MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
I. Introduction
Plaintiff Aspect Software, Inc. has sued Gary Barnett (“Barnett”), its former Executive Vice. President and Chief Technology Officer, alleging that Barnett breached his contract with Aspect Software when he accepted a position with a rival corporation. Aspect Software has moved for a preliminary injunction. For the reasons discussed below, Aspect Software’s motion is GRANTED.
II. Burden of Proof and Standard of Review
In ruling on a preliminary injunction, courts must state the factual findings or conclusions that support the court’s ruling. Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(a)(2). The burden of providing a factual basis sufficient to justify a preliminary injunction rests with the party seeking the injunction.
Nieves-Marquez v. Puerto Rico,
HI. Factual Background
a. Employment at Aspect
Aspect Software is a Delaware corporation formed in 2005 with its principal place of business in Massachusetts. Aspect Software develops, licenses and sells cus *122 tomer contact center products and services to customers around the world. Their products and services allow businesses to provide customer service, collections, sales and telemarketing directly to customers through contact centers. Aspect Software maintains substantial volumes of confidential information and trade secrets relating to its existing and potential customers and to the development of Aspect Software’s product line.
Barnett was the President and CEO of a telecommunications company called Aspect Communications. In 2005, Barnett’s company was acquired by Concerto Software and the two companies formed Aspect Software (hereinafter “Aspect”). On September 30, 2005, Aspect hired Barnett to be its Executive Vice President of Research and Development, Chief Technology Officer, and Executive Vice President of Global Support. Barnett served on Aspect’s Executive Management team and was one of the company’s four Executive Vice Px-esidents. Barnett’s job responsibilities at Aspect were described at length in the record, see Affidavit of Aspect’s Chief Executive Officer James Foy, D. 1-2, 44-45 at ¶ 17, 1 but to summarize, he was responsible for managing all aspects of the customer contact center business, including software and hardware development, technology standards, employee recraitment and retention, and customer relations, as well as general strategic and business management with regard to the customer contact center business. His home base was an Aspect office in Tennessee, but he also had an office at Aspect’s headquarters in Massachusetts.
Barnett signed an employment agreement (“Agreement”) with Aspect that contained a provision entitled “Noncompete; Non-Solicitation” at section seven. The provision included the following language:
(a) Employee acknowledges that Employee’s services to the Company require the use of information including a formula, pattern, compilation, program, device, method, technique, or process that the Company has made reasonable efforts to keep confidential and that derives independent economic value, actual or potential, from not being generally known to the public or to other persons who can obtain economic value from its disclosure or use (“Trade Secrets”). Employee further acknowledges and agrees that the Company would be irreparably damaged if Employee were to provide similar services requiring the use of [the Company’s] Trade Secrets to any person or entity competing with the Company or engaged in a similar business. Therefore, Employee agrees that during the Employment Period and duxdng the twelve (12) month period immediately thereafter (the “Protection Period”), he or she will not, either directly or indirectly, for himself or herself or any other person or entity ... (iv) Participate in any business in which he would be reasonably likely to employ, reveal, or otherwise utilize Trade Secrets used by the Company prior to the Executive’s termination in any geographical area in which the Company or any of its affiliates conducts business. “Participate” includes any direct or indirect interest in any enterprise, whether as officer, director, employee ... [or] executive....
