California Lawsuit Wants To Weaken Noncompetes (axios.com) 125
An anonymous reader shares a report: California already prohibits companies from enforcing noncompetes within the state, but a Bay Area life sciences company is asking a state court to go even further. Veeva Systems is suing three of its East Coast-based competitors and asking a California Superior Court judge to declare that it has the right to hire employees who have signed such agreements. Veeva also wants a court to limit the use of non-disparagement and confidentiality agreements. "Non-compete agreements are bad," the company said in its suit. "These agreements limit employment opportunities. They suppress wages. They keep employees trapped in jobs they do not want, and they keep employees from fairly competing with their former employers. These agreements restrict fair and robust competition for employees."
one solution (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:one solution (Score:5, Interesting)
Take this a step further, require them to report your last day of employment as the last day of the non-compete. Ie: no employment gaps on your resume.
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It's not as if the BAs, developers, and designers can't go and work elsewhere - only that they cannot compete with you regarding your company plan. I've signed many non-compete contracts and it never stopped me from getting my next position.
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Pinching IP and trade secrets would be actionable (if not actually illegal) even without a non-compete.
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I'm asking. Not trolling.
I worked for company X doing UX and front-end development. (You have heard of the company.) My signing the non-compete clause did not stop me from getting my next job. In what circumstance would I be hurt from so signing?
I can see, perhaps, if the non-compete clause was written overly broad and that they went after me because I went into a similar field. But I understand why I couldn't be directly hired to work for a competit
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UX and front-end development is a generic skill that applies to many industries.
Some skill sets are more specific such as a restaurant manager. If they were limited by a non-compete there management skills would be far less in demand in a different industry.
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UX and front-end development is a generic skill that applies to many industries.
That depends. If by UX you mean "continuously tweak shit at random because change is good" then sure, that's generic, anyone can do it (Microsoft, Mozilla, Google, and many others have made this a standard part of their development lifecycle). However, if it's "design and implement a good, effective, usable interface" then that's much, much more rare.
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you're conflating genericity with rarity, which are two different things. UI design, good or bad, is a fairly generic skill (and can be applied to a lot of different fields)
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I can see, perhaps, if the non-compete clause was written overly broad and that they went after me because I went into a similar field. But I understand why I couldn't be directly hired to work for a competitor. (example: work for Uber and go to Lyft). But not if you go from Uber to Amazon or to Goldman Sachs.
In Silicon Valley, people jump from their company to a competitor all the time. In some industries (storage being a prime example) there are a limited number of companies, so you hop within that group. Eventually you know many of the people at all of those companies, making it even easier to switch.
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The line is very simple:
1. Do not take your former employer's property with you when you leave (no files, printouts, etc.)
2. Do not share your former employer's plans, strategies or technologies with your new employer
Abide by those and, in California, your former employer can't do jack about you going to a competitor.
A somewhat vague line is poaching. Many companies will ask you to sign something (usually during exit) saying that you will not use your knowledge of company employees to help a competitor ide
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I'm going to play devil's advocate here.
What if you were on a chess team helping someone win a championship. Would it be fair to that team if you then switched to another team? You would know the strategies that were being developed. If your job included developing strategy would you not have an advantage by knowing what your previous employer was planning? What if you were hired simply to bring that insigh
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All this is to say that even as a techie who is involved in business meetings I don't see how I can hurt my company by going to a competitor. But I could see how a high level business planner may be barred by a non-compete clause.
Excellent point. I suppose the higher up the food chain you are, the more such a move could be scrutinized.
But for engineers, engineering managers and engineering directors, no real issues (so long as you abide by those two guidelines I mentioned). Marketing or BizDev directors might have some issues.
Of course if you go to a competitor and then use prior company's intellectual property, prepare to be sued or jailed. Every now and then you see that happen.
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Right, non compete usuallly means things like not having salespeople build up a solid rapport with clients and then taking the clients with them when they leave the company. Or if you're the lead designer of their smart phones they don't want you to leave to go design a smart phone for someone else. Ie, you're actually gaining a competitive advantage by using trade secrets or confidential information.
