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(Published in the Idaho Business Review, September 2008)
By Richard L. Stacey
A non-competition
agreement is an agreement in which an employee promises not to work for a
competitor for a specified period of time after leaving the company in exchange
for employment or continued employment.
In today’s increasingly competitive job market, this type of an
agreement is becoming more prevalent.
Non-competition agreements are now commonplace for many jobs within the construction
industry.
Historically in
Idaho, non-competition agreements that are carefully drafted to protect
employers’ legitimate business interests are enforceable. Many provisions comonly found in these
agreements, however, are the subject of significant litigation. On July 1, 2008
new legislation went into effect to add certainty to the enforceability of
these agreements.
Under the new law, an
employer may require a “key employee” to execute a non-competition agreement
prohibiting the “key employee” from working for a direct competitor for up to
eighteen (18) months after employment is discontinued. A “key employee” is an employee whose
knowledge of the employer’s business operations, customers, and other business
relationships might allow the employee to harm or threaten the employer’s
legitimate business interests if the employees were to go to work for the
employer’s competition. Any employee
among the highest paid 5% of the employer’s employees is presumed to be a key
employee.
“Legitimate business
interests” are now defined by statute to include “good will, technologies,
intellectual property, business plans, business processes and methods of
operation, customers, customer lists, customer contacts and referral sources,
vendors and vendor contacts, financial and marketing information, and trade
secrets.” An employer may properly seek
to protect each or any of these business interests through non-competition
agreements.
A non-competition
agreement must be reasonable in duration, geographical area, and includes
restrictions on the type of employment.
The law creates legal presumptions with respect to each of these
areas. A non-competition agreement
prohibiting employment with a competitor for eighteen (18) months or less is
presumed reasonable. A non-competition
agreement prohibiting employment within the geographic area in which the key
employee provided services or had a significant presence or influence is
presumed reasonable. A non-competition
agreement prohibiting future employment of the type conducted by the key
employee while working for the employer is presumed to be reasonable.
An employer may also
increase the duration of a non-competition agreement beyond eighteen (18)
months, so long as the employee is given some agreed-upon benefit or payment in
exchange for the extended duration. The
statute does not quantify how much of a benefit or payment the employer must
give the employee in exchange for the extended duration.
All employers should
review the language of their non-competition agreements to ensure compliance
with the new statutory framework. When
reviewing your non-competition agreement, consider the following
recommendations to minimize potential legal challenges:
1. Your agreement
should be carefully drafted to protect only those business interests that are
at risk if the particular employee were to go to work for the competition. Employers have a tendency to try to create
broad protection by using over-inclusive provisions. Unfortunately, overbroad provisions can leave
you with no protection at all if the agreement is not unenforceable.
2. Make sure that
your agreement does not contain blanket prohibitions against working for a
competitor in any capacity or within any geographic region.
3. Make sure that
your agreement is clear. Ambiguities in
non-competition agreements have historically been construed against the
employer and in favor of the departing employee. The new law is unlikely to change this rule
of interpretation.
4. Consider including
a liquidated damages provision in your agreement. A liquidated damages provision can establish
a predetermined amount that the company will be damaged by a particular
employee going to work for the competition.
One of the difficulties of enforcing non-competition agreements can be establishing
the dollar amount that the company is actually damaged by a departing
employee. A liquidated damages provision
may help eliminate the necessity of proving actual damages.
5. When hiring a new
employee, consider inquiring whether the potential employee has signed a
non-competition agreement with any former employer. Failure to do so may cause you to end up
embroiled in litigation over the former employer’s non-competition agreement.
In the event a court
determines that the duration, geographical area, or type of employment in a
non-competition agreement is unreasonable, the new law authorizes the court to
re-draft the provision to make it reasonable.
While this decreases the likelihood that an agreement will be determined
to be entirely unenforceable, employers should not view this as a reason to
make these provisions over-broad. Overly
broad provisions make an agreement intrinsically susceptible to legal
challenge. Moreover, the employer may
have less protection after the court re-drafts the agreement than the employer
would have had if the agreement was properly drafted in the first place. If your business interests are legitimately
worth protecting, then you should have your non-competition agreements drafted
with particularity to protect these interests with certainty.
Richard
L. Stacey is a partner with the law firm Meuleman Mollerup LLP
practicing in the areas of construction law, environmental law, and complex
commercial litigation. Mr. Stacey can be
reached at 208.342.6066, or by email
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; more
information at www.lawidaho.com.
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