The Agreement also included the following px'ovision, titled “Choice of Law,” at section 17:
All issues and questions concerning the construction, validity, enforcement and interpretation of this Agreement and the schedules hereto shall be governed by, and construed in accordance with, the *123 laws of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, without giving effect to any choice of law or conflict of law rules or provisions (whether of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts or any other jurisdiction) that would cause the application of the laws of any jurisdiction other than the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
During the course of his employment, Barnett generated and was given access to information Aspect’s complaint describes as trade secrets, including 1) strategic decisions concerning Aspect’s “roadmap” for future technological advancement, 2) the design of Aspect’s flagship “Unified IP” product and the timeline for its release to the public, 3) details of the relationship between Aspect and the Microsoft corporation as to both technical and strategic matters, 4) the internal structure of Aspect products’ components as well as the strengths and weaknesses of individual components, 5) negotiations between Aspect and Aspect’s clients, 6) marketing strategies and specific customer targeting objectives, 7) Aspect products’ ability to deploy across multiple servers, 8) the interfaces used to connect Aspect products to third-party products, 9) functionality, strengths and weaknesses of Aspect products, 10) cloud computing technology strategies, 11) Aspect’s use of Microsoft’s SQL server for reporting and analytics and plans for future use, 12) Aspect’s use of other Microsoft software and platforms, and 13) Aspect’s research and development budgets and resources, including the quality of Aspect’s individual employees and Aspect’s fiscal constraints.
B. Employment at Avaya
Avaya is a global telecommunications company that, according to an affidavit submitted by Alan Baratz, Avaya’s Senior Vice President and President, Global Communications Solutions, self-identifies as “the world leader in the contact center business.” Avaya is one of Aspect’s main competitors. 2 On April 17, 2011, Baratz offered Barnett the position of Avaya’s Vice President and General Manager, Contact Center Business Unit. Baratz offered the position to Barnett because Baratz “consider[ed] Mr. Barnett to be a worldwide authority and luminary on contact center technology and solutions.” 3 The position included an annual base salary of $500,000 and annual target bonus of $350,000. On April 18, 2011, Barnett accepted the offer, informed Aspect that he was going to work for Avaya and resigned from Aspect.
Barnett and Avaya both claim that they took steps to protect Aspect’s trade secrets before Barnett started his new job. *124 Barnett turned off his Aspect-issued Blackberry immediately after tendering his resignation, left his laptop computer in his office, and boxed all Aspect property in his home and made arrangements for a representative from Aspect to retrieve the boxes. Avaya included language in its employment offer to Barnett that specifically forbade him from using any Aspect trade secrets in the course of his employment with Avaya and, separately, incorporated by reference Barnett’s Agreement with Aspect.' 4 Avaya and Barnett subsequently entered into an “Employee Agreement Regarding Intellectual Property” that included similar protections. Additionally, on April 21, 2011, Alan Baratz, Avaya’s Senior Vice President and President, Global Communication Solutions, sent Barnett an email that provided, in relevant part:
Given your current obligations to Aspect, I have put together the “ground rules” below, which I need you to follow:
1. Do not retain any documents or information relating to Aspect’s business, in any form, that you obtained in your role as an Aspect employee.
2. Do not disclose any document or information relating to Aspect’s business to anyone at Avaya and do not use such documents or information in your employment with Avaya.
3. If Aspect comes up in any discussion or meeting that you are attending in your role as an Avaya employee, you should not provide any input.
4. If, in the course of your employment with Avaya, you are asked for information relating to Aspect’s business, you must refrain from providing the information.
5. Until April 19, 2012, do not have any communications with any Aspect employee about leaving his or her employment with Aspect.
6. Until April 19, 2012, do not play any role in hiring anyone who was employed with Aspect in the 180 days prior to your involvement in the hiring process.
7. Until April 19, 2012, do not have any communications with any Aspect customer, supplier, licensee, licensor or business relation about doing business with Aspect or Avaya.
8. Until April 19, 2012, do not make any negative statements about Aspect to *125 any Aspect customer, supplier, licensee, licensor or business relation. 5
On April 21, 2011, after resigning from Aspect, Barnett relocated with his family to San Jose, California. On April 25, 2011, he started working in Avaya’s Santa Clara, California office.
IV. Procedural History
On April 27, 2011, Aspect filed the instant lawsuit in Suffolk Superior Court against Barnett alleging breach of contract and seeking injunctive relief and declaratory judgment. On May 3, 2011, Barnett removed the action to this Court. On May 9, 2011, Aspect submitted to this Court a draft injunctive order that would enjoin Barnett from working for Avaya for a period of one year (consistent with the “Protection Period” discussed in §§ 7(a) and (d) of the Agreement), from contacting Aspect’s customers or potential customers for the same period of time, and from disclosing or using any of Aspect’s trade secret information. On May 11, 2011, the Court permitted Avaya to participate in the case as an amicus curiae. That same day, the Court held a hearing on Aspect’s motion for a preliminary injunction at which counsel for Aspect, Barnett and Avaya all appeared.
