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Non-Competition Agreements in Kansas


Questions & Answers: Non-Competition Agreements in Kansas

I have a non-compete clause signed in MO that my employer says I'm violating by taking a job in Texas. They agreement says I can't work for a competitor in any market in which the...
I have a non-compete in KS in with a freight broker. The company I'm employed by is under serious financial termoil and it is preventing me from being able to perform my daily obli...
I worked at a tanning salon that owned a gym for maybe two months, after quitting I got a job at a gym that has a couple tanning beds. I signed one of these statements not complete...
I worked for a MLM that had a non compete to not recruit or solicit customers or promoters for 1 year. I have not been recruiting but other promoter and customers have asked me que...
I have a non-compete that was signed ~13.5yrs ago (no duration on non-compete) with a KS company. I left the company 9 yrs ago. I have identified and work with a new company (wit...
I signed a non compete after I had taken a job with my company, when I was taking over a management position in a facility I transferred to. I got about a 1.75% raise. I was told b...
 

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 Kansas

Kansas 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.

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