STRATEGIX, LTD., et al., Plaintiff and Appellants,
v.
INFOCROSSING WEST, INC., et al, Defendants and Respondents.
Infоcrossing West, Inc., et al., Plaintiffs and Respondents,
v.
Matthew Aarsvold et al., Defendants and Appellants.
Court of Appeal of California, Fourth District, Division Three.
Jackson, DeMarco, Tidus & Peckenpaugh, William M. Hensley, Marc Alexander, Jeff J. Astarabadi, Irvine, for Appellants Strategix, Ltd., and ePassage, Inc.
Matthew Aarsvold, in pro per.
*615 Gordee, Nowicki & Arnold and Alan J. Gordee, for Respondents Infocrossing West, Inc., and Infocrossing Services West, Inc.
OPINION
IKOLA, J.
Matthew Aarsvold, Strategix, Ltd., and ePassage, Inc. (appellants) appeal from an order granting a preliminary injunction to respondents Infocrossing West, Inc., and Infocrossing Services West, Inc., (respondents).[1] The court enforced nonsolicitation covenants contained in agreements by which Strategix, with the consent of its parеnt company, ePassage, sold its goodwill and substantially all of its assets to Infocrossing's predecessor, Systems Management Specialists (SMS). The preliminary injunction barred appellants from soliciting Infocrossing's employees or customers.
The nonsolicitation covenants are unenforceable because they are broader than permitted by the statute that authorizes noncompetition covenants reаched in connection with the sale of a business, Business and Professions Code section 16601.[2] Section 16601 allows a seller to agree not to compete with the buyer in the geographic location where the sеller had carried on business. The permissible scope of the covenant is thus tied to the sold business. The nonsolicitation covenants here wrongly barred appellants from soliciting the buyer's employees and customers, rather than the former employees and customers of the seller, Strategix. The court thus erred by granting the preliminary injunction.
FACTS
ePassage and Strategix agreed to sell Strategix's goodwill and substantially all of its assets to Infocrossing's predecessor, SMS. The parties executed two contracts in connection with the sale: An asset purchase agreement between Strategix and SMS and a consulting services agreement between ePаssage and SMS.
The consulting agreement contained two nonsolicitation covenants. One prohibited ePassage from soliciting SMS's employees for one year after the termination of the consulting relationship. The other prohibited ePassage from soliciting SMS's customers for the same period.
ePassage and Strategix rescinded the purchase and consulting agreements, and shortly thereafter sued Infocrossing. The сomplaint alleged Infocrossing breached the consulting agreement and caused a failure of consideration for both agreements.
Infocrossing then filed a complaint against ePassage, Strategix, and Aarsvold. It alleged appellants breached the nonsolicitation covenants, and sought a permanent injunction.
The court soon issued a temporary restraining order forbidding appellants from soliciting Infocrossing's customers or employees. The court also ordered appellants to show cause why it should not issue a preliminary injunction. After consolidating the two cases and holding a hearing, the court issued а preliminary injunction enjoining appellants from soliciting Infocrossing's customers or employees.
*616 DISCUSSION
Where the propriety of an order granting a preliminary injunction "`depends upon a question of law . . . the standard of review is not abuse of discretion but whether the superior court correctly interpreted and applied [the] law, which we review de novo.'" (Vo v. City of Garden Grove (2004)
California's public policy affirms a person's right to pursue the lawful occupаtion of his or her choice. (Metro Traffic Control, Inc. v. Shadow Traffic Network (1994)
Courts will enforce a nonсompetition covenant, however, if the parties entered into it as part of the sale of a business. Section 16601 sets forth the specific requirements for this exception. It provides, "Any person who sells the gоodwill of a business . . . may agree with the buyer to refrain from carrying on a similar business within a specified geographic area in which the business so sold . . . has been carried on, so long as the buyer . . . carries on a like business therein."[3] (Ibid.)
Section 16601's exception serves an important commercial purpose by protecting the value of the business acquired by the buyer. "In the case of the sale of the goodwill of a business it is `unfair' for the sеller to engage in competition which diminishes the value of the asset he sold." (Monogram Industries, Inc. v. Sar Industries, Inc. (1976)
To further this purpose while still respecting the public policy against restraints of trade, section 16601 limits the geographic scope of a noncompetition covenant to thе area where the sold company carried on business. (Monogram, supra,
*617 By extension, we conclude courts may enforce nonsolicitation covenants barring the seller from soliciting the sold business's employees and customers. (Cf. § 16601 [sellers may agree not to compete where "the business so sold" was carried on].) These covenants prevent the seller from unfairly depriving the buyer of the full value of its acquisition, including its goodwill. (See Monogram, supra,
On the other hand, nonsolicitation covenants barring the seller from soliciting all employees and customers of the buyer, even those who were not former еmployees or customers of the sold business, extend their anticompetitive reach beyond "the business so sold." (§ 16601.) They do more than ensure the buyer receives the full value of the business it bought, whose goodwill does not include "`the patronage of the general public.'" (Hill, supra,
In addition, practical concerns militate against barring the seller from soliciting the buyer's employees and customers, rather than the sold business's emрloyees and customers. The seller presumably is familiar with the sold business's employees and customers as of the date of sale. Thus, the seller has some basis for determining who it may and may not solicit pursuant to the nonsolicitation covenants. But the seller is far less likely to be familiar with the buyer's employees and customers, especially as time passes. "An injunction must be narrowly drawn to give the party enjoined reasonable notice of what conduct is prohibited." (Thompson v. 10,000 RV Sales, Inc. (2005)
Infocrossing сoncedes the nonsolicitation covenants should apply only to Strategix's employees and customers. As it aptly and commendably observes, "the key to any understanding of Section 16601 lies in recognizing that a сompetitive restraint created under it can extend only as far as the operations of the business that was sold. A non-solicitation clause cannot be enforced beyond that nexus."
Infocrossing instead asks us to modify the preliminary injunction to address only Strategix's former customers and employees. Courts have "blue penciled" noncompetition covenants with overbroad or omitted geographic and time restriсtions to include reasonable limitations. (See Swenson v. File (1970)
DISPOSITION
The order granting the preliminary injunction is reversеd. Appellants shall recover their costs on appeal.
BEDSWORTH, Acting P.J., and O'LEARY, J., concur.
NOTES
Notes
[1] Infocrossing West, Inc., is the parent of Infocrossing Services West, Inc. For purposes of this opinion, it is not necessary to distinguish between parent and subsidiary. Thus, we will refer to them collectively as "Infocrossing."
[2] All further statutory references are to this Business and Professions Code.
[3] In their opening brief, appellants contended section 16601 does not apply herе because the nonsolicitation covenants appear in a consulting agreement, not the sale agreement, and because they lack a geographic restriction. We asked for additional briefing on whether the nonsolicitation covenants are unenforceable because they bar defendants from soliciting Infocrossing's (the buyer's) customers and employees. Because this issue is determinative, we nеed not reach appellants' contentions.
[4] In dicta, Kolani notes some courts "saved" noncompetition covenants through narrow construction when the goodwill exception otherwise applied. (Kolani, supra,
