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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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
4 judgment record are reviewed "in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party." Lightfoot
v. Sch. Admin. Dist. No. 35, 200.3 ME 24, ~ 6, 816 A.2d 6.3. However, a party wishing to avoid
summary judgment must present a prima facie case for each element of the claim or defense
that is asserted against it. See Reliance Nat'l Indem. v. Knowles Indus. Svcs., 2005 ME 29, ~9, 868
A.2d 220.
"If material facts are disputed, the dispute must be resolved through fact-finding."
Curtis v. Porter, 2001 ME 158, ~7, 784 A.2d 18. A factual issue is genuine when there is
sufficient supporting evidence for the claimed fact that would require a fact-finder to choose
between competing versions of the facts at trial. See Inkel v. Livingston, 2005 ME 42, ~ 4, 869
A.2d 745. "Neither party may rely on conclusory allegations or unsubstantiated denials, but
must identify specific facts derived from the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories,
admissions and affidavits to demonstrate either the existence or absence of an issue of fact."
Kenny v. Dep't of Human Svcs., 1999 ME 158, ~3, 740 A.2d 560 (quoting Vinick v. Comm'r, 110
F.sd 168, 171 (1st Cir. 1997)).
With that standard in mind, the inquiry turns to whether the Defendants have
demonstrated that they are entitled to summary judgment.2
2 Defendants' reply filing in response to the Plaintiffs' opposition includes material beyond what Rule 56 permits. Rule 56(h)(3) provides for the moving party to submit a reply statement of material facts "limited to the additional facts submitted by the opposing party and any objections to denials or qualifications ... " The Defendants' reply statement of material facts includes responses to the 16 numbered paragraphs of additional facts submitted by Plaintiffs, but goes on to include 13 new numbered paragraphs of further facts. The court disregards the 13 paragraphs because they are not permitted by the rule. Accordingly, the court also disregards the further affidavit of Luke A. Delano as it relates to those 13 extraneous paragraphs.
However, the court does consider the transcript ofNancy Cronin's deposition attached as Defendants' Exhibit 5, in part because the Plaintiffs' opposition repeatedly refers to the upcoming deposition of Ms. Cronin regarding the Delano agency's computer software system.
No request to reopen the summary judgment record has been submitted in the weeks since the last filing, so the court trusts and assumes that the parties are content for the court to rule based on the present record.
5 2. Count One (Request for Injunctive Reliif)
The Amended Complaint itself acknowledges that to obtain injunctive relief, the
Plaintiffs must show irreparable harm as well as a likelihood of success, among other things.
The irreparable harm alleged in this case consists of Defendant Delano's alleged violation of
the Agreement Not to Compete or Disclose and his alleged misappropriation of confidential
software, or software data, or other confidential information. Certainly, violation of a covenant
not to compete and misappropriation of confidential or proprietary information or software can
be the basis for injunctive relief In this case, however, the Plaintiffs have not responded to
Defendants' summary judgment motion with a prima facie showing of liability, as is their
burden at this stage.
With respect to the breach of the Agreement Not to Compete or Disclose, the admitted
fact that Delano never signed the document is fatal to that aspect of the Plaintiffs' claim. As
Delano points out, agreements not to compete are within the Statute of Frauds, 33 M.R.S. § 51.
In addition, even when duly memorialized for purposes of the Statute of Frauds, they are
strictly construed. Moreover, the pleadings do not generate, either expressly or by implication,
any basis for avoiding the Statute of Frauds, such as reformation or promissory estoppel. The
court sees no possibility that the Agreement Not to Compete or Disclose would be enforced in
equity, by means of injunctive relief, against a party that admittedly never signed it.
With regard to the claim of misappropriation of software, Plaintiffs' response to the
Defendants' motion does not effectively put any such issue into contention. Plaintiffs were
obligated to show that there is a genuine issue as to whether Delano misappropriated Staab's
proprietary software. Delano asserts, without effective contradiction by Plaintiffs, that his
business uses a commercial software system that he purchased and paid to have adapted to the
6 Delano agency's needs, and that the agency is not using any software developed or used by
Staab.
With regard to Staab's claim that Delano misappropriated customer lists and other
confidential or proprietary information, once again Plaintiffs' opposition does not identify any
such misappropriation or effectively put issues of misappropriation into contention. Plaintiffs
do propound additional statements of material fact in response to those of the Defendants, but
none that is relevant to the Plaintiffs' misappropriation claims.
The Plaintiffs have not generated genuine issues of material fact as to Count One, and
the court concludes that the Defendants have met their burden to demonstrate that they are
entitled to judgment as a matter oflaw on Count One of the Amended Complaint.
