UtiliSave, LLC v. Miele

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedSeptember 17, 2015
DocketCA 10729-VCP
StatusPublished

This text of UtiliSave, LLC v. Miele (UtiliSave, LLC v. Miele) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
UtiliSave, LLC v. Miele, (Del. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

UTILISAVE, LLC, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) C.A. No. 10729-VCP ) DONNA C. MIELE, ) ) Defendant. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Date Submitted: May 12, 2015 Date Decided: September 17, 2015

John G. Harris, Esq., BERGER HARRIS LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Attorneys for Plaintiff.

Joanne P. Pinckney, Esq., Elizabeth Wilburn Joyce, Esq., PINCKNEY, WEIDINGER, URBAN & JOYCE LLC, Wilmington, Delaware; Attorneys for Defendant.

PARSONS, Vice Chancellor. This is an action by a Delaware limited liability company (“LLC”) against a

former member and employee for breach of a confidentiality provision in the LLC

operating agreement. The LLC claims to own valuable confidential information,

including trade secrets. The former member and employee was a senior executive of the

LLC who allegedly had access to its confidential information. A few months after the

defendant resigned as an employee in late 2014, she allegedly began to compete with the

LLC. Thereafter, the plaintiff filed this action against the defendant for specific

performance of the confidentiality provision and damages. This motion currently is

before me on the defendant‟s motion to dismiss.

For the reasons that follow, I deny the defendant‟s motion as to the plaintiff‟s

claim for equitable relief and grant it as to the plaintiff‟s claim for monetary damages.

Taking all well-pled allegations of fact as true and drawing all reasonable inferences in

favor of the plaintiff, the complaint pleads only one non-conclusory breach of the

confidentiality provision at issue. As to that alleged breach, I conclude the defendant

failed to carry her burden of proving that the contract was invalid or unenforceable as a

matter of law. I also conclude that it is reasonably conceivable that the plaintiff could

prove that the confidentiality provision survived a court ordered termination of the LLC

and that the restrictions it imposes on the defendant are not overly broad or unreasonable

as a matter of law.

1 I. BACKGROUND1

A. The Parties

Plaintiff, UtiliSave, LLC (the “Company”), is a limited liability company formed

under the laws of the State of Delaware. Michael H. Steifman, currently the sole owner

and manager of the Company, founded UtiliSave in 1991. UtiliSave has been and

continues to be an innovator and industry leader in the business of auditing the utility

bills of large institutions such as universities and hospitals. UtiliSave collects tens of

millions of pieces of data regarding its clients‟ utility usage and analyzes them in light of

the applicable regulatory scheme by employing proprietary methods and processes that

enable UtiliSave to find its clients savings in the form of exemptions, credits, refunds, or

improved rate or service classifications.

Defendant, Donna C. Miele, is a former employee and member of UtiliSave. In

2000, UtiliSave hired Miele to a senior management position. As a member of the senior

management team, Miele‟s responsibilities touched on many aspects of UtiliSave‟s

business, including client relations, sales development, human resources, collections,

utility auditing, and operations. In 2006, Miele became an owner and Member of

UtiliSave when she, Steifman, and Mikhail Khenin executed the Amended and Restated

Limited Liability Company Agreement of UtiliSave, LLC, dated as of January 1, 2006

1 The facts are drawn from the well-pled allegations of Plaintiff‟s Verified Complaint (the “Complaint”), which are assumed true for purposes of the Defendant‟s motion to dismiss, as well as documents integral to the Complaint or incorporated by reference therein.

2 (the “LLC Agreement”).2 Miele also signed an employment contract, dated as of January

1, 2006 (the “Employment Agreement”), that expired by its terms on January 1, 2008.3

Miele‟s Membership in UtiliSave terminated on July 12, 2012, by order of this Court.4

Miele continued as an employee of UtiliSave until she resigned from the Company in

October 2014.

B. Facts

The Complaint arises from the terms of the LLC Agreement and, at this stage,

turns largely on whether a confidentiality provision therein survived the termination of

Miele‟s membership interest in UtiliSave and is enforceable. The confidentiality

provision at issue, if valid and enforceable, prohibits Miele from disclosing or using for

her own account anything defined as confidential information “for as long as the

Company is engaged in the UtiliSave Business[.]”5 Plaintiff alleges that Miele, after

resigning from UtiliSave, used the Company‟s confidential information for her own

account in breach of the confidentiality provision.

1. The LLC Agreement and its termination

Upon execution of the LLC Agreement, Managing Members Steifman and Khenin

each owned 40% of UtiliSave; Miele, a non-managing Member, and a group of Gotham

2 Def.‟s Opening Br. Ex. B (the LLC Agreement). 3 Def.‟s Opening Br. Ex. C (the Employment Agreement). 4 In re UtiliSave, LLC, C.A. No. 4441-CS (Del. Ch. July 9, 2012). 5 LLC Agreement § 5.05.

3 entities each owned 10%.6 The LLC Agreement contained a confidentiality provision

(the “Confidentiality Provision”), which stated, in relevant part:

Each Member acknowledges that the information, observations and data (including, but not limited to, financial information, customer lists, techniques, audit issues, procedure and analysis) obtained by it while a Member of the Company concerning the business or affairs of the Company (“Confidential Information”) are the property of the Company. Therefore, each Member agrees that, for as long as the Company is engaged in the UtiliSave Business, it shall not disclose to any unauthorized person or use for its own account any Confidential Information without the unanimous prior written consent of the other Members, unless and to the extent that the aforementioned matters (i) were already in the Member‟s possession before its association with the Company (including any due diligence period), (ii) become generally known to and available for use by the public other than as a result of the Member‟s acts or omissions to act or (iii) are required to be disclosed by any court, tribunal or federal or state agency. . . . Each Member shall deliver to the Company at any other time the Company may request, all memoranda, notes, plans, records, reports, computer tapes and software and other documents and data (and copies thereof) relating to the Confidential Information, work product or the business of the Company which it may then possess or have under his control, except for those items that were the property of the Member prior to the commencement of business (including any diligence period) by the Company. This provision shall (i) also be binding on the principals, employees and agents of the Members, (ii) survive the termination of the Company and (iii) continue to be binding on a Member following the termination of its interest in the Company.7

6 LLC Agreement Schedule A. Steifman owned his stake through a wholly owned entity, MHS Venture. The Gotham entities were Gotham Partners, L.P., Gotham Partners III, L.P., and Gotham Holdings II, LLC. 7 LLC Agreement § 5.05 (emphasis added).

4 A dispute arose between Steifman and Khenin beginning in 2007; in 2009,

Steifman filed a lawsuit against Khenin in New York and commenced a dissolution

proceeding in this Court, which was stayed pending resolution of the New York action. 8

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UtiliSave, LLC v. Miele, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/utilisave-llc-v-miele-delch-2015.