Noncompete Agreements in Texas: Forum Selection Provisions Are Enforceable


Texas courts have long held that Texas law should determine whether non-compete agreements affecting Texas residents are enforceable.  As a result, Texas courts generally will not enforce out-of-state choice of law provisions.  However, as a recent Texas Supreme Court case illustrates, contractual forum selection provisions can alter that result.

In Re AutoNation, Inc. involved a suit filed in Broward County, Florida, by a Florida corporation (AutoNation) against one of its former employees for allegedly violating a non-compete agreement.  A forum selection provision in the agreement mandated that suit be filed there. 

Shortly thereafter, the former employee--who lived and had worked for AutoNation in Texas--filed suit in Texas state court, seeking a declaration that the non-compete agreement was unenforceable under Texas law, and seeking to prevent the Florida suit from going forward.  The ex-employee, citing some Florida case law, contended that a Florida court likely would apply Florida law to the contract.  Given Texas’ strong public policy favoring the application of Texas law to the contract, the ex-employee argued, a Florida court should not be permitted to adjudicate the dispute. The Texas trial court agreed and enjoined AutoNation from taking further legal action against the ex-employee outside of Texas.  The trial court held, "Texas public policy will likely be thwarted if AutoNation is permitted to litigate enforceability of the restrictive covenants solely in Florida and solely under Florida law."  The court of appeals affirmed.

The Texas Supreme Court reversed.  In doing so, the court held that forum selection clauses--unless procured through fraud or overreaching--are enforceable.  The court also acknowledged Florida's interest in the dispute (given that AutoNation's headquarters were located there).  The court then refused "to presume to tell the forty-nine other states that they cannot hear a non-compete case involving a Texas resident-employee and decide what law applies, particularly where the parties voluntarily agree to litigate enforceability disputes there and not here."

In a concurring opinion, Justice O'Neill wrote:

What is not apparent . . . is that enforcement of the forum-selection clause in this case will result in application of the contractual forum's law in a manner that will undermine Texas public policy. Had there been a clear showing to this effect, I might agree with the court of appeals' analysis, or at least would consider the trial court justified had it decided to abate the Texas declaratory judgment action pending the Florida court's decision. But a mere indication that the Florida court intends to apply Florida law does not, without more, justify a Texas court's interference with the parties' chosen forum.

Time will tell whether Justice O'Neill's concurrence takes some of the bite out of this decision.  Based upon her concurrence, the next Texas resident who's sued in a foreign jurisdiction for allegedly violating a non-compete agreement may contend: (a) the foreign jurisdiction is likely to apply its law and (b) that law is contrary to Texas public policy.  The latter point might be made, for example, if the foreign state’s law is that at-will employment is sufficient consideration for a non-compete agreement (as opposed to Texas law, which states that such consideration is “illusory”).  Whether a stronger showing on the public policy issue than was made in this case could change the result is unknown.

In the meantime, given Texas’ relative hostility to non-compete agreements, out-of-state companies who have employees here should consider adding non-Texas forum selection provisions to their non-compete agreements.  Based upon this decision, they may be enforceable.


In re AutoNation, Inc., 2007 WL 1861341 (Tex. Jun. 29, 2007) (this opinion has not yet been inserted into the official reports, and is therefore subject to revision or withdrawal).

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Noncompete Agreements in Texas: Some Restrictions Are Overly Broad


Non-compete agreements routinely provide for the employer to get injunctive relief in the event the employee engages in post-employment competition. In a recent case, the agreement in question subjected the employee to potentially harsher penalties. 

The non-compete in question contained the following provisions:

14.     Restrictive Covenant. In consideration of the benefits being provided to the Employee pursuant to this Agreement as outlined in Section 12 and elsewhere, and the unique nature of the Firm's Clients and their business with the Firm as outlined in Section 12, the Employee shall neither call nor solicit, either for himself or for any other Person any of the clients of the firm for a period of twenty-four (24) months immediately following the Employee's period of active employment (the "Post Termination Period")….

15.     Payments to firm. …[T]he Firm and the Employee agree that should any Client of the Firm retain the services of Employee or any Person with whom Employee is associated at any time during the "post Termination Period", regardless of whether or not solicited by the Employee or such Person, the Employee shall pay to the firm an amount equal to 150% of the fees billed and accepted by such client during the twelve month period preceding the time when the client retains the services of the Employee or any Person with whom Employee is associated….

