CCBill Sues Paycom Over Former Exec Patrick Curran

TEMPE, Ariz. – Only one week after former CCBill employee Patrick Curran started work with competitor Paycom, CCBill has filed a lawsuit for breach of contract, XBIZ has learned.

CCBill filed suit in Arizona last week alleging that Curran’s new position at Paycom was a breach of his employee contract and confidential disclosure agreement. The suit alleges that Curran used company information to shift business from CCBill to Paycom.

However, Joel Hall, president of Paycom, told XBIZ that no wrongdoing has taken place and that the lawsuit against his company and new employee Curran is “baseless, overreaching, unenforceable and draconian.”

Hall told XBIZ that his company had filed a preemptive suit in both California and Arizona in anticipation of CCBill’s lawsuit, defending Curran’s right to work where he wants to.

Curran is currently employed as Paycom’s chief administrative officer after serving as CCBill’s vice president of human resources from 2001.

CCBill claims that Paycom was aware of Curran’s agreement and proceeded to employ him regardless. CCBill is seeking compensatory damages.

“I just know that Patrick is not the kind of person who steals or cheats or lies, and we plan to defend this,” Hall said. “We prefer to go about running our business and don’t consider this much of a distraction for us. I think that when CCBill realizes the same, they will continue running their business as well. This was anticipated and we’re going to back work.”

While California will not enforce a noncompete agreement against employees, California employers can still use a confidentiality nondisclosure agreement to protect company information.

Copyright © 2025 Adnet Media. All Rights Reserved. XBIZ is a trademark of Adnet Media.
Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission is prohibited.

More News

FSC: Arizona Governor Signs Controversial Age Verification Law

Free Speech Coalition has released a statement regarding Arizona Governor Katie Hobbs signing the state's age verification bill into law.

NCOSE Sues 4 Adult Websites Under Kansas Age Verification Law

The National Center on Sexual Exploitation (NCOSE), a conservative anti-pornography organization, has sued four adult websites in Kansas under the state's age verification law.

Sarina Havok, Robin Coffins Launch New Site Through Grooby's Blue.xxx

Sarina Havok and Robin Coffins have launched their new membership site, SarinaAndRobin.com, through Grooby's website management company Blue.xxx.

SpankChain Pauses SpankPay, SpankMatch

SpankChain has paused SpankPay, its adult crypto payment platform, and SpankMatch, its adult networking platform.

Sen. Mike Lee Tries Again to Criminalize All Porn With Interstate Obscenity Definition Act

Republican Senator Mike Lee of Utah has introduced the Interstate Obscenity Definition Act, which would redefine almost all visual depictions of sex as obscene and therefore illegal.

Ofcom Investigates 2 Adult Sites for AV Noncompliance

U.K. media regulator Ofcom is investigating two adult sites for failure to comply with age assurance requirements under the Online Safety Act, which Ofcom is charged with enforcing.

MojoHost to Launch New GPU Servers

MojoHost has announced plans to launch new GPU servers for its clients.

Maximilian Peldszus Joins Fanblast

Former BestFans CEO Maximilian Peldszus has joined creator software company Fanblast.

Kiiroo Joins Pineapple Support as Supporter-Level Sponsor

Kiiroo has joined the ranks of over 60 adult businesses and organizations committing funds and resources to Pineapple Support.

Sex Work CEO Debuts Upgraded 'GPTease' AI Assistant

Sex Work CEO has introduced the Power Tier upgrade to its AI-powered, NSFW text generator, GPTease.

Show More