When Ruth A. Wells (Ruth) and Arthur M. Wells (Arthur) ended their marriage in divorce, they also put asunder their interest in a corporation, Ramson, Inc., in which each owned half the capital stock. Under the agreement (entitled “STIPULATION”) which became incorporated in the divorce decree, Arthur agreed with Ruth to sell his stock in Ramson, Inc., to it for $52,500, of which $2,500 was to be paid “forthwith,” the balance in monthly payments of $1,000, with no interest. Arthur agreed not to compete with Ramson, Inc., within Worcester County, Barnstable County and the “greater New Bedford, Plymouth and Fall River areas.” 2 It is the enforceability of the agreement not to compete in Fall River and New Bedford which is the subject of controversy.
After the divorce, Arthur organized a corporation, Care-at-Home Nursing Services, Inc., which provides the same sort of homemaker services as Ramson, Inc., does. Its areas of operation were Springfield, Newton, Salem and Lawrence and the environs of those cities. Both corporations do business principally by contracting with regional nonprofit corporations organized under the sponsorship of the Commonwealth’s Department of Elder Affairs to provide social services to eligible individuals within the “service area.” At the time of the Wells divorce no quasi-public corporation of this sort had been organized in the Fall River or New Bed-ford service areas. Corporations were organized in those areas in 1977. Arthur notified Ruth in February, 1978, that he proposed to do business in the Fall River and New Bed-ford service areas since she had not as yet done so. In March, 1978, Ramson signed a contract for homemaker *323 services with the newly established New Bedford service area corporation. On May 30, 1978, Arthur’s corporation advertised in the Fall River Herald News for a director of a New Bedford branch office. The complaints initiating these law suits were soon in the mail.
Following entry of judgments, which gave effect to the non-competition agreements, the parties filed cross-appeals: Arthur and Care-At-Home Nursing Services, Inc., claiming in substance that the restrictive covenant is not enforceable in Fall River and New Bedford at all; Ruth and Ramson, Inc., claiming the restrictive covenant should be enforced without time limit.
Were the contested noncompetition agreement between an employer and an employee, the restrictive clause would not be enforceable because at the time of its execution Ram-son, Inc., did no business in New Bedford and Fall River. Its business, which involved providing homemaker services for elderly persons, was then active in Worcester and Hyannis, and Ramson had neither offices nor telephone listings in New Bedford or Fall River. Out of concern for an individual’s ability to earn a living and to protect against monopoly, employee covenants not to compete are enforceable only to the extent they are necessary to protect the legitimate interests of the employer.
Richmond Bros.
v.
Westinghouse Bdcst. Co.,
Concern about the restricted individual and the probability of unequal bargaining power between an employer and an employee recedes when the restriction arises in the context of the sale of a business or, as in the case at bar, the sale of an interest in a business.
Whitinsville Plaza, Inc.
v.
Kotseas,
Among the considerations which favor more liberal enforcement of buyer-seller covenants are: that a seller of a business interest may not derogate from the value of the business as sold by competing with it,
Old Corner Book Store
v.
Upham,
We proceed to analyze the agreement before us in terms of these criteria. Arthur argues that enforcement of the agreement is against the public interest because it will reduce competition among suppliers of services for which the Commonwealth and the Federal government are indirectly customers. 4 There are, however, five additional providers of homemaker services in the Fall River and New Bedford service areas (the judge’s findings say “approximately six” inclusive of Ramson), so that it cannot be said that competition was reduced in any significant fashion. Barring Arthur from these areas does not result in monopoly of the homemaker services market in them.
The criterion of product line plays no role in this case.
The reasonableness of the space carved out by the restrictive agreement is the issue about which contention swirls. Certainly the designation of the “greater New Bedford, Plymouth and Fall River areas” as the forbidden territories in the Wellses’ agreement was neither so broad nor so sweeping as to render it unenforceable. See
All Stainless, Inc.
v.
Colby,
364 Mass, at 779-780;
Middlesex Neurological Associ
*326
ates
v.
Cohen,
As to the fourth and final test of the restriction, reasonableness of time, we agree with the judge’s inferential conclusion that a restraint unlimited in time was unreasonable, and we accept his finding that fifty-two months is a reasonable time, a period he apparently chose because it was roughly equivalent to the period for the completion of payment by Ramson of the price for Arthur’s stock. See
Catan-ia
v.
Hallisey,
By order of a single justice of this court, the judgments entered in the Probate Court enjoining Arthur and his corporation, Care-At-Home Nursing Services, Inc., “from en *328 gaging in the business of home health care services within the New Bedford and Fall River” areas for fifty-two months beginning December 30, 1975, was stayed pending appeal. The order for the stay was entered March 5, 1979. Between entry of the order and the issuance of a rescript in this case approximatély one year will have elapsed. Had the injunction stayed in force it would have expired, by the terms of the judgment, on April 30, 1980. So as to give Ruth and Ramson the benefit of its original terms, the judgments are to be modified so as to enjoin the defendants from engaging in the business of home health care services within the New Bedford and Fall River geographical areas until April 30, 1981. We understand that, pending appeal, Ramson has suspended its monthly payments on account of the purchase price paid for Arthur’s stock. No argument has been made that damages should, or practically could, be assessed for whatever violations of the agreement may have occurred. Our order for modification of the judgments assumes the orderly resumption of those payments. As thus modified, the judgments are affirmed.
So ordered.
Notes
We have drawn these facts and others recited later in this opinion from findings of fact made by the trial judge, whose findings stand unless clearly erroneous, Mass.R.Dom.Rel.P. 52(a) (1975), which in this regard is the same as Mass.R.Civ.P. 52(a),
The rich decisional and textual literature on the subject of employer-employee noncompetition clauses is reviewed in detail in the All Stainless, Marine Contractors and National Hearing Aid Center opinions.
The government nexus exists by reason of the Commonwealth’s sponsorship and supervision and the Federal government’s funding of the regional nonprofit corporations with which Ruth’s and Arthur’s corporations typically contract.
The judge’s findings expressly do not attempt to determine how much of the aggregate purchase price was allocable to the agreement not to compete.
