Update on Pending Massachusetts Legislation Relative to Noncompetition Agreements

There has been a serious push to clarify the way Massachusetts regulates noncompetition agreements. Many legislators and those in the high tech industries have voiced concern that the current approach hampers Massachusetts companies from competing with California high tech businesses where noncompetition agreements are not enforceable because they are contrary to public policy. The advocates of this approach feel that the freer movement of employees between competitors would create more innovation and competition. But the issue is not clear cut. There are many that want to enforce noncompetition agreements with no change in approach to protect innovation that the company has created.

A bill that attempts to reach a compromise between these two views has been making its way through the legislature. Recently, the latest version of House No. H4607, is now with the House Committee on Steering and Policy which decides when the bill will be considered by the full House. The following is a summary of the highlights of the bill which amends Chapter 149 of the General Laws by inserting a new section 24L.

While the amendment allows noncompetition agreements, it provides the following:

I. EXCLUSIONS

- Noncompetition agreements made in connection with the sale of a
business, sale of assets of a business, or otherwise outside the employment relationship.
- Agreements by which the employee agrees to not reapply for
employment to the same company after termination.

II. ELEMENTS NECESSARY TO BE VALID AND ENFORCEABLE

- A separate agreement in writing signed by employee and employer.
- Applicable to an employee with average annualized federal gross income
of at least $75,000 plus $1,500 for each full year from the amendment’s effective date.
- If a condition of employment, to the extent feasible, must provide copy
7 days before commencement of employment with notice that it is a condition of employment.
- If entered into after commencement of employment, must be supported
by adequate consideration which cannot be continued employment. 10% or more of current annual pay is presumptively adequate.
- Must protect one of the types of legitimate business interests
listed in the bill.
- Reasonable duration, but in no case more that 1 year from cessation of
employment. Duration of no more than 6 months is presumptively valid. Tolling is allowed under certain circumstances.
- Reasonable geographical scope in relation to interests served. Area
limited to where employee provided service or had influence is presumptively reasonable.
- Limited in scope of proscribed activities. If limited to type of service
that employee is performing at the time presumed reasonable.

III. GENERAL

- The Court can reform an agreement in its discretion to make agreement
valid and enforceable.
- The Court can refuse to enforce the agreement if:
- Against public policy.
- In extraordinary circumstances.
- Necessary to avoid a harsh result.
- Based on common law or equitable factors that would militate
non-enforcement.
- The Court can award attorneys’ fees to the employee or the employer
under certain circumstances outlined in the bill.
- No choice of law allowed that would avoid Massachusetts law if the
employee has been a resident and working in Massachusetts for at least 30 days.

According to prevailing views about the pending legislation, additional changes will certainly be made. We will report on its progress.
 

Maryland Court Enforces Non-Compete Agreement Against Former Employee

On February 4, 2010, the United States District Court for the District of Maryland granted summary judgment to Plaintiff TEKsystems, Inc. (“TEK” or the “Company”), a leading technical staffing and services company, and enjoined its former Director of Strategic Accounts, Jonathan Bolton (“Bolton”), from violating certain restrictive covenants contained in his Employment Agreement.

Pursuant to the Employment Agreement, Bolton was prohibited from competing with the Company within a fifty (50) mile radius of the office in which he worked at the time his employment was terminated, for a period of eighteen (18) months following the termination of his employment. Although Bolton worked in New York City, the Employment Agreement at issue was executed in Maryland and the contract specifically provided that Maryland law would govern all disputes.

Less than two weeks after resigning from TEK, Bolton began working for another IT-staffing company as their Managing Director of New York City. Bolton worked out of his home in Wayne, New Jersey, which is located less than 50 miles from his prior office at TEK. Approximately one month later, TEK issued Bolton a cease and desist letter requesting that he provide written assurances that he would abide by the terms of his Employment Agreement. However, Bolton never provided any response to the Company. Consequently, TEK filed a lawsuit to enforce the restrictive covenant and sought an award of injunctive relief and damages.

In analyzing the restrictive covenant pursuant to Maryland law, the court concluded that it was reasonable in terms of both geographic scope and duration. The court noted that covenants imposing a far broader limitation than 50-miles had previously been upheld by courts in Maryland, especially where, as here, the Company operates on a nationwide and international level. Likewise, the 18-month duration of the restrictive covenant was clearly compliant with the norms governing the temporal scope of restrictive covenants.

