Lawlor v. North American Corporation of Illinois

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 24, 2011
Docket1-09-3603 Rel
StatusPublished

This text of Lawlor v. North American Corporation of Illinois (Lawlor v. North American Corporation of Illinois) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lawlor v. North American Corporation of Illinois, (Ill. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

FOURTH DIVISION March 24, 2011

No. 1-09-3603

IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT

KATHLEEN LAWLOR, ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of Plaintiff-Appellee and ) Cook County. Cross-Appellant, ) v. ) No. 05 CH 13876 ) NORTH AMERICAN CORPORATION ) OF ILLINOIS, ) ) The Honorable Defendant-Appellant and ) Carol Pearce McCarthy, Cross-Appellee. ) Judge Presiding.

JUSTICE LAVIN delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Presiding Justice Gallagher and Justice Pucinski concurred in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION

Here, we are confronted with dueling appeals from the trial of an employment dispute that

paradoxically concluded with both parties prevailing in their respective claims and each receiving

punitive damages. The litigation itself arose out of an employment noncompetition investigation.

After plaintiff left her sales position from a large corporate employer, she figured out that she was

under surveillance by investigators, whom she suspected of stealing her mail and whom she

ultimately learned used nefarious means (“pretexting”) to obtain her private phone records. These

phone records were then used by her ex-employer to investigate her activities in the waning 1-09-3603

months of her seven years of employment. The employee, Kathleen Lawlor, filed suit against

North American Corporation of Illinois (North American), after learning of the investigation. She

claimed an “intrusion upon seclusion” tort and requested compensatory and punitive damages.

North American’s counterclaim alleged she violated her fiduciary duty of loyalty by attempting to

steer business to a prospective employer and that she also communicated confidential corporate

sales information to the same company.

At trial, both parties prevailed in their respective claims. A jury awarded Lawlor $1.75

million in punitive and $65,000 in compensatory damages. The trial court heard the employer’s

equity claim contemporaneously and, one month after the trial, it ruled in North American’s favor,

awarding $78,781 in compensatory and $551,467 in punitive damages.

North American’s primary contention is that Lawlor failed to prove that North American

was liable on an agency theory for the actions of an independent contractor that somehow

acquired her private phone records. Lawlor, meanwhile, appeals from the reduction of her

punitive damage award and also appeals from the trial court’s judgment on the counterclaim,

which raised the duty of loyalty issue. She argues that, as an at-will employee without any

contractual duty to refrain from disclosing simple sales volume and commissions information, the

trial court’s findings were against the manifest weight of the evidence and amount to an abuse of

the trial court’s discretion. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the jury’s verdicts against

North American in Lawlor’s favor and reinstate the full punitive damage verdict returned by the

jury. With regard to North American’s breach of loyalty counterclaim, we hold that the trial

court’s judgments for compensatory damages and punitive damages were against the manifest

2 1-09-3603

weight of the evidence and we therefore reverse those judgments.

BACKGROUND

The parties engaged in four years of bruising discovery, but the testimony at the six-day

trial was relatively uncomplicated. Lawlor was aggrieved that North American, through

surreptitious means, acquired her mobile and home phone records in a failed effort to prove that

she breached the company’s noncompetition agreement. Painted with a broad brush, Lawlor

presented evidence at trial to the effect that North American, through counsel and at least two

independent investigators, set about the tasks of personal surveillance and getting her private

phone records.

Lawlor testified that she decided to quit her job as a salesperson after her employer

suddenly attempted to change her compensation agreement. Shortly after she left its employ,

North American began an investigation to determine if she had violated their noncompetition

agreement. The evidence at trial revealed the following sequence: (1) North American assigned

an officer, Patrick Dolan, to serve as corporate liaison on the investigation; (2) North American

asked its lawyer, Lewis Greenblatt, to conduct the investigation; (3) the lawyer then hired an

investigator, Probe, which had worked in so-called “noncompetition” cases before; (4) Dolan

gave the lawyer and the investigator personal information from the plaintiff’s personnel file,

including her birth date, social security number, address and telephone numbers; (5) the

investigator passed this information on to yet another investigator, Discover, which, presumably

through “pretexting,” obtained the phone records; and (6) the phone records were then passed up

the line back to North American, which used the information internally to investigate Lawlor’s

3 1-09-3603

activities by cross-checking all of the numbers found on the records. This investigation started

shortly after Lawlor left North American and lasted approximately five months, by which time

Lawlor had been working at a competitor for three months.

North American vigorously defended itself on all levels, attempting to prove that the

investigation was conducted in an entirely proper fashion while endeavoring to separate itself,

under the aegis of the thorny provisions of agency law, from the shadowy activities of the

investigators. It sought a directed verdict at the close of Lawlor’s case, arguing that it could not

be held liable on an agency basis for the improper conduct of either of the investigation firms, one

of which had been directly hired by North American’s lawyer.1 With regard to its lawsuit against

Lawlor, North American sought to prove that she had improperly communicated company

information to a prospective employer while still in its employ and also argued that she attempted

to steer business to the prospective employer, despite the fact that it did not allege a violation of

1 Defendant acknowledged, in a document entitled “North American’s Opposition to

Lawlor’s Supplement to her Motion to Enforce Probe’s Subpoena and Motion to Quash

Subpoenas for Telephone Records,” that both Probe and Discover were “agents of North

American’s attorney that had been retained to investigate Lawlor’s employment activities while

employed by North American.” This motion was supported by an affidavit by Greenblatt that

indicated that “Probe performed investigatory services, as my agent and at my direction,

concerning the circumstances of Lawlor’s employment at North American.”

4 1-09-3603

the noncompetition agreement, which was the genesis of the investigation. 2 The evidence at trial

will be described below in a witness-by-witness recitation.

Testimony of Kathleen Lawlor

Lawlor, an at-will employee, worked at North American as a commission-based

salesperson selling printed promotional items from 1998 to 2005. Lawlor was given wide latitude

in determining the prices she charged her clients for North American’s products. Once she

acquired a third party’s business in the manner of a “rainmaker,” the account was managed and

handled by other North American employees. During her first three years at North American,

Lawlor received a salary, but beginning in 2001, she signed an agreement with North American

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