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ACTUAL CASE HISTORY*: Morgan, 44, had worked in the office furnishings business for over 19
years. From his first, entry-level job as an office assistant shortly after college, over time Morgan had
Like many other industries, the office furnishings industry had gone through a considerable
consolidation in recent years. Due primarily to repeated mergers and acquisitions, the industry came
to be dominated by four large manufacturers. Morgan’s employer, one of those four major players,
prided itself on its retention of top “talent.” By means of paying employees well – and by aggressively
using and enforcing non-compete agreements – they had suffered few defections to competitors.
This last year had been a difficult year in the industry. Not only had large corporations cut back on
refurbishing their offices, but layoffs and bankruptcies in many industries had resulted in corporate
employers occupying diminished office space. Bonus expectations, industry-wide, were low.
Unsolicited, Morgan received an invitation to interview with Private Equity investors interested in
hiring an aggressive veteran to head up a mid-tier firm they hoped to one day take public.
Particularly enticing to Morgan was a potential 10% ownership of the company. He was intrigued, and
Morgan’s non-compete agreement prohibited him from “directly or indirectly providing services to
any company that was engaged in the office furnishings industry for 24 months after cessation of
employment, regardless of the reason for departure.” He shared it with the Private Equity investors.
There didn’t seem much way around it. To Morgan, and to his prospective employers, the non-
compete seemed “air-tight,” and insurmountable. And, so, he contacted us for a consultation to
As is our custom, we asked Morgan lots and lots of questions about himself, about his work, about
his employer, and about their business practices. In the process, we learned two things that
interested us. For one, the company had recently lowered all executives’ salaries, including
Morgan’s, even though his employment contract, which set his salary, still had one full year to run.
Also, Morgan was aware that his superiors, on numerous occasions, engaged in an industry practice
euphemistically called “gifting,” more commonly known as bribing clients’ representatives to get new
business.
With that information in mind, we did three things for Morgan. First, we assisted Morgan in
negotiating his new employment terms with the Private Equity investors. As part of those terms, we
had them acknowledge his non-compete, and agree to pay his legal fees to fight it. Second, we
prepared Court papers to file in Court just in case his employer found out what was in the works.
Those Court papers cited both (a) the violation of Morgan’s employment contract, and (b) Morgan’s
discomfort with the company’s practice of “gifting” that was deceptive and apparently fraudulent, to
say the least. Third, we contacted Morgan’s employers, and showed them our drafted Court papers.
Their decision? Not to fight the matter, but rather to “walk away.” Though their non-compete
seemed air tight and insurmountable, we found both (a) a legal defense, and (b) a practical defense,
positive career opportunity. However, those of us who regularly go to battle over non-compete’s
know that – more often than not – there exist good legal and practical defenses to them, and
In fact, my experience over 30 years in this field has convinced me that most employers and their
lawyers secretly worry that their employees may come to understand that very empowering truth:
non-compete’s are defeatable. And, too, most Judges have no desire whatsoever to keep a person
out of work without a darn good reason to do so. Though non-compete’s may seem to be
impenetrable, the fact is often they turn out to be rather flimsy in their power over you.
Remember: If your employer is forced to back down, or your employer loses in Court, and its other
employees find out, your employers’ non-compete agreements may frighten far fewer
present employees into remaining with the company . . . Your former employer fears this, because
this might just require your former employer to treat its employees better!
Remember: If your former employer’s clients, customers, suppliers, investors or prospective
employees then find out – by public documents in a non-compete Court battle*** – that your
those clients, customers, suppliers, investors and prospective employees may not want to affiliate
with your former employer. Your former employer fears this, because this might just require your
former employer to treat its clients, customers, suppliers, investors and prospective employees in
more open, honest, legal and respectful ways.
Remember: If your former employer’s tax authorities or regulators find out – by public documents in
a non-compete Court battle*** – that it engages in illegal activities, does not fulfill its legal
obligations, or engages in tax evasion or other illegal practices, it may end up costing your former
employer far more in the long run than it is worth to enforce your non-compete. Your former
employer fears this, because it might just require it to make sure it acts in full compliance with all
legal requirements.
