Monday, September 11. 2006California narrows exceptions to non-compete agreementsCalifornia Code Section 16600 says that:
The only exceptions to Section 16600 apply to the seller of a business and partners in a business, but not employees of a business, although California courts will enforce an employee non-compete agreement to protect an employer's trade secrets. This would seem to leave little open for interpretation, but the federal courts in California until recently enforced non-compete agreements if they "narrowly constrained" the employee from competing. A California state court, which the federal courts must follow on matters of California state law, rejected that approach in Edwards v. Arthur Andersen. Now, Section 16600 means what it says. The Edwards case prompted a number of commentaries, including those at Contracts Prof Blog, LawMemo.com and Oregon Business Litigation. The most important aspect of the case, however, noted by Law.com, was the procedural posture of the case and the loss of an employer tactical advantage. That is, the Edwards case did not involve an employer suing to enforce a non-compete, which is the typical posture of these cases. Instead, the employee brought suit because he had been fired when he refused to sign the agreement. Edwards, and not his potential employer, brought the suit for what non-lawyers would call wrongful discharge. Edwards won.
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