Smile Finders v. Chrystal Medina CA2/7

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 19, 2021
DocketB298590
StatusUnpublished

This text of Smile Finders v. Chrystal Medina CA2/7 (Smile Finders v. Chrystal Medina CA2/7) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smile Finders v. Chrystal Medina CA2/7, (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 10/19/21 Smile Finders v. Chrystal Medina CA2/7 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS

California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION SEVEN

B298590 SMILE FINDERS et al., (Los Angeles County Plaintiffs and Appellants, Super. Ct. No. BC492238)

v.

CHRYSTAL MEDINA et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, William A. MacLaughlin, Judge. Affirmed in part, reversed in part and remanded with directions. Lewis Brisbois Bisgaard & Smith, Jeffry A. Miller, Wendy S. Dowse, Craig Holden and Robert M. Collins for Plaintiffs and Appellants Smile Finders, Soleimani Dental Corporation, Soheil Soleimani DMD Corporation, S. Alexander Soleimani Dental Corporation, S.A. Soleimani Dental Corporation and Dental Management Services, LP. Atabek & Associates and Jon A. Atabek for Defendants and Respondents Chrystal Medina and Genwell, Inc. Baranov & Wittenberg and Michael M. Baranov for Defendants and Respondents Houman Baratian, Baratian Dental Corporation, and Shallen Price. ___________________ Six affiliated dental companies— Smile Finders, a licensed dental referral company; Soheil Soleimani DMD Corporation, Soheil Soleimani Dental Corporation, S. Alexander Soleimani Dental Corporation and S.A. Soleimani Dental Corporation (collectively Soleimani Dental Corporations); and Dental Management Services, LP (DMS)—appeal the judgment entered in their trade secret and breach of contract lawsuit against Dr. Houman Baratian, a dentist who had worked at one of the dental offices owned by the Soleimani Dental Corporations and then opened a competing professional office, and several related individuals and entities. Smile Finders contends the trial court erred in granting a motion for nonsuit precluding its claim for lost profits for misappropriation of its trade secrets, and all six affiliated dental companies—Smile Finders, DMS and the Soleimani Dental Corporations (collectively the Soleimani parties)—contend the court erred in granting the nonsuit motion as to their breach of contract claims against Baratian and two former employees of Smile Finders and DMS. We affirm in part and reverse in part with instructions to conduct a new trial as to certain of the Soleimani parties’ breach of contract claims.

2 FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND 1. The Parties to the Lawsuit and Appeal The Soleimani Dental Corporations, owned by Dr. Soheil Alexander Soleimani, operate a total of eight dental offices. Smile Finders functions as the marketing arm of the affiliated companies generating and providing referrals exclusively to the Soleimani Corporations. DMS provides management services to the Soleimani Dental Corporations. On September 14, 2012 the Soleimani parties filed an unverified complaint, on February 5, 2013 a first amended complaint, and on September 6, 2013 the operative second amended complaint for injunctive relief and damages alleging causes of action for misappropriation of trade secrets, breach of contract and several related torts. The second amended complaint named as defendants in the misappropriation cause of action Baratian, Baratian Dental Corporation, Chrystal Medina, the former marketing director of Smile Finders who left Smile Finders to work for Baratian, and Genwell, Inc., a company founded by Medina. Baratian, Medina and Shallen Price, a former employee of Smile Finders and DMS, were named as defendants in the breach of contract cause of action. (Baratian, Baratian Dental Corporation, Medina, Genwell and Price, the only defendants involved with this appeal, are referred to 1 collectively as the Baratian parties.) Each of the causes of action was brought on behalf of all six of the Soleimani parties.

1 The Soleimani parties do not challenge the trial court’s order granting nonsuit as to the additional defendants named in the second amended complaint or the causes of action alleged other than misappropriation and breach of contract. For her part, Medina has not appealed the trial court’s entry of judgment

3 Baratian, who started working as an independent 2 contractor with Soleimani in 2007, signed a new contract for services with DMS in April 2011. Article 6 of the contract, titled Proprietary Rights of DMS and All DMS and Affiliated Entities, expressly applied “with equal force and effect to DMS and any related organizations, including but not limited to DMS LP, S. Alexander Soleimani Dental Corp., Soheil Soleimani DMD Corp., Soleimani Dental Corp., S.A. Soleimani Dental Corp, or Smile Finders.” The contract protected DMS and its affiliated entities’ confidential and proprietary information, including “customer lists, customer information, names, addresses and information relating to leads, lists of leads, names, addresses and telephone numbers of referral sources, . . . marketing information, methods of operation, . . . and all other information of independent economic value to DMS.” Baratian agreed he would not “directly or indirectly, either during the term of this contractual relationship with DMS or thereafter, disclose or use the Confidential Information other than in the business of or as directed by DMS, without the prior written consent of DMS.” He also agreed not to use the confidential information for a period of three years following termination of his relationship with DMS

against her on her cross-complaint against Smile Finders for unfair business practices, and Baratian and Medina have not appealed the entry of a permanent injunction in favor of Smile Finders prohibiting any use of the trade secrets at issue in the litigation. 2 Baratian’s original contract for services, effective March 18, 2007, was with Soleimani Dental Corporation. He signed a second contract with Soleimani Dental Corporation effective December 1, 2009.

4 “to either directly or indirectly solicit, or take away, or attempt to solicit, or take away any of the patients of DMS, either for Dentist or for any other person, firm or corporation.” Medina and Price also signed confidentiality agreements as a term of their employment. Medina’s agreement, signed in 2003, was between her and all six affiliated dental entities. Price’s agreement was with Smile Finders, her employer until she 3 transferred to DMS in 2011. The agreements, in substantially similar language, protected any “trade secrets, as that term is defined by the law,” and “any and all information concerning any database or contact names [and] any resources which employer uses to promote the business,” and specifically identified as confidential information “[t]he names and addresses of Employer’s contact and referral sources, and clients and prospective clients from whom Employee has solicited business while in the employ of the Employer, and all other confidential information relating to those contact and referral sources and clients.” 2. Misappropriation of Smile Finders’s Company List Smile Finders generates referrals to the individual dental offices owned by the Soleimani Dental Corporations primarily through employer-sponsored corporate health fairs (nonexclusive events that other health care providers attend) and dental wellness (exclusive) events. Smile Finders employees (bookers) attempt to arrange both types of marketing opportunities at

3 The confidentiality agreement signed by Price is undated, and the handwritten insert on the line to identify her employer is illegible on the copy of the document included in the record on appeal.

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Smile Finders v. Chrystal Medina CA2/7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smile-finders-v-chrystal-medina-ca27-calctapp-2021.