The problem arises in making this too broad - a generic middle grade programmer isn't competing by working f
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Now. That is truly f**ked up.
Re:one solution (Score:5, Interesting)
Actually, that's (not quite) the reason why non-competes are invalid in CA. The court ruled that a company wouldn't just have to pay you your full salary, but in fact would have to pay you more than your full salary during the non-compete period. The justification was that during this period you would not be keeping up with the latest technologies, and your skills would bit-rot. You'd become inherently less employable, and the company must compensate you for that.
Re:one solution (Score:5, Interesting)
I think that alone makes it a fair compensation and there's nothing stopping a person from updating their skill set while they wait for the non-compete clause to expire. If you want to stay sharp, there're are plenty of open source projects to get involved in and there are plenty that are using new languages, technology, etc.
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except you can't really improve your skillset without work experience, because that's where the edge cases happen.
But I speak as a database geek.
Real world work involves all sorts of craptastic data that only happens at work, whether it is 3rd party data or cleaning up internal data form one's systems before sending it to the 3rd parties (or the accounting system...). At least for that aspect, one does not get experience with dealing with crap data outside of work environments. And every company is differen
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Indeed, it's related to a general trend that most companies would rather throw away old employees than maintain a long term relationship. You'll find hot tech start-ups in the Bay Area with very high churn rates. Ordinarily this would be a problem, but the culture here wants to believe there is some huge advantage to switching jobs every 30 months or so.
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but the culture here wants to believe there is some huge advantage to switching jobs every 30 months or so.
There is: your salary goes up, and in general is maximized according to what your value on the open market is. Companies won't give decent raises if you stay with them long-term, but by getting a new job you reset your salary to what the current market rate is. The downside to this, of course, is lack of stability for the employee, but it does help keep you from getting stuck in a rut.
Now how this si
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You'll find hot tech start-ups in the Bay Area with very high churn rates.
Churn is good. New employees bring new ideas and fresh perspectives. Geographic areas with high churn rates have higher productivity rates than areas with more stability/stagnation. Churn-friendliness is one reason that California has been successful despite the high taxes and stifling state bureaucracy.
I have found that the most productive workers are "boomerangs", that leave, work somewhere else for a few years, and then return. They already know the people and culture, and return brimming with ideas
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I don't know, I like to retain company knowledge and have a stable company culture. Some of the most productive tech companies in silicon valley like Apple and Intel have many employees pushing 10 years at the company.
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> the culture here wants to believe there is some huge advantage to switching jobs every 30 months or so.
It's not just the culture, unless that culture is capitalism in information industries. Experience with skills are equated to proficiency in software usage/development everywhere. Now you have specific industry knowledge (of a potential competitor), shown a beneficial behavior (ability to stay employed), and proficiency. It's a huge salary advantage to jump every two or three years, which is why devel
jimmy john's will cut you down to 1 hour / week (Score:2)
jimmy john's will cut you down to 1 hour / week after you quit / get fired at min wage.
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Elaborate please.
Are you saying that shitty retail stores have non-compete agreements?
Re:jimmy john's will cut you down to 1 hour / week (Score:5, Informative)
Jimmy John's is a sandwich place that was in the news last year [fortune.com] for making low-wage employees sign non-competes that prevented them from working at other sandwich shops within 2 miles of a Jimmy John's. And it wasn't clear if working at a restaurant that happened to serve sandwiches also count, so Jimmy John's lawyers would blast ex-employees with scary letters just in case.
Re:one solution (Score:4, Interesting)
I work for a major corporation which has this provision in its non-compete, no doubt as a bone for the "unconscionable" provisions of the law.
The mechanism goes like this: if you want to take a job with a competing firm, first you must notify corporate legal who must review the potential move and either release you from non-compete obligations, or enforce the non-compete clause by offering you continued employment at a compensation rate matching the bona-fide offer you presented to legal for evaluation, whether or not you are actually working for the company.
First problem: what does submitting your offer to legal and waiting for a response do to your chances of landing the outside job? what does it do to your continued career development if you end up not leaving?
