrugated boxes and related packaging materials.” In 2018, Lamb terminated Troy’s employment after discovering that Troy had shared

some of Lamb’s confidential information—including its plans to add a new high-speed

digital printer to its conversion process—with his uncle, appellee James Best. James Best

allegedly used the information to establish a new company, Precision Digital Printing, LLC

(Precision), that would use the same digital printer to print detailed graphics onto corrugated

board for other box converters that competed with Lamb.

Lamb filed a complaint in the Pulaski County Circuit Court seeking a series of

injunctions against Troy Best, James Best, and Precision. Lamb alleged that Troy breached

the Agreement, breached his fiduciary duty, and converted Lamb’s confidential information.

Lamb further alleged that James and Precision tortiously interfered with Troy’s employment

contract with Lamb, converted its confidential information, and aided and abetted Troy’s

breach of fiduciary duty. At the conclusion of a two-day trial, the circuit court ordered Troy

to return all the confidential information that he had taken from Lamb after he was

terminated but found no evidence of irreparable harm warranting injunctive relief. Lamb

now appeals the circuit court’s order. We affirm.

I. Facts and Procedural History

Lamb’s customers are vendors that use corrugated boxes to make bulk shipments of

their products to retailers. Lamb’s process for converting the boxes begins with its purchase

of sheets of unfinished corrugated board from a supplier. The process, otherwise known as

“conversion,” begins with the application of graphics, such as the product manufacturer’s

name and logo, onto the board. The board is then cut, slotted, glued, and folded into a box.

2 The part of the process that applies graphics to the corrugated board is the focus of

this case. One method to apply graphics is to stamp the graphics directly onto the corrugated

board using ink and printing dies that are mounted on a “flexograph” machine that also cuts

and folds the corrugated board into a box. 2 Lamb has five flexograph machines that vary

according to the amount of ink necessary to create the customer’s desired image. Two of

the flexograph machines have two colors of ink, two machines have three colors, and one

flexograph machine has four colors.

Lamb uses a second method of applying graphics for customers who want more than

four colors on their packaging. In those instances, Lamb glues a lithographic label to the

board before it is cut and folded. Kyle Lamb, the president of the company, described the

process as follows:

[It] is a different process than the flexograph machine, to put labels on the box. We have another piece of converting equipment called an Automaton where we would buy a label with the graphics on it already [and] put it into the Automaton. The Automaton would put glue on the label and adhere it to the corrugated sheet. [A]t that point, we would take that corrugated sheet with the label on it back to the [flexograph], run it through the [flexograph] and finish it into a box. The Automaton is a kind of press that just applies the graphics.

Kyle also said that Lamb is one of only a few manufacturers in Arkansas that are capable of

applying lithographic labels with an Automaton.

In 2015, Lamb began exploring a new digital printing method that would print

lithograph-quality images directly onto the corrugated board. Operating like a large ink-jet

printer, the new technology offered substantial benefits. Lamb could bypass the Automaton

2 In this context, a “die” is a large tool that applies ink onto the corrugated board according to a customer’s specifications.

3 and would no longer have to buy labels from a vendor. Digital printing was also superior to

the printing process available on the flexographic machines, where any changes to a

customer’s desired image would require the purchase of an entirely new printing die at a

cost of several thousand dollars. The new technology allowed Lamb to make the changes

simply by editing an electronic file of the image.

Lamb hired a graphics design manager, Travis Beaty, to lead the search for a digital

printer. Mr. Beaty performed cost studies of several digital printers, including those that

were manufactured by EFI, a company that was well established in the digital printing

business. Mr. Beaty initially determined that the first available digital machines, which

printed images by making several passes over the corrugated board, were too slow to be of

much use to Lamb.

In late 2017, however, EFI began selling a single-pass digital printer—the Nozomi

18000—that could apply a lithograph-quality image at a much higher rate than the multipass

digital printers. It also applied the graphics at a higher rate—and lower cost—than the

Automaton label machine that Lamb had been using. Lamb’s interest in digital printing

thereafter focused on the Nozomi 18000 (Nozomi), and Mr. Lamb and Mr. Beaty made

plans to travel to North Carolina on May 1, 2018, to view a demonstration of the machine

on a production line.

In August 2017, while Lamb’s search for a printer was well underway, Lamb hired

Troy for the newly created position of office manager. The position was created in response

to the retirement of Jerry Lamb, the patriarch and founder of the company. Until then, the

Lamb family “had always controlled all of the proprietary information” of the company.

4 Indeed, Kyle anticipated that Troy “was going to have access to a lot of our proprietary

information,” including Lamb’s profit margins, customer lists, manufacturing processes, and

costs. Consequently, when Mr. Lamb offered Troy the position of office manager, he

“wanted some protection for Lamb because this was the first time that [Lamb] had allowed

anybody outside the family access to what we considered proprietary information.”

To that end, Troy’s offer of employment was contingent on his execution of the

Agreement. Section five addressed nondisclosure of confidential and proprietary

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

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2020 Ark. App. 62, 595 S.W.3d 378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lamb-associates-packaging-inc-v-troy-w-best-james-best-and-arkctapp-2020.