Martinez v. Thompson Corp
Active — Discovery Phase- James Martinez was terminated from Thompson Corp on Dec 18, 2025 after 6 years of employment as Senior Operations Manager.
- Client alleges wrongful termination in violation of implied contract and public policy.
- Employment agreement contains non-compete and indemnification clauses currently under review.
- Thompson Corp has offered a preliminary settlement of $185,000 with non-disclosure terms.
| Name | Type | Date Uploaded | Tags | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Employment Agreement.pdf |
Jan 16, 2026 | ContractKey | ||
Email Correspondence — Jan 2026.pdf |
Mar 12, 2026 | Evidence | ||
Deposition Transcript — Martinez.docx |
DOCX | Mar 17, 2026 | DepositionKey | |
Settlement Offer Draft.pdf |
Mar 18, 2026 | SettlementDraft | ||
Company Policy Manual.pdf |
Jan 20, 2026 | Reference |
The indemnification clause in Section 4.2 of your Employment Agreement means that Thompson Corp agreed to cover your legal costs if you were sued for actions taken as part of your job. This is standard in senior employment contracts. However, it specifically excludes coverage for intentional misconduct. In the context of our case, this clause may be relevant if Thompson Corp attempts any counterclaims.
Based on current state law, non-compete clauses must be reasonable in scope, duration, and geographic area. Your agreement restricts you from working in the same industry within a 50-mile radius for 2 years. Given recent judicial trends in our state, courts have been narrowing enforcement of broad non-competes, especially after termination without cause. I believe there's a strong argument that this clause is overly restrictive.
If we reject the current $185,000 offer, the case proceeds to trial preparation. Thompson Corp may submit a revised offer, but there's no guarantee. Going to trial carries both upside potential (a jury could award significantly more) and risk (we could receive less or nothing). I recommend we discuss a counter-offer strategy in our next meeting.
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