Non-Competition Agreements in Iowa

Non-competition agreements, also known as covenants not to compete or restrictive covenants, are employment contracts used by employers to limit the ability of an employee to compete with the employer by stealing customers or trade secrets. Enforceable agreements must strike a balance between protecting the employer's legitimate business interests from an unfair competitive advantage with the employee's right to work in a field for which he or she is trained.  In general, courts decide what is considered reasonable or not reasonable by examining the type and size of the business, how long and over what geographic area the restrictions apply and whether adequate consideration, or benefit, was given the employee at the time the agreement was signed.

The Law In Iowa

Iowa courts have determined that restrictive covenants are enforceable if the terms are reasonable and necessary to protect a legitimate business interest of the employer such as customer relationships or trade secrets. Factors considered when determining reasonableness include the hardship an agreement puts on the former employee, its effect on the general public and the restrictions placed on time, territory and activity of the former employee.  Legitimate business interests include good will, customer contacts, employees with highly specialized training and trade secrets.

Consideration

With any contractual arrangement, both parties must be giving and receiving something of value, also known as consideration. Iowa courts have determined that the offer of initial or continued employment is sufficient consideration or benefit to the employee in exchange for agreeing to not compete with the employer should the employment relationship terminate.

Reasonableness in Time and Geographic Scope

Agreements may be deemed unenforceable if a court finds that they are unreasonable in terms of duration, geographic scope and the type of employment or line of business being restricted. If a court finds an agreement is unreasonable, it may modify the agreement so that it does not unduly infringe on the former employee's ability to work.

Examples of non-compete agreements that Iowa courts have found to be reasonable include:

  • A 1-year, 250-mile radius restriction against a former embryo-transplant specialist veterinarian including activities other than those involving embryo-transplants.
  • A 1-year restriction against a former financial adviser from soliciting customers or employees and from working as a financial adviser within the area he had worked for the former employer.
  • A 2-year restriction against a former sales representative from selling business forms and related products to eight identified customers of the former employer with whom he actually did business during the last year of employment.

The courts have found the following restrictive covenants unreasonable:

  • A 1-year restriction on a former manufacturing engineer supervisor from working "in any capacity for any computer-related company anywhere in the world."
  • A 100-mile radius restriction where the employer had offices in several places which resulted in a prohibition from working virtually anywhere in the state.
  • A restriction against a former employee who did not receive specialized training or have close personal relationships with customers.

Employers need to keep these issues in mind when asking employees to sign restrictive covenants. It is also important to know if potential new hires have a non-compete agreement with a former employer. In some cases, the new employer can be liable to the former employer if hiring the employee would put him or her in violation of the agreement. Different rules may apply to situations in which all or part of a business is being sold and a restrictive covenant is agreed to by the buyer and the seller.

Questions & Answers: Non-Competition Agreements in Iowa

I am currently employed with a radio station (not in contact with any customers or trade secrets or specialized training). I have applied for a different position at a television ...
I work for a home care place that only accepts private pay. If I have my own clients who are medicaid and not accepted by this company am I in breach of the no compete ...
Dear Attorney, I am contacting your firm in regards to a breach of contract agreement matter in your jurisdiction. Please permit me to send you the agreement for your review so yo...
Looking, Does the non-compete contract specify that it only applies to "direct competitors"? Normally a non-compete is written to carefully define the scope of what constitutes a ...
Hey I formally worked for a drain company as a mechanic and jet tech. I got hurt at work things went south. I was forced to sign a non compete contract after my employment was term...
I am a new(just out of school) hair stylist and have worked at a salon for just over 3 months. My boss had us all sign a no compete with restrictions of 15 miles from the current s...
Comments (13)add comment
Ellen Griffin: ...
Question: is a non-compete enforceable if it is signed after the initial date of employment (i.e. on day 2), and is it enforceable if the employee is 100% commission and employment ends prior to the employee receiving any compensation?
1

April 28, 2012
Joellen Sperfslage: ...
I have worked for a manufacturing software company for 9 years and we were just purchased and merged with a new company. They are making us sign a Confidentiality, Invention Assignment, Non Solicit, Non Compete and Arbitration Agreement. My question is they are contracting these agreements per the state you live, so the agreements are all different depending on the state you live in. so mine is stating During your employment with the Group and for a period of 2 years thereafter I am restricted that I can not sell any products or services which are the same or mirrely the same within 10 miles of any location in which (a) the Company maintains an office or has a protected Customer. can they withhold me from employment for that long in an industry I have worked in for the last 27 years? This company has 32 software offerings. I feel this document has me hostage to them.
2

August 19, 2012
Steven Daily: ...
Ellen,
Iowa courts will uphold non-compete agreements entered into after employment has begun, on the theory that the "consideration" you received was continued employment. The fact that your employment terminated before you were actually paid might not matter to a court. If at the time an employee signs the contract there was consideration, I don't see how subsequent events could change that.

