In July 1996, David S. Baskin started working for Farr Associates, a behavioral science consulting firm based in High Point, North Carolina. Through about 461 client offices, Farr provides behavioral consulting services to individual clients, and conducts leadership and self-awareness seminars that are open to the public. Its largest client base is in North Carolina, but it also has offices in 41 other states and four foreign countries. Its clients are generally large businesses, often having multiple offices within a given state, province or country.
Farr provides its services through its employees called Consultants. Their work generally consists of providing behavioral science consulting to individual Farr clients and conducting leadership seminars developed by Farr that are open to the public at large. Consultants are usually trained by Farr, using a training system developed by Farr. However, Farr did not provide consulting training to Mr. Baskin because he had over 20 years of experience in the field, but he did receive some training as to the administration of Farr’s leadership program.
When a Farr Consultant is assigned to work with a client, the Consultant works very closely with that client, gaining a full understanding of the client’s business needs and cultivating close personal relationships with the client’s principle representatives. Consultants achieve such a rapport with the
As part of his employment contract with Farr, Mr. Baskin signed a non-compete agreement, which provided the following:
For the valuable consideration being provided to the Employee under this Agreement, the Employee covenants and agrees that during the term of this Agreement and for a period of three (3) years from the date the Employee’s employment with the Company is terminated, regardless of whether such termination is with or without cause, or is by mutual agreement, or is involuntary as to one of the parties hereto, the Employee will not directly or indirectly render to any current client or customer of the Company or to any client or customer who was a client or customer of the Company during the two (2) year period immediately preceding the termination date of the Employee’s employment with the Company, services of any kind similar to the services previously or presently rendered for such client or customer.
Mr. Baskin worked for Farr for about two years, providing behavioral science consulting to eight clients. On 2 October 1998, Mr. Baskin gave written notice of his resignation to Farr, to be effective in two week’s time. Upon leaving Farr, Mr. Baskin started the Baskin Group, Inc., which offers behavioral consulting services to interested businesses. He immediately began providing consulting services to J. A. Jones Construction Company, a client of Farr’s since 1988 that had worked directly with Mr. Baskin while he worked for Farr. A few other Farr clients have also been in contact with Mr. Baskin, although the parties disagree as to whether Mr. Baskin solicited their business.
On 12 March 1999, Farr brought an action seeking to enforce the non-compete agreement against Mr. Baskin and also asserting a claim that Mr. Baskin breached his employment contract by not providing sufficient advance notice of his resignation. On 19 March 1999, Farr moved for injunctive relief to stop Mr. Baskin from violating the terms of the non-compete agreement. Mr. Baskin moved to dismiss Farr’s complaint on the ground that it did not state a claim upon which relief could be granted. He also filed affidavits in opposition to Farr’s motion for a preliminary injunction.
Superior Court Judge Judson D. DeRamus denied Farr’s motion for injunctive relief, finding that Farr had failed to demonstrate a likelihood of success on the merits of the claim. Thereafter, Superior Court Judge Peter M. McHugh granted Mr. Baskin’s motion to dismiss regarding the claim based on the non-compete agreement, but denied Mr. Baskin’s motion with respect to the claim based on his failure to give adequate notice of his resignation. Farr appealed both orders to this Court. We consolidated the two appeals.
We first address Farr’s argument that the trial court erroneously dismissed this action, since the dismissal of an action is subject to more stringent rules than the grant of an injunction. Farr argues that the trial court committed reversible error in partially granting Mr. Baskin’s motion to dismiss because Farr’s complaint states on its face a claim for breach of an enforceable non-compete agreement.
A motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6) tests the legal sufficiency of the complaint by presenting the question whether, as a matter of law, the allegations of the complaint are sufficient to state a claim upon which relief can be granted under some legal theory.
See Hobbs v. N.C. Dep’t Hum. Res.,
In the case at bar, the question is whether the non-compete agreement is enforceable as a matter of law. If not, then the trial court properly granted Mr. Baskin’s motion to dismiss the claim.
The record on appeal shows that the non-compete agreement meets two of the above requirements — it is in writing and is part of the employment contract. It also meets the third requirement because the promise of new employment is valuable consideration in support of a covenant not to compete.
