delivered the Opinion of the Court.
¶1 Mоntana Mountain Products (MMP) appeals from the grant of summary judgment to Dawn Curl and Columbus Custom Products (CCP). We affirm.
¶2 We restate the issues on appeal as:
¶3 1. Whether Curl’s covenant not to compete is an unlawful restraint on trade.
¶4 2. Whether the District Court erred in granting summаry judgment to Curl on MMP’s claims of intentional interference with contractual relations and business relations.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
¶5 In 2001 Dawn Curl worked for a company named Montana Cincha, Inc., located in Absarokee, Montana. Montana Cincha’s business almost exclusively involved finishing products for Montana Silversmiths. These products included watchbands and luggage tags. The work involved picking up materials from the Montana Silversmiths plant, finishing the materials, and then delivering them back to the plant.
¶6 In August of 2001, MMP purchased Montana Cincha, Inc. MMP continued the same business operation, with Montana Silversmiths as its only customer. After hiring Curl, MMP requested that Curl sign an employment contract. The contract included the following covenant not *9 to compete:
Curl acknowledges a duty of loyalty to MMP and agrees to refrain from competing with MMP during the term of her employment with MMP. Curl further agrees to rеfrain from competing with MMP following the termination of her employment with MMP for a period of 3 years within a 250 mile radius of any MMP location. Competition means providing subcontract labor for Montana Silversmiths оr any other customer of MMP and/or reproducing MMP’s designs or products placed in development or production during Curl’s employment with MMP for wholesale and/or retail distribution.
Not long thereafter, in January 2002, Curl’s еmployment with MMP ended. By March 2002, CCP, a brand-new company, hired Curl as its plant manager. By all accounts, CCP’s line of work is nearly identical to that of MMP. Each finishes products for Montana Silversmiths, and each counts Montana Silversmiths as its only customer. It is undisputed that the existence of CCP has resulted in less business for MMP.
¶7 MMP sued Curl and CCP, claiming breach of contract, intentional interference with contractual relations and intentional interference with business relations. Curl moved for summary judgment, which the District Court granted. MMP now appeals.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶8 We review a grant of summary judgment
de
novo, assessing the same standard under Rule 56, M.R.Civ.P., as the district court.
Barr v. Great Falls Intern. Airport Auth.,
DISCUSSION ISSUE ONE
¶9 Whether Curl’s covenant not to compete is an unlawful restraint on trade.
¶10 Section 28-2-703, MCA, states, “Any contract by which anyone is restrained from exercising a lawful profession, trade, or business of any kind, otherwise thаn is provided for by 28-2-704 or 28-2-705, is to *10 that extent void.” Sections 28-2-704 and 28-2-705, MCA, apply to the sale of the goodwill of a business and the dissolution of a partnership, respectively. They are not at'issue here.
¶11 In addition to these two statutory exceptions to the bar on contracts in restraint of trade, this Court has held that only restraints on trade that are unreasonable are void. MMP argues that that exception apрlies here. An example of this exception arose in
O’Neill v. Ferraro
(1979),
[A] reasonable and limited covenant restraining trade will be considered valid. Three things are essential to such a covenant:
“(1) it must be partial or restricted in its operation in respect either to time or place; (2) it must be on some good consideration; and (3) it must be reasonable, that is, it should afford only a fair protection to the interests of the party in whose favor it is madе, and must not be so large in its operation as to interfere with the interests of the public.”
O’Neill,
¶12 We discussed the reasonableness exception in the context of an employment contract in
Dobbins, DeGuire & Tucker, P.C. v. Rutherford, MacDonald & Olson
(1985),
*11
¶13 We recognized that
O’Neill
concerned a lease, whereas
Dobbins
concerned an employment contract, but even so “we conclude[d] that similar principles should be applied in the present
case.”Dobbins,
¶14 In the case sub judice, the District Court concluded that Dobbins does not apply because Dobbins’ language limits its “scope to the profession of public accounting.” Having distinguished Dobbins, and thus having concluded that it was improper to apply the reasonablеness test, the court determined that § 28-2-703, MCA, is “clear and unambiguous” and that its plain meaning prohibits restraints on trade such as Curl’s covenant not to compete.
¶15 Although the court interpreted the
Dobbins
rationale too narrowly, it nonetheless concluded that the covenant was void as a restraint on trade, in violation of §28-2-703, MCA. Even though the District Court reached the right result, we take this opportunity to correct the impression that the
Dobbins’
rationale is limited to the profession of public accounting. First, there is no indication from the facts of
Dobbins
that the employees involved were partners. In fact, we explicitly stated that the partnership dissolution еxception of §28-2-705, MCA, was not at issue.
Dobbins,
¶16 The covenant not to compete fails the third prong of the test. That, prong, again, is that the covenant “must be reasоnable, that is, it should afford only a fair protection to the interests of the party in whose favor it is made, and must not be so large in its operation as to interfere with the interests of the public.” O’Neill,
¶17 MMP cites a number of foreign cases upholding covenants of broader distance аnd length than Curl’s. However, in all of these cases either the law was more permissive than Montana’s,
see, e.g., McAlpin v. Coweta Fayette Surgical Assoc., P.C.
(Ga. Ct. App. 1995),
ISSUE TWO
¶18 Whether the District Court erred in granting summary judgment *13 to Curl on MMP’s claims of intentional interference with contractual relations and business relations.
¶19 MMPnext claims that Curl committed the torts of interference with contractual relations and interference with business relations. MMP premises both of these claims on the assumption that Curl’s covenant not to compete is valid. We have, however, concluded that it is void. Therеfore, both of MMP’s tortious interference claims fail.
CONCLUSION
¶20 Whether §28-2-703, MCA, is viewed as an absolute restriction on restraints on trade (the District Court’s rationale) or a restriction on unreasonable restraints (the rationale of O’Neill and Dobbins), the covenant in the present case is void. The covenant not to compete is invalid and MMP has no claim against Curl for intentional interference with contractual or business relations. We affirm the judgment of the District Court.
