Legal Question in Employment Law in New Jersey

Breach of contract case

I was hired as an H1-B employee by Company A and placed as a contractor at Company D through Company B and C. I resigned from Company A after serving a 2 week notice period and joined Company D as an employee for another team and not the one which I was working as a contractor.

My employment contract with Company A was for a period of 12 month and I quit after 5 months. The non-compete agreement with Company A was really broad. Now Company A has filed a suit against me for breach of contract, tortious interference, breach of good faith and fair dealing.

Do you think Company A has any real case?


Asked on 8/09/07, 2:53 am

2 Answers from Attorneys

Eric Fikry Obermayer Rebmann Maxwell & Hippel LLP

Re: Breach of contract case

Companies are generally permitted to protect their confidential and proprietary business information, goodwill, customer relationships, and relationships with strategic partners. In determining whether a noncompete agreement is reasonable and therefore enforceable, courts consider the following: (1) is the restrictive covenant necessary to protect the employer's legitimate interests; (2) does the covenant impose any undue hardship on the employee; and, (3) is the covenant injurious to the public interest. In addition to the non-compete, you may also need to look at whether you are subject to a non-disclosure agreement as well.

Please note that this inquiry is a very fact-sensitive analysis, and can only really be evaluated after reviewing the actual documents and facts involved.

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Answered on 8/09/07, 9:50 am
Daniel Cevallos Cevallos & Wong, LLP

Re: Breach of contract case

The short answer is: Yes, Company A has a case--because it's been filed against you. Do not make the mistake of thinking that you can sign an agreement and ignore it later. New Jersey Courts routinely enforce non-compete agreements that are �reasonable� in scope. A non-compete agreement will generally be considered reasonable if it (1) protects the legitimate interests of the employer; (2) does not impose an undue hardship on the employee; and (3) is not injurious to the public.

If the geographic and temporal restrictions in your non-compete agreement exceed the boundaries necessary to protect your employer, a New Jersey court may modify the agreement by reducing those restrictions to make the agreement reasonable. See Solari Industries v. Malady, 55 N.J. 571 (1970).

It is VERY IMPORTANT that you contact private counsel to represent you. If not, they will take default judgment against you and win whatever they have claimed. Feel free to call our offices or e-mail me directly at [email protected]

-Danny Cevallos, Esquire

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Answered on 8/09/07, 10:08 am


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