3. Count Two (Embezzlement)
The issue whether Delano did or did not embezzle $7 5,000 in the form of unauthorized
checks written to himself, as Plaintiffs claim in Count Two of their Amended Complaint,
appears to come down to the credibility of the accusation versus the credibility of the denial.
The parties' respective Statements of Material Fact and responses squarely engage on the
embezzlement issue. Plaintiffs say Delano issued the checks at issue without their knowledge
or authorization; Defendants say he was authorized to issue the checks. Neither side proffers
any further evidence in the form of written authorization or non-authorization that might
elevate the dispute from a "he said, she said" situation.
Which side has the burden of persuasion may depend on whether Delano is deemed to
have been acting as a fiduciary when he issued the checks in question, so the usual requirement
that the Defendants as the non-moving parties must present a prima facie showing of liability
may or may not apply to this claim.
7 Delano presents several arguments as to why the accusation of embezzlement should be
rejected-such as the fact that all of the checks at issue were written before or after St. Pierre's
absence due to incarceration and not during it-but it is inescapable that whether Delano was
or was not authorized to issue the checks in question is a genuine issue of material fact that can
only be resolved by the fact finder. Accordingly, the Defendants' motion must be denied as to
Count Two of the Amended Complaint.
4. Count Three (Misappropriation)
For essentially the same reasons as the court grants summary judgment to the
Defendants on Count One, the Defendants are entitled to summary judgment on Count Three:
the Plaintiffs' responses to the Defendants' statement of material fact and the additional
statements propounded by Plaintiffs do not identify any computer program, software, customer
lists or other proprietary or confidential information that Delano or the Delano agency has
misappropriated from Staab or St. Pierre. Because the Plaintiffs' opposition does not effectively
generate any genuine issue of material fact as to which a fact finder could reasonably decide in
Plaintiffs' favor, Defendants are entitled to summary judgment on Count Three of the
Amended Complaint.
5. Count Four (Punitive Damages)
Punitive damages are available in Maine upon proof by clear and convincing evidence
that a defendant acted with actual or implied malice in committing an intentional tort. See
Shrader-Miller v. Miller, 2004 ME 117, ~20, 855 A.2d 1139; Tuttle v. Raymond, 494 A.2d 1353,
1361 (Me.1985). Malice can be implied where the defendant's deliberate conduct is sufficiently
"outrageous," but it cannot be implied "by the defendant's mere reckless disregard of the
circumstances." Tuttle, 494 A.2d at 1361.
8 What the Plaintiffs label as a claim of embezzlement in Count Two is in substance a
claim of conversion intentionally committed. Plaintiffs' allegations in Counts Two and Four
also include that Defendant Delano was acting as a fiduciary when he embezzled funds, and
that he acted with actual or implied malice.
As they do with respect to Count Two, the Defendants raise multiple arguments that a
fact finder might well find persuasive against the Plaintiffs' claim for punitive damages in
Count Four. Indeed, accusations of embezzlement and claims for punitive damages, like claims
of violating non-competition agreements or misappropriating proprietary or confidential
material, should not be asserted lightly. However, just as the issue raised by Count Two as to
whether Delano did or did not have authority from St. Pierre to issue the checks in question is
an issue for the fact finder, so is the related issue of whether, if he were found to have
"embezzled" the funds, punitive damages in addition to actual damages should be awarded.
Therefore, the court denies the Defendants' Motion for Summary Judgment as to Count Four.
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED AS FOLLOWS:
1. Defendants' Motion for Summary Judgment is granted in part, as to Counts One and
Three of the Amended Complaint, and is denied as to Counts Two and Four.
2. Judgment is hereby entered for Defendants against Plaintiffs on Counts One and
Three of the Amended Complaint.
Pursuant to M.R. Civ. P. 79(a), the clerk is hereby directed to incorporate this Order by
reference in the docket.
Dated December 10, 201.3
Justice, Maine Business & Consumer Court
Entered on the Docicet: JJ ·j / · IJ Copies sent vi<~ Mail __ Electronically _j/_ 9 Staab Agency, Inc. and Shirley St.Pierre v. L.A. Delano Agency, LLC and Luke A. Delano BCD-CV-13-24
Staab Agency, Inc. and Shirley St.Pierre Petitioners I Plaintiffs
Counsel: Bruce Merrill, Esq. Law Office of Bruce M. Merrill PA 225 Commercial Street, Suite 501 Portland, ME 04101
L. A. Delano Agency, LLC and Luke A. Delano Respondents 1 Defendants
Counsel: Michelle Allott, Esq. Farris Law 491 US Route One, Suite 22 Freeport, ME 04032