The court refused to uphold these provisions on the following grounds:

First, the court held that the monetary penalty was unreasonable. The court explained it in this way:  “[I]f Hardy prepared a $500 tax return for a client, and if the same client paid $50,000 during the previous year for accounting services provided by Mann Frankfort, Hardy would have to pay $75,000 to Mann Frankfort."

The court believed this to be excessive.

Second, the court objected to the “Restrictive Covenant” provision:

Hardy's restrictive covenant is not limited to the clients that he served. The agreement states that he may not call or solicit "any of the Clients of the Firm" for 24 months. The client-purchase provision similarly refers to "any Client of the Firm."  This type of restrictive covenant that does not require a connection between the clients and the person who is restricted by the covenant is overbroad. 

The court continued:

The agreement contains no geographical restrictions, no restrictions to clients that were actually served by Hardy while he was employed by Mann Frankfort, and an exorbitant fee for Hardy's service to clients that did business with Mann Frankfort.  We hold the restrictive covenant is unenforceable due to its failure to comply with the requirements of the Texas Business Code.  Because Hardy's agreement fails to comply with the Covenants Not to Compete Act, it is unenforceable, as written. (citation omitted)

In all cases involving non-compete agreements, the non-compete restrictions must be reasonable to be enforceable. In this case, the court held that the restrictions were unreasonable.

Hardy v. Mann Frankfort Stein & Lipp Advisors, Inc., 2007 WL 1299661 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] May 3, 2007).

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Texas Noncompete Agreements: Difference Between Buy/Sell Agreements and Employer/Employee Agreements


In the context of one company purchasing another company, a non-compete agreement is far more enforceable than it would be in an employer/employee situation.  That's hornbook law.  A good explanation for this was given in a Texas Supreme Court case:
 

In the case of covenants not to compete incident to the sale of a business, the seller's promise not to compete with the buyer increases the value of the business to the buyer.  Without such a covenant the value of the business would be reduced, lessening the likelihood that businesses would be purchased.  In employee covenants, the special training or knowledge acquired by the employee through his employer is valuable consideration and often enhances the value of the employee to other firms.  To allow employees to use or sell this valuable training or knowledge upon leaving a firm would create a disincentive for employers to train or educate employees.

Thus, in buy/sell situations, covenants not to compete are understandably easier to enforce, and their scope can be much broader than employer/employee covenants can be.



 

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Texas Noncompete Agreements Enforceable? How Definite Must Promise to Provide Confidential Information Be?

Even after Sheshunoff clarified the law governing non-compete agreements, we continue to see agreements that cause us to scratch our heads and wonder whether they are enforceable. Sheshunoff made clear that, even in an at-will employment situation, a delay between the employee signing the non-compete agreement and receiving the information is not fatal to the agreement’s enforceability.

However, “How strong must the promise be?” is a question that remains somewhat unanswered. Prior to Sheshunoff, several appellate court decisions considered agreements in which (a) the employee “acknowledged” that he would receive confidential information; (b) the employer expressed its “intent” to provide such information; (c) the employer promised to provide information to the employee that the employee “needed” to do the job, and so on.

In those cases, the employee routinely contended that the employer really didn’t promise anything (because the employer could decide not to provide information). Thus, the employee argued, the employer couldn’t rely upon an alleged promise to provide confidential information to justify the employee’s promise not to compete.

Unfortunately, many, if not most, of the pre-Sheshunoff appellate cases that dealt with these issues invalidated the non-compete agreements in question because the alleged employer promises were “illusory”—because they depended upon continued at-will employment.  Before Sheshunoff, a promise dependent upon continued at-will employment was meaningless.  After Sheshunoff, such a promise is enforceable.

Again, though, what is a “promise”?  Must the word “promise” appear in the agreement? Probably not. Terms such as “shall provide” or “agrees to provide” should suffice. But whether a simple “acknowledgement” by the employee that he will receive confidential information is enough is unclear. Some of the pre-Sheshunoff cases opined that terms like these might constituted “implied” promises on the part of the employer to provide information, but a lot of that language was dicta (because the cases were decided on the issue noted above). Now that Sheshunoff has held that the conveying of information need not occur at the moment of signing the agreement, we can expect to get some appellate decisions that squarely define how strong the employer’s promise must be.