V. Discussion
A. Preliminary Injunction
To obtain a preliminary injunction, Aspect “bear[s] the burden of demonstrating (1) a substantial likelihood of success on the merits, (2) a significant risk of irreparable harm if the injunction is withheld, (3) a favorable balance of hardships, and (4) a fit (or lack of friction) between the injunction and the public interest.”
Nieves-Marquez,
1. Likelihood of Success on the Merits
a. Choice-of-Law
Aspect and Barnett dispute whether Massachusetts law or California law should govern the analysis of the merits of Aspect’s complaint. In a diversity action, the choice-of-law rules that apply are those of the forum state, in this case, Massachusetts.
Klaxon v. Stentor Elec. Mfg. Co.,
Here, the Agreement includes a specific choice-of-law provision identifying the laws of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts as the relevant substantive law governing the Agreement. Barnett argues that this Court should not honor the choice-of-law provision because doing so would be contrary to what he characterizes as a fundamental policy of California, namely section 16600 of the California Business and Professional Code, which states that “[e]very contract by which anyone is restrained from engaging in a lawful profession, trade, or business of any kind is to that extent void.” Barnett’s argument fails to satisfy any of the three prongs which must be met before this Court may disregard a contractual choice-of-law clause.
First, while California’s policy against non-competition covenants has been characterized as “fundamental,”
Roll Sys.,
Second, California’s interest in the determination of the particular issue at bar is either weaker than or, at best, equal to Massachusetts’ interest. The non-compete clause was negotiated between a company with its principal place of business in Massachusetts and its employee, who worked at least in part in Massachusetts; any harm caused by a violation of the non-compete clause will be felt in Massachusetts. Even if the Court chose to credit in *127 full the position, put forward in Avaya’s amicus brief, that California has an interest in the freedom of its residents to seek employment regardless of trade-secret-related non-compete clauses and has a separate and distinct interest in the freedom of its employers to hire an employee regardless of any trade-secret-related covenants not to compete that employee may have entered into in other states, California’s twin interests in pursuing its non-fundamental policy would not materially outweigh Massachusetts’ interest in ensuring that Massachusetts contracts are enforced.
Third and finally, California would not be the state of the applicable law in the absence of an effective choice-of-law by the parties. In cases where no choice-of-law provision applies, the Supreme Judicial Court has decided “not to tie Massachusetts conflicts law to any specific doctrine, but seek[s] instead a functional choice-of-law approach that responds to the interests of the parties, the States involved, and the interstate system as a whole,” and looks to the Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws (1971) as an “obvious source of guidance.”
Bushkin Assocs., Inc. v. Raytheon Co.,
Accordingly, the Court will enforce the choice-of-law clause agreed to by the parties and will interpret the Agreement pursuant to the substantive law of Massachusetts.
b. Underlying Breach of Contract Claim
Aspect’s underlying complaint rests on a breach of contract claim, coupled with requests for injunctive and declaratory relief that are derivative of the breach of contract claim. Under Massachusetts law, to prove a breach of contract claim, a plaintiff must show: 1) existence of a valid and binding contract, 2) that the defendant breached the terms of the contract, and 3) the plaintiff has suffered dam
*128
ages from the breach.
Coll v. PB Diagnostic Sys., Inc.,
Here, the Agreement prohibits Barnett from “participating] in any business in which he would be reasonably likely to employ, reveal or otherwise utilize trade secrets.” Instead of quarreling with the scope and breadth of the non-compete clause, Barnett argues that the phrase “reasonably likely” is either vague and therefore unenforceable or ambiguous and therefore requiring the Court to resort to extrinsic evidence to determine the phrase’s meaning. Barnett argues in the alternative that his employment with Ava-ya does not breach the Agreement’s prohibition.
