It's not exactly news that it helps to have a lot of money when going to court. So when a big company sues another it can be thought of as a fair fight in a way that a big company suing a 30-year-old assistant account manager just can't.
That uneven playing field has come to really aggravate Minneapolis attorney Chris Penwell, who once gave legal advice almost exclusively to employers but more recently has tried to help workers — and almost always tells them they have no good legal options if an old employer tries to stop them from working for a competitor.
The noncompete agreements at the heart of these disputes are controversial enough that our state's attorney general is just one of many political leaders calling for scrapping or scaling them back. But Penwell isn't on board with that.
"I don't think it's tipped in the employer's favor under the law," said Penwell, a shareholder with the Minneapolis firm Siegel Brill. "It's simply that employees don't have the wherewithal to get into court."
It's a subtle and important point he's making. The law is fine. It's getting the law applied that's so challenging for workers.
Although sometimes called different things, a noncompete agreement is essentially a contract under which an employee agrees not to compete with the old employer for period of time and maybe in a geographic area after leaving the job. Practices vary around the country, and here they've been shaped by many years of case law, not the Legislature. Minneapolis business lawyer Kim Lowe of the firm Avisen Legal called Minnesota's a middle-of-the-road approach, unlike states such as California where the law is solidly behind the job hoppers.
One thing Minnesota workers have going for them: They have to be paid for agreeing to a noncompete, although parties have argued in court over what's real compensation. They also have had the courts looking out for them if employers have given them restrictions that are too broad, like a noncompete that lasts five years rather than the far more customary one or two years.
Meanwhile, the real cause for heartburn for most business owners (based on personal experience) is employees walking out and trying to take customers with them. This is particularly true for companies that only sell to other businesses, where the whole market might be just a handful of profitable customers.