Safeway Transportation, Inc. v. West Chambers Transportation, Inc.

100 F. Supp. 2d 442, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7021
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Texas
DecidedMay 15, 2000
DocketCivil Action G-99-173
StatusPublished

This text of 100 F. Supp. 2d 442 (Safeway Transportation, Inc. v. West Chambers Transportation, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Safeway Transportation, Inc. v. West Chambers Transportation, Inc., 100 F. Supp. 2d 442, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7021 (S.D. Tex. 2000).

Opinion

ORDER GRANTING PLAINTIFF LEAVE TO AMEND COMPLAINT

KENT, District Judge.

Plaintiff Safeway previously moved for leave to amend its Complaint to include a claim for conspiracy to breach an employee’s fiduciary duty. In an Order dated February 29, 2000 the Court denied Plaintiffs Motion For Leave to Amend The Complaint. Now before the Court is Plaintiffs Motion For Reconsideration, seeking to have the Court reverse its prior Order. For reasons explained more fully below, that Motion is GRANTED, the Court’s prior Order Denying Plaintiffs Motion For Leave To Amend is VACATED, and Plaintiff is hereby GRANTED LEAVE to amend its Complaint to include a claim for conspiracy to breach an employee’s fiduciary duty. In addition, ANDREW F. SPALDING, DEFENDANTS’ COUNSEL, is ADMONISHED for his unprofessional conduct, and warned that any future lapses will result in SEVERE SANCTIONS.

*444 I. Factual and Procedural Background

Plaintiff Safeway is a mid-sized commercial trucking firm specializing in the shipment of dry and liquid bulk chemicals. Defendants Nauk, Sharp, and Strahan are former employees of Safeway. Safeway currently leases their operating facilities from Defendant West Chambers Industrial Park. In the summer of 1998, Strahan and Sharp persuaded Safeway’s president to relocate Safeway’s Houston operation from its original Baytown location to the West Chamber Industrial Park facilities. Within approximately six months after this relocation, Defendants Nauk, Sharp, and Strahan had resigned from Safeway and were employed by a newly created, competing trucking company, Defendant West Chambers Transportation, L.L.C. In essence, Safeway complains that after its Baytown operation was relocated, its former employees, acting in concert with Safeway’s landlord and other individuals, wrongfully appropriated Safeway’s confidential and proprietary information in the course of creating a competing trucking business.

Safeway’s Original Complaint includes causes of action for conversion, unfair competition, misappropriation of trade secrets, breach of fiduciary duty, breach of lease and implied covenant of quiet enjoyment, tortious interference with Safeway’s lease, defamation, and fraud in a real estate transaction. Safeway seeks leave to amend its Complaint to include a cause of action for conspiracy to breach an employee’s fiduciary duties towards his employer.

The trial of this action was originally scheduled for March 27, 2000. However, at the request of the parties, the trial date has been moved to January, 2001.

II. Leave To Amend

The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provide that after the time period has passed for a party to amend his Complaint as of right, a party “may amend the party’s pleading only by leave of the court or by written consent of the adverse party.” Fed R. Civ. P. 15(a). However, the Rules also provide that “leave shall be freely given when justice so requires.” Id. “The policy behind Fed.R.Civ.P. 15(a) is to freely allow amendments unless the rights of the adverse party would be unduly prejudiced.” Thompson v. New York Life Ins. Co., 644 F.2d 439, 444 (5th Cir. Unit B 1981). “This policy is certainly strongest where the motion challenged is the first motion to amend.” Id.

The claim Plaintiff seeks to add is intimately related to the claims already plead in Plaintiffs Original Complaint. Thus Defendants will not be unfairly surprised by the addition of a new cause of action. Moreover, this is not a case where Defendants will be unfairly prejudiced by an eleventh hour amendment to Plaintiffs Complaint: the trial of this action has been re-scheduled to January of 2001.

Defendants do not argue that they will be unfairly prejudiced by this Court’s granting Plaintiff leave to amend the Original Complaint. Instead, Defendants argue that: 1) Defendants Dittman and Massengale cannot be individually liable because they were acting in the course of their employment; 2) that there are no facts to support the existence of a conspiracy to breach an employee’s fiduciary duty; and 3) Texas law does not recognize a fiduciary duty between a ordinary employee and his employer. Defendant’s first two arguments are more properly characterized as attempts to advance a defense or motivate a motion for summary judgment, rather than reasons to deny a mere request by Plaintiff to amend its Complaint. The Court will, however, briefly address Defendant’s third argument.

Defendants make much of the fact that the former employees of Safeway were not directors or officers of the company. Defendants also point out that the employees did not execute a non-compete agreement, a confidentiality agreement, nor even an employment agreement. From these facts *445 Defendants conclude that the former employees cannot possibly be said to owe a fiduciary duty towards their employer. Defendants then argue that because conspiracy is a derivative tort, in the absence of fiduciary duty, there can be no conspiracy to breach such a fiduciary duty.

The Court is inclined to agree that these facts tend to undermine the existence of any formal fiduciary relationship between the former employees and Safeway. Formal fiduciary relationships are based on the status of the parties, and include such familiar examples as the duty an attorney owes his client, the duty an agent owes his principle, and the duty an executor of an estate owes the beneficiaries of that estate.

However, Plaintiff does not appear to be arguing that the former employees had a formal fiduciary relationship based on their status as ordinary employees. Instead, Plaintiff appears to be arguing that the former employees breached an informal, common-law “fiduciary” duty. This informal common-law “fiduciary” duty arose from the nature of their employment and the trust their employer reasonably extended to them to maintain the confidentiality of patently sensitive propriety information.

According to recent pronouncements of the Texas Supreme Court, Texas law recognizes not only formal fiduciary relationships, but also informal, common-law “fiduciary” relationships. See Crim Truck & Tractor Co. v. Navistar, 823 S.W.2d 591, 594 (Tex.1992) (“We have also recognized that certain informal relationships may give rise to a fiduciary duty”). There appear to be two Mnds of informal, common-law “fiduciary” duties. One, termed a “special relationship” gives rise to a tort duty of good faith and fair dealing. See id.

The other common-law “fiduciary” relationship, and the one Plaintiff seems to be relying on, is referred to as a “confidential relationship.” See id. A confidential relationship may arise “where one person trusts in and relies upon another, whether the relation is a moral, social, domestic or merely personal one.” Id. (quoting

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Bluebook (online)
100 F. Supp. 2d 442, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7021, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/safeway-transportation-inc-v-west-chambers-transportation-inc-txsd-2000.