Federal Court Strikes Down FTC Noncompete Ban
and Noncompete Issues Generally
August 23, 2024
The Federal Trade Commission on May 7, 2024 published a
ban on all noncompete clauses as an unfair method of competition, effective
September 4, 2024 (with the exception of grandfathered agreements in effect on
Sept. 4, 2024, which can continue to be enforced for senior executives, i.e.,
earning over $151,164 and in a policy-making position). However, the U.S.
District Court for the Northern District of Texas, in Ryan LLC v. Federal Trade
Commission, ruled on August 20, 2024, that the FTC noncompete ban exceeds the
FTC authority and the noncompete ban is set aside and may not be enforced
against anyone and cannot take effect on Sept. 4, 2024 or thereafter. Note that
there are other challenges in other district courts that may fail; but
regardless of those outcomes, this Northern District of Texas district court
decision is enough to keep the FTC noncompete ban from being enforced, unless
Ryan LLC v FTC is overturned on appeal.
State laws in 14 states have recently banned some or all
types of noncompete provisions, and the state laws are not subject to the
Federal court challenges. Also, noncompete provisions, even prior to FTC and
state legislation, were subject to restrictions by state court case-law. Ryant
LLC v. FTC notes that
I.
FTC Noncompete Clause Ban and Court Challenges
A.
FTC Rules Banning Practically All Noncompete Provisions – Effective
Sept. 4, 2024 – On May 7, 2024, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) published
final rules that would ban all noncompete clauses as an unfair method of
competition, and therefore violating Section 5 of the FTC Act.
Federal
Trade Commission (FTC) New Final Noncompete Clause Rule in 26 CFR § 910,
announced by the FTC on April 23, 2024, and published in 89 Fed. Reg. 38342 (May
7, 2024). The effective date is Sept. 4, 2024.
The effective date of the FTC noncompete ban would be 120 days after
publication, i.e., September 4, 2024. This
rule: (i) would prohibit employers from entering into noncompete agreements and
other clauses with all employees or service providers (“workers”); and (ii)
would prohibit enforcement of existing noncompete clauses against all workers
(with the exception of grandfathered agreements in effect on Sept. 4, 2024,
which can continue to be enforced for senior executives).
These FTC rules were designed to protect
the fundamental freedom of workers to change jobs, increase innovation, and
foster new business formation.
B.
Key Points in FTC Rule – The following are the key provisions in
the FTC noncompete ban:
1.
Ban on Noncompete Clauses – Under the FTC rule, it would be an unfair
method of competition for a person (including an employee or independent
contractor): (i) to enter into or attempt to enter into a noncompete clause;
(ii) to enforce or attempt to enforce a noncompete clause; or (iii) to represent
that the worker is subject to a noncompete clause.
16 CFR §
910.2(a)(1). The FTC’s final rule
aims to enhance worker mobility, encourage entrepreneurship, and spur innovation
by banning noncompete provisions and promoting a more dynamic economy.
2.
Senior Executives Exception for Grandfathered Contracts – For senior executives, there would be an
exception if the noncompete was entered into prior to the effective date of the
FTC regulations (Sept. 4, 2024). “Senior executives” mean workers who (i) are in
a policy-making position, and (ii) received annual compensation of at least
$151,164 in the preceding year (or annualized if was employed for only part of
the year; and “policy-making position” means the president, chief executive
officer or equivalent, any other officer of a business entity who has
policy-making authority, or any other natural person who has policy-making
authority for the business entity similar to an officer with policy-making
authority.
16 CFR § 910.1
Thus, with respect to senior executives, any noncompete clauses entered into
prior to Sept. 4, 2024 would continue to be enforced. 16 CFR § 910.2(a)(2). After
the effective date, no new noncompete provisions can be entered into.
3.
Notice Requirement – The new FTC rule provides that employers would need to
provide notice to workers (other than senior executives) who are bound by an
existing noncompete that they will not be enforcing any noncompete provisions
against them. 16
CFR § 910.2(b)(1). The
notice may be on paper delivered by hand to the worker, or by mail at the
worker’s last known personal street address, or by email at an email address
belonging to the worker, including the worker’s current work email address or
last known personal email address, or cell phone text message.
16 CFR §
910.2(b)(2)(b).
The FTC rule would provide a model notice that employers can use for workers,
which states how prior noncompetes may not be binding.
16 CFR § 910.2(b)(4) (figure 1).
4.
Sale Exception
– The Final Rule would not prohibit enforcement of
noncompete clauses that are entered into with respect to the bona fide sale of a
business, including a bona fide sale of (i) a business entity, (ii) an
individual’s interest in a business entity or (iii) all or substantially all of
a business entity’s operating assets.
See 16 CFR § 910.3.
5.
Only for Post-Employment Bans; Non-Solicitation Clauses – The FTC noncompete ban would specifically
apply to post-employment noncompetes, so it does not affect restrictions on
moonlighting in the same field.