Joellen,
This does seem extremely over-broad to me when you compare it to the examples given in the article above. On the other hand, a court will have to examine the details of your industry and of your employer's business, and this is a case-by-case situation. It is almost impossible to generalize about what will be enforceable and what won't be. I wish I could be more precise. You could try to negotiate a narrower or shorter non-compete if you think you have some leverage.

Steve Daily
LawServer
3

August 20, 2012
arrellah: ...
I signed a non-compete that states I cannot be employed by a business similar to the company for 100 miles for 2 years. It was prove in unemployment court that the company had no just reason to fire me. So i was awarded unemployment. Do I have to wait the two years my unemployment has run out and having a hard time finding a place to work because of this aggrement. it has been almost a year now. Do I have any rights to work?
4

August 21, 2012
Cathy: ...
Just got dish network this summer and now they don't have Big Ten Network and we enjoy watching games. I was told Iowa is a no contract state, can this get me out of their contract? Would like to switch to Direct TV soon.
5

September 21, 2012
Former Employee: ...
I left a sales position with a company with one office. I don't remember if I signed a non-compete or not. I'm assuming I did. I received 1 week of "specialized" training 5 years ago. I quit due to a hostile work environment. I was NOT in an Account Management role. Would I be affected by a restrictive covenant?

Former employee
6

December 03, 2012
Steven Daily: ...
Arellah,
Look at the written terms of your non-compete. Does it indicate whether it matters why your employment was terminated? It probably does not. In that case, whether your non-compete is valid is going to depend on the factors outlined in the article above.

Former Employee,
Assuming you did sign a non-compete, the former employer will likely argue that you had access to confidential customer lists or information that would be useful to a competitor. In any event, it is not really one's job title that matters but the substance of what did on the job and what information one had access to.

Steve Daily
LawServer.com
7

December 03, 2012
Looking : ...
I am currently employed with a radio station (not in contact with any customers or trade secrets or specialized training). I have applied for a different position at a television station within the same market. The positions have different titles and job responsibilities/skillsets from each other. My skillsets are much more suited for the 2nd position. I am currently under a non-compete with the radio station but it is a gray area as to whether or not television is considered a direct competitor to radio as we directly compete with other radio stations in town. Would going from my current position to the one in televsion be considered a breach of contract?
8

February 05, 2013
Jill: ...
I work for a home care place that only accepts private pay. If I have my own clients who are medicaid and not accepted by this company am I in breach of the no compete
9

February 24, 2013
Johan Molin: ...
Dear Attorney,

I am contacting your firm in regards to a breach of contract agreement matter in your jurisdiction. Please permit me to send you the agreement for your review so you can run a conflict check.

Yours Sincerely,
Johan Molin
President
ASSA ABLOY Group
SE-107 23 Stockholm Sweden
This e-mail address is being protected from spambots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
www.assaabloy.com
10

March 31, 2013
Steven Daily: ...
Looking,
Does the non-compete contract specify that it only applies to "direct competitors"? Normally a non-compete is written to carefully define the scope of what constitutes a competitor. If it is unclear in your case, then I think it likely that a court would invalidate the non-compete due to it not being specific enough as to its scope.

Jill,
As with Looking, it really depends on how the non-compete is defined in terms of its scope. If the scope is not clearly defined, then it will likely be invalidated by a court.

Johan,
Thanks for contact us, but LawServer does not provide legal representation. You can find a list of Iowa employment law attorneys here:

http://www.iabar.net/AttorneyOnLine.nsf/results?ReadForm&c2=&a=Labor Law

Steve Daily
LawServer.com
11

April 02, 2013
sk: ...
Hey I formally worked for a drain company as a mechanic and jet tech. I got hurt at work things went south. I was forced to sign a non compete contract after my employment was terminated. They held my tool box as some sort of ransom so I felt I had no choice. Is this contract legal and enforceable
12

April 15, 2013
Kay Lange: ...
I am a new(just out of school) hair stylist and have worked at a salon for just over 3 months. My boss had us all sign a no compete with restrictions of 15 miles from the current salon for 2 years! After looking at maps, other salon, and mapquesting..that's our ENTIRE area! it even goes over into another state! I live roughly 10 miles from the salon and can not even work in my home town because of this. I think this is absurd! Suggestions? Thank you!
13

May 17, 2013

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