Second problem: how often does it all go as advertised, without lengthy delays, stonewalling, etc?
Final problem: even if the company does pay you for non-compete, that's very temporary while you look for other work, basically little better than unemployment compensation - and you'll be trying to get it out of a legal department for a company that you're cutting ties with - what could possibly go wrong?
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make the company that makes you sign a non compete pay you full salary for the duration of the non compete, whether you are actually working or not.
You could make quite a bit of money that way, sign up for as many different jobs as you can, all with noncompetes that require you to be paid out...
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Police: Well I hardly think this is good enough. I think it would be more appropriate if the box bore a large red label "warning lark's vomit".
Salesman: Our sales would plummet.
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Voluntary Contract (Score:1)
Why does CA think it can unilateral terminate a voluntary contract between an employee and employer?
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Same reason why it's not legal to sell your heart or lungs.
Re:Voluntary Contract (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Voluntary Contract (Score:4, Informative)
That's not a given, else there'd be no need for severability clauses [merriam-webster.com].
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Why does CA think it can unilateral terminate a voluntary contract between an employee and employer?
the contract becomes null and void upon termination of employment, there is no compensation to the employee, the employer has no right to enforce any contract where there is no business being conducted.
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Because it's the sixth largest economy in the world.
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Well one side of my previous contract basically said if I've walked past the type of work while working for them, I can't perform the work for someone else. The other side said there would be no changes to pay without a discussion involving both myself and my employer. A few days after I started they cut everyone's paycheck 15% across the board. When I left to work for a different division of the customer with someone else, guess which part of the contract was all anyone looked at?
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Ever see a "severability" clause?
Want to try to sue for specific performance on that 15% pay cut? I bet you really don't, given the chances and amount of any potential win.
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Ever see a "severability" clause?
Want to try to sue for specific performance on that 15% pay cut? I bet you really don't, given the chances and amount of any potential win.
Yeah, I threatened them, they threatened to send their lawyers after me for breach of the noncompete. I found working elsewhere for a year, then coming back to be cheaper. I've been working for the same customer they said I could work for going on seven years now after the year away.
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Why you stupid ass. Have you ever heard of "contract law"? It's one of the biggest areas of the law. Probably half the laws on the books are what's legal in a contract and what's not.
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He's right though. You asked a very stupid question.
Why can a state enforce some new law? Because it is the role of the state to enact and enforce laws to serve the public interest.
Re:Voluntary Contract (Score:5, Insightful)
"Voluntary". Let's not bullshit, in almost every job offer situation the employer making the offer has significantly more leverage than the person accepting the job and will press for concessions like a non-compete. A lot of people sign on to the non-compete because they need the job today, and can't worry about the nebulous effects of the non-compete as it may apply in the abstract future. Employers know this and take full advantage of it because once the employee is in the door, that's one more thing keeping them there even if the work environment starts to suck.
Those reasons alone are why it's not a bad idea for CA to void these "agreements".
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Plus the fact that Silicon Valley companies have become some of the biggest jerks in history at swinging non-compete, anti-poach and other employee abuse agreements around as wildly as they can possibly imagine.
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And you have to be at the gym in 26 minutes too, right? To impress your wife Morgan Fairchild?
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Employee/Employer relationships are hugely lopsided. It is reasonable for the state to step in and protect the rights of the little guy. Try red-lining and negotiating your terms of employment next time you get a job. Good luck with that.
I find it especially hypocritical that you have large companies who lobbied and won "Right to Work" laws in most states (i.e. at-will employment) to turn around and put in non-compete clauses. If you want to make it hard for employees to unionize and make it very easy/c
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I say make it 1.5x annual salary, PLUS normal benefits as if you still worked there. You know, health insurance (or extended health insurance0, stock options, etc. And they have to pay out your regular PTO, too.