Non-solicitation clauses that
do not prohibit or
function to prevent a worker from switching jobs or starting a new business are generally not
restricted by the FTC rule, as noted in the preamble to the 2024 final rule.[1]
C.
Federal Court Stikes Down FTC Noncompete Ban
1.
Potential Stay by Federal Northern District in Texas – Within a
day or two of when the FTC announced the final rule banning noncompete clauses,
two lawsuits were filed in Texas to challenge the rule, (i) Ryan LLC v. FTC
on Apr. 23, 2024 in the Northern District in Texas,
No. 3:24-cv-009; (ii)
Chamber of Commerce
of the U.S.
v. FTC, No. 6:24-cv-00148 (E.D. Tex., Apr. 24, 2024) filed the day after the rules.
The Eastern District Court of Texas dismissed the Chamber of Commerce
case because, under the first to file rule, the Ryan LLC case was filed first,
and joined the Chamber of Commerce as a party in the Ryan LLC case.
Chamber of Commerce of the U.S.
v. Federal Trade Commission, — F.Supp.3d –, 2024 WL 1954139 (E.D. Tex., May 3,
2024).
The Texas Northern District judge (Asa Brown), in Ryan LLC
v. Federal Trade Commission, 2024 WL 3297524, — F.Supp.3d — (N.D. Tex. July
3, 2024), imposed a parital stay on the FTC noncompete ban only with respect to
the parties to the case, i.e., Ryan LLP and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, but it
did give indication that it is likely to strike down the FTC noncompete ban once
it rules.
2.
Pending District Courts in Northern District of Pennsylvania and
Middle District of FLorida – In ATS Tree Services, LLC v. FTC, No. 2:2024cv01743 (E.D. Pa. Apr. 25, 2024), a similar suit was filed on Apr. 25, 2024 in the Eastern
District in Pennsylvania. ATS Tree Services filed a motion for preliminary
Injunction on May 14 seeking a stay of the effective date. The Eastern District
in Pennsylvania, in ATS Tree Services, LLC v. Federal Trade Commission, 2024 WL
3511630 (E.D. Pa., July 23, 2024), denied ATS Tree Services motion to stay and
preliminary enjoin enforcement of the FTC noncompete ban because it did not find
any irreparable harm.
In general, the Fifth Circuit in Texas (where the Ryan LLC case was
filed) is less employee friendly than the Third Circuit in Pennsylvania (where
the ATS Tree Services case was filed), and therefore, even though the Fifth
Circuit ruled against the FTC, this may not be the view of the Fifth Circuit,
and this could lead to an appeal to the Supreme Court to resolve the
differences.
3.
Florida Case – In Properties of the Villages v. Federal Trade
Commission, No. 5:24-cv-316-TJC-PRL, filed on July 2, 2024, a motion for a
preliminary injunction on the FTC noncompete ban was filed in the Federal
district court for the Middle District of Florida.
4.
Arguments for Challenges – Arguments made by the lawsuits include
that: (i) the rules implicates the major questions doctrine, which would
necessitate additional legal authority from Congress; (ii) the FTC rule is
arbitrary and capricious under the Administrative Procedure Act because the
evidence the FTC relies on cannot justify a nationwide ban of noncompetes in all
situations; (iii) the FTC rule incorrectly expands what is a prohibited an
unfair method of competition; and (iv) the rule unlawfully infringes on state
contract laws.
5.
FTC Noncompete Ban Struck Down by District Court in Texas in Ryan LLC
v. FTC – In Ryan LLC v. Federal Trade Commission, __ F.Supp.3d __, 2024 WL
3879954 (N. Dist. Tex. Aug. 20, 2024), Judge Ada Brown held that the FTC
exceeded its authority in promulgating the noncompete ban, Congress did not give
the FTC authority to impose new substantive restrictions, the authority of the
FTC to issue regulations was only for housekeeping rules and not for new
substantive restrictions and the FTC acted in an arbitrary and capricious in
issuing the regulations; therefore the district court granted the plaintiffs’
motion for summary and held that the FTC noncompete rules are invalid and may
not be enforced at all on September 4, 2024 or any time thereafter.
II.
States that Have Banned Noncompete Provisions (all Since 2021)
A.
Four States Ban All Noncompete Agreements – In the past three
years, California, Minnesota, North Dakota and Oklahoma have passed broad
legislation banning post-employment noncompete agreements, regardless of salary.
(California has had long-standing legislation banning most noncompete
agreements, but this was expanded by 2023 legislation even to out-of-state
contracts.)
B.
Ten States and D.C. Ban Noncompete Agreements for Non-Highly Paid
Employees – Colorado, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, New Hampshire, Oregon,
Rhode Island, Virginia, Washington and the District of Columbia have all passed
laws in the past three years prohibiting post-employment noncompete agreements
unless the employee earned above a certain threshold. There are also non-compete
rules from a few states prior to 2020, like Massachusetts in 2018 (and
California, as noted above). (Also, in
July 2024, Pennsylvania banned noncompete covenants for health care providers if
it is for more than one year or the health care provider was dismissed by the
employer.)
