Peterson v. Don Peterson & Associates Insurance Agency, Inc.

452 N.W.2d 517, 234 Neb. 651, 1990 Neb. LEXIS 71
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 9, 1990
Docket88-020
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 452 N.W.2d 517 (Peterson v. Don Peterson & Associates Insurance Agency, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peterson v. Don Peterson & Associates Insurance Agency, Inc., 452 N.W.2d 517, 234 Neb. 651, 1990 Neb. LEXIS 71 (Neb. 1990).

Opinion

Grant, J.

The defendant, Don Peterson & Associates Insurance Agency, Inc. (hereinafter referred to as the Agency), appeals from the district court’s granting of partial summary judgment and subsequent summary judgment in favor of the plaintiff, Thomas R. Peterson, a former employee of the Agency, in his action for breach of a contract.

The plaintiff filed a petition in district court on July 22,1987, for recovery of $27,000, which represented the balance due under a “Termination Agreement and Sale of Stock of [the Agency]” entered into between the parties on February 27, 1987, and for prejudgment interest. The Agency answered, alleging that its obligation to repurchase plaintiff’s stock in the Agency terminated under a provision of a “Stock Redemption Agreement” between the parties, executed August 30, 1986. The stock redemption agreement relieved the defendant of payment for the stock if the plaintiff violated the covenant not to compete contained in the stock redemption agreement.

Plaintiff then filed a motion for partial summary judgment “on the issue of the enforceability of the covenant not to compete contained in the STOCK REDEMPTION AGREEMENT dated August 30, 1986, between Plaintiff and Defendant.” After a hearing, the court ruled that the covenant “is unreasonable and unenforceable as a matter of law.”

*653 Plaintiff then filed a motion for summary judgment “in the principal sum of $27,000 which is the amount due on the Termination Agreement . . . together with prejudgment interest, ” and also filed a motion for attorney fees, alleging that the Agency’s defense to payment was frivolous. The Agency then moved for leave to amend its answer to pray for “rescission of the contract” on the grounds that the court had “declared a portion of the agreement between the parties invalid,” thus resulting in a failure of consideration. The Agency also sought leave “to file a Counter-Claim to request injunctive relief and for a return of proceeds already paid under the contract. . . .” The record does not show that this Agency motion was ever noticed for hearing.

On December 4,1987, the court sustained plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment upon finding that “there [was] no evidence to substantiate the Defendant’s allegation that the Plaintiff violated the non-compete clause of the parties’ agreement; that there is no genuine issue of material fact”; and that plaintiff was entitled to a judgment of $27,000 plus interest. The court overruled plaintiff’s request for attorney fees, and the record is silent on the disposition of the Agency’s motion for leave to amend.

In this court, the Agency assigns two errors, alleging that the district court erred (1) in sustaining plaintiff’s motion for partial summary judgment upon finding that the covenant not to compete was unenforceable as a matter of law and (2) in sustaining plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment upon finding that under the evidence presented, $27,000 was due under the termination agreement. The plaintiff has cross-appealed, assigning error in the trial court’s action in failing to find that the defense was frivolous, thereby entitling the plaintiff to attorney fees under Neb. Rev. Stat. §§ 25-824 and 25-824.01 (Reissue 1989). We affirm as to the Agency’s appeal and reverse as to plaintiff’s cross-appeal.

The facts of this case are not in dispute. The plaintiff was employed as an insurance agent for the Agency between 1983 and 1987 and was a stockholder of the Agency. Plaintiff’s “book of business, ” which he brought to the Agency, resulted in approximately $60,000 in commissions annually. On August *654 30, 1986, the parties entered into a contract entitled “Stock Redemption Agreement, ” which provided in part:

In the event that a stockholder... leaves the employ of the company, or is terminated by the company, he shall be required to sell his stock, and the company shall be required to buy the same .... If the non-compete clause contained in the following paragraph hereof is violated or challenged, neither the company nor the other stockholder shall have any obligation to repurchase the stock if it has not been purchased, or to make any further payments for the stock if it has already been purchased.

The stock redemption agreement also contained a clause setting out a covenant not to compete proscribing former employees from engaging in or being concerned with

any duties or pursuits whatever which would tend to compete either directly or indirectly with the company within a twenty-five mile radius of the city limits of Fremont, Hooper, or Wahoo, Nebraska, or any other town or city in which the company maintains at the time of termination of employment an insurance office, or with the company’s established customers wherever located, for a period of three years from the time their employment by the company terminates.

At the time of the termination of plaintiff’s employment, the Agency had offices in Fremont, Wahoo, Lincoln, and Elkhorn, . Nebraska, and “an association with offices in Tekamah, West Point and Hooper.” A substantial part of eastern Nebraska was within the description in the agreement.

On February 27, 1987, the parties executed a document entitled “Termination Agreement and Sale of Stock of Don Peterson and Associates Insurance Agency, Inc.” Under that agreement, the Agency repurchased plaintiff’s 20 shares of stock in the Agency corporation for the sum of $35,520, payable $5,520 down on April 1 plus $1,500 per month beginning May 1, 1987, until the sum due was fully paid. In consideration for the Agency’s repurchase of stock, the agreement provided for plaintiff to place his stock in escrow with a named bank and to submit his resignation, effective February 28, 1987. This agreement also specifically provided:

*655 “This Agreement contains the entire agreement of the parties ..."

The Agency made the required downpayment and the first two monthly installments, due May 1 and June 1, 1987, but stopped making payments thereafter. Although plaintiff sent the Agency a letter demanding payment and warning the Agency of plaintiff’s right to invoke the acceleration remedy in the termination agreement, the Agency refused to make payment, stating that plaintiff had violated the covenant not to compete under the stock redemption agreement and that plaintiff’s actions entitled the Agency to withhold payment. The Agency alleged in its answer that after plaintiff resigned, he caused some of the Agency’s clients to transfer their business to Fremont State insurance, a competing agency located in the same building as plaintiff’s present employer.

The record shows that after the plaintiff left his employment with the Agency, he eventually went to work for Coldwell Banker in Fremont, where he worked solely as a real estate sales associate. He had no duties or responsibilities as an insurance agent. Coldwell Banker, a real estate company, and Fremont State, an insurance agency, share a common location in Fremont, but the two operate independently in their respective fields.

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Bluebook (online)
452 N.W.2d 517, 234 Neb. 651, 1990 Neb. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peterson-v-don-peterson-associates-insurance-agency-inc-neb-1990.