“In order to create an enforceable contract, ‘[i]t is a necessary requirement that [the] agreement ... be sufficiently definite to enable the courts to give it an exact meaning.’ ”
Armstrong v. Rohm & Haas Co., Inc.,
The Court also finds that Aspect has carried its burden of showing that it is reasonably likely to prevail with regard to its assertion that Barnett breached the Agreement by accepting a position as Ava-ya’s Vice President and General Manager, Contact Center Business Unit. As the Foy and Baratz declarations make clear, Aspect and Avaya are intense competitors in the customer contact center business, precisely the field in which Barnett has encyclopedic knowledge of Aspect’s trade secrets. Avaya hired Barnett to work in that same field. Whether or not Barnett actually has “employed], reveal[ed] or otherwise utilize[d]” Aspect’s trade secrets in the course of his work with Avaya (or whether he will do so in the future), Aspect has established that at the time of his departure from Aspect it was at the very least “reasonably likely” that he would do so. That likelihood is sufficient to establish a breach of the Agreement.
The Court appreciates Barnett and Ava-ya’s efforts to protect the integrity of Aspect’s trade secrets. But even if these scrupulous efforts are wholly successful, they will merely reduce the harm that will flow from Barnett’s breach of the Agreement; they will not erase the fact of the breach. Further, some of these efforts, such as those set forth in Baratz’s e-mail to Barnett, lack the force of law; others, such as the trade secret protections written into Barnett’s employment agreement, are backed by the force of contract law as to the bilateral relationship between Avaya and Barnett but cannot be enforced by Aspect. 10 These efforts, while admirable, *130 do not alter the analysis that Aspect is likely to succeed on its claim that Barnett breached the Agreement.
2. Irreparable Harm
The likelihood of irreparable harm is a necessary threshold showing for awarding preliminary injunctive relief.
Matos v. Clinton Sch. Dist.,
Barnett argues that he and Avaya have already taken sufficient steps to protect Aspect’s trade secrets, removing the threat of irreparable harm and, accordingly, any need for preliminary injunctive relief. He points to the April 21, 2011 e-mail between Baratz and Barnett, the “Proprietary Information” and “Existing Restrictive Covenants” clauses in Avaya’s employment offer to Barnett, and clause “F” of Barnett’s Avaya Employment Agreement Regarding Intellectual Property. He has also offered to provide monthly confirmation to Aspect that he has neither used nor disclosed any non-public Aspect information.
The Court fully credits the sincerity of Barnett and Avaya’s intent and the scrupulousness of their efforts. But given the extent of Barnett’s experience at Aspect and the similarity between his positions at Aspect and at Avaya, “it is difficult to conceive how all of the information stored in [Barnett]’s memory can be set aside as he applies himself to a competitor’s business and its products.”
Marcam Corp. v. Orchard,
S. Balance of Hardships
“Any potential harm caused to [Aspect] by a denial of its motion must be balanced against any reciprocal harm caused to [Barnett and Avaya] -by the imposition of an injunction.”
TouchPoint Solutions, Inc. v. Eastman Kodak Co.,
A Public Interest
A preliminary injunction is not appropriate unless there is “a fit (or lack of friction) between the injunction and the public interest.”