 

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Texas Non Compete Contracts: Is Term of Employment Sufficient Consideration for Non-Compete?

One of the most frequently-litigated issues involving noncompete agreements is whether the consideration given by the employer was adequate. There are generally two parts to the inquiry: one, whether the consideration given was real (i.e., not “illusory”); and two, whether the consideration given justified the noncompete agreement in question.

Giving a definite term of employment satisfies the first requirement, but it might not satisfy the second (because the court may not perceive a logical relationship between the term of employment given to the employee and the need to keep that employee from engaging in post-employment competition). Conversely, the giving of confidential information can satisfy the second prong, but if the promise to convey the information is not sufficiently definite, it may be held to be illusory.

In a case earlier this year, the consideration for the non-compete agreement consisted of:

        a.    a six-month term of employment;

        b.    employment beyond the initial six-month period for as long as the employer was satisfied with the employee’s work; and

        c.    a promise to convey confidential information.

Sometime later, the employee resigned, began working for a competitor, and was sued on his non-compete agreement. The employee contended that the non-compete was unenforceable. However, the trial and appellate courts disagreed, the latter holding that the employer “was obligated to fulfill its promises [to provide confidential information and specialized training] for at least six months.”  This promise to provide confidential information was held sufficient to make the covenant not to compete enforceable.

Thoughts:

1.  Courts have routinely held that a promise to provide confidential information in an at-will employment situation is not enforceable because there is no guarantee that the employee will get the information before she is fired (i.e., the employer might not get around to providing the information until days, weeks, or months after the agreement is signed).   Of course, if the employer promises to give the information when the agreement is signed, and does so, it might be enforceable.

2.  The facts of this case make the following argument by the employee possible:  "There was no guarantee that I would get the confidential information within the first six months of employment. Thus, my situation is not substantively different from an at-will employee who has no guarantee that he'll ever get the information he was promised." In this case, though, the court treated the above promises, collectively, as a guarantee that the employee would receive confidential information during the first six months of his employment (thereby making it a non-illusory promise).

3.  Belt and suspenders approach is best:  Combining a term of employment with a promise to provide confidential information at the instant the agreement is signed (and then doing it) is a good way to increase the likelihood that the non-competition agreement will be enforced.

4.  This is not to suggest that a term of employment per se makes a non-compete agreement enforceable.  The point of this case is, the court believed that a six-month term of employment meant that the employer's guarantee to provide confidential information (which gave the employer an interest in preventing competition) was not "illusory" (although the promise to provide confidential information might have been illusory in an at-will employment situation).



Pearson v. Visual Innovations Co., Inc., No. 03-04-00563-CV, 2006 WL 903736 (Apr. 6, 2006, no pet.).

 

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Texas Non Compete Agreements. What Constitutes a Promise to Give Confidential Information?

In a recent case, the employer's consideration in exchange for the employee's promise not to compete was set forth in the following provision:
 

Employer hereby agrees to provide to Employee any specialized training necessary, in the opinion of Employer, to allow Employee to conduct the duties of employment with Employer. Employer further agrees to provide to Employee any of Employer's proprietary and confidential information necessary to allow Employee to conduct the duties of employment with Employer.

The employee contended that this provision didn't obligate the employer to do anything, because the employer might have concluded that no specialized training (confidential information) was needed for the employee to do her job. The court [of appeals] disagreed:
 

[T]he trial court could have concluded that Rattikin was in fact bound to provide O'Brien with confidential and proprietary information and specialized training. The agreement merely gives Rattikin the option of determining, in its opinion, what confidential and proprietary information and training it should provide O'Brien during the course of her employment.

Observations:

1. The best practice for an employer is to unambiguously promise to provide confidential information at the moment the non-compete agreement is signed, and then do it.

2. This case illustrates the difficulty in predicting with certainty whether a particular non-compete agreement is enforceable. Clearly, the employee in this case had a plausible argument that the employer maintained sole discretion over whether to provide specialized training or confidential information, and that, therefore, the alleged consideration was "illusory." The court disagreed with this interpretation, but the employee (and her attorney) no doubt believed in the correctness of her legal position.



O'Brien v. Rattikin Title Co., No. 2-05-238-CV, 2006 WL 417237 (Tex. App.--Fort Worth Feb. 23, 2006, pet. filed).
 