But, first, you need to be aware of the most common defenses to non-competes, and how and when
to raise those defenses. As you will see, some are factual, some are contractual, and some are
And, second, if you find one or two good defenses available to you, it is often best to be proactive
and aggressive in using them by showing your employer they will likely lose such a battle, or if they
do “win” the battle, they will more than likely “lose the larger war.” Said differently, there are good
ways to convince your former employer that it is not in its best interests to try to enforce your non-
compete.
WHAT YOU CAN DO: Consider whether one or more of these ten most common (a) factual, (b)
contractual, and (c) legal defenses to a non-compete may be available to you. If so, your proactive
presentation of them to your employer will likely be an effective way to defeat your non-compete,
1. Your intended new job may not, in fact, violate the precise terms of your non-compete
agreement. – More often than you might believe, people do not carefully read over the precise
words of their non-compete agreement, and don’t carefully consider whether it precludes their
intended new job. Recently we won a non-compete battle because the agreement prohibited our
client from working for an employer who used “the same or similar technology” as the former
employer, and the new employer, in fact, did not do so. This potential defense cannot be overlooked,
and it often is. Another non-compete battle we recently won involved a non-compete that said that
our client, a saleswoman, could not sell to any of her employer’s customers. Problem was, she did
not have a list of them, and the employer refused to give her one. Since it was impossible for her to
know who she could not sell to, she was relieved of any obligation to do so.
2. The non-compete restriction may be too vague to be enforceable . – All too often, in a
misguided attempt to provide wide-reaching protection, employers and their lawyers use language
in non-compete agreements that is far too vague and too broad to be enforceable at all. Prohibitions
against “selling advertising” or working “in the dental profession” are commonly found to be just too
3. “Unclean Hands” is a common and effective defense . – In order for an employer to ask a Court
to Order an employee to act in good faith and honorably, the employer, itself, must first be doing so.
If the employee departed from the company because of extreme harassment or blatant
discrimination, the employer’s non-compete enforcement efforts will likely fail. And, too, if the
employer was engaged in illegal or dishonest conduct, in which the employee did not want to
participate, non-compete efforts for this reason will also likely fail. If the illegal or dishonest
behavior was against clients, former employers are extremely reluctant to see such matters raised in
two recognized and accepted purposes of a non-compete agreement are (1) the protection of trade
secrets, and (2) the protection of valuable business relations. So, why in the world would an
employer need to keep a Janitor – or any other person who is no threat whatsoever to trade secrets
or client relations – from working for a competitor? Non-compete’s cannot be used merely to punish
or set an example without a true “legitimate business purpose” at risk. For this reason, too, an
employer whose business is solely in communications cannot enforce a non-compete that prohibits
a former employee from working for a company whose sole business is selling shoes.
5. Unreasonable Breadth as to (a) Time, (b) Geography or (c) Activities . – With a few
exceptions, Courts will refuse to enforce non-compete’s that are plainly unreasonable in their
restrictions. If the employer does business only in Duluth, Minnesota, a restriction on your working
for a competitor “anywhere in the Western Hemisphere” will likely not pass judicial review. Likewise,
no Judge will enforce a non-compete that is, by its terms, to last 10 years. The same goes for a
prohibition against work for “any potential competitor,” as every business is a “potential competitor.”
In these situations, however, a Court might be tempted to enforce such restrictions, but limit its
enforcement to “within five miles of Duluth for a period of three months, and other employers in the
same exact business.” This has historically been referred to as a Judge “blue-penciling” his or her
enforcement Order.