Nieves-Marquez,
VI. Conclusion
For the reasons discussed above, Plaintiff Aspect’s Motion for Preliminary Injunction is GRANTED. Accordingly, it is hereby ordered that Defendant Gary Barnett shall be enjoined and restrained until further order of the Court from:
(1) Continuing his present employment with Avaya, Inc., its subsidiaries or affiliates for the duration of the “Protection Period” as defined by Section 7(a) of the Agreement;
(2) Violating Section 7(a) of the Agreement. Accordingly, Barnett is prohibited from directly or indirectly, for himself or any other person or entity,
(i) inducing or attempting to induce any employee of Aspect or any of Aspect’s affiliates to leave Aspect or such affiliate, or in any way interfering with the relationship between Aspect or any affiliate and any employee thereof;
(ii) hiring any person who is (or in the case of a former employee, was an employee of Aspect or any affiliate at any time during the 180 day period prior to any attempted hiring by Barnett) an employee of Aspect or any affiliate;
(iii) inducing or attempting to induce any customer, supplier, licensee, licensor or other business relation of Aspect or any affiliate to cease doing business with Aspect or such affiliate, or in any way interfere with the relationship between any such customer, supplier, licensee, licensor or business relation and Aspect or any affiliate (including, without limitation, making *132 any negative statements or communications about Aspect or its affiliates); (iv) participating in any business in which he would be reasonably likely to employ, reveal, or otherwise utilize Trade Secrets used by Aspect prior to Barnett’s termination; and
(8) Disclosing or using Aspect’s confidential information, proprietary information, or Trade Secrets (as that term is defined in the Agreement).
For the issuance of this injunctive relief, the plaintiff is required to post a bond pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 65. In the exercise of its discretion, the Court imposes a bond of $500,000. The order of preliminary injunction will become effective upon the filing of the $500,000 bond by Aspect and its notice to Barnett of such filing. Because the parties have not yet stated their positions as to the appropriate amount of bond, the Court allows each party leave to file a motion to modify the bond amount within seven days. Once the order of preliminary injunction becomes effective, it will remain in effect while the Court considers any motion to modify the bond amount.
So ordered.
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
I. Introduction
On May 27, 2011, the Court entered a preliminary injunction and order (“the Preliminary Injunction”) in this case.
1
Currently before the Court is Defendant Barnett’s Motion to Amend the Preliminary Injunction. Barnett asserts that amendment is necessary “so as to allow [Barnett] to avoid ‘unwitting contempt.’ ” Def. Memo, D. 22 at 12 (quoting
Regal Knitwear Co. v. Nat’l. Labor Relations Bd.,
II. Legal Standard
Barnett brings his motion pursuant to Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 52(b), 59(e) and 60(b)(6). Barnett asserts that the standards governing motions filed pursuant to these various rules are functionally similar, at least in the context of addressing the risk he fears of so-called “unwitting contempt.”
Pursuant to Rule 52(b), “[o]n a party’s motion filed no later than 28 days after the entry of judgment, the court may amend its findings — or make additional findings— and may amend the judgment accordingly.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(b). “A Rule 52(b) motion is meant ‘to correct, clarify or amplify the [Court’s] findings [and] is not meant to provide an avenue for relitigating issues on which the moving party did not prevail.... ’ ”
Dash v. Chi. Ins. Co.,
Barnett argues that these standards are more relaxed when a party’s motion for an amendment is motivated by an intent to avoid “unwitting contempt” and relies upon
Regal Knitwear
in support of his proposition. Def. Memo, D. 22 at 12. But Barnett has not offered, and the Court cannot find, any examples of a court in the First Circuit discussing either
Regal Knitwear
or the concept of “unwitting contempt” in conjunction with a motion under Rules 52(b), 59(e), or 60(b), let alone such a court in the Circuit relying on
Regal Knitwear
to alter the standard under which it reviews a motion brought under those rules.
2
In this Court’s estimation, the “best” case in this Circuit for Barnett’s position may be
Williams v. Lesiak,
Thus, even taking full account of Regal Knitwear, Barnett’s burden is steep, regardless of which specific rule governs his motion: he may not relitigate issues on which he has failed to prevail in earlier proceedings before the Court, and he must either 1) persuade the Court that granting his motion would merely amplify (rather than alter) the intent behind the Preliminary Injunction, or 2) show that exceptional circumstances, a manifest error of law or newly discovered evidence cast doubt on the Preliminary Injunction as it currently stands.
