CLS Blue Sky Blog

Cleary Gottlieb Discusses Non-Disparagement Clauses

In September, former Uber executive Eric Alexander filed a complaint (the “Complaint”) against another former Uber executive, Rachel Whetstone. The Complaint alleges breach of a mutual non-disparagement clause in Whetstone’s separation agreement with Uber; a clause that Whetstone, during her negotiation with Uber, apparently insisted specifically name Alexander and preclude them from disparaging each other. In the Complaint, Alexander alleges that he is a third party beneficiary of the contract and can therefore enforce the non-disparagement obligation against Whetstone.

The Complaint, filed in California state court, alleges that Whetstone disseminated false and/or misleading information to reporters and others about Alexander’s involvement in Uber’s response to an allegation of rape against an Uber driver in India. At issue in that dispute is Alexander’s alleged handling of the rape victim’s medical files in defending Uber against the victim’s civil suit. He is said to have illegally obtained, read and discussed the records, and insinuated both that the medical records showed a lack of physical damage (i.e., thereby questioning the rape itself) and that the rape was part of a competitor’s conspiracy. Alexander denies these allegations, and instead devotes a portion of the Complaint to his belief that in fact the perpetrator would not have been criminally tried or convicted in India but for his personal efforts to assist (and his insistence that Uber assist) the prosecution in its case against him. On June 6, 2017, when Bloomberg and Recode threatened to, and ultimately did, publish stories suggesting that Alexander had illegally obtained and carelessly treated the medical records, Uber terminated his employment. Alexander alleges that these stories and those published for months thereafter were the result of Whetstone, whose own employment had been terminated by Uber in April 2017, continuing to contact the press.

The Complaint, filed without supporting materials (including the alleged non-disparagement obligation), and underlying facts are unusual for a few obvious reasons, but they also raise a number of interesting questions:

This post comes to us from Cleary, Gottlieb, Steen & Hamilton LLP. It is based on the firm’s blog post, “Shut Up! (Someone Is Actually Suing on the Basis of a Non-Disparagement Clause)” dated October 26, 2018, and available here.

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