Wausau Mosinee Paper Corp. v. Magda

366 F. Supp. 2d 212, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6144, 2005 WL 757382
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedMarch 25, 2005
DocketCIV. 05-09-B-MJK
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 366 F. Supp. 2d 212 (Wausau Mosinee Paper Corp. v. Magda) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wausau Mosinee Paper Corp. v. Magda, 366 F. Supp. 2d 212, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6144, 2005 WL 757382 (D. Me. 2005).

Opinion

*214 MEMORANDUM OF DECISION 1 ON MOTION FOR PRELIM-INAR YINJUNCTION

KRAVCHUK, United States Magistrate Judge.

On March 16, 2005,1 held an evidentiary hearing on plaintiffs motion for a preliminary injunction in this case involving a contractual dispute over a non-compete agreement. This difficult case presents thorny issues involving business ethics and the economic dynamics of the highly competitive specialty and engineered paper industry set against the backdrop of an individual’s conflict between his professional and family obligations. The case also raises the perennially troublesome issue of when and to what extent covenants not to compete will be enforced in Maine’s courts. In the final analysis I conclude that the employer, Wausau Mosinee Paper Corporation (now WausauPaper) is more likely than not to succeed in its quest for injunc-tive relief at law, but that the additional, equitable factors that must be considered do not justify an imposition at this time of injunctive relief that would require the defendant to immediately cease working for his current employer.

Findings of Fact

Otis Mill, located in Jay, Maine, is one of at least three specialty mills operated by WausauPaper in Maine, Wisconsin, and Mississippi. These mills form the specialty products group of WausauPaper, making specialized papers including, but not limited to, microwave popcorn bags, bumper sticker backings, “ereped” papers, masking tapes, and release papers commonly used in food handling operations. WausauPaper has over 1200 employees working in these mills, including the 250 employees in Maine at Otis Mill. Wausau-Paper has been in existence in one form or another for over 100 years, but the specialty products group is a somewhat newer division of the company. These specialty papers are made at smaller mills, often older mills that have been refurbished, because typically the run size of each application is too small to make it profitable to produce the specialty papers on the largest papermaking machines. Because the industry has the potential of being highly profitable, it is also highly competitive and requires the industry leaders to spend a great deal of time, money and skill on product development.

Otis Mill became part of WausauPaper in 1997, but has operated as a paper mill for many years prior to that. Emerson Brooks, the person responsible for the day to day operation of Otis Mill and defendant Magda’s former direct supervisor, has worked at the mill since 1978. Otis Mill as it now exists is constantly involved with new product development with a special emphasis on its “deep-color” paper line, producing items such as the red Williams-Sonoma shopping bags, and other novel technologies involving release papers, super coated papers, and what are called super calendared release liners, for instance the throw away paper that supports the adhesive on a “MY NAME IS” tag. In order to succeed in the specialty papers market it is necessary for a company to constantly reinvent itself in accordance with the demands of the marketplace.

In March 2002, Wausau Paper’s management determined that all new sales and product development employees would be required to sign a non-compete agreement upon employment with the company. Existing sales and product development em *215 ployees had already been required to sign confidentiality agreements and new hires would also be required to do that as well. Existing employees were not asked to sign non-compete agreements. The form non-compete agreement (Ex. 11) contains a narrowly drawn restrictive covenant prohibiting the employee from, inter alia, accepting employment with certain conflicting organizations for a one year period. The conflicting organizations are enumerated in an “Exhibit A” to the agreement, which WausauPaper reserves the right to update on a periodic basis. At the time that David Magda signed the form, Exhibit A listed fourteen competitors and customers of WausauPaper. The agreement further provided that although the list of companies could change over time, the number of conflicting organizations would never exceed fourteen. Glatfelter, Mag-da’s current employer, was included within that list.

The one year employment prohibition meets Wausau’s need to insure that employees will not take design ideas that are in process to a competitor. John Katchko, Wausau’s vice-president for product development, testified that given the specialty paper group’s need to constantly develop new products, the one-year limitation is essential to maintain a competitive advantage and that, in the aggregate, one year represents a fair approximation of the product development curve. The agreement also provides that for a two-year period the company’s confidential information must be held in strict confidence regardless of employment, and, of course, a requirement that trade secrets will forever be held secret.

At the time the nomeompete agreement became company policy there is no indication that Mike Behrens, the vice-president of human resources for the specialty products division, informed his subordinate human resources directors at the specialty mills how to implement the policy other than to present the form agreement to new hires on the day they commenced employment and completed other company paperwork. There was no company-wide policy that the existence of the non-compete provision be discussed in the interview process or presented with the offer of employment. From the time the policy was instituted in March 2002 through the commencement of Magda’s employment on June 30, 2003, Steve Wilkins, the director of human resources at the Otis Mill never had occasion to obtain a non-compete agreement from a new hire.

In April 2004, Wausau revised the list of conflicting organizations by decreasing the number of named organizations to twelve and limiting the Glatfelter restriction to those divisions or operations within the company that compete directly with the specialty paper group of Wausau. Beh-rens also e-mailed Wilkins and other human resource directors to advise them that the non-compete agreements apply to both new hires and promotions within the sales and product development areas of the specialty products group. 2 Behrens further cautioned the human resource directors that in the future the existence of the non-compete provision needs to be presented earlier in the interview process in order to avoid a “backlash” or misunderstanding regarding employment agreements.

*216 In May 2004, Wausau again revised the Exhibit A List to the employment agreement, this time increasing the number of conflicting organizations to fifteen, but otherwise retaining the prohibition on employment with competing divisions within Glatfelter Papers. That list remains the operative Exhibit A at this time and would have been the list in effect at the time of Magda’s resignation. There is no evidence that Magda was ever presented with the revised Exhibit A prior to the commencement of this litigation.

Magda’s Personal and Professional Circumstances Before and After His Employment at the Otis Mill

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Bluebook (online)
366 F. Supp. 2d 212, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6144, 2005 WL 757382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wausau-mosinee-paper-corp-v-magda-med-2005.