6. Void as Against “Sound Public Policy.” – Sometimes the effect of a non-compete violates a
broader social purpose. So, for example, if it can be shown that an employer uses a non-compete to
maintain a monopoly in its business or trade, a Court will likely not enforce that non-compete. The
same holds true if it can be shown that the non-compete requirement is only enforced against
7. Prior Employer Breach. – If an employer has previously breached an employment contract with
the employee (as was true in Morgan’s case, above), or has violated an assurance to that employee, it
cannot successfully argue to a Court that it has the right to demand that its former employee abide
8. Fraudulent Inducement. – I cannot count how many times I have heard a client say, “I was told
that they would not enforce this if I left, so long as I did not go to a primary competitor,” or some
variation of that. Another common example is this: “You must sign this in order to be eligible for a
bonus,” and then you received no bonus. If you were tricked into signing your non-compete by some
assurance or promise which does not appear to have been made in good faith, you may very well
Faith. – The law in most states is just not clear on the question “If an employee is terminated
without ‘cause,’ is his or her non-compete enforceable?” Some Courts say “Yes,” while other Courts
say “No.” Most importantly, though, most Courts will not enforce such a non-compete agreement if
they feel the employer has acted in bad faith, and most will enforce it if the employee has acted in
bad faith. Attorneys often battle to convince the Judge that it is their client who is “wearing the White
Hat,” and the other side is “wearing a Black Hat.” (In cowboy movies of years ago, that is how you
could tell the difference between the “Good Guy” and the “Bad Guy.”) It is for this reason that we
strongly encourage our clients to avoid any appearance of impropriety, and to report to us any
10. Other Contractual and Factual Defenses. – A non-compete agreement is a kind of contract
and, for this reason, is always subject to the many defenses to contracts available in the law,
including the ones noted above, and these others: (a) The employer is simply in error on the facts: I
am not violating the agreement; (b) I never signed it; (c) it is a forgery; (d) both sides were under a
false impression, or made a material mistake, at the time the agreement was made (failure to read
the agreement does not suffice); (e) I signed it under duress, such as blackmail (this is not commonly
effective in non-compete’s); and (f) It requires me to do something that is illegal. The contract
defense of “no consideration,” meaning that the employee did not get anything in return, is usually
not available in non-compete matters, as most Courts say that the continuation of employment was,
employer trying to enforce my non-compete? We usually suggest that the employee consider
bringing the valid defense(s) and/or strong argument(s) to the attention of the employer (and the
employer’s attorney, if his or her identity is known), and say, in effect, “Strong factual, contractual
and legal bases exist such that this non-compete agreement is not enforceable, and I think that, if
you go to Court, you should be honest with the Judge that you know about these defenses; otherwise
you will be deceptive to the Court, something you really should not do.”
Such efforts are often effective. Nevertheless, should a Court battle ensue, you and your lawyer will
be on firmer ground for having taken these steps in that (a) you have already assembled your factual
and legal arguments, (b) you have shown by your actions that you are acting in good faith, and (c)
you have added grounds to believe, and argue, that your former employer has acted in bad faith.
Don’t forget the importance, as noted above, of wearing the “White Hat.”
***AN IMPORTANT LEGAL NOTE: It is a crime – extortion – to say, one way or the other, “If you don’t
do as I say, I will expose you publicly.” It is not a crime, though, to say, “I have valid legal defense(s)
to the non-compete, here they are, and if we go to Court, I will have no choice but to raise them in
public Court documents.” If you fail to understand or appreciate the distinction between those two
statements, and are not committed to acting consistently with that distinction, you would be well-
advised to first consult with an attorney before proactively negotiating your non-compete.
Defending Against Non-Compete’s. If you would like to obtain a copy, [click here].
We also offer Model Memos and Letters for Negotiating and Navigating Non-Compete’s in
the ways we suggest above. To view our list, and obtain one or more, [ click here].
To obtain our “Ultimate Package” of Non-Compete Materials, including all of our Checklists,
Negotiation and navigation of work and career issues requires that you think “out of the box,” and
avoid risks at every point in your career. Knowing ways to lower and eliminate risks gives you a
distinct advantage in navigating workplace life. Knowing ways to avoid and resolve disputes is even
more advantageous. Learning the “in’s and out’s” of doing so is what we are here for. Now it’s up to
you.
Always be proactive. Always be creative. Always be persistent. Always be vigilant. And always do
what you can to achieve for yourself, your family, and your career. Take all available steps to
increase and secure employment “rewards” and eliminate or reduce employment “risks.” That’s what
*A note about our Actual Case Histories: In order to preserve client confidences, and protect client
identities, we alter certain facts, including the name, age, gender, position, date, geographical
location, and industry of our clients. The essential facts, the point illustrated and the lesson to be