Legal Question in Employment Law in Colorado

employee non-compete agreement

Is the below non-compete agreement inforceable in Colorado or Wyoming? I work in CO. Company headquarters is in WY. I pay CO taxes.

For good consideration and as an inducement for ''xyz company'' (Company) to employ _______________________(Employee), the undersigned Employee hereby agrees not to directly or indirectly compete with the business of the Company and its successors and assigns during the period of employment and for a period of three (3) years following termination of employment and notwithstanding the cause or reason for termination.

The term ''not compete'' as used herein shall mean that the Employee shall not own, manage, operate, consult or to be employed in a business substantially similar to, or competitive with, the present business of the Company or such other business activity in which the Company may substantially engage during the term of employment.

The Employee acknowledges that the Company shall or may in reliance of this agreement provide Employee access to trade secrets, customers and other confidential data and good will. Employee agrees to retain said information as confidential and not to use said information on his or her own behalf or disclose same to any third party.


Asked on 2/21/06, 10:32 am

1 Answer from Attorneys

Francisco Romero F.L. Romero Esq., P.C.

Re: employee non-compete agreement

The information provided here is general in nature and not intended to answer any specific legal issue, nor does the provision of this information give rise to an attorney-client relationship. With that said, the enforceability will depend upon which state's laws apply and several other facts. The agreement may contain a governing law provision which should state what state's laws apply. Non-competes are presumptively invalid in Colorado unless they fit into one of 4 permissible categories: 1) part of the purchase and sale of a business; 2) designed to recover costs of training an employee whose employment with the employer lasted less than 2 years; 3) applies to executive or management personnel or officers and employees who are professional staff to execs/management; or 4) to protect trade secrets. I do not know what your position is, so I cannot tell you if the management/executive provision would apply. Unless the situation fits into one of these categories, the no-compete is invalid in Colorado.

In Wyoming, the presumption does not exist and the last time I checked, was not codified. Generally non-competes are valid if they are reasonable in terms of the restrictions - 3 years is reasonable under Wyoming case law, but I didn't see a geographical limitation (within 100 mile radius of Cheyenne, for example)- case law may support an argument against enforceability based upon the vagueness of the terms. The risky part here is that if you violate it, you could get sued and even if you win, lawsuits are expensive.

If you have real concerns (eg. you are currently operating or thinking about starting a competing business), it would be worth the time and money to consult an employment lawyer for an opinion on the validity of the non-compete. If the contract does not specify which state law controls, I'd recommend consulting with a Wyoming attorney first (assuming the place of the contract was Wyoming, the HQ of the business). If the contract states that Colorado law applies, then consult with CO counsel. A few hundred dollars is well spent for a solid legal opinion and you'd also have an attorney lined-up if the employer decides to take you to task under the agreement.

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Answered on 2/22/06, 4:52 pm


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