This matter is before the court following a motion for summary judgment filed by plaintiff and a cross motion for summary judgment filed by defendant. Oral argument was held on July 6, 2005, and the court ruled at that time that plaintiffs motion for summary judgment was denied. Further, it was held that the portion of defendant’s cross motion which was for dismissal of plaintiffs cause of action grounded in unjust enrichment was granted. The court reserved decision on the remainder of defendant’s cross motion, and that will be addressed at this time.
Facts and Procedural Background
According to its own description as contained in the complaint, plaintiff is a corporation which “has provided businesses with various digital services used in the production of marketing and packaging materials, including imaging, design and mechanical layout, electronic prepress, and catalog and packaging development” (complaint 1Í 3). Defendant was an employee of plaintiff who left its employ in July 2004, and began working for Jay Advertising immediately thereafter. According to the affidavit of Greg Smith, the president of Jay, Jay is an advertising and marketing company which conducts advertising, planning, research, promotions, media and public relations. These descriptions of the two companies have not been contested by either of the parties.
Defendant was required to execute an employment agreement on May 31, 2000. It contained, inter aha, restrictive covenants. One, found in paragraph 5.4, was a covenant not to compete. It consisted of general language in which defendant, for the period of one year following termination of employment with plaintiff, agreed not to compete with plaintiff, nor solicit any customers of plaintiff, and not to work for a competitor. A second restrictive covenant was found in an entirely different paragraph. Paragraph 5.6 provided that, during the one-year postemployment period, defendant “shall not hire any employee of the [plaintiff] or solicit any employee of the [plaintiff] to leave the employment of the [plaintiff] for any purpose.” When defendant’s initial term of employment was nearing an end, plaintiff sent defendant a letter in which plaintiff indicated that it wished to retain defendant as an employee, and made several amendments to the May 31, 2000 agreement. Among those revisions,
Plaintiff filed suit against defendant alleging damages as the result of defendant’s alleged solicitation of one of plaintiffs employees, Marianne Warfle. Plaintiff has asserted that defendant actively participated in the hiring of Warfle by Jay to such an extent that defendant violated her restrictive covenant not to solicit plaintiff’s employees. Defendant, in response, has contended that she did nothing affirmative to seek out Warfle, that Warfle merely responded to a blind ad for an open position which turned out to be with Jay, and upon learning that Warfle had applied for the open position, informed both her and Jay that she could not actively assist in the potential hiring process of Warfle in deference to the restrictive covenant which she had executed with plaintiff. The parties’ submissions on these motions focus primarily on this factual dispute. But defendant’s cross motion may be resolved in her favor without a trial of that discrete factual issue.
Discussion and Analysis
The nonrecruitment provision at issue appears in article 5 of the agreement entitled “Covenants by Employee.” The first three paragraphs of article 5 concern confidential information. Paragraph 5.4 is a covenant not to compete. Paragraph 5.5 is a nonsolicitation of customers provision. Paragraph 5.6, the one at issue here, is a nonrecruitment provision which reads, in its entirety, “During the non-competition period, the employee shall not hire any employee of the company or solicit any employee of the company to leave the employment of the company for any purpose.” As I indicated at oral argument, two issues immediately present themselves by defendant’s cross motion. First, can the nonrecruitment provision be read as a standalone covenant, without regard to and not tied to the noncom-petition provisions? Second, if it can be read as a stand-alone provision, is it enforceable in this state? Both the structure of article 5 of the agreement and the first clause of paragraph 5.6 compel a reading of the paragraph 5.6 covenant as erecting a nonrecruitment duty only in conjunction with the nondisclosure of propriety information provisions (HIT 5.1, 5.2, 5.3) and the noncompetition provisions (HH 5.4, 5.5 and, as I find here, 1T 5.6). The first clause of paragraph 5.6 (“Muring the non-competition
Even assuming, however, that the nonrecruitment provision may be read as a stand-alone provision, having application to noncompetitors in a case in which the former employer fails to establish that protection of confidential information is at stake, such a provision would be held unenforceable in New York. The Court of Appeals has not considered whether a covenant not to recruit is enforceable in this state. The federal courts cite Veraldi v American Analytical Labs. (
Veraldi is indeed the only New York case I have been able to find treating a covenant not to solicit employees. The case involved a counterclaim asserting that the former employee solicited the employer’s customers and employees, both of which were covered by restrictive covenants. The Court upheld the trial court’s refusal to dismiss the counterclaims, observing that “the restrictive covenant does not violate public policy and, therefore, is enforceable.” (Veraldi,
I assume that, because the particular kind or type of restraint that is involved here is a postemployment restraint on the conduct of an employee, the covenant should be analyzed according to the three-pronged reasonableness formula of EDO Seidman and section 188 of the Restatement (Second) of
To be sure, such a covenant does not affect in the same way the “powerful considerations of public policy which militate against sanctioning the loss of a man’s livelihood” (Purchasing Assoc. v Weitz,
Generally, a restrictive covenant in an employment agreement “is reasonable only if it: (1) is no greater than is required for the protection of the legitimate interest of the employer, (2) does not impose undue hardship on the employee, and (3) is not injurious to the public.” (BDO Seidman,
Here, defendant establishes as a matter of law that enforcement of the nonrecruit provision of the agreement will not serve any legitimate employer interest in the circumstances, and plaintiff fails to raise an issue of fact on the matter. It is not alleged that the employee allegedly recruited possesses any confidential or proprietary information of the plaintiff, nor is it alleged that she was in any position to acquire trade secrets. Plaintiff does not present any admissible evidence that she was a particularly valuable or unique employee, or provided services to plaintiff which cannot easily be replaced. (Ken J. Pezrow Corp. v Seifert,
Conclusion
Defendant’s cross motion for summary judgment is granted. (Giuffrida v Citibank Corp.,
Notes
. There is authority to the contrary elsewhere. (Smith, Barney, Harris Upham & Co., Inc. v Robinson,
. This is just another way of saying that a failure to meet the first prong of the tripartite common-law standard (restraint must be “no greater than is required for the protection of the legitimate interest of the employer”) (BDO Seidman,
