Miller v. Honkamp Krueger Financial Services, Inc., No. 20-3061 (8th Cir. 2021)
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After plaintiff left her employment at HKFS, she filed suit seeking a declaratory judgment that the restrictive covenants in her various employment contracts were unenforceable. HFKS brought counterclaims against plaintiff and a third-party complaint against plaintiff's new employer, Mariner.
The Eighth Circuit reversed the district court's order preliminarily enjoining plaintiff from breaching the non-compete and nonsolicitation provisions in her employment contracts. The court agreed with plaintiff and Mariner that the non-compete provision did not survive her termination of the Employment Agreement. Because HKFS is not likely to prevail on the merits of its breach of contract claim with respect to the non-compete provision, the district court erred in enjoining plaintiff from violating that provision. In regard to the non-solicitation provision in plaintiff's contract, the court concluded that South Dakota law applies under the agreement's choice-of-law provision, and such provisions cannot prevent a former employee from accepting unsolicited business. Therefore, the non-solicitation agreement, in part, violates South Dakota law and public policy and it is at least in part unenforceable. The court remanded for further proceedings.
Court Description: [Erickson, Author, with Shepherd and Kobes, Circuit Judges] Civil case - Contracts. The district court erred in granting defendant's motion for a preliminary injunction enforcing the non-competition provisions in plaintiff's employment contract; when plaintiff terminated the parties' Employment Agreement, the non-competition provision became inoperable; as defendant is unlikely to prevail on the merits of its breach of contract claims with respect to the non-competition provision, the district court erred in enjoining plaintiff from violating that provision; with respect to the non-solicitation provision in plaintiff's contract, South Dakota law applies under the agreement's choice-of-law provision, and South Dakota prohibits such provisions in so far as they prevent a former employee from accepting unsolicited business; the district court erred in entering an injunction enforcing the provision.
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