Funny thing about non-competes, it's often applied lopsidedly. I.e., an employee joining you probably came from
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When David Cutler took his team from Digital to Microsoft (to make Windows NT)
I wonder how things would be different today if someone went back in time and arranged an "accident" for Cutler before he could arrange this transfer. Would MS have become the company it is now? Would they have come up with something like NT, or tried to continue on with the Win95 tech? How far would they have gotten with that?
Contract law [Re:Voluntary Contract] (Score:4, Informative)
Why does CA think it can unilateral terminate a voluntary contract between an employee and employer?
CA is not "terminating" a contract. It is declaring that the contract was not valid in the first place.
What Makes a Contract Invalid? [lawdepot.com] :
When a contract is void, it is not valid. It can never be enforced under state or federal laws. A void contract is null from the moment it was created and neither party is bound by the terms. Think of it as one that a court would never recognize or enforce because there are missing elements.
A contract can be void for the following reasons:
The terms of the agreement are illegal or against public policy (unlawful consideration or object)
A party was not of sound mind while signing the agreement
A party was under the age of consent
The terms are impossible
The contract restricts the rights of a party
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Contracting away rights [Re:Contract law] (Score:2)
What Makes a Contract Invalid? [lawdepot.com] : ...The contract restricts the rights of a party
...A contract can be void for the following reasons:
You can absolutely contract rights away, just not those that would cause the court to deem the contract substantively unconscionable.
in this particular instance, the contract restricts the rights of an entity that was not part of the contract (the company that would otherwise hire you).
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Oh god, libertarians.
What would you do without the state civil court system?
Duals? Warfare?
Whether or not a contract is voluntary is irrelevant. What is relevant is the authority that can enforce the contract. In this case, that is the State of California and they can modify how contracts are enforced in their civil court system at will.
Re: Voluntary Contract (Score:2)
Libertarians are quite fond of civil courts and contracts, as a general rule. You can read Wikipedia and learn what libertarianism is, if you want. I promise, none of them are hiding under your bed.
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Do you think you can operate a business without a license from the local government?
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Because the two sides of the contract are not in an equal position to negotiate.
And because California hates business even more than New York.
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The overwhelming majority of business in California (and everywhere else) are family owned, and the overwhelming majority of workers are employed at family owned businesses.
My employer is family owned. And we have state regulators come in and dig through our trash cans looking for burnt out light bulbs.
So no, California hates business. All business, but especially profitable business.
Contracts have to have consideration to be valid (Score:4, Insightful)
A non-compete requires the employee to give up something (their ability to work in their chosen field for a number of years) in exchange for nothing. If the company continued to pay you for the duration of the non-compete, then it could be valid. But because they company's lawyers are trying to get something for nothing, they refuse to give you any consideration in exchange for your non-compete, thus invalidating the non-compete as a legal contract.
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There are already things that you cannot legally contract for. If California wants to expand that list, then so be it. Let's see how that works out.
Non-compete agreements are a protection for the employer, who generally enjoys the position of power in negotiations. The company can already use salary adjustments and other benefits to dissuade employees from competing.
If the person is a high-level executive or has knowledge of trade secrets, then maybe some protection is reasonable.
Otherwise, screw it. Let th
The East Coast (Score:2)
Here on the East Coast in the Federal Circuit Courts, non-compete clauses in contracts have been declared invalid and not binding. And this will be why Veeva Systems is trying to sue in California court to make it universal—they do not want to be hauled into a court in a "foreign" state
This is a good strategy for Veeva. It is a pre-emptive move in a court of their own choice
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Non-competes are illegal in CA.
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This is the precise language being used in the East.
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Not only that, this issue has already been resolved. "Application Group, Inc. v. Hunter Group, Inc.", 1998, dealt with an issue that sounds very similar to this one. It was decided in California court that the out of state agreement was not enforceable within the state.
(http://online.ceb.com/calcases/CA4/61CA4t881.htm)
I'm not sure what is different about this new case.
Just Say No (Score:1)
I thought the People's Republic of California was a paradise for tech workers?
In all seriousness - violating a non-compete (if you're dumb enough to sign one) isn't a crime. It's a contract violation. It only matters if the company you signed with wants to enforce it in civil court. It has nothing to do with your new company- short of them potentially losing you when the old company takes you to court.