See Milner Airco, Inc. v. Morris,
First we observe that the non-compete agreement in this case meets the requirement of being designed to protect Farr’s legitimate
business interests. The protection of customer relations against misappropriation by a departing employee is well recognized as a legitimate interest of an employer.
See United Laboratories Inc. v. Kuykenall,
However, we hold that the fourth part of the test from Hartman — -the time and territory restriction — is unreasonable on its face and the non-compete agreement is therefore unenforceable.
In evaluating reasonableness as to time and territory restrictions, we must consider each element in tandem — the two requirements are not independent and unrelated.
See Hartman,
We have previously held that time restrictions of a certain length are presumed unreasonable absent a showing of special circumstances. A five-year time restriction is the outer boundary which our courts have considered reasonable, and even so, five-year restrictions are not favored.
See, e.g., Welcome Wagon Int'l, Inc. v. Pender,
In the case at bar, the covenant restricts Mr. Baskin from providing services to Farr’s
To prove that a geographic restriction in a non-compete provision is reasonable, an employer must first show where its customers are located and that the geographic scope of the covenant is necessary to maintain those customer relationships.
See Todd,
Both parties present arguments as to why the physical scope of the territorial restriction is or is not reasonable. However, the physical scope of the restriction is irrelevant since Mr. Baskin is not prevented from working in any particular locale. Specifically, we reject Mr. Baskin’s argument that the non-compete agreement is overly broad because it has no defined physical territorial limit at all. However, Farr’s use of its client base as a substitute for a physical limitation works to achieve an unreasonable effect in its own way.
In
Hartman, supra,
we set forth a six-part test to determine whether the geographic scope of a covenant not to compete is reasonable. The six factors are: (1) the area or scope of the restriction; (2) the area assigned to the employee; (3) the area where the employee actually worked; (4) the area in which the employer operated; (5) the nature of the business involved; and (6) the nature of the employee’s duty and his knowledge of the employer’s business operation.
See Hartman,
Farr has approximately 461 offices in 41 states and four foreign countries — Canada, Mexico, Israel, and The Netherlands. Many of Farr’s clients have multiple offices within a given state, province or country. The covenant in question prevents Mr. Baskin from working for all of Farr’s current or recent clients, regardless of where the client is located, whether he had any contact with them, or whether he even knew about them. Although Mr. Baskin is not prevented from working in any particular locale, he is precluded from working with a number of businesses in a large number of cities throughout the world. The scope of the covenant is extreme, considering that Mr. Baskin only worked with a relatively small number of Farr’s clients.
We further note that the client-based restriction is unduly vague. The covenant does not define whether the term “client or customer” includes one-time attendees of a Farr workshop. And the covenant may extend to clients’ offices that never contacted Farr. If Farr worked for a client in one city, but that client has offices in other cities, the non-compete agreement ostensibly prevents Mr. Baskin from working for that client in any of its offices, not merely the office with which Farr once worked. Both of these factors work to expand the reach of the covenant.
Although Mr. Baskin knows Farr’s business practices, Farr’s main concern is that the Consultant makes business contacts with Farr’s clients — clients that may be lost when the Consultant leaves. Although Farr had a legitimate reason for wanting to prevent departing employees from misappropriating clients, the number of clients embraced by the covenant, as compared to the number of clients serviced by Mr. Baskin, is unreasonable.
Farr relies on three cases in which our Supreme Court held that a client-based geographical restriction was reasonable. In two of those cases, the Supreme Court upheld client-based restrictions which included clients the employee had not personally serviced; however, we find that the scope of the restriction in the case at bar is much broader than the restrictions contemplated in those cases. In
Triangle Leasing Co., Inc. v. McMahon,
We hold that the scope of the client-based territorial restriction in the case at bar is unreasonable, thereby rendering the non-compete agreement unenforceable. In addition, since time and territory restrictions are two parts to one inquiry, we find that the five-year time limitation lends further support to our holding that this non-compete agreement is unreasonably broad and therefore unenforceable. The trial court properly dismissed Farr’s claim that Mr. Baskin breached an enforceable non-compete agreement.
Having found for Mr. Baskin on the merits of Farr’s non-compete claim, we further uphold the trial court’s denial of Farr’s motion for preliminary injunction.
Affirmed.
Notes
. In addition to the smaller scopes of the client-based restrictions, the time limitations in those cases were also much shorter than in the case at bar: two years, 18 months, and two years respectively.
