Employee Noncompetition Agreements - Will They Survive When the Employer Is Acquired?
October 13, 2003
Hank E. Jackson- West Palm Beach
Corporations have routinely required employees to sign
noncompetition agreements to protect the corporation’s confidential information
as well as customer relationships. When 100 percent of the corporation’s stock
is purchased, trial courts are increasingly being asked to decide whether the
corporation, in the absence of express consent of assignment by the employees,
can enforce the noncompetition agreements. As exemplified in three recent
appellate decisions in Florida, corporate law principles and employment law
principles not only analyze the issue from different perspectives, but also can
come to opposite results.
Earlier this year, the Florida Supreme Court in Corporate
Express Office Products, Inc. v. Phillips, 847 So. 2d 406 (Fla. 2003) ultimately
and decisively adopted the corporate law view and held that noncompetition
agreements in such circumstances are enforceable. However, such a firm and
strict pronouncement of the law on this issue is not uniform across the 50 state
jurisdictions. As a result, when it comes to the effect of a 100-percent stock
purchase on a corporation’s employee competition agreements, the warning of
“buyer beware” is appropriate.
Determined by State Law
Under early common law principles, employee noncompetition
agreements were generally considered restraints against trade and void as
against public policy. Through a succession of case opinions and statutory
enactments, the various state jurisdictions have modified this prohibition
against noncompetition agreements. Even though state law differs substantially
among the 50 states, the test that has evolved regarding the general
enforceability of noncompetition agreements is whether the restrictions are
reasonably necessary to protect a legitimate business interest of the company
desiring to enforce the noncompetition agreement. Commonly recognized
legitimate business interests include the protection of a company’s trade
secrets, confidential information and customer relationships.
With the prevalent use of 100 percent stock purchases to
acquire corporations, courts have been asked to consider the effect of such a
transaction on the enforceability of employee noncompetition agreements. The
courts are turning to both corporate law and employment law principles for
guidance.
The Corporate Law View
Under a corporate law view, the form of the purchase is
definitive in determining its effect. If a corporation’s stock is purchased,
including a purchase of 100 percent of the stock, there is no impact on the
corporation’s rights and obligations. This principle is fundamental and a
bedrock of corporate law and commercial transactions. Courts can and do easily
find both statutory and common law authority supporting and re-enforcing this
fundamental corporate law principle.
Understandably, this straightforward and business-minded
approach was followed by an intermediate Florida appellate court in Sears
Termite and Pest Control, Inc. v. Arnold, 745 So. 2d 485 (Fla. 1st DCA 1999).
In that case, Sears purchased 100 percent of the stock of an extermination
company and changed the company’s name to Sears Termite and Pest Control, Inc.
Employees of the extermination company, who had signed noncompetition agreements
with the company prior to the purchase of the stock by Sears, left the company
and began competing. Sears sued the employees for violating their
noncompetition agreements. The employees’ primary defense was that the
noncompetition agreements were not enforceable because they had not been
assigned to Sears. The court disagreed. Relying on corporate law principles,
the court held that assignments were not required because the change in
ownership of corporate stock does not effect the corporation’s existence or its
contractual rights.
However, this corporate law view as expressed in Sears
Termite was adamantly rejected two years later by another intermediate Florida
appellate court. In Phillips v. Corporate Express Office Products, 800 So. 2d
618 (Fla. 5th DCA 2001), which is discussed below, the intermediate appellate
court adopted the master/servant or employment law view. It held under a
similar fact pattern that noncompetition agreements were not enforceable.
The Employment Law View
The common law of employment relationships, which
traditionally has been referred to as master/servant, holds that personal
service contracts cannot be assigned absent the consent of the employee. The
concept is derived from the realization that employees (servants) have agreed to
act under the direction and control of their employers (masters) and that such a
relationship is often inherently more personal than other contracts. As a
result, employees would not generally enter into such relationships with total
strangers, and therefore, their agreements regarding such relationships should
not be assigned to total strangers without their consent. Similarly, employees
should not be bound by noncompetition agreements that have been assigned without
their consent.
