Blog Post

Aug 27, 2012

California Court Of Appeal Finds That Non-Competition Agreement Contained In Employment Agreement Is Unenforceable Against Former Seller/Employee Even Though It Was Executed In Connection With The Sale Of A Business

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Non-competition agreements executed in connection with the sale of a business are typically enforceable as a limited exception under Business and Professions Code section 16601 and applicable case authority to California’s general prohibition against non-competition agreements. A recent California Court of Appeal decision, however, further narrows this limited exception. 

In Fillpoint v. Maas, 2012 WL 3631266 (Aug. 24, 2012), the California Court of Appeal, Fourth District, found that two separate agreements–a stock purchase agreement and employment agreement–executed pursuant to the sale of a business, must be read together when analyzing the restrictive covenants contained in each agreement. The Court then held that the non-competition covenant in the employment agreement, whose terms differed from the non-competition covenant in the purchase agreement, did not fall under the “sale of business” exception, and thus was unenforceable. The Court reasoned that the covenant was not focused on protecting the acquired company’s goodwill. Rather, it impermissibly “targeted an employee’s fundamental right to pursue his or her profession” in violation of Business and Professions Code section 16600, California’s statute prohibiting non-competition agreements.

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