Nike,
Inc. v. Eugene McCarthy, 379
F.3d 576 (9th Cir. 2004)
This recent Ninth Circuit case provides an interesting analysis of the circumstances under which a court will restrain a former employee from accepting employment with a competitor.
In this case, the Ninth Circuit
had to determine the validity of a non-compete agreement under
The Ninth Circuit affirmed the
district court’s preliminary injunction enforcing the agreement.
Based on the circumstances surrounding McCarthy’s promotion by Nike and
the execution of the non-compete agreement, the Ninth Circuit held that the
agreement met the statutory requirements to be enforceable. The
Ninth Circuit further held that Nike has a legitimate interest in enforcing the
agreement, because there is substantial risk that McCarthy in shaping Reebok’s
product allocation, sales and pricing strategies, could enable Reebok to divert
a significant amount of Nike’s footwear sales given the highly confidential
information McCarthy acquired at Nike. Although
the Ninth Circuit’s decision involves extensive analysis of the
In this case, as Brand
The Ninth Circuit rejected
McCarthy’s argument that Nike must show actual use or potential
disclosure of confidential information before a non-compete agreement can be
enforced. Rather, “[a]n employee’s knowledge of confidential
information is sufficient to justify enforcement of the non-compete if there is
a substantial risk that the employee will be able to divert all or part of the
employer’s business given his knowledge.” The court held that, given
the confidential information McCarthy acquired at Nike, and his new position
with Reebok, “there was a substantial risk that Reebok would be able to divert
a significant part of Nike’s business.”
The Ninth Circuit also rejected McCarthy’s contention that the balance of harm does not favor Nike because the only harm that Nike would have suffered is “fair competition.” The court held that Nike has shown “potential harm from unfair competition due to McCarthy’s knowledge of confidential information peculiar to Nike’s products.” Meanwhile, there were many factors mitigating any potential harm to McCarthy from the preliminary injunction: Under the non-compete, Nike had to pay McCarthy his full salary and benefits during the one-year restricted period, and Reebok agreed to keep his job offer open during the one year period. Though McCarthy testified that he would suffer by sitting out a year because of the fast-moving nature of the industry, the court concluded that “the potential disruption to Nike’s sales and products outweighs any harm that the injunction would cause McCarthy in the intermediate or long term.”