LAKE LAND EMP. GROUP OF AKRON, LLC. V. COLUMBER.
804 N.E.2d 27 (Ohio 2004)
NATURE OF THE CASE: The Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court's summary judgment
grant to Columber (D), former employee after Lake Land (P), former employer filed a
complaint asserting that D had breached a noncompetition agreement the parties had executed.
The appellate court certified a question to the state supreme court.
FACTS: D worked for P and one day quit and started his own competing company. While
working at P, D signed a noncompete agreement which provided that for a period of three
years after his termination of employment D would not engage in any business within a
50-mile radius of Akron, Ohio, that competed with the business of D. P sued D claiming a
breach of the agreement. Lake D's employment with P terminated in 2001. D admitted that he
had been employed by P from 1988 until 2001 and that he had signed the noncompetition
agreement some three years after he started working for P and that following his discharge
from P he had formed a corporation that is engaged in a business similar to that of P. D
pled lack of consideration in his answer. D moved for summary judgment, claiming that the
noncompetition agreement was unenforceable. He asserted that the agreement was not supported
by consideration and that the restrictions in the agreement were overly restrictive and
imposed an undue hardship on him. D could not remember whether he had been told that his
continued employment was dependent upon execution of the agreement or whether he had posed
questions about the restrictions it contained. After the agreement was signed the at-will
relationship of the parties continued for ten years thereafter. The trial court granted
summary judgment in D's favor. Since D had 'no change in his employment status in connection
with the signing of the noncompetition agreement,' there was no consideration to support the
agreement. The court of appeals affirmed. It certified a conflict, however, between its
decision and the judgments of other courts. The certified issue is 'Is subsequent employment
alone sufficient consideration to support a covenant-not-to-compete agreement with an
at-will employee entered into after employment has already begun?'
ISSUE:
RULE OF LAW:
HOLDING AND DECISION:
LEGAL ANALYSIS:
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