III. Discussion
Barnett does not argue that exceptional circumstances, a manifest error of law or newly discovered evidence require altering the Preliminary Injunction. Instead, Barnett argues that because the Preliminary Injunction prohibits him from “participating in any business in which he would be reasonably likely to employ, re *134 veal or otherwise utilize Trade Secrets used by [Plaintiff] Aspect prior to Barnett’s termination,” Preliminary Injunction, D. 16 at 2 3 , but does not “set forth explicit criteria or boundaries for determining” what kind of work Barnett can do, Def. Memo, D. 22 at 13, the Preliminary Injunction should be amended “so that he receives predictability and certainty regarding his role at Avaya, and does not unwittingly face a motion for contempt.” Id. at 4.
The Court is familiar with this argument. Barnett made a nearly identical argument four months ago when he opposed Aspect’s Motion for a Preliminary Injunction enforcing Barnett’s employment agreement with Aspect,
see, e.g.,
Def. Memo in Opp., D. 6 at 19 (arguing that the language in Section 7 of the Agreement was too vague to be enforceable), 21 (arguing that given the vagueness and ambiguity in the Agreement, the Court should not enforce it against Barnett); Transcript of Motion Hearing, D. 8 at 40-41 (arguing that the “reasonably likely” language in the Preliminary Injunction, mirroring the language in the Agreement, is too vague to provide guidance to Barnett), 44 (discussing enforceability of the Agreement). This argument was unavailing, at least in the preliminary injunction context.
See
Additionally, Barnett’s fear of “unwitting contempt” should be at least somewhat allayed by the procedural posture of this case. Aspect has not moved for an order of contempt. Were it to do so, it would have the burden of “establishing] by clear and convincing evidence that the putative contemnor violated the relevant court order,”
Goya Foods, Inc. v. Wallack Mgmt. Co.,
VI. Conclusion
For the reason set forth above, Barnett’s Motion to Amend the Preliminary *135 Injunction is DENIED. 4
So ordered.
Notes
. References to docketed material are abbreviated as "D.-.
. The nature of the competition between Aspect and Avaya is set out in detail in paragraphs 29-32 of the Foy Affidavit, and is discussed briefly in the affidavit of Alan Baratz, Avaya’s Senior Vice President and President, Global Communications Solutions, D. 6-2, at ¶ 2. According to the affidavits, the competition is particularly intense with regard to customer contact center products.
. The parties dispute the exact work responsibilities that Barnett’s new position at Avaya entails. Aspect asserts in its complaint that "Barnett’s responsibilities in his new position with Avaya will likely be substantially similar to his responsibilities while employed at Aspect." Barnett asserts in his affidavit that his responsibilities at Avaya would not include 1) the use or protection of Avaya's trade secrets, 2) defining Avaya's standards for developing and acquiring technology, 3) enforcing technology standards on a company-wide basis, 4) monitoring staff and vendor performance, or 5) ensuring that Avaya’s internal technological processes are legal. Barnett's affidavit does not affirmatively state what his job responsibilities at Avaya would include, but it is undisputed that Avaya is a competitor of Aspect’s in the customer contact center business and that Barnett would be the executive in charge of that specific business at Avaya.
. The employment offer Avaya made to Barnett included the following language:
Proprietary Information: By acceptance of this offer, you agree that (1) no trade secret or proprietary information belonging to any of your previous employers will be disclosed or used by you at the Company, and that no such information, whether in the form of documents, memoranda, software, drawings, etc. will be retained by you or brought with you to Avaya other than those items explicitly permitted by your previous employers, and (2) you have brought to Avaya’s attention and provided it with a copy of any agreement which may impact your future employment at Avaya including non-disclosure, non-competition, non-solicitation, invention assignment agreements or agreements containing future work restrictions.
Existing Restrictive Covenants: You have provided Avaya with a copy of the Employment Agreement, dated September 30, 2005, as amended, between Aspect Software, Inc. ("Aspect Software”) and you ("Aspect Employment Agreement”)[ ] which contains certain restrictive covenants, which prohibit you from, among other things, soliciting either employees and/or customers or other business associates of Aspect Software to terminate or decrease their business relationship with Aspect Software, and prohibit you from participating in any business in which you would be reasonably likely to employ, reveal, or otherwise utilize Aspect’s "Trade Secrets,” as defined in the Aspect Employment Agreement. By signing this letter, you affirm that you can and will perform your duties as GM, Contact Centers without violating the Aspect Employment Agreement.