The court also found that the covenant not to compete served to protect TEK’s legitimate business interest, as the Company’s success in the IT-staffing industry overwhelmingly depends upon the ability of its employees to make and maintain personal connections with clients, and Bolton was privy to TEK’s client contacts and confidential information. And, while the covenant could create some inconveniences for Bolton by prohibiting him from working in the New York City area for the next 18 months, the Court did not find that such inconveniences rose to the level of undue hardship. Finally, the court considered the public interest at stake and noted that “the public benefits from the enforcement of reasonable restrictive covenants” which serves to “facilitate and protect business growth, especially in technology-related and information based fields.”

Based on these conclusions, the court awarded a permanent injunction barring Bolton from operating in the New York City area for 18 months from the date of the court’s order. Because the court found that there was insufficient evidence showing that any of TEK’s customers had paid any fees to Bolton for his work with his new employer, the court declined to rule on damages, choosing instead to allow the parties to further brief that specific issue.

This case demonstrates that Maryland is a favorable forum for enforcing non-compete agreements, even where there is no proof that an employer has suffered a loss of profits. Thus, Maryland employers who wish to protect their legitimate business interests should not hesitate to utilize and maintain appropriate restrictive covenants, so long as such covenants are reasonable in terms of scope, geographic area and duration, do not unduly restrict an employee from earning a living, and do not limit fair competition.
 

NJ Supreme Court Restricts An Employer's Ability To Review An Employee's Communications With A Personal Attorney On The Employer's Computers

While many employers worry that some court decisions will add "insult to injury," New Jersey employers must now be aware of Stengart v. Loving Care Agency Inc., et al., --- A.2d ----, ---N.J. -- (N.J. 2010), decided March 30, 2010, which presages adding "injury to injury." That is because it first injures employers' interests by stating that an employer cannot write an enforceable policy that “banned all personal computer use and provided unambiguous notice that an employer could retrieve and read” all emails that an employer wrote through a personal email account using an employer’s computer and that an employee’s communications with personal counsel concerning matters adverse to the company may occur during work time using the employer's resources. And if that were not injury enough to the employer's interests, in having employees actually work on company business while at the office using the company's resources, the Stengart Court then goes on to add another possible injury—on remand, the trial court should consider disqualifying the company's counsel for not immediately returning to the departed employee (or her counsel) all copies of such communications. The Stengart decision demands that employers, especially in New Jersey, not only revisit their written policies, but also that they consider how such policies are actually being applied and enforced. Decisions like Stengart can also directly impact on steps that have become part of best practices responses in trade secret and restrictive covenant cases involving departing employees.

Background

Plaintiff Marine Stengart was the Executive Director of Loving Care, Inc., a home care services agency, who resigned and then sued Loving Care for constructive discharge under the New Jersey Law Against Discrimination. Stengart was issued a company laptop computer. Despite some factual discrepancies between the parties as to the content and dissemination of certain policies, the Court also assumed for its analysis that the company had a well-publicized electronic communications policy that made all aware that the employer's computer and system (including those allowing for internet access) were all company property, to be used for company business, and that the company believed that there was no reasonable expectation of privacy in any communications that an employee had through such equipment or system because the communications were, as announced in the policy, subject to monitoring, were considered the property of the company, and were embedded within the company's physical property. Stengart, nonetheless, used her company computer to communicate with her personal counsel through her Yahoo account. Such communications were discovered by her former employer on that computer after her termination. Loving Care's counsel did not immediately disclose the existence of such communications to Stengart or her counsel, and instead referenced and included those of relevance to a response to a later discovery request.

The Court's Analysis

The Court’s analysis is driven by two basic factors, one case specific, one more general, on the issue of whether a privilege ever existed or was waived.

Of specific concern to the Court was Loving Care's written policy, which clearly stated that E-mail and voice mail messages, internet use and communication and computer files are considered part of the company's business and client records, that "such communications are not to be considered private or personal to any individual employee, that the company reserved the right to review, audit, intercept, access and disclose “all matters on the company’s media systems and services at any time." But the policy also stated that "occasional personal use is permitted." The Court, assuming the policy was in effect, and despite language in the policy that specifically applied to "internet use and communication" in addition to e-mail, found that an objective reader might not conclude that the policy applied to using a work computer to access a personal, password-protected Yahoo account. Moreover, the Court held that the company's reasonable statement that "occasional personal use" of the company email would be tolerated somehow further frustrated the company's effort to thwart the creation of any reasonable expectation of privacy.

But, more generally, the Stengart Court found that the interests protected by the attorney-client privilege outweighed employers' interests in enforcing electronic communications policies. In doing so, the Court seemed to ignore the fact that privileged communications require an expectation of confidentiality, and none should have arisen on the facts of this case. The Court's analysis suggests strongly the policy's provision allowing for occasional "personal" use somehow created an expectation of privacy, ignoring the distinction between "private" and "personal." In Stengart, the terms were used interchangeably, even though the words do not necessarily carry the same connotation.

