Employer's Use of Noncompetition Agreements
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The desire of employers to keep their employees from competing with them has been a source of much litigation. In a typical
arrangement, the employer requires the employee to sign an agreement that prevents the employee from engaging in specified
forms of competition with the employer for a certain time period and in a specific geographic area. Tennessee courts usually
will enforce the noncompetition agreement if it is reasonable as to time and place.
Validity and Enforcement
A challenge to the validity and enforcement of an agreement often focuses on the reasonableness of the geographic scope and
the duration of the restrictions. Another factor considered is the nature of the former employee's duties and whether those
duties increase or diminish the possibility of competitive harm to the employer. An extensively trained employee who has access
to trade secrets or who has developed substantial contacts with customers poses a greater competitive threat than a worker
who has few connections to the company's place in competitive markets.
Blue Pencil Rule
If it is determined that a noncompetition agreement is too restrictive, Tennessee courts are allowed to take a flexible approach.
Under the "blue pencil" rule, a court can preserve acceptable parts of the agreement and enforce offending provisions with
appropriate modifications. For example, a five-year ban on competition may be enforced for only three years. Or, a five-state,
no-competition area may be reduced to the state where the employee worked.
Sometimes the legality of a noncompetition agreement is before a court not because the employer is enforcing it but because it fired an employee who refused to sign the agreement. In that setting, Tennessee law generally favors the employer's right to discharge an "at-will" employee for any reason or for no reason at all. An at-will employee is one hired for an indefinite term and not protected by contractual or statutory provisions requiring that there be a good reason for termination.
© 1999 Fargarson & Brooke