Top
Stories
Blog: The Ethical Workplace Restoring Workplace Trust, Part II May 23, 2013
Latest News Disaster Preparedness: Tornadoes May 22, 2013
Blog: The Practical Employer Email Surveillance as Evidence of Retaliation May 22, 2013
Latest News Workforce Software Gets to Work Abroad May 21, 2013
Blog: The Practical Employer Social Media is the Digital Water Cooler May 21, 2013
Blog: The Practical Employer Fired for Suing an Ex-Employer? Court Rejects Public Policy Claim May 20, 2013
Featured Article Explaining Exchanges May 17, 2013
Featured Article Breaking Down the Language Barrier May 16, 2013
Featured Article Now, You’re Speaking My Language May 16, 2013
Blog: The Practical Employer Patriots Cutting Diabetic Player Raises Serious ADA Issues May 16, 2013
Blog: The Practical Employer

What Skeletons Are You Unearthing by Suing an Ex-Employee?

Before you bring suit against an ex-employee, you might want to consider whether there exist any skeletons in your employment closet that could come back to haunt you in the litigation.

  • Published: November 5, 2012
  • Comments (0)
Related Topics:

Before you bring suit against an ex-employee, you might want to consider whether there exist any skeletons in your employment closet that could come back to haunt you in the litigation. Case in point—Automotive Support Group, LLC v. Hightower [pdf], decided Nov. 4 by the 6th Circuit.

Automotive Support Group sued two ex-employees for breaching the non-competition provisions in their employment agreements. One of the sued employees, Don Ray McGowan, counterclaimed in the lawsuit for unpaid wages and severance owed under his employment agreement.

The appellate court affirmed the trial court's dismissal of the company's claims. It also affirmed the trial court's judgment for McGowan on his unpaid wage and severance claims. How much did the employee win? $70,501.31—$750 in unpaid wages (trebled under the applicable South Carolina wage payment statute), $2,500 in severance pay, and $65,751.31 in attorneys' fees. Add to that $70,000 whatever the company paid its own lawyers to litigate this case.

There are two lessons for employers that leap to mind:

  1. Unclean hands. Non-competition cases are often decided on equitable bases. In addition to money damages, you are likely asking a court to award you an injunction enforcing the agreement and precluding the employee from working for a competitor. To obtain an injunction, however, one must have what is called "clean hands." Clean hands means that the party seeking an injunction has not acted inequitably or unfairly toward the party it is seeking to enjoin. Refusing to pay wages raises the possibility of a court refusing to issue an injunction because of your unclean hands. The better practice: pay the wages (you owe them anyway), and then file suit.
  2. Sometimes you get what you ask for. Would McGowan have started a lawsuit over $3,250? Probably not. Once he was sued, did have anything to lose by raising those issues as a counterclaim? Again, probably not. If you are going to bring a lawsuit against an ex-employee, make certain that you are not creating an environment to incent that individual to file a claim that otherwise might stay buried and never see the light of day.

Written by Jon Hyman, a partner in the Labor & Employment group of Kohrman Jackson & Krantz. For more information, contact Jon at (216) 736-7226 or jth@kjk.com.

Leave A Comment

Guidelines: Comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. We will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. You are fully responsible for the content you post.

Stay Connected

Join our community for unlimited access to the latest tips, news and information in the HR world.

Follow Workforce on Twitter
HR Jobs
View All Job Listings

Search