Scientific Enterprises, Inc. v. George

47 Va. Cir. 9, 1998 Va. Cir. LEXIS 268
CourtFairfax County Circuit Court
DecidedApril 2, 1998
DocketCase No. (Chancery) 132066
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 47 Va. Cir. 9 (Scientific Enterprises, Inc. v. George) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Fairfax County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scientific Enterprises, Inc. v. George, 47 Va. Cir. 9, 1998 Va. Cir. LEXIS 268 (Va. Super. Ct. 1998).

Opinion

BY JUDGE M. LANGHORNE KEITH

This matter came on for a hearing on September 8,1997, and was heard for five days concluding on September 15, 1997. Post-trial briefing was completed on October 10,1997. Complainants’ Bill of Complaint alleges that Respondents conspired to injure Complainants in their trade or business, breached their fiduciary duties to Complainants, and converted to their own use and benefit Complainants’ property. In their counterclaim, Respondents seek payment of back salary, expenses, and unpaid, deferred, and accrued compensation. The counterclaim for deferred compensation was struck at the conclusion of the evidence.

Findings of Fact

Complainants, Scientific Enterprises, Inc. (“SEI”), Sci-Rep, Inc. (“Scirep”), Sci-Tek, Inc. (“Scitek”), and Scientific Associates, Inc., are related Virginia corporations. Respondents, Donald C. George and Dennis McFadden are individuals who own and operate Respondent, Technical Representatives, Inc., a Pennsylvania corporation (“TRT). George and McFadden were [10]*10minority shareholders of SEI and officers and directors of all of the Complainants. Richard Keyes, not a party to this action, is the majority shareholder of SEI.

In 1976 Keyes hired McFadden and George as sales engineers to work for SEI. Before their employment with SEI, McFadden had been the sales manager for a major client of SEI, Keithley Instruments, Inc. (“Keithley”), and George worked for McFadden. In the early years of SEI’s operation, Keyes was apparently a prime mover in the company, but by May of 1993, McFadden and George were dissatisfied with the situation at SEI. Keyes had taken some of their territory, was spending most of his time on administrative matters, not sales, and while a good part of SEI’s business could be traced to McFadden’s and George’s contracts and efforts,1 Keyes and his wife,2 nonetheless, were drawing substantial sums from the company. In addition, McFadden and George lost promised deferred compensation because of a settlement with a former shareholder/employee of SEI.

Efforts to resolve this business dispute with Keyes were not successful, and by May of 1993, McFadden and George had consulted counsel for advice concerning their resignation from SEI and setting up their own company. On October 1,1993, McFadden and George resigned as employees, officers, and directors of SEI and the other Complainants. According to a stock repurchase agreement dated October 1,1977, they tendered their shares of stock in SEI. After their resignation, McFadden and George offered positions in TRI to Keith Black and Betty Taylor. There is some circumstantial evidence that an offer to join TRI was made to Walter Bryson before October 1,1993, but after considering all the evidence and the testimony of the witnesses at trial, the Court concludes that the Complainants have failed to show that TRI’s offer predated McFadden’s and George’s resignation. Bryson, Black, and Taylor all accepted the offers and joined TRI within a few days after October 1,1993.

While Complainants assert that McFadden and George solicited SEI clients before they resigned on October 1,1993, the evidence does not support this claim. Shortly after their resignation, McFadden and George sent fax messages to their former SEI principals informing them that they had left SEI, formed TRI, and solicited a shift of accounts from SEI to TRI. Officers from Keithley, IOtech, Lake Shore, and Cincinnati Sub-Zero Products all testified [11]*11that they knew nothing of McFadden’s and George’s plans before October 1, 1993. Each of these client-companies gave Keyes an opportunity to keep their business for SEI after McFadden and George left. Keyes hired two salesmen to replace McFadden and George. Keyes efforts were unavailing, and TRI was successful in having these and other principals shift their sales representative business to TRI. When George called Keithley, he told the sales manager, Mr. Brock, that Bryson and Black were on board at TRI. This representation was not true when made, but it was true by die time Mr. Brock decided to terminate SEI.3 The evidence was in conflict concerning whether McFadden and George harbored any malice or ill will toward SEI. The Court finds, after considering all the testimony and other evidence, that no such feelings motivated McFadden and George.

In 1990, McFadden was under some financial pressure and set up a company known as Tech-Pro that received $16,154.18 worth of commissions that admittedly should have gone to SEI. George did not know that McFadden had set up Tech-Pro until McFadden proposed to use this corporation in the Spring of 1993 when he and George began to plan their departure from SEI.

During the time that McFadden and George were planning to leave SEI and set up their own sales company, they were not as scrupulous as they should have been in making sure they did not use SEI resources to advance their own plans. Phone bills, dinners, and motel rooms were charged to SEI that were attributable to TRI not SEI. Because the evidence indicated that their working hours were so flexible, the Court does not find that McFadden and George planned their move on SEI’s time.

The most serious charge leveled by SEI is that McFadden and George converted SEI customer lists. Respondents argue that these lists were not confidential and that most of the information in them came from the principals of SEI. They further argue that the information in the lists is readily available. However, Respondents concede that they would not turn over their own customer lists to a competitor. There seems little doubt to the Court that some of the customer lists were taken by McFadden and George when they left SEI. However, they did not deprive SEI of the lists as copies were left behind when Respondents departed. Further, it is unclear what, if any, damages SEI suffered because TRI had the lists available or even what the value of the lists was. The information in the customer lists was not confidential, and the main value of the lists was the cost of compiling them. There was no evidence that the [12]*12customer lists were useful in TRI’s efforts to convert principals from SEI to TRI. The Court finds that the principals left SEI not because TRI had copies of SEI customer lists but because McFadden and George were no longer with SEI. While Keyes may have been a key salesperson in the early years of SEI’s operations, by 1993 McFadden and George were indispensable to the continued success of SEI with Keithley and SEI’s other principals. The failure of Keyes to recognize this perhaps unpleasant fact and to nurture McFadden and George was the shoal upon which SEI grounded.

On October 1, 1977, McFadden signed an individual employment agreement with Scientific Representatives, Inc., that stated it incorporated by reference a “Company Employment Policy attached hereto ... .” Complainants’ Exhibit 4. The undated Company Employment Policy of Scientific Enterprises, Inc., was introduced as Complainants’ Exhibit 34 but was not attached to Exhibit 4. The Company Employment Policy required that an employee give sixty days’ notice of the termination of employment. Complainants’ Exhibit 3, Paragraph 13. On September 4, 1990, Scientific Representative, Inc.’s corporate existence was terminated by the State Corporation Commission, and there was no evidence that McFadden ever signed another employment agreement.

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Bluebook (online)
47 Va. Cir. 9, 1998 Va. Cir. LEXIS 268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scientific-enterprises-inc-v-george-vaccfairfax-1998.