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Texas Non Disclosure Agreements Lawyer: Non-Disclosure Agreements Overview

A promise not to disclose trade secrets or confidential information is not a covenant not to compete. Thus, the requirements applicable to noncompete covenants do not to apply.  Non-disclosure agreements are enforceable (however, whether the information sought to be protected is actually confidential may be contested).

Texas Non Solicitation Agreements: Non-Solicitation Agreements Overview

Provisions prohibiting the solicitation of customers are treated as covenants not to compete (and thus must meet the requirements applicable to all noncompete agreements). Unlike disclosing the employer's confidential information (which is legally actionable, even without an express agreement by the employee that he will not do so), soliciting the employer's customers constitutes fair competition (unless done via a theft of the employer's trade secrets, a breach of fiduciary duty, etc.), and thus is not actionable unless prohibited by a valid covenant not to compete.  Because the scope of a covenant must be reasonable, a provision prohibiting a salesperson from soliciting any of his former employer's customers might be unreasonable (and might have to be reformed), but a provision restricting the employee from soliciting customers with whom he personally dealt would be relatively more enforceable.

Dallas Texas Non Compete Attorney: Texas Non-Compete Agreements--Practical Considerations

Practical considerations in this area of the law include the following:
 
For the Former Employer :

1.  In addition to (or in lieu of) a non-compete provision, an employment agreement may contain non-solicitation or employee raiding provisions. A non-solicitation provision typically prohibits a departing employee from soliciting his former employer's customers. The "old" employer should be cognizant of the fact that solicitation
can be very difficult to prove. The departing employee is likely to contend that his new customers contacted him (rather than him soliciting them). Many times, the customers will side with the departing employee. Before filing suit for breach of a non-solicitation agreement, an employer should be confident that it will be able to provide that solicitation occurred.
 
2. Counterclaims are likely. A former employee who is sued for violating a non-compete agreement may file a counterclaim for discrimination, harassment, unpaid wages, or for some other alleged wrong. Before suing a former employee, an employer should try to anticipate possible counterclaims.

3.   One-size-fits-all agreements are not advisable. Every state has its own laws governing non-compete agreements. It is virtually impossible to draft a non-compete agreement that will be enforceable in all 50 states.  Non-compete agreements are particularly difficult to enforce in Texas.  It is important that all employers - and, in particular, non-Texas companies that have employees in
Texas - ensure that their agreements comply with Texas laws.
 
For the Employee:

1. Give everything back. A departing employee should return all of his former employer's property. Taking the former employer's documents or information (including copies thereof) can get the employee sued for conversion, theft of trade secrets, etc. Even in cases where the employee has not signed an agreement requiring her to return company property, she should do so.

2. Beware e-mails. Employees sometimes mistakenly think that e-mails they send from work are "private."  Not so.  By searching computer hard drives and networks, employers can locate e-mails received and sent by former employees, including e-mails that the employee had previously deleted. E-mails sent and received by employees can enable the employer to prove wrongful solicitation of the employer's clients, breach of fiduciary duty, theft, etc.
 
3. Beware phone calls. As with e-mails, employees sometimes erroneously believe that telephone calls they make are undetectable. But telephone records subpoenaed by an employer can yield evidence of wrongful conduct (e.g., solicitation of the employer's customers).  Employees
must be mindful of the fact that telephone calls, like e-mails, are not completely undetectable.

For the "New" Employer:

1. Ensure the new employee is "clean." To the extent possible, the new employer should ensure that its new employee does not possess, use, or disclose to the new employee's other employees any of the former employee's confidential, proprietary or trade secret information.
 
2. The new employer should also get assurance from its new employee that the latter is not a party to a non-compete agreement that prevents the employee from working for the new employee. The new employee obviously needs to protect itself from being sued for tortious interference
with contract, misappropriation of trade secrets, or other wrongful acts.

