BOCA RATON, FL (Boca Post) (Copyright © 2026) — A Boca Raton company that says it specializes in recovering dormant and unclaimed assets for corporate clients has filed suit against Laboratory Corporation of America Holdings, alleging it was not paid for work performed under a long-running contractor agreement.
The case, E-Cyber Commerce, Inc. v. Laboratory Corporation of America Holdings, Case No. 502026CA003818XXXAMB, was filed April 6, 2026, in the Circuit Court of the Fifteenth Judicial Circuit in and for Palm Beach County, Florida. The complaint was filed by Boca Raton-based Klein Law Group, P.A. The complaint, as filed, does not list defense counsel.
According to the complaint, E-Cyber Commerce says it is in the business of locating, identifying, and recovering unclaimed, unrecovered, and dormant assets for corporate entities. The filing says those assets can include uncashed state warrants, unclaimed tax refunds, dormant vendor payments, bankruptcy distributions, and other financial property that may go uncollected because of accounting errors, restructuring, lost mail, name changes, or administrative oversight.
E-Cyber alleges Labcorp hired it to search for and recover that kind of property on Labcorp’s behalf. The complaint says the parties agreed E-Cyber would act as an independent contractor and would receive 10 percent of the value of any assets successfully recovered. The filing also alleges the agreement gave E-Cyber the sole and exclusive right during the term of the contract to locate and claim unclaimed assets for Labcorp.
According to the complaint, E-Cyber performed database searches, verified ownership records, prepared claim paperwork, communicated with state agencies, and submitted supporting materials needed to recover funds. The company claims that through that process, Labcorp became aware of the existence and location of assets identified through E-Cyber’s work, and that once claims were approved, payment was reissued directly to Labcorp.
The complaint says E-Cyber invoiced Labcorp for services under the agreement and that Labcorp at times had previously paid invoice balances. It identifies eight invoices by number: 2835, 2846, 2847, 2856, 2957, 2987, 2998, and 3036. Copies attached to the filing show invoice dates ranging from March 2022 through June 2025.
E-Cyber alleges Labcorp gave written notice on or about Nov. 6, 2024, that it intended to terminate the agreement. Under the complaint’s description of the contract, that made the effective termination date Feb. 4, 2025. Even after that, E-Cyber claims Labcorp remained obligated to pay for assets recovered and for claims filed as of the effective date of termination.
The lawsuit also points to an Aug. 27, 2024 email that, according to the complaint, offered to recover an item owed to “Laboratory Corporation of America” in the amount of $734,327.44 at a 5 percent recovery rate. E-Cyber alleges that if Labcorp engaged and paid that outside company during the term of E-Cyber’s exclusive rights, it would amount to a breach of the exclusivity terms of the agreement.
The complaint brings three counts: breach of contract, unjust enrichment, and account stated. E-Cyber seeks equitable relief or, alternatively, damages of more than $250,000, plus interest, attorney’s fees, and costs. These are allegations made by the plaintiff and have not been proven in court.
The original complaint, E-Cyber Commerce, Inc. v. Laboratory Corporation of America Holdings, Case No. 502026CA003818XXXAMB, as filed April 6, 2026, with the Palm Beach County Clerk of Court, can be at the PBC Clerk of Court.
Read more about breach-of-contract and other business disputes. Palm Beach County court records show civil complaints filed throughout the year. Boca Post tracks those filings in our Boca Raton lawsuits coverage.




