Legal Question in Business Law in New York
Non disclosure/confidentiality agreement
I have recently swithed from one service company to another as a sales representative. Both companies are based out of New York. My prior company is threatening legal action if I do not re-assure them that I will not oversee accounts that I serviced while employed by them. They are claiming that I am violating a confidentiality agreement, however the contacts that we sell to are published in a variety of books and resources. Do I need to stay out of the old accounts? How Long?
3 Answers from Attorneys
Re: Non disclosure/confidentiality agreement
Your legal rights and responsibilities will be governed by any non-compete, non-disclosure and/or employment agreement you may have signed. A reading of any agreements that you may have signed would give us the information needed to answer your question.
I recommend that you seek counsel from an attorney before servicing any of your old clients.
This communication is for informational purposes only, is not legal advice and is not intended to create an attorney-client relationship or any other type of relationship, which, under the policies of Adelman & Lavaia, LLC and Gary Adelman, Esq. , can only be created by execution of a formal retainer agreement.
Re: Non disclosure/confidentiality agreement
Hard to say without reading the agreement you signed. While you may be correct that the customer names are well known, and even the contact people there, it is possible some other language in your agreement may legally stop you from making contact. The time period depends upon the language of the contract. Only thing in your favor, possibly, may be that if you are unable to otherwise seek gainful employment, a court could possibly rule that the agreement is too restrictive. Again, more information is needed from you and the reading of the contract language is required, to enable me to give you more than a general answer.
Re: Non disclosure/confidentiality agreement
Not clear from your question if you ever signed a non-compete, non-solicitation or non-disclosure clauses/agreements with your former employer. If not, in the employment context such covenants normally cannot be implied after your employment with the first company terminated. If you did (it may have been a part of your employment agreement, offer letter or employment handbook), what is the term of the non-compete or non-solicitation clauses ? It cannot be forever and it cannot be unreasonably long.
However, if your first employer claims that you have misappropriated their trade secrets (such as customer lists), there is no time limit on how long you are obligated from refraining to use such information. This then becomes a question of whether, as you suggest, the source of your sales leads in fact comes from the public domain.
In any event, your contracts, correspondence from your first employer, nature of your current employer's business and other facts and circumstances must be examined carefully to see what legal exposure you may have and how best to avoid litigation.
This reply is in the nature of general information, is not legal advice and should not be relied upon as such.
Related Questions & Answers
-
What to do if I do not receive a product that I ordered on-line? I ordered some cd's... Asked 11/30/04, 2:50 pm in United States New York Business Law
-
Name infringement I have been selling a product for over a year called 'Body... Asked 11/28/04, 8:11 pm in United States New York Business Law
-
Car broke into with a parkin lot that says it has cameras (but doesn't) Yesterday,... Asked 11/26/04, 3:29 pm in United States New York Business Law
-
Size of legal point setting what is the minimum point setting size for a legal form? Asked 11/23/04, 2:24 pm in United States New York Business Law
-
Turning a C Corp to LLC in 2nd year before tax filing We are a Financial Services... Asked 11/16/04, 8:27 pm in United States New York Business Law