Lanmark Technology, Inc. v. Canales

454 F. Supp. 2d 524, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 72012, 2006 WL 2828599
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedSeptember 29, 2006
Docket1:06CV327
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 454 F. Supp. 2d 524 (Lanmark Technology, Inc. v. Canales) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lanmark Technology, Inc. v. Canales, 454 F. Supp. 2d 524, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 72012, 2006 WL 2828599 (E.D. Va. 2006).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

ELLIS, District Judge.

In this diversity action for breach of contract and fraudulent misrepresentation, plaintiff, Lanmark Technology, Inc. (“Lan-mark”), alleges that its former employee, defendant Arturo Canales, (i) breached a non-compete clause in his employment agreement and (ii) fraudulently induced Lanmark to hire him based on misrepresentations of his educational experience. Chiefly at issue on summary judgment is (a) whether Lanmark’s non-compete clause is fatally overbroad, and hence unenforceable under Virginia law and, if not (b) whether Canales violated the clause when he accepted an employment offer that required him to work under a contract with Lanmark’s former client, the Defense Logistics Agency (“DLA”).

I. 1

Lanmark, a Virginia corporation headquartered in Fairfax, Virginia, provides information technology services, program management oversight, and administrative support to clients in the federal government and commercial sectors. According to Lanmark’s website, 2 included within these broadly-framed categories of services are the following specific services:

Information Technology Services: software development, software testing, software quality assurance, software configuration management, web design and development, audiovisual technical support, system design and data integration, data interoperability, network engineering and maintenance, information technology operations and helpdesk support, net-centric enterprise services, knowledge management systems, and database and application development;
• Program Management Services: program/project analysis and support, conference management support, training development and support, logistical planning and support, and resource planning;
• Administrative Support Services: program and personal support, finance, budgeting and accounting services, library science and information *526 management, contract support, inventory management, warehousing services, file/reeords digitization, and management and maintenance.

By any measure, this is an exceptionally broad range of diverse services that Lan-mark purports to offer government and commercial customers.

Canales, a Tennessee citizen and resident, claims to have twenty years of experience in military contracts, technology services, and project management. Additionally, he claims to have earned both a bachelor’s and master’s degree in engineering from Columbia State University.

Lanmark hired Canales, in June 2004, as a project manager at an annual salary of $92,000. Lanmark claims it hired Ca-nales based, at least in part, on Canales’s representation that he had received two engineering degrees from Columbia State University. There is, as it turns out, an issue as to whether Columbia State University is a “diploma mill” that provides “bogus degrees” or a genuine educational institution. 3 Lanmark asserts that Columbia State University is a diploma mill, that Canales knew this when he applied for a position at Lanmark, and that Canales intentionally misrepresented his education at Columbia State University to induce Lanmark to hire him. Canales vigorously disputes this claim, contending that he believed then, as he does now, that his degrees are genuine. In any event, this dispute is immaterial to the dispositive issue of the enforceability of the non-compete clause.

From June 2004 until November 2004, Canales worked on projects related to the contract between Lanmark and DLA (the “Lanmark-DLA contract”), in which Lan-mark performed an inventory audit of DLA’s assets. Two DLA representatives in charge of the Lanmark-DLA contract, John Frankenberger and Danny Lester, testified that Canales was knowledgeable and performed his duties in a satisfactory and professional manner. Despite DLA’s satisfaction with Canales’s work, Lanmark now contends that Canales did not meet either DLA’s or Lanmark’s expectations. Certain undisputed facts reflect otherwise. To begin with, DLA representatives, as noted, praised Canales’s work and gave no indication they were dissatisfied with his performance. 4 The evidence also suggests that Lanmark was satisfied with Canales’s performance. In mid-July 2004, Lanmark gave Canales a 4% raise (amounting to $4,000), increasing his annual salary to $96,000, and increasing his vacation time from 80 hours (two weeks) per year to 120 hours (three weeks) per year. Finally, when the Lanmark-DLA contract was completed, DLA, as a satisfied customer, paid Lanmark the full amount due under the contract.

In October 2004, only a month before he was terminated, Canales signed a Nondisclosure/Noncompete Agreement that included the following clause at issue here:

Employee shall not, for a period of two years following termination of employment with the Company, assist, as an employee or otherwise, any competitor to [Lanmark] to obtain business opportunities to perform services similar to those provided by [Lanmark] that relates to (1) a contract or project being performed by [Lanmark], (2) a business opportunity that [Lanmark] is pursuing, *527 or (3) a person or organization for whom [Lanmark] has provided or is providing services.

The agreement further provided that Virginia law would govern all disputes arising under its terms.

In November 2004, after only five months of employment, Lanmark terminated Canales’s employment for reasons not stated in the record. Following his termination, Canales returned to work for his pre-Lanmark employer, PC Mall, in Memphis, Tennessee. While working at PC Mall, Canales accepted employment with CrystalView Technology Corp. (“CrystalView”), which has a contract with DLA’s Cooperative Administrative Support Unit 5 (the “CrystalView-CASU contract”) that requires it to perform management and oversight services for DLA. Significantly, Canales’s work on the Crys-talView-CASU contract differs from the work he performed under the Lanmark-DLA contract. Specifically, the Lan-mark-DLA contract required Canales “to do an inventory and to apply barcodes to assets and to review documentation and to create replacement documentation when it [did not] exist.” By contrast, the Crystal-View-CASU contract requires that Ca-nales “support the [Immediate Response Team], attend meetings, maintain a [Plan of Action and Milestones] for both DLA and [the Department of Defense] in a support role and help review scheduling of ongoing efforts.” Thus, as Frankenberger testified, the two contracts do not involve “the same sort of functions at all.” Importantly, it is undisputed that Canales did not “assist” CrystalView with any contract proposals or otherwise help CrystalView to solicit, negotiate, or obtain the Crystal-View-CASU contract. The parties dispute, however, whether, at the time of CrystalView’s employment offer, Canales was aware that CrystalView had a contract with the CASU that would require him to perform services for DLA.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
454 F. Supp. 2d 524, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 72012, 2006 WL 2828599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lanmark-technology-inc-v-canales-vaed-2006.