Staab Agency, Inc. v. L A Delano Agency

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedDecember 10, 2013
DocketCUMcv-13-24
StatusUnpublished

This text of Staab Agency, Inc. v. L A Delano Agency (Staab Agency, Inc. v. L A Delano Agency) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Staab Agency, Inc. v. L A Delano Agency, (Me. Super. Ct. 2013).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE BUSINESS AND CONSUM~RLO~T

Cumberland, ss. /itvfH ~CUll')- I.J.;rop,D\J

STAAB AGENCY, INC. and SHIRLEY ST. PIERRE

Plaintiffs

v. Docket No. BCD-CV-13-24 I LA DELANO AGENCY, LLC and LUKE A. DELANO

Defendants

ORDER ON DEFENDANT'S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

Defendants LA Delano Agency, LLC and Luke A. Delano have moved for summary

judgment on the four-count Amended Complaint filed against them by Plaintiffs Staab Agency,

Inc. and Shirley St. Pierre. The court elects to decide the Motion without oral argument. See

M.R. Civ. P. 7(b )(7). For the reasons stated below, the court grants the Defendants' Motion for

Summary Judgment as to Counts One and Three of the Amended Complaint and denies the

Motion as to Counts Two and Four.

Factual Background

The following summary of facts is based on the Amended Complaint and the parties'

Statements of Material Facts, with factual disputes noted where they are material. At all

relevant times, Plaintiff Shirley St. Pierre [St. Pierre] has been the owner of Plaintiff Staab

Agency, Inc. [Staab], a business in Jefferson, Maine that primarily titles and registers vehicles

for out-of-state customers. In 2005, Defendant Luke Delano [Delano] was hired by Staab as

St. Pierre's assistant. According to the Verified Complaint, Staab at all relevant times has used

proprietary software to perform essential tasks and maintains proprietary and confidential

information. Delano had no prior experience in the vehicle titled and registration business. His work

at the Staab Agency consisted of administering the company and managing employees, and he

was not involved in registering vehicles. DSMF tJ 3 (admitted by Plaintiffs). 1 The parties

agree that his duties included issuing payroll and bonus checks to Staab employees, St. Pierre

and members of St. Pierre's family, as directed by St. Pierre. DSMF tJ 11 (admitted by

Plaintiffs).

In October 2007, St. Pierre requested a number of her employees to execute an

Agreement Not to Compete or Disclose in the form attached as Exhibit A to the Amended

Complaint. Delano witnessed other employees' signatures on the Agreement Not to Compete

or Disclose, but did not himself sign it. There is a dispute as to why he did not sign the

Agreement Not to Compete or Disclose. St. Pierre claims she thought he had signed it,

whereas Delano claims he offered to sign but was told by St. Pierre that he did not need to. In

any case, there is no dispute that he did not sign.

St. Pierre's Amended Complaint suggests that Delano may have signed and later

removed the copy signed by him from his personnel file. However, in their responses to

Defendants' Statement of Material Facts paragraph 5, the Plaintiffs acknowledge that Delano

never signed the Agreement Not to Compete or Disclose although they claim, and he denies,

that he was asked to sign. DSMF tJ 5 (qualified admission by Plaintiffs).

From April 17, 2009 to October 28, 2010, St. Pierre was incarcerated as a result of

being convicted of federal tax evasion. Her conviction occurred in October 2008, and she was

sentenced in February 2009. See DSMF tJ 13-14 (essentially admitted by Plaintiffs). Around

the time of her sentencing, St. Pierre executed and delivered a General Durable Power of

1 This and similar references are to numbered paragraphs within the Defendants' Statement of Material Facts.

2 Attorney instrument in favor of Delano, to enabling him to manage the Staab Agency's

business during her incarceration.

During St. Pierre's incarceration, Delano essentially managed Staab's office, although

St. Pierre remained as involved as she could be from a federal prison; she was able to

communicate with Delano about the Staab business by electronic mail, and authorized Delano

to issue checks to Staab employees and to St. Pierre's family members, as she had done before

her incarceration. Delano used the power of attorney to act in St. Pierre's stead in a number of

Staab's business and St. Pierre's personal transactions. In addition, Delano continued to issue

checks to employees as he had before St. Pierre's absence from the business.

After St. Pierre returned to Staab in October 2010, she resumed overall responsibility

for the business, and Delano returned to the administrative role he had previously occupied for

Staab's office operation, including issuing checks to Staab employees and members of St.

Pierre's family. The power of attorney instrument apparently remained in force until Delano's

departure although he did not exercise it in the manner he had during St. Pierre's absence.

In January 2012, Delano left the employ of the Staab agency. Later that year, he opened

his own vehicle titling and registration business, Defendant L A Delano, LLC ["the Delano

agency"]. Although much smaller than Staab, the Delano agency is a competitor of Staab in

the field of vehicle titling and registration.

In April 2013, Plaintiffs St. Pierre and Staab commenced this action against Delano and

the Delano agency. Both the Verified Complaint and the Plaintiffs' Amended Complaint, which

was docketed August 30, 2013, present Plaintiffs' claims in four numbered counts:

• Count One is for injunctive relief against both Defendants based on the Defendants' alleged violations of "the spirit, if not the letter, of the Agreement Not To Compete or

Disclose" and the Defendants' alleged misappropriation of Staab's "proprietary

3 computer software, or information contained therein, and other confidential business

information."

• Count Two for embezzlement alleges that Delano embezzled $7 5,000 from Staab while

employed there. Specifically, Plaintiffs claim that Defendant Delano wrote himself and

negotiated a series of $5,000 checks drawn on Staab's checking account on dates in

February and August 2007, January 2008, and November and December 2010, without

authorization.

• Count Three for misappropriation seeks damages against Delano for his alleged

misappropriation of Staab's proprietary software, information therein, and other

confidential information

• Count Four seeks punitive damages against Delano for committing acts of

misappropriation and embezzlement with actual or implied malice

Defendants have denied liability, and their summary judgment motion goes to all of the

Plaintiffs' claims. Specifically, Defendant Delano denies that the Agreement Not to Compete or

Disclose binds him, because he never signed it. He denies he misappropriated any propriety

software or confidential information from Staab. He claims that all of the checks making up

Plaintiffs' $7 5,000 embezzlement claim were authorized by St. Pierre.

Analysis

1. Standard qf Review

Pursuant to M.R. Civ. P. 56( c), a moving party is entitled to summary judgment "if the

pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the

affidavits, if any, ... show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact set forth in those

statements and that [the] party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law." See also Beal v.

Allstate Ins. Co., 2010 ME 20, ~ 11, 989 A.2d 733. At this stage, the facts in the summary

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