The holdings of the Stengart Court go beyond the earlier Appellate Division decision in the case, which had only implied that a policy cannot be written that would have led the Court to have found any claim of privilege inert or waived. Indeed, the Supreme Court expressly stated that, and also noted that “a zero-tolerance policy [on personal use of computers]” is “unworkable and unwelcome in today’s dynamic and mobile workforce…” That reading is certainly furthered by the Court's remand to consider whether the employer's counsel should be disqualified under RPC 4.4(b) for having kept and reviewed the communications.

Takeaways and Next Steps

The decision leaves employers with several questions that we will try to help you answer, and they are questions that can have particular impact in the area of trade secret and restrictive covenant litigation:

1. Do you, as an employer, want a policy that reaches otherwise privileged or private communications? You do. Though the Stengart Court says that no legitimate business interest is furthered by transforming all private communications into company property, the Court misses the important point that many legitimate business interests are furthered by stemming private communications during work, the most basic being the employer's interest in having work being done at work. Indeed, the very examples earlier used by the Appellate Division as to what is accessible instantly "with the touch of a keyboard or a click of a mouse" (e.g., medical records, bank accounts, phone records, and tax returns) illustrate full well that these are the very sort of personal items that an employer has a great interest in keeping from being disclosed in or to the workplace. In warning employees that what is personal and private will be neither if brought into the workplace, employers are protecting themselves and their employees, and also assuring that they are not paying employees to come to work to work on personal medical, financial or other matters between lunch breaks and coffee breaks.
 

2. Does Stengart allow for the creation of such a policy? It may. But drafting and then upholding that policy against legal challenge will take great care. We know this because a close reading of Stengart leaves the careful room to operate—as the Supreme Court says, “Our conclusion…does not mean that employers cannot monitor or regulate the use of workplace computers.” For instance, Stengart says that a policy requiring that one work at work and not spend valuable time on personal communications is appropriate, “[b]ut employers have no need or basis to read the specific contents of personal, privileged, attorney-client communications in order to enforce corporate policy." Of course, overlooked by the Court is that one cannot define the communicative activity as one outside the employer's business interests without knowing the content that would show that. Thus, the Stengart Court's distinction between communicative conduct and communicative content probably fails analytically, which is implicitly acknowledged by the Court's noting that an employer may have an interest in certain types of personal content as reflected in previously decided cases. Nevertheless, one can enforce such a policy by blocking access to Internet-based email accounts from employee computers, or through other mechanisms and policies that focus on the time devoted to such communications as opposed to their content.

3. With or without a new policy, what do you do if you find attorney-client communications on a departed employee's computer? The first thing that one must do is collect, segregate and preserve such communications. Once that has been done, whether by one's internal IT staff or outside IT consultants, the existence of such documents should be made known to outside counsel. Then things get a little more complicated. If the employer is already in litigation, it would appear that Stengart compels one to either then turn over all copies to the plaintiff and his/her counsel or present them to the court for in camera review as to whether or not they are privileged or if privilege has been waived. Because fully reviewing the documents at issue after becoming aware that they are arguably privileged raises the possibility of later disqualification under RPC 4.4(b), an employer may even consider retaining special counsel separate from regular employment counsel to handle the application to the court, and to advise the client concerning the issues that have arisen without running the risk of having primary defense counsel disqualified from the matter. An even more sensitive, nuanced analysis will be required if that matter is not yet in litigation, and there is no already designated third party decision maker available. At that point, the employer, along with employment counsel and possibly special counsel, must carefully weigh a number of practical, legal, ethical and business factors before determining how to approach the relevant issues.

Having both employment counsel and possibly special counsel familiar with those issues and the new landscape defined by Stengart will be essential to avoiding damaging one’s position concerning claims that the departed employees are expected to file. This is especially true as it relates to departing employees in the trade secret or restrictive covenant context, where one often seeks to document through forensic computer analysis what communications occurred in preparation for a departure and what confidential information may have been transmitted. The last thing one wants when operating with a need for speed is some ancillary disqualification issue to arise for one’s outside counsel. That is why segmenting roles and responsibilities is important, and it may be that special counsel can turn the tables on a departing employee and his/her counsel by demonstrating that the pre-departure communications were actually advice as to how and under what circumstances information could be taken. This would have the potential to render the communications unprivileged ones in furtherance of a “crime or fraud,” which exception has been construed in New Jersey and elsewhere to apply to civil wrongs of a wide variety, and could possibly lead to the ex-employee’s counsel becoming a witness in the matter, which could have its own potentially disqualifying or limiting implications.