Robert Half International, Inc. v. Ainsworth

68 F. Supp. 3d 1178, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 175054, 2014 WL 7272405
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. California
DecidedDecember 17, 2014
DocketCase No. 14-CV-2481-WQH (DHB)
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 68 F. Supp. 3d 1178 (Robert Half International, Inc. v. Ainsworth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robert Half International, Inc. v. Ainsworth, 68 F. Supp. 3d 1178, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 175054, 2014 WL 7272405 (S.D. Cal. 2014).

Opinion

ORDER

HAYES, District Judge:

The matter before the Court is the Motion to Dismiss Complaint for Failure to State a Claim filed by all Defendants. (ECF No. 6).

I. Background

On September 23, 2014, Plaintiff Robert Half International Inc. (“RHI”) commenced this action by filing a Complaint in San Diego County Superior Court. (ECF No. 1-1). On October 17, 2014, Defendants Eric Ainsworth, Lisa Aldava, Serena Greenwood, Ruben Hernandez, Jr., Deana Schweitzer, and Catherine Sherman removed the action to this Court on the basis of federal question jurisdiction. (ECF No. 1). On October 23, 2014, Defendants filed the Motion to Dismiss Complaint for Failure to State a Claim, seeking dismissal of Plaintiffs first, second, sixth, eighth, ninth, tenth, twelfth, thirteenth, fourteenth, fifteenth, sixteenth, seventeenth, and twenty-second claims for relief. (ECF No. 6). On November 10, 2014, Plaintiff filed an opposition. (ECF No. 7). On November 17, 2014, Defendants filed a reply. (ECF No. 9).

II. Allegations of the Complaint

“RHI is a professional staffing services firm founded in 1948, specializing in recruiting and placing temporary and permanent employees with clients or customers of RHI. RHI has branch offices located throughout North America, including in California.” (ECF No. 1-1 at 8). “RHI’s success as an industry leader and its competitive advantage are directly related to its ability to hire, train, develop, and retain top talent in whom it invests significant resources and who are entrusted with key confidential business information, including RHI’s' procedures, financial and personnel plans, objectives and strategies, compensation and bonus structures, training platforms and technology, and information about existing and prospective clients, candidates, and employees.” Id. “RHI expends considerable time and resources in these efforts, which provides RHI with a distinct competitive advantage.” Id.

“RHI also expends much effort to maintain and cultivate its existing client and candidate relationships and to develop new relationships. To keep its competitive advantage, RHI invests substantial time, effort, and expense into organizing, analyzing, using, and maintaining confidential and proprietary business information. All of the Defendants had access to this information, including RHI’s valuable database, the tool that RHI uses to successfully operate its business and to maintain its competitive advantage over competitors and others.” Id.

“As a result, as a condition, of their employment, RHI requires its employees to sign documents to safeguard RHI’s confidential business and personnel information, which create a duty not to disclose or use this information outside of their employment with RHI, including after the termination of their employment.” Id. “RHI also enters into employment agree[1181]*1181ments with its employees, including each of the defendants here, which prohibit former RHI employees from using RHI’s name and their prior employment experience at RHI to market a competing business.” Id.

Defendants each signed employment agreements with RHI that prohibited them from “rendering] services to or entering] into the employment of any person, firm, corporation or other business entity other than one of the RHI Companies without the Employer’s written consent.” Id. at 12. The employment agreements also prohibited Defendants from using “confidential information ... including, without limitation, information with respect to the name, address, contact persons or requirements of any customer, client, applicant, candidate or employee of any of the RHI Companies ... and information with respect to the procedures advertising, finances, organization, personnel, plans, objectives or strategies of the RHI Companies.” Id. at 12-13. The employment agreements further provide at Paragraph Eleven: “Employee agrees that Employee shall not, directly or indirectly, Solicit any Other Employee to either leave the employ of the RHI Companies or to become connected in any way with any Competitor.” Id. at 13. Paragraph Thirteen of the employment agreements provides:

After termination of Employee’s employment with Employer, Employee shall not indicate on any stationary, business card, advertising, solicitation or other business materials that Employee is or was formerly an employee of Employer, any of its divisions, or any of the RHI Companies except in the bona fide submission of resumes and the filling out of applications in the course of seeking employment.

Id. at 14. The employment agreements further provide that Paragraphs Eleven and Thirteen are “ ‘reasonable and necessary in order to protect and maintain the proprietary and other legitimate business interests’ of RHI and that these restrictions would not prevent them from earning a livelihood.” Id.

A. The La Jolla Office

On or about July 25, 2014, Defendants Aldava, Greenwood, and Sherman resigned from their employment with RHI’s La Jol-la Office and joined Ledgent Staffing, a subsidiary of Plaintiffs competitor, Roth Staffing Companies, L.P. (“Roth”). “Alda-va coordinated the group defection and used RHI’s confidential business information to assist Ledgent in making successful offers of employment to Greenwood and Sherman.” Id. at 9. On her last day, Defendant Aldava “admitted that she had contacted almost every one of RHI’s clients and candidates she had worked with to tell them that she was leaving.” Id. Defendant Aldava falsely told a representative of the La Jolla Office’s biggest client that “RHI had instructed Aldava that her Permanent Services group should not perform any more work for that client and that RHI was no longer interested in doing business with that client.” Id. Defendants Aldava, Sherman, and Greenwood have continued to call clients and candidates with whom they worked at RHI to obtain business for Ledgent.

In the month prior to their resignations, Defendants Aldava, Sherman, and Greenwood took excessive time off. Following their resignations, RHI received emails on Defendant Aldava, Sherman, and Greenwood’s former email accounts from candidates seeking positions with RHI’s clients.

B. The Carlsbad Office

On or about February 28, 2014, Defendant Ainsworth resigned from RHI’s Carlsbad Office to join Ultimate Staffing, a subsidiary of Roth. “Ainsworth exploited [1182]*1182RHI’s confidential information after leaving RHI to benefit Ultimate Staffing. Ainsworth has unfairly and illegally solicited numerous current clients that Ains-worth met through RHI.” Id. at 10.

In the months after he left, for example, Ainsworth pretended he still worked for RHI to deceive clients into doing business with him and Ultimate Staffing. Ainsworth contacted an RHI client to check the status of a candidate he had placed on behalf of RHI. When the client mentioned that another replacement was needed to be hired, Ainsworth took on the assignment to fill that position, all without telling the client that he no longer worked for RHI. A few days later, the client learned of the deception during a conversation with the RHI contact who had replaced Ainsworth, and expressed shock and surprise about Ainsworth’s misrepresentations.

Id. at 10-11.

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68 F. Supp. 3d 1178, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 175054, 2014 WL 7272405, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-half-international-inc-v-ainsworth-casd-2014.