Mustang Security and Investigations, Inc., Marilyn Wachel v. Alpha & Omega Services, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 15, 2007
Docket01-06-00093-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Mustang Security and Investigations, Inc., Marilyn Wachel v. Alpha & Omega Services, Inc. (Mustang Security and Investigations, Inc., Marilyn Wachel v. Alpha & Omega Services, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mustang Security and Investigations, Inc., Marilyn Wachel v. Alpha & Omega Services, Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Opinion Issued November 15, 2007




In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

____________


NO. 01-06-00093-CV


MUSTANG SECURITY AND INVESTIGATIONS, INC., and

MARILYN WACHEL, Appellants


V.


ALPHA & OMEGA SERVICES, INC., Appellee





On Appeal from the 80th District Court of

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 2002-61805





MEMORANDUM OPINION

            Mustang Security and Investigations, Inc. (“Mustang”), and Marilyn Wachel (“Wachel”) appeal the trial court’s grant of summary judgment on their counterclaims against Alpha & Omega Services, Inc. (“A&O”). We consider whether Mustang asserted a claim for affirmative relief and whether Wachel raised a genuine issue of material fact. Concluding that neither did, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

Background

          A&O contracts with its customers to provide private security services, including horse-mounted patrol for businesses. Mustang provides the same or similar services to its customers. Mustang hired Wachel as its operations manager shortly after her employment with A&O had ceased. Wachel had been employed by A&O from 1993 until A&O terminated her employment in 2002. A&O filed suit against Wachel, alleging violations of a non-compete agreement signed by Wachel during her tenure with A&O. After the trial court determined that the non-compete agreement was unenforceable, A&O voluntarily dismissed its suit.

          A&O filed a new suit against Mustang and Wachel and added additional Mustang employees who had previously worked for A&O, asserting breach of contract, breach of fiduciary duty, misrepresentation, tortious interference with contractual and business relations, misappropriation of trade secrets, and conspiracy. A&O subsequently nonsuited all defendants except Mustang and Wachel.

          Wachel and Mustang each filed counterclaims. Wachel asserted that A&O breached a salary agreement arising from a promotion that she had received while employed by A&O. The details of Wachel’s new position were memorialized in a memorandum dated February 27, 2001, which read as follows:

INTEROFFICE MEMORANDUM

          TO:              MARILYN WACHEL

          FROM:        JOHN DE ROUEN (initials [hand-written])

          RE:              SALARY AGREEMENT FOR YEAR 2001

          DATE         FEBRUARY 27, 2001

I enjoyed meeting with you last week and look forward to working with you in 2001. To recap our discussion on wages and rank, please acknowledge the following:

1.Initial salary of $36,000 per year (to be reviewed in six months)

2.A work week of not less than forty (40) hours at five (5) days/week. Anything in excess of 40 hours/5 days will be decided by you. (This includes a minimum of 12 hours per week of [scratched out]) billable riding. (participation at my discretion. mew [hand-written])

3.A promotion to the rank of Lieutenant and a rank review in six weeks.

4.A bonus system to be developed in the next sixty (60) days based on filling schedules and postings.

Please acknowledge agreement and return executed copy with original signature to our office. Keep one copy for your own files.

***

I acknowledge aned [sic] agree to the above.

[signed] 3-08-01 Marilyn Wachel Date


          “Shortly thereafter,” A&O advised Wachel that her new position was being eliminated. Wachel was not terminated at that time, but was reassigned, working fewer hours and earning less money than previously agreed upon. Wachel nevertheless continued to work under the new conditions until, in late April of 2002, A&O terminated Wachel’s employment. Wachel’s counterclaim alleged a breach based on her demotion and subsequent employment termination.

           Mustang filed a counterclaim against A&O, seeking a declaratory judgment that the non-compete agreements signed by A&O’s employees were invalid. Further, Mustang sought a declaration that A&O had no trade secrets that could be misappropriated. In response, A&O filed a general denial and special exceptions to the declaratory judgment action, asserting that it was duplicative of the controlling issues in A&O’s petition. No hearing was held, and no ruling was obtained on the special exceptions.

          A&O filed a motion for summary judgment on both Mustang’s and Wachel’s counterclaims. A&O asserted that Wachel’s employment was an at-will relationship and that the memorandum on which Wachel relied to assert her claims was not an enforceable employment contract. A&O asserted that Mustang’s claims were redundant of issues already before the trial court and that its counterclaim did not assert a claim for affirmative relief.

          Mustang filed a First Amended Original Counterclaim along with its response to A&O’s summary judgment motion clarifying that it sought declaratory relief not only as to A&O’s “existing covenants not to compete . . . but [also as to] all A&O’s covenants not to compete executed by former and existing A&O employees and contractors which have not expired or otherwise been declared valid or invalid.” Mustang also attempted to broaden the declaratory action by requesting a judicial declaration “that all of the business of A&O, as it concerns mounted patrol and other security related services, including any procedure, method, technique, design, records, customer lists, and other information that A&O claims are trade secrets are not, in fact, trade secrets, as that term is defined in law, nor are such confidential, unique or proprietary and that such are not entitled to protection by law.”

          On September 19, 2005, A&O filed a reply indicating that Mustang’s attempt to defeat A&O’s summary judgment motion by merely broadening the scope of its requested declarations should be rejected by the Court. A&O contended that Mustang’s declaratory action remained redundant of A&O’s claims and, to the extent that Mustang tried to seek additional affirmative relief, such claims were impermissibly seeking an advisory opinion under the Uniform Declaratory Judgment Act.

          After considering the parties’ pleadings and oral arguments, the trial court granted A&O’s summary judgment motions and dismissed Wachel’s and Mustang’s counterclaims.

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Mustang Security and Investigations, Inc., Marilyn Wachel v. Alpha & Omega Services, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mustang-security-and-investigations-inc-marilyn-wa-texapp-2007.