C.
New York – In New York a bill that would ban almost all noncompete
agreements was passed but was vetoed by Governor Hochul because it was too
broad.
III. Existing
State Law Regarding Noncompete Agreements.
A.
Existing States’ Case-law Would be Applicable if Statutory Ban is
Stayed
– If
the FTC noncompete ban on noncompete clauses is stayed or struck down in court,
or reversed or limited in future legislation or FTC guidance, preexisting state
law and state cases would become operative. In states that have not enacted
recent bans on noncompete provisions (or where such state bans have been struck
down), the existing case law in those states will again be operative.
B.
Enforceability of noncompete
agreements – State laws vary regarding enforceability of noncompete
provisions. Generally, noncompete provisions will be enforced in most states if
the restrictions are reasonable in geographical scope
and reasonable in time period, and they are necessary to protect
legitimate business interests.
For example, in New York, which is fairly liberal in allowing
noncompete restrictions, the noncompete restrictions will be enforceable if: (i)
the time period of restriction is reasonable, (ii) the geographical scope is
reasonable, (iii) the burden on the employee is not unreasonable, (iv) public
policy is not harmed, and (v) the restrictions are necessary for the employer’s
protection (see,
e.g., Service Systems Corp. v. Harris, 341 N.Y.S.2d 702 (4th Dep’t 1973);
Mallory Factor Inc. v. Schwartz, 146 A.D.2d 465, 536 N.Y.S.2d 752 (1st Dep’t
1989); International Paper Co. v. Suwyn, 951 F. Supp. 445 (S.D. N.Y. 1997)).
In New Jersey noncompete restrictions
will be enforced only if reasonable under the circumstances (e.g.,
Community Hosp. Group, Inc. v. More, 183 N.J. 36, 869 A.2d 884 (2005)).
Texas and Florida statutes
restrict noncompete requirements unless they are reasonable restrictions
necessary to protect legitimate business interests (Texas Business &
Commerce Code §15.50; Florida Statutes Annotated §542.335).
California by statute, even prior to the 2023 ban, would generally
void noncompete provisions, providing that “except as provided in this Chapter,
every contract by which anyone is restrained from engaging in a lawful
profession, trade or business of any kind is to that extent void.” (California
Business & Professional Code §16600) The Ninth
Circuit allowed “narrow restraint” enforcement of noncompete provisions that are
very limited, but the California Supreme Court rejected this exception.[2]
The 2023 California legislative ban would, presumably, supersede these prior
rules.
D. Blue-penciling Noncompete Agreements – Where noncompete provisions are overbroad and therefore unenforceable on their terms, many states will “blue pencil” the restrictive covenants to a limited scope for which they would be enforceable. For example, in New York restrictive covenants will be blue penciled.[3] Often, employment agreements will add language to specifically provide for blue penciling.
CHARLES C. SHULMAN, ESQ.
212-380-3834 / 201-357-0577
cshulman@ebeclaw.com
www.ebeclaw.com
[1]
Points to consider re the FTC final rule: (i) employers
should review their noncompete agreements; (ii) even if the FTC rule
would be upheld, for executives in
policy-making positions earning over $151,164, there would be a
grandfather exception from the FTC noncompete ban if the agreement was
entered into prior to Sept. 4, 2024 (and it could be beneficial to
separate the noncompete from other terms of the employment agreement so
that the noncompete can remain unaltered in its grandfathered form; but
it is unclear whether the negotiated non-compete in connection with
a separation would result in loss of grandfathered status for senior
executives); (iii) garden
leave agreements would not be covered by the FTC noncompete ban; and
(iv) the
FTC cannot assess civil penalties for using unfair methods of
competition, but if an entity is ordered to cease and desist from FTC
violations, monetary penalties can sometimes be obtained in court.
[2]
The Ninth Circuit provided a narrow restraint exception in Campbell v.
Trustees of Leland Stanford Jr. University, 817 F.2d 499 (9th Cir. 1987)
and General Commercial Packaging v. TPS Package Engineering, Inc., 126
F. 3d 1131 (9th Cir. 1997). The California Supreme court rejected this
narrow restraint exception in Edwards v. Arthur Andersen LLP, 44 Cal.4th
937, 81 282 (Cal. S. Ct. 2008).
[3]
See, e.g., Deborah Hope Doelker, Inc. v. Kestly, 87 A.D.2d 763, 449
N.Y.S.2d 52 (1st Dep’t 1982); Muller v. N.Y. Heart Ctr. Cardiovascular
Specialists P.C., 238 A.D.2d 776, 656 N.Y.S.2d 464, 465 (3d Dep’t 1997);
BDO Seidman v. Hirshberg, 93 N.Y.2d 382, 690 N.Y.S.2d 854, 712 N.E.2d
1220 (1999).