This is an appeal from the denial of appellant’s petition for a preliminary injunction. Appellant Puritan sued appellee Eubank, a former employee, for damages arising out of Eubank’s alleged violation of certain covenants not to compete contained in his employment contract with Puritan. Puritan also sought to enjoin Eubank temporarily from his continued competition with Puritan alleging that it had no adequate remedy at law.
In denying Puritan a preliminary injunction against Eubank, the trial court found that Eubank had been employed solely as a salesman for Puritan, and that he is now self-employed as a salesman of sanitary maintenance supplies and chemicals in competition with Puritan. There is no dispute that Eubank had entered into an employment contract with Puritan at the outset of his eleven-year period of employment. The contract contained restrictive covenants providing in part as follows: "Representative does expressly covenant and agree that... for a period of two years immediately following the ter *335 mination of such employment he will not ... 1. Solicit orders for sanitary maintenance chemicals and other chemical specialties, supplies and equipment, or for engineering and maintenance services in connection therewith, for distribution to institutional, industrial, commercial and governmental consumers. 2. Contact for the purpose of diverting any of the customers or accounts of Puritan’s business as described [elsewhere in this contract]. 3. Own, manage, control, operate or participate in the ownership, management, or control, or engage as a sales representative or sales executive, of any business which engages in any phase of the business described [elsewhere in this contract].”
Assuming for the sake of argument that the territorial limitations of these covenants were reasonable, we agree with the trial court that the limitations of Eubank’s activities after termination of his employment with Puritan were unreasonable considering the business interest of Puritan sought to be protected.
See Howard Schultz & Assoc. v. Broniec,
With regard to the severability clause contained in these covenants, it is well-settled that courts may not "blue-pencil” an invalid covenant in an employment contract so as to render it enforceable.
Rita Personnel Services v. Kot,
Judgment affirmed.
