Techno Lite v. EMCOD

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 21, 2020
DocketB284989
StatusPublished

This text of Techno Lite v. EMCOD (Techno Lite v. EMCOD) 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
Techno Lite v. EMCOD, (Cal. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed 1/21/20 CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION*

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FOUR

TECHNO LITE, INC., B284989 c/w B289486 (Los Angeles County Plaintiff, Cross-defendant Super. Ct. No. LC101264) and Respondent,

v.

EMCOD, LLC, et al.,

Defendants, Cross-complainants and Appellants.

* Pursuant to California Rules of Court, rules 8.1100 and 8.1110, this opinion is certified for publication with the exception of parts A.2. through and including D. of the Discussion. APPEAL from a judgment and order of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Rick Brown, Judge and Virginia Keeny, Judge. Affirmed. Schwartz & Asiedu and Kwasi A. Asiedu; Law Offices of Stephen K. Lubega and Stephen K. Lubega for Defendants, Cross-complainants and Appellants. Reed & Reed and Darren G. Reed for Plaintiff, Cross- defendant and Respondent.

_________________________________________

INTRODUCTION Appellants Scott Drucker and Arik Nirenberg worked for respondent Techno Lite, a company engaged in selling lighting transformers that was previously owned by Neil Olshan and respondents Stefan Poenitz and David Tour. While Drucker and Nirenberg worked for Techno Lite, they also ran their own company, appellant Emcod, LLC. Though Emcod also sold transformers, Techno Lite consented to Drucker’s and Nirenberg’s operating Emcod while working for Techno Lite, based on their promise that they would run Emcod on their own time, and that Emcod would not compete with Techno Lite. In 2013, after Olshan died, Poenitz and Tour offered to gift Olshan’s shares in Techno Lite to Drucker. Drucker refused the shares and instead offered to purchase Techno Lite from Poenitz and Tour. Although the parties negotiated, no purchase was consummated, and Drucker and Nirenberg resigned from Techno Lite in mid-December 2013.

2 Shortly thereafter, Techno Lite accused Drucker, Nirenberg, and appellant Joseph Frole -- an outside salesperson who sold products on behalf of both Techno Lite and Emcod -- of stealing its customers and misappropriating its trade secrets. On January 29, 2014, Techno Lite filed a complaint against Emcod, Drucker, Nirenberg, and Frole for breach of fiduciary duty, misappropriation of trade secrets, interference with contractual relationships, intentional and negligent interference with prospective economic advantage, conversion, injunctive relief, and constructive trust. Emcod, Drucker, and Nirenberg, in turn, cross-complained against Techno Lite, its owners, its operations manager respondent Rodney Davis, and several others for intentional interference with contract, intentional and negligent interference with prospective economic relations, violation of the California unfair competition law, violation of the Cartwright Act, violation of the unfair business practices act, defamation, and injunctive relief. Techno Lite subsequently filed two amended complaints, adding causes of action for fraud and unfair business practices. Appellants secured summary adjudication of Techno Lite’s misappropriation of trade secrets claim before the Honorable Russell S. Kussman. The parties thereafter proceeded to a court trial on the remaining causes of action before the Honorable Rick Brown. After the close of evidence, as part of appellants’ closing argument, Emcod, Drucker, and Nirenberg requested leave to amend their cross-complaint to conform to proof to add a cause of action

3 for breach of contract for Poenitz’s and Tour’s failure to sell Techno Lite to Drucker and Nirenberg. The court denied the request. Following the conclusion of the trial and a subsequent hearing, the court found Drucker, Nirenberg, and Frole liable for interfering with Techno Lite’s prospective economic advantage, and also found Drucker, Nirenberg, and Emcod liable for fraud and unfair competition.1 The court dismissed appellants’ cross- complaint. In a later proceeding, the Honorable Virginia Keeny denied appellants’ motion for attorneys’ fees for defeating Techno Lite’s misappropriation of trade secrets claim. Appellants now argue the courts below erred by: (a) finding Drucker, Nirenberg, and Emcod liable for fraud; (b) finding appellants liable for interfering with respondent Techno Lite’s prospective economic advantage; (c) denying Emcod, Drucker, and Nirenberg’s motion for leave to amend their cross-complaint to conform to proof; and (d) denying appellants’ motion for attorneys’ fees after appellants secured summary adjudication of Techno Lite’s claim for misappropriation of trade secrets. In the published portion of the opinion, we reject appellants’ argument that they

1 As to the remaining causes of action, the court found against Techno Lite on its claims of breach of fiduciary duty and interference with contractual relations, found Techno Lite’s conversion claim to be de minimis and awarded no damages for it, and found Techno Lite’s causes of action for injunctive relief and constructive trust to be moot.

4 could not be found liable for fraud because their promise not to compete against their current employer was void under Business and Professions Code section 16600. In the unpublished portion of the opinion, we reject their remaining contentions and affirm.

STATEMENT OF RELEVANT FACTS

A. Poenitz and Tour Purchase Techno Lite In 2003, Olshan, Poenitz, and Tour purchased Techno Lite from Shafrir Romano. Both Drucker and Nirenberg were working for Techno Lite, and they continued on with the new ownership. Originally, Romano was kept on to run Techno Lite, but in 2005, following a dispute with the new owners, Romano left the company and Drucker was tasked with running Techno Lite. Following his departure, Romano interfered with Techno Lite’s relationship with its suppliers, nearly causing Techno Lite to go out of business.

B. Drucker and Nirenberg Found Emcod and Promise Emcod Will Not Compete with Techno Lite In 2006, with Techno Lite in dire financial straits, Drucker and Nirenberg founded Emcod, LLC.2 Drucker testified they did so because they “were in fear of Techno Lite closing its doors.” They “started Emcod as a backup to

2 By the time trial began, Emcod had become a corporation.

5 basically have something to fall on to if Techno Lite was to close its doors.” Drucker and Nirenberg were each 50 percent owners of Emcod, and its only employees. When Olshan, Tour, and Poenitz discovered Emcod, the parties had “many discussions,” but ultimately they decided to permit Drucker and Nirenberg to operate Emcod while still working for Techno Lite, because Drucker and Nirenberg promised them Emcod would not compete with Techno Lite. Drucker testified he told Techno Lite’s owners that Emcod would not compete with them in the lighting industry. Tour testified that Nirenberg promised him Emcod’s business “will have nothing to do with any of your parts. We’re not going into competition with you.” Tour further testified that he and Techno Lite’s other owners were assured that Emcod’s operations “weren’t going to affect [Techno Lite’s] business in any way, shape, or form.” Poenitz testified that “Arik [Nirenberg] and/or Scott [Drucker]” told him “that Emcod made custom transformers . . . that had nothing to do with [Techno Lite’s] market or [its] customer base.” In 2009, Frole began selling products for both Techno Lite and Emcod as an outside salesperson; he was paid by commission on products sold.

C. Emcod Begins Competing with Techno Lite; Appellants Conceal Their Actions In 2012, Emcod started selling to Techno Lite customers the same products Techno Lite was selling. Specifically, Drucker admitted that Emcod sold to certain

6 Techno Lite customers such as Diode L.E.D., G.M. Lighting, Five Star Wholesale, Ark Lighting, and Village View Lighting the same products Techno Lite sold.

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Techno Lite v. EMCOD, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/techno-lite-v-emcod-calctapp-2020.