This is an action in equity brought by the plaintiff to enforce restrictive covenants against the defendants. After a hearing, the Master (E. Paul Kelly, Esq.) recommended that the covenants should be held unenforceable and that a temporary and permanent injunction should issue to prevent the plaintiff from enforcing any of the provisions of the restrictive covenants. This recommendation was upheld by the Superior Court (Johnson, J.), which reserved and transferred the plaintiff’s exceptions. We overrule the plaintiff’s exceptions.
The plaintiff is the largest accounting firm in both New Hampshire and Vermont with four offices in New Hampshire and three in Vermont. The defendants are former employees of the plaintiff. Before beginning his employment, each defendant had orally negotiated the terms of his employment with a representative of the plaintiff. After these agreements were made, each defendant signed a written contract containing a covenant not to compete with the plaintiff upon termination of the employment. These restrictive covenants were not part of the prior oral agreements but defendants were confronted with the written covenants only after they had substantially changed their positions in reliance upon the prior oral agreements.
The covenants provided that for three years after termination of employment, the employee “will not enter into the employ of, or represent in any manner, any person, firm or corporation who or which was a client of the Employers at any time prior to the termination of this employment without the express written approval of the Employer.” The covenants contained a liquidated damages clause which provided that in the event of a breach of the restrictive covenant, the employees would have to pay fifty percent of the fees they received from serving the plaintiff’s former clients for three years after the termination of their employment.
In August 1976, the defendants voluntarily terminated their employment with the plaintiff and established an accounting firm in White River Junction, Vermont. The defendants are presently serving *682 207 clients, 40 of whom are former clients of the plaintiff. The defendants did not receive the express written approval of the plaintiff required by the employment contract before they began to serve these clients.
An employer seeking to enforce a covenant not to compete must show that the covenant is supported by consideration,
see Lang v. Johnson,
We must examine the provisions of the employment contracts to determine whether the restrictive covenants were supported by consideration. The written covenant contained a clause, not contained in the original oral agreement, that employment was terminable by either party on thirty days’ written notice, and terminable by the plaintiff if it was not satisfied with the employees’ services. The plaintiff reserved the right to be the sole judge of such satisfaction.
The master incorrectly determined that the notice requirement, added by the written covenant, was not sufficient consideration for the defendants’ promises not to compete upon termination of their employment.
See Advanced Copy Products, Inc. v. Cool,
The provision permitting the plaintiff to terminate the contract if dissatisfied with the defendants’ work does not render its promise to employ illusory because there is an implicit requirement that the employer, in good faith, be dissatisfied with the employee’s work when he exercises his power to terminate the employment. 3A A. Corbin, Contracts § 647, at 105 (1960).
*683
The defendants signed the covenants after they were hired by the plaintiff under oral employment agreements and were employed for approximately three years after they signed their employment contracts. Continued employment after signing an employment contract constitutes consideration for a covenant not to compete contained therein.
Daughtry v. Capital Gas Co.,
The trial court determined that the covenants were unenforceable because they imposed unreasonable restrictions upon the employees. The covenant’s validity depends upon its reasonableness given the particular circumstances of each case.
Moore v. Dover Veterinary Hospital, Inc.,
In scrutinizing restrictive covenants, this court employs the following three-pronged test: “[a] restraint on employment is reasonable only if it is no greater than necessary for the protection of the employer’s legitimate interest, does not impose undue hardship on the employee and is not injurious to the public interest.”
Moore v. Dover Veterinary Hospital, Inc.,
The master correctly concluded that the restrictive covenant was unreasonable as it related to the employer’s legitimate interest. The master found that the plaintiff’s earnings exceed two million dollars per year and that it serves over 3,000 clients. The master also found that the defendants serve only 207 clients and that their gross earnings for the period of June 1, 1977, to January 12, 1978, were $47,900. The master held that in the absence of a defined geographical coverage within the covenants, the two-State region of New Hampshire and Vermont would be established as the area covered. He found that this area is unreasonably large. He further found that the class of clients protected by the. covenants was too broad because the class includes all clients served by the plaintiff during its existence, whether or not they were current clients.
Several courts have enforced restrictive covenants in the accounting profession to protect the employer’s legitimate interest.
See Faw, Casson & Co. v. Cranston,
Courts closely examine the effect that enforcement of a covenant will have upon the employee’s life. 6A A. CORBIN, Contracts § 1394, at 101 (1962). “Disproportionate hardship to the party against whom enforcement is sought has always been regarded as a reason for refusing equitable remedies.”
Id.
In this case, the defendants are earning less than when they were employed by the plaintiff. Requiring the defendants to pay fifty percent of their earnings from 40 of their 207 clients undoubtedly would work hardship upon the defendants. This hardship is disproportionate to the harm that the plaintiff would incur if 40 of its 3,000 clients seek the services of the defendants. The master found that none of the defendants were actively soliciting any former client of the plaintiff. The defendants should not, therefore, be penalized for or precluded from following their chosen profession. “An employer ‘has no right to unnecessarily interfere with the employee’s following any trade or calling for which he is fitted and from which he may earn his livelihood and he cannot preclude him from exercising the skill and general knowledge he has acquired or increased through experience or even instructions while in the employment.’ ”
Dunfey Realty Co. v. Enwright,
The master also ruled that the liquidated damages figure was unreasonable because it was actually a penalty inserted to prohibit the defendants from serving any former clients of the plaintiff after termination of the employment.
See Langlois v. Maloney,
*685 The master finally found that the covenant was unreasonable because the public’s ability to choose accountants would be adversely affected. Residents of New Hampshire and Vermont who were dissatisfied with the plaintiff’s services could not freely seek out the services of the defendants without causing the defendants to incur severe financial penalties.
The master’s conclusion that the restrictive covenants failed all three parts of the reasonableness test is supported by the evidence and will not be overruled.
See Sargent Lake Association v. Dane,
The plaintiffs argue that even if the restrictive covenants are unreasonable, the trial court incorrectly refused to reform them. Courts reform overly broad restrictive covenants if the employers first show that they acted in good faith in the execution of the employment contracts.
Solari Industries, Inc. v. Malady,
Although the master erred in stating that he had no authority to reform the overly broad restrictive covenants,
Solari Industries, Inc. v. Malady,
In summary, we hold that the restrictive covenant, although supported by consideration, is unreasonable with respect to the *686 interests of the employer, the employee, and the public. The plaintiff is precluded from obtaining the remedy of reformation because it did not prove that it acted in good faith in the execution of the employment contracts.
Exceptions overruled.
