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A Nail in the Coffin? Another California District Court Finds That Employee Non-Solicitation Agreements Are Void Under California Law

Client Alert | 3 min read | 05.09.19

A federal district court in San Jose recently ruled, in WeRide Corp., et al. v. Kun Huang, et al., that employee non-solicitation agreements are “void” under California Business & Professions Code section 16600 because such agreements are an invalid restraint on employment. This is the second federal court opinion this year that has barred enforcement of a post-employment non-solicitation agreement.

Background

For three decades, the law in California was that employee non-solicitation agreements were not prohibited by section 16600. In November 2018, that law became less certain when a California Court of Appeal decided AMN Healthcare, Inc. v. Aya Healthcare Services, Inc., et al. There, the Court held that former employees who were in the business of recruiting travel nurses could not be prohibited from soliciting nurses working at their former employer because such a prohibition would improperly restrain them from engaging in their chosen profession. Although AMN Healthcare called into question the continuing viability of case law permitting employee non-solicitation agreements, that decision could potentially be distinguished on the fact that travel nurses relied on recruiting to engage in their profession. 

The viability of employee non-solicitation agreements in California was questioned again in January 2019, when another judge from the Northern District of California, sitting in San Jose, decided Barker v. Insight Global, LLC, et al. Judge Freeman found an employee non-solicitation agreement invalid under California law, relying on AMN Healthcare’s analysis of prior California state court decisions. As with AMN Healthcare, the decision in Barker could be distinguished because it also involved the recruiting business.

The WeRide Decision

WeRide is the first decision to state that employee non-solicitation agreements are void in California on facts that do not involve the business of recruiting. Judge Davila granted in part and denied in part WeRide’s motion for a preliminary injunction in a case involving a dispute between two companies involved in the development of autonomous vehicle technology. The district court granted the preliminary injunction based on WeRide’s claims of misappropriation of trade secrets against a competitor and one of its former employees. It declined, however, to issue an injunction on plaintiff’s claim of a breach of an employee non-solicitation agreement prohibiting the same employee from soliciting employees for one year after his employment ended. 

The district court held that the employee non-solicitation agreement is “void under California law” under California Business & Professions Code section 16600 and that such a restraint on employment is “invalid.” Judge Davila recognized that the AMN Healthcare decision was based in part on the fact that it involved the business of recruiting but, citing Barker, stated that those facts do not abrogate or limit AMN Healthcare’s primary holding that employee non-solicitation clauses are invalid in California. Judge Davila cited the Barker court’s reasoning that the “plain language” of section 16600 “prevents a former employer from restraining a former employee from engaging in his or her lawful profession, trade, or business of any kind.”  

Implications for California Employers

We will not have certainty on the validity of employee non-solicitation agreements in California until the California Supreme Court weighs in. Although state courts are not bound by federal district courts on issues of state law, Judge Davila’s decision may influence other California state and federal courts considering similar cases. 

In the wake of these decisions, employers should consider whether employee non-solicitation agreements advance important business interests in their specific circumstances. The lack of clarity concerning validity should inform a company’s risk assessment of continuing to include, or seeking to enforce, such clauses in employment agreements.

Insights

Client Alert | 4 min read | 04.24.24

Muldrow Case Recalibrates Title VII “Significant Harm” Standard

On April 17, 2023, the Supreme Court handed down a unanimous decision in Muldrow v. City of St. Louis, Missouri, No. 22-193, holding that transferees alleging discrimination under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 need only show that a transfer caused harm with respect to an identifiable term or condition of employment.  The Court’s decision upends decades of lower court precedent applying a “significant harm” standard to Title VII discrimination cases.  As a result, plaintiffs claiming discrimination under Title VII will likely more easily advance beyond motions to dismiss or motions for summary judgment. In the wake of the Court’s decisions in Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. President and Fellows of Harvard College (6-2), No. 20-1199, and Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. Univ. of North Carolina (6-3), No. 21-707 (June 29, 2023), Muldrow will also likely continue to reshape how employers conceive of, implement, and communicate workplace Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (“DEI”) efforts.  The decision may be used by future plaintiffs in “reverse” discrimination actions to challenge DEI or affinity programs that provide non-economic benefits to some – but not all – employees.  For example, DEI programs focused on mentoring or access to leadership open only to members of a certain protected class could be challenged under Muldrow by an employee positing that exclusion from such programs clears this new, lower standard of harm. ...