PFB Members' Service Corp. v. Eckenroad, T.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 23, 2020
Docket801 MDA 2019
StatusUnpublished

This text of PFB Members' Service Corp. v. Eckenroad, T. (PFB Members' Service Corp. v. Eckenroad, T.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
PFB Members' Service Corp. v. Eckenroad, T., (Pa. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

J-A25005-19

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

PFB MEMBERS’ SERVICE CORPORATION IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA Appellee

v.

TODD A. ECKENROAD

Appellant No. 801 MDA 2019

Appeal from the Order Entered April 23, 2019 In the Court of Common Pleas of Cumberland County Civil Division at No: 2019-02114

BEFORE: STABILE, J., MCLAUGHLIN, J., AND MUSMANNO, J.

MEMORANDUM BY STABILE, J. FILED APRIL 23, 2020

Appellant, Todd A. Eckenroad, an accountant, appeals from an order

granting Appellee, PFB Members’ Service Corporation, a preliminary injunction

enforcing a noncompete covenant1 in Appellant’s employment agreement.

The injunction decreed that for two years following Appellant’s resignation

from Appellee, he could not provide accounting services to clients of Appellee

whom he served during his final two years of employment, whether or not

they continue to remain Appellee’s clients. The injunction was not limited to

any geographic area. We hold that the court abused its discretion by imposing

these terms in its order, and we vacate the preliminary injunction and remand

this case for further proceedings.

____________________________________________

1 Pennsylvania courts use the terms “noncompete covenant” and “restrictive covenant” interchangeably. We will use “noncompete covenant” in this opinion. J-A25005-19

On November 30, 2018, Appellant resigned from his position as an

accountant for Appellee. On March 4, 2019, Appellee filed a civil action

alleging that Appellant breached the noncompete covenant in his employment

agreement. Two days later, Appellee filed a petition seeking a preliminary

injunction against Appellant. On April 2, 2019, the trial court convened an

evidentiary hearing on Appellee’s petition for injunctive relief.

On April 23, 2019, the trial court issued an opinion and order granting

Appellee a preliminary injunction. The court found the following facts:

[Appellee] is a business organization with its principal office in Camp Hill, Cumberland County, Pennsylvania, that provides business services, primarily to Pennsylvania farmers, including accounting, payroll, and tax services.[2] [Appellant] is an adult individual residing in New Enterprise, Bedford County, Pennsylvania. From August 1, 2003, until November 30, 2018, when he left his employment with the title of senior account supervisor, [Appellant] was an at-will employee of [Appellee], and in the two years preceding his departure his assigned geographic territory was Bedford and Fulton Counties, Pennsylvania.

As an account supervisor, [Appellant]’s duties consisted of providing business and accounting services, including payroll and tax preparation services, to [Appellee]’s clients. Prior to his departure, he had been servicing 104 such clients, which was in excess of the average clientele of 75 serviced by the remaining 34 account supervisors. Toward the end of 2018, [Appellee] announced an increase in fees for its services, as well as a reduction in compensation to its account supervisors, effective ____________________________________________

2 Appellee is not simply an accounting firm or tax preparer. It is a general farm membership organization that provides an array of services to its members. For an annual membership fee, members can access discounts on rental cars, hotels, supplies, as well as access to Appellee’s warehouse facility, which sells agricultural products. For an additional fee, members can purchase accounting services (including tax preparation) and business analysis. N.T., 4/2/19, at 33-34.

-2- J-A25005-19

January 1, 2019. The increase in fees precipitated a termination of their relationship with [Appellee] by a number of clients. By a letter dated November 16, 2018, [Appellant] advised [Appellee] of his intention to leave his employment, indicating:

Because of the recent changes the company has decided to make, I can no longer continue my employment . . . . My last day will be November 30, 2018. There is just no way my family and I can make it with the future loss of income that will be a result of the changes that have been made with the fee schedule and employee compensation package. I have already had clients leave and others that are planning to leave next year due to the fee increase. . ..

Please know that I was not considering this until I was put in a position of needing to make this very difficult decision for the welfare of my family. I want to part on good terms.

In leaving his position with [Appellee], [Appellant] did not advise any of [Appellee]’s clients in advance of his decision to do so. However, as of the hearing herein[,] 48 of the 104 clients he had been servicing had either cancelled or not renewed their relationship with [Appellee].3

Shortly after leaving [Appellee]’s employment, [Appellant] opened “Eckenroad Accounting Services,” which he operates out of his home in Bedford County, Pennsylvania, and which is “dedicated to providing accounting services to small businesses and individuals in the area.” Services offered include personal tax preparation, partnership tax preparation, corporate tax preparation, tax planning visits, payroll quarterlies preparation, W-2 & 1099 preparation, and a free initial consultation.

3 This appears to be a minor misstatement. Based on our review of the preliminary injunction hearing transcript, we think the trial court meant to say that the number of Appellee’s clients in Bedford and Fulton Counties dropped from 104 to 48 after Appellant’s resignation. Thus, 56 of Appellee’s clients cancelled or declined to renew their memberships, not 48.

-3- J-A25005-19

In assembling a clientele for his new business, which appears to be largely oriented toward preparation of tax returns and does not provide business consulting services, [Appellant] did not solicit or accept any clients of [Appellee] who remained with [Appellee]. However, he did accept about 20 former clients who had chosen to terminate their relationship with [Appellee].

The [July 22,] 2003 employment agreement executed by the parties contemplated [Appellant]’s provision of “farm management counseling and tax reporting services to clients of [Appellee] in accordance with the procedures established from time to time by [Appellee] and under the supervision and direction of [Appellee].” It indicated that [Appellant] would “be compensated in accordance with an Incentive Wage Program as established and amended from time to time by [Appellee] which [was to] be based upon, but not limited to, factors such as length of service, net gross revenue produced from accounts served, and other performance based upon standards to be determined by [Appellee].”

The noncompete provision contained in [paragraph 6 of] the employment agreement provided, in pertinent part, as follows:

B. Employee hereby provisions and agrees with Employer that, during the “Noncompete Period” and within the “Noncompete Area,” Employee shall not directly or indirectly, either as an employee, employer, consultant, agent, principal, partner, stockholder, corporate officer, director, or in any other individual or representative capacity, engage in or participate in any business which provides any goods or services competitive in any way with the goods and services provided by Employee for Employer under this Agreement nor shall Employee, directly or indirectly, solicit the business of any customers/clients of the Employer or perform for such customers or clients, nor solicit the performance, neither in person nor through any other entity with which he/she is associated, any of the services of the nature of those performed by Employee for Employer.

C.

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Bluebook (online)
PFB Members' Service Corp. v. Eckenroad, T., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pfb-members-service-corp-v-eckenroad-t-pasuperct-2020.