Sagarino v. Sci Connecticut Funeral Serv., No. Cv00-0499737 (May 22, 2000)

2000 Conn. Super. Ct. 6429
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedMay 22, 2000
DocketNo. CV00-0499737
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2000 Conn. Super. Ct. 6429 (Sagarino v. Sci Connecticut Funeral Serv., No. Cv00-0499737 (May 22, 2000)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sagarino v. Sci Connecticut Funeral Serv., No. Cv00-0499737 (May 22, 2000), 2000 Conn. Super. Ct. 6429 (Colo. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION ON APPLICATION FOR TEMPORARY INJUNCTION
Defendant and Counterclaim Plaintiff SCI Connecticut Funeral Services, Inc. ("SCI") has brought this Application for a Temporary Injunction to restrain Plaintiff and counterclaim Defendant Robert L. Sagarino ("Sagarino") from continuing to violate an Agreement-Not-To-Compete given by Sagarino in connection with the sale of stock in the Donald D. Sagarino Funeral Home, Inc. to SCI. SCI claims that Sagarino has violated the Agreement-Not-To-Compete by opening and operating a funeral home known as the C.R. Sagarino Funeral Home approximately two miles from the location of the Donald D. Sagarino Funeral Home, now known as the New Britain Memorial/Sagarino Funeral Home, in New Britain, Connecticut.

Facts CT Page 6430

After a hearing on the Application for Temporary Injunction the court finds the following facts. On June 16, 1994, SCI purchased all of the stock from the Donald D. Sagarino Funeral Home, Inc. from Sagarino's mother for the sum of $700,000. SCI also purchased the real estate where the Donald D. Sagarino Home was located for the sum of $375,000.

At the time of the stock purchase, Sagarino had been a long time employee of the Donald D. Sagarino Funeral Home. As a condition of purchasing this stock, SCI required that Sagarino and other family members execute five year employment or consultant agreements and fifteen year agreements-not-to-compete. The Agreement-Not-To-Compete signed by Sagarino provided that for a fifteen year period, within a thirty mile radius of the Donald D. Sagarino Funeral Home, Sagarino would not:

(a) directly or indirectly, alone or for the account of Covenantor, or as a partner, member, employee, advisor, or agent of any partnership or joint venture, or as a trustee, officer, director, shareholder, employee, advisor, or agent or any corporation, trust or other business organization or entity, own, manage, advise, encourage, support, finance, operate, join, control, or participate in the ownership, management, operation, or control of or be connected in any manner with any business which is or may be in the funeral, mortuary, crematory, marketing or prearranged funerals business or any business related to the above; or

(b) induce or assist anyone in inducing in any way any employee of Corporation to resign or sever his employment or to breach an employment agreement with Corporation to its affiliates.

The Agreement-Not-To-Compete further provided that for a period of fifteen years, Sagarino:

3. (b) Will not reveal (except pursuant to any judicial process) to any third person any difference of opinion, if there be such at any time, between Covenantor and the management of Corporation;

(d) Will not knowingly or intentionally do any act or thing detrimental to the business of Corporation; and

(e) Will encourage and recommend the use of the Corporation's services by relative, friends and CT Page 6431 acquaintances.

In consideration for the Agreement-Not-To-Compete, SCI agreed to pay Sagarino the sum of $65,000 in 120 equal payments of $541.67, which payments SCI has been making and Sagarino has been accepting. Sagarino's mother, brother and sister also executed Agreements-Not-To-Compete which had fifteen year terms. The amounts they each were to receive under the terms of those agreements were less than the amounts to be received by Sagarino. SCI would not have purchased the business if Sagarino had refused to execute the Agreement-Not-To-Compete. There is nothing in the Employment Agreement or the Agreement-Not-To-Compete, both of which were signed by Sagarino, that makes the Agreement-Not-To-Compete dependent in any way on Sagarino's employment with SCI or the Donald D. Sagarino Funeral Home.

Sagarino's Employment Agreement with SCI expired on June 15, 1999, and, thereafter, Sagarino was employed by SCI as an employee at will. On July 29, 1999, SCI terminated Sagarino's employment after Sagarino admitted to drinking alcohol in the preparation room of the Funeral Home.

The execution of the Agreement-Not-To-Compete was crucial to SCI because it was paying a substantial amount of money for a business that had existed for many years and had established significant goodwill in the New Britain area, particularly with the Italian-American community. Attracting business in the funeral home industry is highly dependent upon personal relationships and on the family name connected with the business. People select funeral homes based upon their own or their family's previous experience with a particular funeral home and the family members who run it. There is strong "brand loyalty" to a particular funeral home and the family members who run it. Most clients are individuals whose families have previously used the same funeral home.

The Donald D. Sagarino Funeral Home was perceived as a family run business and a multi-generational institution which served several generations of its customers' families. Unlike certain business where customers return daily, or monthly, in the funeral home business families generally do not have the need to return to the same funeral home for many years. The average time for return business is nine years. Therefore, it can take a long time for a new owner to even meet a family and to develop a personal relationship with the family.

During the seven month period from the time he was terminated by SCI until February, 2000, Sagarino made very little attempt to seek employment in the funeral industry in New Britain, made very absolutely no attempt to seek employment in the funeral industry in the area outside CT Page 6432 the thirty mile distance restriction in the Agreement-Not-To-Compete, and made absolutely no attempt to seek employment in any other industry. In early 2000, Sagarino opened and began operating the C.R. Sagarino Funeral Home, located on 25 South Street, New Britain, Connecticut, approximately two miles from the Donald D. Sagarino Funeral Home. Sagarino is advertising and seeking clients from the same Italian-American community that the Donald D. Sagarino Funeral Home has traditionally served. There was evidence, introduced by Sagarino himself, that he is in fact competing with and taking customers from the Donald D. Sagarino Funeral Home. Two out of the three prepaid funeral contracts which the C.R. Sagarino Funeral Home has secured since it has been in operation were obtained by means of the transfer of those funeral contracts from the Donald D. Sagarino Funeral Home.

Discussion of Law and Ruling

A party is entitled to a temporary injunction if the party establishes that: (i) there is a probability of success on the merits and there is no other adequate remedy at law, and (ii) substantial and irreparable injury is imminent. Connecticut Association of Clinical Laboratories v.Connecticut Blue Cross, 31 Conn. Sup. 110, 119 (1973). Irreparable injury and lack of an adequate remedy at law is considered to be automatically established where a party seeks to enforce a covenant not to compete.Lampson Lumber Co. v. Caporale, 140 Conn. 679, 685, 102 A.2d 875 (1954);Welles v. O'Connell, 23 Conn. Sup. 335, 337 (1962).

In Welles v. O'Connell, 23 Conn. Sup. 335

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Bluebook (online)
2000 Conn. Super. Ct. 6429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sagarino-v-sci-connecticut-funeral-serv-no-cv00-0499737-may-22-2000-connsuperct-2000.