Ex parte B2K Systems, LLC, [Ms. 1130742, Sept. 12, 2014] __ So. 3d __ (Ala. 2014). This action involves
a commercial dispute where the petitioners purchased the business owned
by the respondent Nannette Smith, and, as part of the consideration, agreed
to keep Smith as president and pay her a salary for five years. Petitioners
discharged Smith. She brought an action in Jefferson County, to which
the Defendants asserted that an alleged outbound forum-selection clause
required the action to be brought in Michigan. The circuit court disagreed,
holding that the clause was ambiguous and only rendered Michigan a proper
forum, not the exclusive forum. The Supreme Court agreed and denied mandamus
as to this issue. The circuit court issued an injunction prohibiting the
petitioners from interfering with Smith's operation of the business.
The Supreme Court treated the request for review of this portion of the
order as a direct appeal and reversed, holding that Smith failed to prove
that she would suffer irreparable injury. The company's chief asset
was the source code for its software, and Smith argued that her potential
loss of control over that intellectual property established the irreparable-injury
requirement. However, the Court found no evidence that the software and
source code are in any imminent danger. There was no evidence that the
petitioners intended to damage or destroy the source code, but, to the
contrary, all the parties shared a common interest in the success of the
business. The alleged injuries could be redressed by money damages, so
Smith showed no irreparable injury to support the preliminary injunction.
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