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Video – Attorney Michael Campbell Discusses Whether Covenants Not To Compete Are Valid. Are They Worth The Effort?

Video – Attorney Michael Campbell Discusses Whether Covenants Not To Compete Are Valid. Are They Worth The Effort?

BailBonds.Media wants the public to have answers to the myriad of questions that surround the civil legal system and your legal rights. We bring those answers to you in the form of video interviews by Attorneys.Media of legal experts in your area and across the country.

Ray Hrdlicka – Host – Attorneys.Media “Obviously, one of the three business people leaving…that brings us into this next question about covenants not to compete. Because that person leaves…do they take a third of their business, a third of the business with them? Do they…? How does that work? And obviously, the follow up question, are covenants not to compete worth the paper they are written on?”

Michael Campbell – Business Dispute Attorney – Pierce County, WA

“Much of the time, no they’re not, but sometimes they are. For example, in California, covenants not to compete, unless they’re based on something more than just an employer-employee relationship, that is that the person was a partner or something of that sort, then it’s different. But otherwise, just on a pure employer-employee relationship, they are considered violations of the 13th amendment to the constitution in the United States, which prohibits slavery.”

Ray Hrdlicka – Host – Attorneys.Media

“I see.”

Michael Campbell – Business Dispute Attorney – Pierce County, WA

“They are absolutely not favored. There aren’t too many States that follow that approach, the same California approach. I did find a case or two in Montana that seem to do that. But in Washington, covenants not to compete are legal, even between employers and employees. However, they need to be very narrowly written and narrowly construed.

So, for example, if they’re just an employee, and it goes for, the covenant goes for longer than a year, or the period not to compete goes for longer than a year, it’s probably not going to be enforced. Also, if it’s too broad, if it’s too broad in area, because you only cover a, say, the city of Tacoma, and it prohibits you from ever going into this business anywhere in the world, that’s way too broad. And that will not be enforced or will be modified to include just Tacoma.

But as a business, you have to be careful in drawing up covenants not to compete, or any other clause in your contracts, that might be considered to be heavy-handed. Because if the court wants to, they can say, this thing was written unfairly, and it had a very unfortunate result, and it was an attempt to be way too heavy handed with the employee. And therefore, we’re not going to enforce it at all. And therefore, they’re not just going to restrict the scope to just Tacoma, for example. They’re just going to say, it’s gone, it’s done. You didn’t do it right and we’re just not going to enforce it, period. And so, you need to be careful as a business.”

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  • Lawyer in various fields and locations, including contracts, business, litigation, research and writing
  • Served as the President and General Manager of Promed Agency, a healthcare staffing company
  • Founded Northwest Law Publishing Co. and published the official Oregon Land Use Board of Appeals Reports
  • Negotiated exclusive marketing license for ORLAW, a CD-based Oregon law product, and merged publishing and real estate finance businesses in Oregon
  • Organized Natural Law Party and Oregon Reform Party in Oregon politics
  • Increased sales of Lexis, a computer-assisted legal research tool, to state and local government agencies and law firms in Washington
  • Developed Amity Testing Institute, a graduate test preparation program in southern California

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