As mentioned previously, this view was applied to an
employee’s noncompetition agreement in Phillips v. Corporate Express Office
Products, Inc. 800 So. 2d 618 (Fla. 5th DCA 2001). In Phillips, the Florida
intermediate appellate court was confronted with whether employees of a
corporation that sold 100 percent of its stock, merged into its parent company
and then changed its name, could be required to adhere to noncompetition
agreements that they had entered into prior to the 100-percent-stock sale. The
court, relying on employment law principles, ruled that noncompetition
agreements are personal service contracts and are not assignable without the
parties’ consent. The court acknowledged the contrary corporate law view as
expressed in Sears Termite. However, it held that the form of the purchase,
whether by asset sale, stock sale or merger, was irrelevant to the
enforceability of the employee noncompetition agreements. Instead, the court
focused on the realities of the employment relationship, including the
differences in the culture and mode of operation of the company before and after
the acquisition. Referring to the law of master/servant, the court explained
that employees enter into noncompetition agreements based on the character and
personality of the master. Servants do not intend to suffer such a restraint
for the benefit of a stranger to the original undertaking.
The Florida Supreme Court
The Florida Supreme Court accepted review of the Phillips
decision on the grounds that there existed a clear conflict between two of
Florida’s intermediate courts. In Corporate Express Office Products, Inc. v.
Phillips, 847 So. 2d 406 (Fla. 2003), the Florida Supreme Court acknowledged
the corporate law and employment law views. However, it decisively and
unequivocally chose the corporate law view and rejected the employment law
view. As expressed in its opinion, the court relied upon the fundamental
principle of corporate law that ownership of corporate stock does not alter a
corporation’s existence, identity or rights. The Court appears to have not even
considered any fact-specific arguments that supported the employment law view.
Instead, it explained its rejection of the employment law view by stating that
the consideration of changes in corporate culture and mode of operation would
interject unnecessary uncertainty into corporate transactions.
Other Jurisdictions
Although Florida’s appellate courts have now decisively
ruled on the issue and chosen the corporate law view of enforcing employee
non-competition agreements in the context of 100-percent-stock purchase
transactions, the law in other jurisdictions is not so clear. Most opinions in
other states are at the trial court level and not as definitive. As exemplified
in the three Florida appellate cases, until a jurisdiction’s highest court makes
a decisive ruling to accept the corporate law view and reject the employment law
view, there will remain uncertainty as to enforceability.
A noteworthy example of this uncertainty is found in
Securitas Security Services USA, Inc. v. Jones, 16 Mass. L. Rptr. No. 19, 486
(August 18, 2003), a recent ruling in Massachusetts by that state’s specialized
business litigation court. In Securitas, a security services corporation
acquired another security services corporation. The court accepted the fact
that the acquisition did not dissolve or terminate the acquired corporation, but
that it remained an existing corporate entity. A high level employee who had
executed a noncompetition agreement with the acquired security company resigned
shortly before the acquisition. The court refused to enforce the noncompetition
agreement based on employment law principles. It held that the employee had not
consented to an assignment of the contract; and therefore, the employee had not
shown a willingness to suffer the restraint of the non-competition agreement
with a stranger.
The common law as well as the statutory law governing
noncompetition agreements varies substantially from state to state. Moreover,
it continues to develop and change. Confronted with competing public policy
arguments, different state courts are not likely to rule uniformly on whether
and to what extent the corporate law or the employment view should prevail. As a
result, assessing the enforceability of an employee noncompetition agreement
will continue to require a specific analysis under the law of the state that
governs its enforceability.
Drafting Around the Issue
To minimize uncertainty, corporations that request their
employees to execute noncompetition agreements should include in those
agreements a provision that the employee explicitly agrees that it is
assignable. This can substantially bolster the acquiring corporation’s ability
to enforce the noncompetition agreement irrespective of the legal form of the
purchase. Some state noncompetition statutes, such as Florida Statute § 542.335
(1)(f), explicitly provide that courts shall not refuse to enforce
noncompetition agreements on the ground that the person seeking enforcement is
an assignee or successor to the agreement if the agreement expressly authorized
enforcement by a party’s assignee or successor.
Conclusion
Corporate law strongly supports that a 100-percent purchase
of a corporation’s stock will have no effect on whether a particular employee
noncompetition agreement is enforceable. However, courts that continue to view
the issue through the lens of employment law principles have and may continue to
reach an opposite conclusion depending on the specific facts of the case.
For more information, e-mail Hank Jackson at
hank.jackson@hklaw.com, or call toll free, 1-888-688-8500.