Defendant Holly Martinez appeals the trial court’s grant of a preliminary injunction. We reverse.
*643 Plaintiff New Hanover Rent-A-Car, Inc., is a corporation that owns Avis automobile rental franchises in New Bern, Wilmington, Jacksonville, and Greenville, North Carolina; and Florence, South Carolina. Each location draws customers from an area within a 100-mile radius of the airport in that city. Because all auto rental companies offer vehicles that are essentially identical, the business is driven principally by the prices charged by competing rental agencies. However, according to John Dalton, plaintiffs president, customer service, including the services provided by franchise employees who work at the rental counter in each airport, is also an important factor in the business.
Defendant successfully interviewed for employment with plaintiff near the end of July 1998 and reported for training on 17 August 1998. She was given a packet of materials to read and sign. The packet included an agreement not to compete, which is at the center of this dispute. Defendant worked for plaintiff from 17 August 1998 through 17 December 1998. Her duties included taking reservations over the phone, serving customers at the counter, and performing other routine daily chores. On 17 December 1998, defendant informed plaintiff she was resigning her position to return to school, adding that she hoped to obtain part-time work in the auto rental business. The next day, defendant began working for the Hertz Rent-A-Car Agency in New Bern at a counter adjacent to plaintiffs counter.
On 29 December 1998, plaintiff obtained a temporary restraining order to prevent defendant from working for Hertz. Following a hearing on 8 January 1999, the trial court granted a preliminary injunction enjoining defendant from continuing her employment with Hertz Rent-A-Car Agency in New Bern, North Carolina, and from accepting employment with any other rental car business within a 100-mile radius of any city where plaintiff has other rental car franchises. Defendant appeals.
Defendant contends the trial court erred in granting the preliminary injunction. Our Supreme Court has said regarding a preliminary injunction:
[It] is an extraordinary measure taken by a court to preserve the status quo of the parties during litigation. It will be issued only (1) if a plaintiff is able to show likelihood of success on the merits of his case and (2) if a plaintiff is likely to sustain irreparable loss unless the injunction is issued, or if, in the opinion of the *644 Court, issuance is necessary for the protection of a plaintiffs rights during the course of litigation.
Investors, Inc. v. Berry,
An agreement not to compete will not be enforced unless it is: “(1) in writing, (2) entered into at the time and as a part of the original contract of employment, (3) based on a valuable consideration, (4) reasonable both as to the time and territory embraced in the restrictions, (5) fair to the parties, and (6) not against public policy.”
U-Haul Co. v. Jones,
The case at bar may be resolved by an examination of the requirement that the writing be signed by defendant. The agreement not to compete is in the form of a printed “EMPLOYMENT AGREEMENT.” It begins with a line at the top for the date. This line has been filled in by hand and reads “17 August 1998.” The next line begins: “I, _, in consideration of being accepted for employment . . . .” and continues with the substantive terms of the agreement. This second blank has been filled in by hand with the printed name “Holly N. Martinez.” At the bottom of the form, following the substantive provisions, there is a line titled “Signature.” This line is blank. Beneath the signature line is a notarization, signed by Robin Dalton, who is plaintiff’s secretary/treasurer and wife of plaintiff’s president. Defendant argues the agreement is invalid because she did *645 not sign it. Plaintiff responds that a signature is not the same as a subscription, and that by printing her name on the top of the agreement, defendant signed it and thereby agreed to its terms.
Our Supreme Court has held that when a statute dictates that a document has to be subscribed, the signature should be at the end of the document, but “it is not essential that the signatures should be placed at the end of the deed or other instrument, where the law requires signing only.”
Devereux v. McMahon,
The signature, it is obvious, is most regularly and properly placed at the foot or end of the instrument signed; but it is decided in many cases that although the signature be in the middle or beginning of the instrument, it is as binding as if at the foot; although, if not signed regularly at the foot, there is always a question whether the party meant to be bound by it as it stood, or whether it was left so unsigned because he refused to complete it.
Love v. Harris,
In determining whether defendant signed the agreement not to compete, we find guidance
in Routh v. Snap-On Tools Corp.,
The evidence as to the existence of an agreement in the case at bar is ambiguous. Defendant’s name is not found in any form on the signature line of the agreement; however, she did print her name at the top, ahead of the substantive portions of the agreement. Therefore, consistent with Routh, the fact-finder below could consider extrinsic evidence to determine whether defendant signed the document, and consistent with A.E.P., we may review that extrinsic evidence independently.
Defendant testified that when she began her employment, plaintiff’s office assistant handed her a number of forms. She testified that the office assistant instructed her to date and put her name on the agreement not to compete, and then took the agreement from her after she followed these instructions. Although the notarization form at the bottom of the agreement recites, “Before me personally appeared Hollv N. Martinez to be known as the person described in and who executed the foregoing instrument, and acknowledged to and before me that she executed said instrument for the purposes therein expressed,” defendant testified that she never discussed the agreement not to compete with any of plaintiff’s employees.
A comparison of this document with other documents completed by defendant at the same time is instructive.
(a) Defendant completed in print an “AVIS EMPLOYEE RECORD,” a document that sought basic personal information. This document did not contain a signature line.
(b) Defendant wrote her name in cursive script at the bottom of a “NON-DISCRIMINATION POLICY” in the space labeled “Employee.”
(c) Defendant wrote her name in cursive script in the space labeled “Employee” at the bottom of a document entitled “ACKNOWLEDGMENT OF EMPLOYEE,” in which defendant was asked to acknowledge plaintiff’s company policies and receipt of plaintiff’s company personnel manual.
*647 (d) Defendant printed her name on State and Federal tax forms where the forms state “Type or print your . . . name,” but wrote her name in cursive script on the line calling for “Employee’s signature.”
(e) Finally, a document entitled, “NEW HANOVER RENT A CAR RENTAL SALES AND SERVICE AGENT COMPENSATION PACKAGE” contains three spaces at the bottom, labeled “Print Name,” “Sign Name,” and “Date.” Defendant printed her name in the first space, signed her name in cursive scfipt in the second space, and provided the date in the third space.
Plaintiff responded with evidence provided by Ms. Dalton, who notarized the agreement not to compete. Although the document contains a blank signature line, Ms. Dalton testified that she witnessed defendant “complete this document” before she notarized it. Ms. Dalton testified that defendant was told to read the form and, when she asked if defendant had any questions, defendant responded that she did not. Ms. Dalton further testified that when she completed the notary form, she did not notice the signature line directly above the notarization was blank.
Our review of the record reveals that the preliminary injunction was improperly issued. The evidence established that where a document requested identification information, defendant printed her name, but where a document requested a “signature” as acknowledgment and acceptance of the material or as confirmation of information requested in the document, defendant wrote her name in cursive. There was no cursive script or any writing at all on the signature line of the agreement not to compete and, therefore, no signature. Based on this evidence, we hold that plaintiff was unable to show a likelihood of success on the merits of its case. Accordingly, we need not address the other issues raised by defendant. The action of the trial court is reversed, and the case is remanded for further action consistent with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
