In this аppeal from the denial of a preliminary injunction, the appellant, Gaylord Broadcasting Co., challenges the district
*252
court’s application of the four-part test in
Hardin v. Houston Chronicle Publishing Co.,
This diversity case involves a breach of a personal service contract between Gaylord, the owner of a New Orleans television station, and Lynn Gansar, one of Gaylord’s former news anchorpersons. The contract was entered into by the parties on July 1, 1980, and was extended on three occasions. Despite repeated аnd apparently good faith negotiations, the parties never reached an agreement concerning a new employment contract, and Gansar’s employment with Gaylоrd ceased as of September 30, 1983.
In pertinent part the contract between Gaylord and Gansar provided:
. Acknowledging the substantial expenses that will be incurred by Gaylord in advertising, featuring and promoting Lynn Gansar in the New Orleans area as a news personality and in accord with the provisions of LSA-R.S. 23:921, for the duration of this agreement and also for a period of оne (1) year following the dissolution of the Agreement, Lynn Gansar will not appear on any radio station or television station, in the greater New Orleans area other than WVUE-TV without the express written permission of Gaylord.
On or about November 1, 1983, one month after Gansar’s employment with Gaylord ended, Gansar entered into negotiations with Cosmos Broadcasting Co., the owner of a New Orleans television station which competed with Gaylord’s station, for a position as a news anchorperson. She did not seek from Gaylord the written consent that her contrаct required. Cosmos and Gansar consummated a personal service contract, and Gansar first appeared on Cosmos’ station as a news anchorperson on December 12, 1983.
The next day, December 13, 1983, Gay-lord filed this diversity action, seeking injunctive relief and damages. In February of 1984, the district court twice heard oral argument concerning Gaylord’s request for a preliminary injunction to enforce the terms of the covenant not to compete. In an opinion rendered from the bench, the district court concluded that Gaylord was likеly to prevail on the merits but had not shown the irreparable injury necessary for the injunction to issue. Accordingly, the district court denied Gaylord’s motion for preliminary injunction. Gaylord timely appealed to this Court, arguing that the district court erred in concluding that Gaylord needed to demonstrate irreparable injury under Fed.R.Civ.P. 65 for an injunction to issue, since Louisiana law does not require a showing of irreparable injury to enforce the prohibitory aspects of a personal service contract.
This court perceives no need to address the correctness of the district court’s denial of Gaylord’s request for a preliminary injunction, since under Louisiana law Gay-lord’s request for injunctive relief is mooted by the terms of the Gaylord/Gansar contract. Assuming Gansar breached the covenant not to compete, Gaylord was entitled to prevent Gansar from working for a competitor for a period of оnly one year following Gansar’s termination of employment. Since Gansar terminated her employment with Gaylord on September 30, 1983, Gaylord’s right to enforce specifically the cоvenant not to compete ceased as of September 30, 1984, one year after Gansar’s employment with Gaylord ended.
This was the precise result reached in
Louisiana Office Systems, Inc. v. Boudreaux,
Boudreaux petitioned the Supreme Court of Louisiana for a writ of review. The Supreme Court granted the writ on October 28, 1974, reversed the judgment of the Court of Appeal, and remanded the case to the Court of Apрeal for its review in light of the Supreme Court’s decisions in
Orkin Exterminating Co. v. Foti,
An identical result was reached in
A-Copy, Inc. v. Michaelson,
*254 Under the authority cited above and the explicit terms of the Gaylord/Gansar contract, we hold that Gaylord cannot enforcе specifically the terms of the now-lapsed covenant not to compete. We therefore dismiss as moot the instant appeal. Our decision does not implicate in any way the merits of the dispute concerning an alleged covenant not to compete and the damages which arose from an alleged breach of that covenant. Those issues must be resolved by a trial on the merits before the district court.
APPEAL DISMISSED AND CASE REMANDED.
Notes
. The First Circuit explicitly rejected A-Copy’s argument that the one-year noncompetition period should be tollеd because of the inordinate delay incident to the legal proceedings.
. The rationale offered in
Louisiana .Office Systems
and
A-Copy
is consistent with the rationale offered in every case addressing this issue which this Court has discovered.
See Economic Laboratories, Inc. v. Donnolo,