 

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Texas Physician Non Compete Agreements: Special Requirements for Non-Competes for Texas Doctors

Special requirements must be met for a physician to be bound
by a non-compete agreement in Texas. In addition to the requirements discussed in other posts, the covenant must:
 
• not deny the physician access to a list of his patients whom
he had seen or treated within one year of termination of
the contract or employment

• provide access to medical records of the physician's
patients upon authorization of the patient and any copies
of medical records for a reasonable fee

• state that any access to a list of patients or to patients' medical
records after termination of the contract or employment shall not
require such list or records to be provided in a format different than
that by which such records are maintained except by mutual consent
of the parties to the contract

• provide for a buy out of the covenant by the physician
at a reasonable price or, at the option of either party,
as determined by a mutually agreed upon arbitrator or,
in the case of an inability to agree, an arbitrator of the
court whose decision shall be binding on the parties
 
• state that the physician will not be prohibited from
providing continuing care and treatment to a specific
patient or patients during the course of an acute illness
even after the contract or employment has been
terminated.
 

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Dallas Texas Covenants Not to Compete Attorney: Available Remedies in Texas Non Compete Cases

An employer may be entitled to injunctive relief to enforce a non-compete agreement in Texas. To obtain permanent injunctive relief, it is not necessary to prove that, without an injunction, the promisee will suffer irreparable harm. But that is not the case with respect to temporary injunctive relief.  Most courts hold that to obtain temporary injunctive relief to enjoin violation of a non-compete provision, one must prove irreparable harm (i.e., that money damages are inadequate).

Irreparable harm may exist if the damages resulting from the breach are hard to quantify, or if the injury cannot be compensated in damages. The threatened disclosure of trade secrets to a competitor can constitute irreparable injury, especially if it would enable a competitor to gain a competitive advantage. Moreover, proof of a continued breach of a non-compete agreement by a highly-trained employee may constitute irreparable harm. In determining whether to grant temporary injunctive relief, the court must balance probable harm to the employer if the injunction is not issued with probable harm to the employee if it is.

In addition to injunctive relief, a court may award damages resulting from breach of a non-compete covenant. Awardable damages might include lost profits resulting from the departing employee's breach of the noncompetition agreement. A non-compete agreement can contain a liquidated damages provision, but the provision must constitute a reasonable forecast of just compensation for the harm caused by the breach.
 
If the court holds that the scope of the non-compete agreement is too broad (e.g., if the court holds that the geographic scope should be limited to Dallas /Fort Worth rather than to all of
Texas), it will reform the scope to make it reasonable. However, if reformation of the scope is required, damages may only be awarded for "post-reformation" violations. For this and other
reasons, an employer has an incentive to ensure that the scope of a non-compete agreement is reasonable.

Attorney's fees and costs may be awarded to the promisor (employee) if he proves that: the scope of the covenant is unreasonable, the employer knew at the time the agreement was signed that it was unreasonable, and the employer has attempted to enforce the covenant to a greater extent than necessary to protect its goodwill or other business interests. Texas cases also hold that an employee who seeks a judicial declaration that a covenant not to compete is unenforceable and void in its entirety may be entitled to recover attorney's fees under the Texas Declaratory Judgment Act.
 
There is no provision in the non-compete statute for an employer who successfully prosecutes an action against an employee to recover attorney's fees.  At least one Texas court of appeals has held that the non-compete statute's silence on this issue precludes an employer from recovering its fees under the statute (or any other applicable law).  However, another Texas court has permitted an employer to recover its fees under the Texas statute allowing the prevailing party in a contract dispute to recoup its attorney's fees.
 

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Dallas Texas Non Compete Agreements Attorney. Texas Non-Compete Agreements Overview

In Texas, non-compete agreements are generally disfavored as unlawful restraints on trade. Courts recognize that in our capitalist economic system, workers must be free to compete with each other, work where they wish, etc. However, the law also acknowledges that an employer may have interests that are important enough to warrant restrictions on post-employment competition.

Whether a particular non-compete agreement is enforceable in Texas cannot be known with absolute precision. The law in this area is complex, courts frequently differ with each other, and much depends on preferences of individual judges. However, both the law and experience provide useful guidance.

A non-compete covenant is typically just one provision contained in a larger employment agreement. In Texas, for a non-compete covenant to be enforceable, the following requirements must be met:

•An otherwise enforceable agreement must exist.

•The noncompete covenant must be "ancillary" to the otherwise enforceable agreement at the time the agreement is made.

•The scope of the noncompete covenant must be reasonable in terms of time, geographical area, and scope of activity to be restrained, and must impose restrictions no greater than necessary to protect the employer's goodwill or other business interest.

These requirements are explained in other posts in this Overview section.

 

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