A restrictive covenant _ whether called a covenant not to compete or an non- piracy agreement _ is unenforceable if, by its terms, the employee is precluded from pursuing his occupation and thus prevented from supporting himself and his family, or if the restriction imposes an undue hardship on the employee.
The majority and the circuit court are in error in concluding that the covenant was narrowly limited in scope, . . . and most importantly, the provision had a very limited effect on the employees who were allowed to work in the insurance industry immediately and without delay. (Circuit court order.)
By characterizing the restrictive covenant as a non-piracy agreement, the majority suggests that the employment contract is substantially less restrictive than a non- compete agreement on the employee and on the economic forces of the marketplace. However, a non-piracy agreement may be very restrictive in its scope and results. That is the case here.
The record showed that Acordia has taken over every major local competitor. Acordia insurance salesmen stated in depositions that all prospects in the [West Virginia] market were already spoken for by other Acordia salesman [sic].
In this climate, the petitioners were restricted from contacting any current clients of Acordia, any former clients of Acordia, and any prospective clients that Acordia had contacted during the two-year period following the petitioners' termination of employment.
Contrary to the majority's assertion that non-piracy agreements are inherently less restrictive than non-compete agreements on free market forces, it seems that Acordia is, with a non-piracy agreement, effectively preventing all competition from former employees. This result the law will not permit.
For these
reasons, I respectfully dissent.