This is very easy to fix. Don't sign a non-compete. Ever. Unless the company demanding it pony's up som
Re:Just Say No (Score:4, Insightful)
And when the six other people behind you get jobs and you don't, why, you can always eat your principles!
Sometimes egregious behavior needs to be squashed by the courts or legislatures, and not just simply left up to the free market Invisible Hand.
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Sometimes it does, sometimes it doesn't. I'd say, for instance, limiting the number of hours employees have to work per week was a pretty damned good intervention. I'd say overtime rules and the like are pretty good regulations. Is there some reason you imagine that just leaving everything to the free market is going to magically make everything better? Is there some reason you trust largely unaccountable organizations over governments where there is at least some level of accountability at the elected repr
Re:Just Say No (Score:5, Informative)
I work in the tech industry and I'm a pretty good negotiator when it comes to payment and other terms for a new job. But I've never been able to refuse to sign a non-compete and still get the job. It is likely impossible for a new college grad to refuse a non-compete, who doesn't have nearly as much power in these situations as I do.
Now if you are a successful executive, then you have way more power and those kinds of things can be negotiated. But I assure you that at least in the Bay Area tech industry, you will find it difficult to negotiate anything like a severance package before your first day.
Now if you're being terminated anyways, you should politely refuse to sign any new paperwork. If they want you to sign something bad enough that's when the severance packages come in. Sadly I've worked at places that cut 10% of their staff to save money, and to save even more money did not give severance to a single one of them. And rather than give them a 2 weeks notice, the company was concerned about employee sabotage and gave no notice other than everyone was invited to a room full of moving boxes and security escort. That's how some of the tech industry operates in my professional experience.
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In most states, such overly broad agreements won't hold up. They have to be related to actually competing against the prior company by using trade secrets or confidential information, not just using the same basic skills that any company uses. My guess is that since most people won't bother to expend the resources to take it to the courts, that companies just do this as a boilerplate agreement.
As for severance packages, you almost never get agreements on those in advance. The sole point of any severance
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I had lawyers from Amazon send my new employer and myself envelopes full of bunch of bullshit about non-compete policies. So they really will go to the effort to do some posturing and intimidation tactics. My HR director told me to ignore it, so I hung onto it for a few months before throwing it in the trash.
Someone tried this nonsense on me... (Score:2, Troll)
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So is that how you finally got to $50k a year?
This wasn't my first $50K per year job. However, the extra month of pay that I got as a Christmas bonus last year pushed my income up to $55K per year.
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Why do you waste so much of your time stalking someone online?
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Was that a contract with a specified duration, or an at-will employment agreement?
It was an open-ended contract.
If it was a contract, then I'm surprised that California wouldn't allow agreed-upon penalties for terminating the contract early.
In 20+ years of IT support contracting, I've never seen penalties imposed for terminating the contract early.
If it was for at-will employment, then yeah, imposing a penalty for not giving two weeks notice would be unenforceable, since that directly contradicts the definition of at-will.
A coworker who worked for a different sub-contractor has a provision in his contract to earn an extra month of pay bonus if he gave a four-week notice.
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Was that a contract with a specified duration, or an at-will employment agreement?
It was an open-ended contract.
I could see how a court would consider an open-ended contract to be equivalent to at-will employment.
Make it work both ways (Score:2)
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Too often these are boilerplate agreements, and the legal department just isn't set up to handle exceptions. I know someone that had a dispute with his contract and got some changes made and approved. Later on it surprised the newer legal department that it wasn't standard, and it seemed to put them into an impasse on what to do (follow the contract, or follow the procedures).
With someone else I know they wanted to move all contractors to a temp agency to simplify things. He disagreed with the new temp ag
Good luck with that (Score:2)
I'm going to assume they mean for people coming to work in California.
Well, other state courts will rule the non-competes still apply as state X laws, where it was agreed to, apply.
No Worries Here (Score:1)
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Yes, of course, in Slashdot saying that you have to abide by your word is "-1 Troll"...