Linda R. Zweifel, n/k/a Linda R. Smith v. Randall Zweifel

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 28, 2020
DocketED107451
StatusPublished

This text of Linda R. Zweifel, n/k/a Linda R. Smith v. Randall Zweifel (Linda R. Zweifel, n/k/a Linda R. Smith v. Randall Zweifel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Linda R. Zweifel, n/k/a Linda R. Smith v. Randall Zweifel, (Mo. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

In the Missouri Court of Appeals Eastern District DIVISION ONE

LINDA R. ZWEIFEL, ) No. ED107451 n/k/a LINDA R. SMITH, ) ) Appeal from the Circuit Court Respondent, ) of Jefferson County vs. ) ) Hon. Antonio M. Manansala RANDALL ZWEIFEL, ) ) Filed: Appellant. ) January 28, 2020

Randall Zweifel appeals from the contempt judgment entered against him for

conduct his ex-wife Linda Smith claimed violated the dissolution judgments. We reverse.

Background

Zweifel and Smith jointly owned and operated Lawn Managers, Inc. during their

marriage. The marriage dissolved, and the parties reached an agreement regarding their

business interests, among other things. The parties’ Marital Settlement Agreement was

incorporated into the dissolution judgment dated May 1, 2012 (collectively the agreement

and judgment will be referred to as “2012 MSA and Judgment”). Therein, it was agreed

that Smith would assign all of her shares in the lawn care business to Zweifel, which would

continue under the name “Lawn Managers, Inc.,” and Smith would establish a new lawn

care company. In Section 5.02, the parties divided the accounts and accounts receivable

of the business. They were each awarded certain commercial accounts and accounts

receivable; Smith was “awarded all right, title, and interest in all residential accounts and accounts receivable in the following zip codes,” and then 19 zip codes were listed. Zweifel

was similarly “awarded all right, title, and interest in all residential accounts and accounts

receivable” in 54 zip codes.

In Section 5.06, the parties addressed “Development of New Business.” Therein,

Smith agreed that her new lawn care business would use the name “Progressive Lawn

Managers, Inc., doing business as Lawn Managers” for a period of no more than two years

and would thereafter stop using the name “Lawn Managers” and use only the name

“Progressive Lawn Managers, Inc.” In that same section, the parties included a non-

solicitation agreement:

For a period of two years from that date of dissolution of marriage [Smith] and her employees will refrain from soliciting residential accounts and commercial accounts in the zip codes that have been awarded to [Zweifel] in Section 5.02(2)(b), and [Zweifel] and his employees will refrain from soliciting residential accounts and commercial accounts in the zip codes that have been awarded to [Smith] in Section 5.02(2)(b). [Smith] and [Zwefiel] understand that the agreement to refrain from soliciting business in the zip codes awarded to the other party includes business for lawn care services, fertilization, weed control, insect control, and other types of lawn service.

There appears to never have been any dispute that under the above terms of the

2012 MSA and Judgment, the parties were: (1) each awarded a number of existing

commercial accounts and a number of existing residential accounts in identified zip codes

and (2) each had the exclusive right to solicit new commercial or residential accounts in

those zip codes, at least for two years. There was, however, disagreement as to the meaning

of “solicit” in Section 5.06. When residential customers in Smith’s zip codes contacted

Zweifel for service, he began servicing them, claiming to believe that because he did not

“solicit” their business he was not violating the 2012 Judgment. It appears that some of

those 72 customers he began servicing were existing accounts awarded to Smith in Section

2 5.02 and some of them were new accounts covered by the non-solicitation provision in

Section 5.06.

In October of 2013, Smith filed a motion for contempt, alleging that Zweifel

solicited and serviced accounts that had been awarded to her in violation of Section 5.02

and the non-solicitation provision of Section 5.06. 1 Zweifel filed a cross-motion for

contempt alleging Smith was engaged in similar behavior. Ultimately, the parties reached

an agreement settling the issues in these motions on July 25, 2014. The terms of that

agreement were entered as the judgment of the court (collectively this agreement and

judgment will be referred to as “2014 Settlement and Judgment”). Therein, the parties

agreed that “each may sign up and service new commercial accounts wherever they may

be, regardless of zip code.” As to residential accounts, the parties agreed as follows:

Parties agree that each of them shall NOT sign up or service any new residential accounts in the zip codes awarded to the other in [the 2012 MSA and Judgment]. This non-compete agreement shall remain in effect for two years from today’s date and is enacted in lieu of the prior non-solicitation clause found in paragraph 5.06 of [the 2012 Judgment]. 2 Zweifel also agreed to transfer to Smith “all of his existing residential customers” in two

of the zip codes that had been awarded to him in 2012, and these zip codes were expressly

covered by the non-competition provision above. Otherwise, the parties agreed, “[a]ll other

terms of [the 2012 MSA and Judgment] shall remain in full force and effect.” It was also

agreed that Smith would stop using the name “Lawn Managers” on December 31, 2014

and thereafter use only the name “Progressive Lawn Managers, Inc.” for her business.

1 Several months earlier, Zweifel was held in contempt of the 2012 MSA and Judgment, on Smith’s motion, for failing to make a certain payment thereunder. He successfully purged himself of that contempt by making the payment. 2 We note the two-year non-solicitation clause in Section 5.06 of the 2012 MSA and Judgment—which this non-compete was said to replace—had actually already expired on May 1, 2014 by its own terms.

3 In February of 2016, Zweifel’s company filed a trademark infringement claim in

federal court, alleging that Smith’s company was continuing to use his company’s name in

violation of the parties’ agreement. While that case was pending, the two-year non-

compete in the 2014 Settlement and Judgment expired on July 25, 2016. The parties

agreed this meant that they were no longer prohibited from signing up or servicing new

residential customers in the other’s zip codes. But it became evident that they disagreed

about whether they could also begin to compete for the existing residential accounts that

had been awarded to the other party. It appears Zweifel believed that once the non-

solicitation and non-compete expired, all customers were fair game and he sent a “We

Want You Back” letter to customer accounts that had been awarded to Smith. It appears

Smith disagreed, and believed there was a permanent non-compete on the existing

customer accounts each was awarded. She asserted an affirmative defense of unclean

hands in the federal trademark infringement case based on the “We Want You Back” letter

and Zweifel’s continued service of the 72 residential customers that contacted him years

earlier. Smith also filed another motion for contempt in state court and a separate request

for injunctive relief based on that conduct.

The state court issued a temporary restraining order prohibiting Zweifel from

contacting, soliciting or providing services to “any of the customers and/or accounts

awarded to [Smith]” in either 2012 or 2014. On Zweifel’s motion to clarify, the TRO was

modified to provide that Zweifel was permitted to respond to a specific list of customers

who contacted him after the “We Want You Back” letter by notifying them that he could

not service their accounts at this time and could not discuss the matter further. The TRO,

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Linda R. Zweifel, n/k/a Linda R. Smith v. Randall Zweifel, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/linda-r-zweifel-nka-linda-r-smith-v-randall-zweifel-moctapp-2020.