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Articles Posted in Employment Law

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FORT LAUDERDALE BUSINESS LITIGATION: EMPLOYEES’ FIDUCIARY DUTIES TO CORPORATE EMPLOYER

A fiduciary relationship exists when an individual must act in the interests of another. Watkins v. NCNB Nat’l Bank of Fla., N.A., 622 So.2d 1063 (Fla. 3rd DCA 1993) (“To establish a fiduciary relationship, a party must allege some degree of dependency on one side and some degree of undertaking…

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FORT LAUDERDALE BUSINESS LITIGATION: ENFORCEMENT OF NON-COMPETE AGREEMENTS

Florida law protects employers and similarly situated persons from unlawful competition. But every competitive act does not qualify as an unlawful competitive act. White v. Mederi Caretenders Visiting Services of Se. Florida, LLC, 226 So. 3d 774 (Fla. 2017) (“Section 542.335 does not protect covenants ‘whose sole purpose is to…

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MIAMI BUSINESS LITIGATION: NON-COMPETE CONTRACTS BARRED BY PROPOSED WORKFORCE MOBILITY ACT

We previously wrote about two potential laws that might limit enforceability of non-compete agreements. The first law is a proposed Florida statute that would constrain or prohibit restrictive covenants for certain medical professionals. The second law is a Federal Trade Commission rule that would ban most non-compete agreements as unfair…

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MIAMI BUSINESS LITIGATION: FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION AND NON-COMPETE AGREEMENTS

Nationwide, the body of law regulating non-compete agreements (including non-solicitation covenants, non-circumvention covenants, covenants barring poaching of employees) has been mainly regulated by state statutes as well as court decisions in state and federal courts.  Federal law has generally stayed out of the regulation of restrictive covenants.  About a year…

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MIAMI BUSINESS LITIGATION: PHYSICIAN NON-COMPETE AGREEMENTS

The Florida restrictive covenant statute allows employers to restrain employees from working for a competitor so long as the non-competition agreement is supported by a legitimate business interest and is reasonable in time, area, and line of business. Fla. Stat. 542.335. Employees that enter contracts containing non-compete agreements can be…

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FORT LAUDERDALE BUSINESS LITIGATION: EMPLOYEE THEFT OF TRADE SECRETS

Some employers have confronted the situation where employees have taken corporate trade secrets to use in competition against their former employer, but the employees had not signed a non-compete agreement.  Under Florida law, however, the fact that the former employees did not sign a non-compete agreement is not dispositive concerning…

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FORT LAUDERDALE BUSINESS LITIGATION: SALE OF BUSINESS THAT INCLUDES A NON-COMPETE COVENANT

Under Florida law, courts evaluate the enforceability of non-compete agreements based on Florida Statutes Section 542.335 as well as case law interpreting this statute.  Under Section 542.335(1)(b), Florida Statutes, to establish that the contract restricting competition is itself lawful and enforceable, a party must simply “plead and prove the existence…

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MIAMI BUSINESS LITIGATION: POACHING CUSTOMERS WHEN THERE IS NO NON-COMPETE AGREEMENT

Florida’s non-compete statute, Section 542.335, Florida Statutes, accords broad protection in favor of a business seeking to prevent former employees from competing with the business via goodwill with customers with whom the former employee dealt during his employment.  In this regard, section 542.335(1)(b)(3) expressly considers a “legitimate business interest” to…

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FORT LAUDERDALE BUSINESS LITIGATION: NON-COMPETE AGREEMENTS AND THE LEGAL DOCTRINE OF THE “BLUE-PENCIL”

The plain terms of a contract control the parties’ course of conduct for all matters subject to that contract’s terms. See Maher v. Schumacher, 605 So.2d 481 (Fla. 3d DCA 1992) (holding that the plain meaning of the contractual language used by the parties controls). The Court is prohibited from…

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FORT LAUDERDALE BUSINESS LITIGATION: NON-COMPETE AGREEMENTS AND CHOICE OF LAW PROVISIONS

Corporations routinely require their employees to enter restrictive covenants (including non-solicition and non-compete agreements) protecting the business from unfair competition. However, employees often live and reside in states that are different from the company’s place of incorporation and principal place of business. This trend has grown in recent years as…

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