- Personal Injury Attorneys
- Personal Injury
- Auto Accident
- Class Action
- Debt Harassment
- Insurance Disputes
- Investment Fraud
- Labor Laws
- Alien Certification
- Assault & Battery
- Business Mergers
- Civil Rights
- Constructive Discharge
- Covenant not to Compete
- Defamation of Character
- Disability Discrimination
- Employee Retirement Act
- Employment Torts
- Failure to Promote
- False Imprisonment
- Family Medical Leave Act
- Farm Labor
- Florida Civil Rights Act
- Hostile Work Enviroment
- Hourly Wage Law
- Job Hazards
- Job Reductions
- Labor Organization
- Medicare
- Negligent Hiring
- Negligent Retention
- Negligent Supervision
- Pregnancy Discrimination
- Race Discrimination
- Religious Discrimination
- Sarbanes Oxley
- Sexual Harassment
- Workforce Diversity
- Maritime Admiralty
- Mass Torts
- Medical Malpractice
- Mesothelioma
- Nursing Home
- Overtime Law
- Product Liability
- Sinkholes
- Social Security
- Spinal Cord Injury
- Trucking Accident
- Workers' Compensation
- Wrongful Death
Covenant not to Compete
A covenant not to compete (CNC), or non-compete clause, takes place when an employee decides to pursue another direction in which they are in competition with the employer as opposed to working for them. A CNC is bound by conventional contract constraints, including the consideration doctrine. The use of such a clause is based on the suggestion that when an employee is fired or resigns, that person can either work for a rival or start up their own company and garner a competitive advantage by utilizing classified information about the former employer's operations. This includes sought after items like customer listings, business practices, soon-to-be released products, and marketing strategies.
At the same time, a business might use the non-compete clause to keep an employee from working anywhere else. Most courts have ruled these contracts to be legally binding as long as the clause puts realistic restrictions on the geographic region and time period to which an ex-employee is not allowed to compete. The courts have made it clear that a person cannot be banned from practicing a trade that he/she has been taught as long as it does not bring down the former employer's business.
