780 N.Y.S.2d 675 | N.Y. App. Div. | 2004
Appeal from an order of the Supreme Court (Ceresia, Jr., J), entered October 2, 2003 in Rensselaer County, which granted defendant’s motion for summary judgment dismissing the complaint.
Defendant, an accountant, worked for John A. Yager, C.EA. (hereinafter the Yager firm) from 1994 until 1998, when the firm was sold to plaintiff, an accounting firm located in the City of Troy, Rensselaer County. Defendant was thereafter employed as a staff accountant by plaintiff until September 2001, when
An employee agreement not to compete will be enforced only if “it is reasonable in time and area, necessary to protect the employer’s legitimate interests, not harmful to the general public and not unreasonably burdensome to the employee” (Reed, Roberts Assoc. v Strauman, 40 NY2d 303, 307 [1976]; see Battenkill Veterinary Equine v Cangelosi, 1 AD3d 856, 857 [2003]). Such agreements are justified by the employer’s need to protect itself from unfair competition by former employees (see BDO Seidman v Hirshberg, 93 NY2d 382, 391 [1999]; Columbia Ribbon & Carbon Mfg. Co. v A-l-A Corp., 42 NY2d 496, 499 [1977]). Even where, as here, there is no showing that a former employee has obtained a competitive advantage through the misappropriation of confidential customer information or that the employee possessed unique or extraordinary abilities, the employer retains “a legitimate interest in preventing former employees from exploiting . . . the goodwill of a client or customer, which had been created and maintained at the employer’s expense, to the employer’s competitive detriment” (BDO Seidman v Hirshberg, supra at 392). Thus, under such circumstances, an anticompetitive covenant may prevent the competitive use of client relationships that the employer assisted the employee in developing through the employee’s performance of services in the course of employment (see id. at 392; see also Gelder Med. Group v Webber, 41 NY2d 680, 685 [1977]). A covenant will be rejected as overly broad, however, if it seeks to bar the employee from soliciting or providing services to clients with whom the employee never acquired a relationship through his or her employment or if the covenant extends to personal clients recruited through the employee’s independent efforts (see BDO Seidman v Hirshberg, supra at 393).
The determination of whether an overly broad restrictive covenant should be enforced to the extent necessary to protect an employer’s legitimate interest involves “a case specific analysis, focusing on the conduct of the employer in imposing the terms of the agreement” (BDO Seidman v Hirshberg, supra at 394). Partial enforcement may be justified if an employer demonstrates, in addition to the legitimate business interest that plaintiff has shown here, “an absence of overreaching, coercive use of dominant bargaining power, or other anti-competitive misconduct” (id. at 394). Factors weighing against partial enforcement are the imposition of the covenant in connection with hiring or continued employment—as opposed to, for example, imposition in connection with a promotion to a position of responsibility and trust—the existence of coercion or a general plan of the employer to forestall competition, and the employer’s knowledge that the covenant was overly broad (see id. at 395).
Application of the factors set forth in BDO Seidman militates against partial enforcement here. Plaintiff has not demonstrated, or even argued, an absence of anticompetitive misconduct on its part, asserting instead that because the restrictive covenant can be partially enforced, it should be. It is undisputed, however, that plaintiff, from a superior bargaining position, required defendant to sign the employment agreement upon hiring her and thereafter as a condition of continued employment as a staff accountant. There has been no showing that, in exchange for her signing the agreement, defendant enjoyed a fi
Peters, Mugglin, Rose and Lahtinen, JJ., concur. Ordered that the order is affirmed, with costs.