Sentry Insurance (Sentry) complains that the defendant Robert J. Firnstein, a former salesman, raided its customers, in violation of a noncompetition clause in Firnstein’s employment contract. A judge of the Superior Court who heard the case without a jury found that Firnstein had not violated the restrictive agreement and judgment entered for Firnstein. We affirm.
*707 Among the facts found by the judge were the following: when he first went to work for Sentry, Firnstein signed a contract under which he agreed for two years after leaving Sentry not to sell insurance in his primary area (town of Hudson) and not to write insurance for customers of Sentry to whom he had rendered service. Four years later, in 1977, Sentry required its sales representatives to sign a revised employment contract on pain of dismissal from Sentry’s employ. It contained a provision under which the sales representative agreed “for two (2) years after . . . termination ... he will not. . . directly or indirectly, seek to induce, promote, facilitate, bring about, solicit, quote rates for, receive, write, bind, broker, transfer or accept replacement or renewal insurance coverage or services for any insurance policy or service sold or serviced by the Sales Representative [Sentry] . . . nor will he induce or seek to induce the discontinuance or lapse of such insurance coverage or service” (emphasis supplied).
Two reasons existed to construe the contract, as the trial judge did, strictly against Sentry: First, it was drafted by Sentry. See
United Shoe Mach. Corp.
v.
Gale Shoe Mfg. Co.,
*708
As to whether Firnstein played the Pied Piper to his former customers after leaving Sentry, the evidence was conflicting. There was sufficient evidence from which the judge could find that Firnstein had not solicited his customers and that his customers had made the advances because they liked his service, because they wanted to deal with an agent who lived in the neighborhood, because in some cases they thought insurance coverage was a fungible product, or because they were dissatisfied with Sentry. An appellate court does not set aside findings of fact unless they are clearly erroneous. Mass.R.Civ.P. 52(a),
There is also reason to conclude, as the judge did, that Firnstein’s good will rather than Sentry’s was involved. The objective of a reasonable noncompetition clause is to protect the employer’s good will, not to appropriate the good will of the employee. See 6A Corbin, Contracts § 1391B (1982 Supp.).
Other portions of Sentry’s employment contract protected confidential information. See
Novelty Bias Binding Co.
v.
Shevrin,
*709
In early stages of the litigation Sentry had secured a preliminary injunction which prevented Firnstein from writing any insurance in the restricted area. By the time the case came to trial the two-year noncompetition period had expired and the only remedy sought by Sentry was damages. The trial judge concluded that, if damages were to be assessed, they would be nominal and that a liquidated damages clause in the contract bore no rational relationship to the wrong done.
Commissioner of Ins.
v.
Massachusetts Acc. Co.,
Judgment affirmed.
