Appellant (surviving corporation) appeals the dismissal of its petition seeking to enforce a covenant not to compete between respondents (employees) and surviving corporation’s predecessor, Reed Stenhouse, Inc., (employer). We reverse and remand.
On review of a dismissal for failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted, the appellate court liberally construes the pleadings, accepting as true all well-pleaded facts and inferences therefrom favorable to the plaintiff, to determine whether the pleading demonstrates a ground for relief.
Zweifel v. Zenge & Smith,
On August 9, 1985, employer was merged with its parent, surviving corporation. Employees terminated employment on September 4, 1985, and, it is alleged, began to solicit business from some who had been clients of employer during the year immediately preceding employment termination, in violation of the contracts. Surviving Corporation sued, claiming, as the successor to employer, it was entitled to enforce the restrictive covenants in the employment contracts. Employees moved to dismiss, asserting the contracts provided for the performance of personal services, were unassignable, and therefore could not be enforced by employer. The petition was dismissed and surviving corporation appeals.
The question presented for decision is whether the surviving company in a statutory merger can enforce covenants not to compete contained in contracts between the merged company and employees of that company. We believe the better reasoned approach dictates enforceability of covenants not to compete following such transfers.
Non-competition covenants in employment contracts are enforceable because they protect the employer’s legitimate interest in preserving the goodwill of his business.
Osage Glass, Inc. v. Donovan,
Likewise, a non-competition agreement is a valuable asset for the business when it is in an employment contract rather than a contract to sell the business.
Saliterman v. Finney,
Employees assert the employment contract at issue in their case is one for personal services, which, as a general rule, cannot be assigned without the consent of the employee.
See Alldredge v. Twenty-
A mere change in the form in which business is owned or conducted should not work a prohibited assignment. Whether there is a change in partnership personnel or structure
(Thames v. Rotary Engineering Co.,
It is not questioned the amalgamation of these entities was in fact a statutory merger. As such, the surviving corporation succeeded to all the rights and liabilities of the preceding corporations. Section 351.450(4), (5), RSMo (1978);
Dodier,
Nothing contained in the limited record available on this motion to dismiss indicates employees’ duty not to compete will be materially altered by the merger. The mere change in corporate personality would not, it seems, alter their duties.
Munchak Corp. v. Cunningham,
It is also urged the contracts in the present case are silent on the matter of assignability, and are therefore not assignable.
Alldredge,
Our holding is not in conflict with
All-dredge,
We do not decide if the covenant here is otherwise enforceable. We hold only that the transfer in the circumstances involved in this case did not impose, as a matter of law, a material change in the obligations and duties of employees; and therefore the transfer does not automatically render such a covenant unenforceable.
Reversed and remanded.
