United Seal & Rubber Co. v. Bunting , 248 Ga. 814 ( 1982 )


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  • Clarke, Justice.

    This is an appeal from a denial of an interlocutory injunction. We must decide whether dealing with certain customers amounted to “business opportunities.” If this question is answered in the affirmative, we then face the issue of whether former officers and directors of United Seal and Rubber Company, Inc. violated their fiduciary duties by soliciting business from those customers.

    The trial court held the relationships in question were not “business opportunities” and denied United Seal and Rubber Company’s prayers for an interlocutory injunction. We agree and affirm.

    The issue was decided in the trial court on assumed facts, and the court noted that defendants reserved the right to contest the facts if the court’s conclusions of law were found in error. Among the facts assumed were these: United Seal is engaged in the sale of various gaskets, seals and rubber products in the southeastern United States. *815Its principal place of business is Decatur, Georgia. Since at least 1977, defendants Bunting, Keeley, and Galphin were three of the four directors of United Seal. Each resigned his position between October 24 and November 10,1980. Each of these individuals had served as an officer of the corporation, and at the time of resignation, Galphin was an officer. United Seal filed suit against these and other defendants alleging several causes of action which are not involved in the present appeal.

    The trial court assumed that the customers in question were customers of United Seal at the date of resignation of the defendants and that they had been customers at least since 1977. The court assumed that those customers generated approximately 50% of United Seal’s gross revenue. The court found that there was no written or oral contract under which the customers were required to make future purchases from United Seal or under which United Seal was required to make future sales to those customers.

    The trial court held that because the business was highly competitive and there was no contractual arrangement with the customers, the relationship did not constitute “business opportunities” of the corporation within the meaning of Code Ann. § 22-714 (1) (c).

    United Seal primarily relies upon this court’s opinion in Southeast Consultants v. McCrary Eng. Corp., 246 Ga. 503 (273 SE2d 112) (1980). That was the first instance in which this court considered the prohibition against a corporate officer or employee appropriating any “business opportunity” of his corporation. In that case, this court held that, in the absence of an agreement to the contrary, an employee is normally able to compete with his former employer and to solicit his customers after terminating his previous employment. The court then pointed out that the 1968 amendment to Code Ann. § 22-714 authorizes the enjoining of a corporate officer or director from the appropriation, in violation of his duties, of any business opportunity of the corporation. Under the holding in McCrary, supra, the court must first find that a business opportunity exists in order to reach the question of fiduciary duty.

    In McCrary, supra, the court adopted the “interest or expectancy” test for identifying a business opportunity. A business opportunity arises from a “beachhead” consisting of a legal or equitable interest or an “expectancy” growing out of a pre-existing right or relationship. Id. at 508. In McCrary the court found a business opportunity inasmuch as the project in question was within the scope of the former employer’s business. It had done a preliminary study of the project and had been invited to bid on the project. Having found that the former employer had a business *816opportunity, the court went on to find that the former employee violated his fiduciary duty and that the trial court did not err in enjoining his participation in the project.

    Decided January 7, 1982 Rehearing denied January 27, 1982. Gambrell, Russell & Mobley, David M. Brown, William W. Gardner, for appellant. Cofer, Beauchamp, Hawes & Brown, James H. Rollins, J. Boyd Page, Julie Childs, Scoggins, Ivy, Goodman & Weiss, Charles H. Ivy, Arlene L. Coleman, for appellees.

    The business opportunity alleged here is far different from the project in McCrary. There the McCrary firm had done preliminary work on a specific contract which gave it an expectancy in the opportunity. The opportunity in McCrary was a well-defined finite project. Here, although under the assumed facts used by the trial court United Seal had dealings of long standing with the customers in question and even though the sales to these customers accounted for a large part of the business of United Seal, there was no contractual arrangement between them and they were not the exclusive customers of United Seal. Further, the opportunity suggested was an ongoing relationship with no finite aspect. We find that under the facts of this case the customers of United Seal did not constitute business opportunities. This being so, we need not reach the question whether these defendants breached any fiduciary duty owed United Seal.

    Judgment affirmed.

    All the Justices concur, except Jordan, C. J., Marshall and Weltner, JJ., who dissent.

Document Info

Docket Number: 38028

Citation Numbers: 248 Ga. 814

Judges: Clarke, Hill, Weltner

Filed Date: 1/7/1982

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023