William Gallagher Associates Insurance Brokers, Inc. v. Everts

13 Mass. L. Rptr. 716
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedSeptember 6, 2000
DocketNo. 199900519C
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 13 Mass. L. Rptr. 716 (William Gallagher Associates Insurance Brokers, Inc. v. Everts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
William Gallagher Associates Insurance Brokers, Inc. v. Everts, 13 Mass. L. Rptr. 716 (Mass. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

Hinkle, J.

Plaintiff

William Gallagher Associates Insurance Brokers, Inc. seeks damages and injunctive relief from defendants Albert Everts, II and InterContinental Insurance Brokers, LLC (“InterContinental”). Plaintiff claims defendants misappropriated confidential business information and trade secrets and solicited plaintiffs customers.2 The matter is now before the court on defendants' motion for summary judgment. After a hearing, for the reasons set forth below, this motion is ALLOWED.

BACKGROUND

The undisputed material facts as established by the summary judgment record are as follows.3

Everts began working for Frank B. Hall & Co. of Boston (“Hall & Co.”) in or around 1985. At Hall & Co., Everts was an account manager.4 In this capacity, he did not sell insurance but issued certificates of insurance, sent out policies and made proposals. The nature of Everts’ work as an account manager was generally the same as the work of a “producer" but differed in that a producer is ultimately responsible for the accounts.5 Everts performed work for two clients of Hall & Co. while there, Sasaki Associates arid Envirogen.

Everts was involved in the environmental and professional liability insurance business at Hall & Co. Everts provided insurance and risk management services for environmental and professional liability risks. He would consult with clients and prospective clients concerning their insurance and then receive quotes from insurance companies for the clients. Everts also generated insurance manuscript and policy forms.

The potential market for environmental insurance and professional liability products includes hospitals, landfills, industry, manufacturing, laboratories, dry cleaners, automobile repair shops, junkyards, restaurants, supermarkets, shopping malls, gas stations, apartment buildings, farms and entities buying commercial properties. The insurance product Everts sold to such clients and the insurers providing that insurance product are well known in the industry. Everts was not in any special position to receive the quotes he obtained, because they are available to anyone with the relevant information about the client or potential client.6

In 1992, Everts moved to California and worked as a producer for the Crowell Insurance Agency of Orange County. After leaving that agency, Everts worked for Marsh & McLennan in 1993 for several months as a producer. Everts maintained contact with Sasaki Associates and Envirogen.7

In August 1993, Everts became a producer with Minet Insurance Services, Inc., a subsidiary of Minet, Inc., and worked in Los Angeles. Everts believes that at that time he required no additional training to work as a producer. He did, however, take courses to maintain his license as a property casualty broker.

Upon joining Minet Insurance Services, Inc., Everts signed a restrictive covenant agreement (the ”1993 agreement")8 with Minet International Professional Indemnity Brokers, Inc. (a sister corporation of Minet Insurance Services, Inc.).9 Only Everts’ signature appears on the 1993 agreement; this agreement was not signed by any representative of Minet Insurance Services. At the time Everts signed the 1993 agreement, Mike Newman, Senior Vice President of Minet Insurance Services, Inc., told Everts that this agreement would never be enforced by Minet Insurance Services, Inc., because non-competition agreements are unenforceable in California.10

In or around February 1996, Minet, Inc. sent Everts (in California) an offer letter11 and another restrictive covenant agreement (the “1996 agreement”). Everts signed the 1996 agreement and sent it to Minet, Inc. in New York. The 1996 agreement provided a signature line for a representative of the William Gallagher Associates Insurance Agency, Inc. That company, a Massachusetts corporation, was owned by Minet, Inc., and changed its name to Minet Insurance Brokers, Inc. in 1996. Through a series of sales and name changes, William Gallagher Associates Insurance Agency, Inc. and Minet Insurance Brokers, Inc. became the plaintiff in this action.12 No representative of Minet, Inc. or the William Gallagher Associates Insurance Agency, Inc. signed the 1996 agreement.

The offer letter stated that Everts’ relocation to Boston would be contingent on receipt of the completed 1996 agreement. The 1996 agreement, nine pages in length, states that it is an agreement between Everts and William Gallagher Associates Insurance Agency, Inc. and its parents, subsidiaries, successors, affiliates and assigns.13 The space provided for the date of the agreement is left blank. The agreement contains “mutual recitals.”14

In April 1996, Everts worked as a producer in the Boston office of Minet Insurance Brokers, Inc. The cost of Everts’ move to Boston was covered by St. Paul Insurance Co.15 Approximately one year later, in May 1997, Minet Insurance Brokers, Inc. (by way of its ownership by Minet, Inc.) was sold to Aon Corporation. In August 1997, the management of the Boston office reacquired ownership of the office, and renamed it William Gallagher Associates Insurance Brokers, Inc. See supra n.12. While Everts was aware of these corporate purchases and name changes, he was not informed of specific details regarding those transactions or their impact on Everts’ employment contracts. When he began working for Minet Insurance Services, Inc., Everts was aware that that corporation was one of a number of related corporations, but he did not know the exact corporate relationship.

Working for Minet Insurance Brokers, Inc. and then for the plaintiff, Everts provided insurance and risk [718]*718management services for environmental and professional liability risks. He consulted with clients and prospective clients concerning their insurance and obtained insurance quotes from insurance companies for the clients. The quotes he received were obtainable by any person with the relevant information from the client. Everts also generated insurance manuscript and policy forms. The skills Everts used to perform these functions were skills that he acquired before working for plaintiff or plaintiffs predecessors, but he was still required to attend courses to maintain his license. The duties Everts performed were generally the same in Boston as they were in California.

Everts received some necessary assistance in performing his job with plaintiff (and Minet Insurance Brokers, Inc.). Specifically, Everts received assistance from persons in the typing pool (although he did much of his own typing), from account managers who performed necessary clerical tasks for Everts and from other support staff members.16 Everts’ office supplies were provided by the company. Everts also received assistance from Philip Edmundson, who brought Everts with him to. sell insurance to Instron Corporation. Everts and Edmundson were successful in selling environmental insurance to Instron. However, Everts has had no contact with Instron since he left his employment with plaintiff, and Instron Corporation has never become a client of InterContinental.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 Mass. L. Rptr. 716, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/william-gallagher-associates-insurance-brokers-inc-v-everts-masssuperct-2000.