Scruggs Management Services, Inc. v. Lloyd E. Hanson and TIG Insurance Company

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 30, 2006
Docket02-05-00413-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Scruggs Management Services, Inc. v. Lloyd E. Hanson and TIG Insurance Company (Scruggs Management Services, Inc. v. Lloyd E. Hanson and TIG Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scruggs Management Services, Inc. v. Lloyd E. Hanson and TIG Insurance Company, (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

                                               COURT OF APPEALS

                                                 SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS

                                                                FORT WORTH

                                        NO. 2-05-413-CV

SCRUGGS MANAGEMENT                                                    APPELLANT

SERVICES, INC.

                                                   V.

LLOYD E. HANSON AND                                                        APPELLEES

TIG INSURANCE COMPANY

                                              ------------

            FROM THE 362ND DISTRICT COURT OF DENTON COUNTY

                                MEMORANDUM OPINION[1]

I.  Introduction


In nine issues, Appellant Scruggs Management Services, Inc. (ASM@) asserts error on the part of the trial court in granting summary judgments in favor of Appellees Lloyd E. Hanson and TIG Insurance Company and error in the jury=s responses to Jury Question No. 1.  We affirm.

II.  Factual Background

Lloyd Hanson worked for twelve years beginning in 1986 in the Reinsurance Department of TIG, an insurance company based in Irving, Texas.  His job responsibilities included negotiating, interpreting, documenting, and accounting for all of TIG=s reinsurance agreements or treaties.  During his tenure with TIG, he developed considerable expertise in keeping track of reinsurance claims and in finding Amissed@ reinsurance claims.

Hanson served as TIG=s Vice President and Director of Ceded Reinsurance for his last four years with the company before leaving in 1998.  As part of his severance package, he agreed to assist TIG whenever he was needed on reinsurance matters in which he had been involved and was asked by TIG to do some work on reinsurance matters shortly after he left the company.


SM is a corporation which provides, among other things, services to commercial and insurance customers throughout the United States.  During the fourth quarter of 1998, Steve Cook, the former Corporate Controller of TIG, (ACook@) introduced Hanson to Michael Scruggs (AScruggs@) and SM=s Executive Vice President Geoff Banta (ABanta@).  Hanson had recently left TIG=s employment and Cook believed that Hanson might be interested in employment by SM.  Scruggs and Banta met with Hanson several times, sometimes with Cook, to determine whether or not Hanson might make a good fit with SM.  Hanson represented to Scruggs that if SM hired Hanson, he would help SM increase the level of services that it was already providing to TIG.  Specifically, Hanson represented that he knew where tens of millions of dollars of Amissed reinsurance@ recoverables could be located at TIG.  With that knowledge and SM=s resources and relationship with TIG, Hanson indicated that if SM employed him, he could help generate millions of dollars of additional revenue from TIG alone.


Hanson was employed by SM as of February 1, 1999.  As a condition of employment in each of Hanson=s positions, he was required to execute an employment agreement.  Each time Hanson=s employment agreement was renewed and extended, he was required to execute a renewal employment agreement.  The February 1, 1999 agreement allowed SM to terminate Hanson=s employment for cause on one hour=s notice and to fire him without cause on thirty days= notice.  The agreement also contained restrictions on Hanson=s ability to work if he left SM, including two year prohibitions on Hanson (1) soliciting Acovered customers@[2] in the Arestricted area@ (a 150-mile radius around any office where Hanson worked or where a covered customer was present) or (2) working for a competing business in the Arestricted area.@ Finally, the agreement stated that Hanson Awill be or has been . . . given access to@ certain AProtected Information@ (trade secrets and confidential or propriety information) and that he would use such information for the exclusive benefit of SM.

On or about October 1, 2000, SM promoted Hanson and elected him to the position of Chief Operating Officer (ACOO@). 

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Scruggs Management Services, Inc. v. Lloyd E. Hanson and TIG Insurance Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scruggs-management-services-inc-v-lloyd-e-hanson-a-texapp-2006.