. Additionally, Barnett submitted an affidavit to this Court, D. 6-1, stating that he has offered to take additional steps to protect Aspect's trade secrets, including "provid[ing] Aspect a periodic declaration — at the end of each month through April 2012 — certifying under oath my non-use and non-disclosure of any non-public Aspect information.''
. More recently, some California courts have questioned the vitality of the
Muggill
line of cases defining the trade secrets exception to Section 16000.
See Edwards v. Arthur Andersen LLP,
. The seven factors set forth in the Restatement are: (a) the needs of the interstate and international systems; (b) the relevant policies of the forum; (c) the relevant policies of other interested states and the relative interests of those states in the determination of the particular issue; (d) the protection of justified expectations; (e) the basic policies underlying the particular field of law; (f) certainty, predictability and uniformity of result; and (g) ease in the determination and application of the law to be applied. Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws § 6(2) (1971).
. Indeed, it would be difficult to do so now, since in section 7(b) of the Agreement Barnett acknowledged and agreed to the necessity and reasonableness of the "duration, geographical area and scope” of the non-compete provision.
. Perhaps as a way of explaining the dearth of authority supporting his position on this point, Barnett asserts that the phrase "reasonably likely" is “unusual” language for a restrictive covenant, Def. Memo at 1, 13, and implies that unusual language is more likely to be vague and ambiguous. The Court disagrees with this implication. If the phrase at issue in the Agreement is indeed unusual drafting — and the Court takes no position as to whether this is so — that may, contrary to the defendant’s argument, alternatively suggest that the Agreement was unusually well drafted.
. Barnett makes much of the fact that, as he claims, Aspect has allowed other employees to leave and join competitors and has not filed suit to prevent them from doing so. (D. 6 at 4-5; Barnett Aff. ¶¶ 42-45). Even accepting such allegations as true, it is not relevant to whether Aspect is likely to succeed on the merits in its case against Barnett.
See Boulanger,
442 Mass, at 643,
. Barnett argues that "[t]he heyday of so-called 'inevitable disclosure' [jurisprudence] was in the mid-1990s to the early 2000s, and the tide has since turned,” and points to recent cases from sixteen different states. Def.’s Memo, at 6, 6 n. 5. Whether or not Barnett's position is correct as a general matter, it does not describe the current state of Massachusetts law. The Court finds Lombard Med. Tech., Marcam, and C.R. Bard more persuasive authority as to Massachusetts law than the out-of-district cases interpreting out-of-state law cited by Barnett.
. The Court has recounted the background of this case elsewhere,
see
. Perhaps this is not surprising. Barnett offers an excerpt from
Regal Knitwear,
Def. Memo, D. 22 at 12 (quoting
Regal Knitwear,
. This language in the Preliminary Injunction was taken nearly verbatim from Barnett's employment agreement with Aspect: "Employee agrees that ... he or she will not ... (iv) Participate in any business in which he would be reasonably likely to employ, reveal, or otherwise utilize Trade Secrets used by the Company prior to the Executive's termination....” Employment Agreement, D. 1-1 *135 at 20 (Section 7 ("Noncompete; Non-Solicitation”), subsection (a) (iv)).
. Earlier in this litigation, Aspect had filed a multi-part motion that sought: 1) an extension in the briefing schedule on the instant motion, 2) a request for in camera review of certain documents, and 3) for a Court order requiring Barnett to cease his employment with Avaya pending the resolution of Barnett's motion to modify the preliminaiy injunction. D. 27. The Court has already resolved the scheduling issue, see D. Entry for 7/21/11, and resolved the issue regarding review of documents without resorting to in camera review. See D. Entries for 7/5/11 and 7/15/11. Aspect has not pressed the third part of its motion, and in light of this order denying Barnett's motion to amend, the remainder of Aspect's multi-part motion, D. 27, is now DISMISSED AS MOOT.
