King v. Head Start Family Hair Salons, Inc.

886 So. 2d 769, 20 I.E.R. Cas. (BNA) 1436, 2004 Ala. LEXIS 6, 2004 WL 68617
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 16, 2004
Docket1021814
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 886 So. 2d 769 (King v. Head Start Family Hair Salons, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
King v. Head Start Family Hair Salons, Inc., 886 So. 2d 769, 20 I.E.R. Cas. (BNA) 1436, 2004 Ala. LEXIS 6, 2004 WL 68617 (Ala. 2004).

Opinion

Kathy King appeals from the trial court's preliminary injunction enforcing a noncompetition agreement between King and Head Start Family Hair Salons, Inc. ("Head Start"). We reverse and remand.

King has worked as a hair stylist for over 25 years. She is a single mother and provides financial support for her daughter, who is in college. Hair styling is King's only vocation. During the 25 years she has been a hair stylist, King has been employed by several different entities rendering hair-care services. The hair-care services offered by Head Start include haircuts, hair coloring, and permanents; it offers those services for both men and women. Head Start had 30 locations *Page 770 throughout Jefferson and Shelby counties.1 King was employed by Head Start for approximately 16 years; for most of that time she performed duties as a stylist and, from October 1995 to September 1996, she also managed one of the company's facilities in Shelby County.

In early March 2003, King left her employment with Head Start and began working for another hair-care entity, Sports Clips, as a manager at its Pelham location. The only hair-care service Sports Clips offers is haircuts, and its primary customers are men and boys. Sports Clips is located in the same shopping center as is the Head Start facility at which King had been employed at the time of her resignation. King apparently contacted several of her former coworkers at Head Start in an effort to get them to leave Head Start and work for Sports Clips. After King had been working at Sports Clips for several weeks, she received a letter from counsel for Head Start. The letter informed her that by working as a manager for Sports Clips and by attempting to recruit Head Start employees to work at Sports Clips, she was violating the "Employee Non-Disclosure and Non-Competition Agreement" ("the noncompetition agreement") she had signed in 1995 while she was employed as a manager of one of Head Start's facilities.

The noncompetition agreement prohibited King from working at a competing business within a two-mile radius of any Head Start facility for a period of 12 months after she left the employ of Head Start and prohibited her from recruiting Head Start employees. King continued her employment with Sports Clips after she received Head Start's letter, and Head Start sued King. Head Start filed a motion for a preliminary injunction, seeking to enforce the noncompetition agreement. Head Start also filed an injunction bond in the amount of $2,000.

At the hearing on the preliminary injunction, King testified that she left Head Start to work as a manager for Sports Clips, but she assumed that the noncompetition agreement was invalid because she believed that her employment file, which contained the noncompetition agreement, had been lost or destroyed. Several of Head Start's current employees testified that King had contacted them about leaving their jobs at Head Start to go to work for Sports Clips. The trial court found that King was violating the noncompetition agreement and entered an injunction prohibiting her from working in the hair-care industry within a two-mile radius of a Head Start facility for a period of 12 months after her employment at Head Start had been terminated.

King argues on appeal that Head Start did not meet its burden of proving that the noncompetition agreement is valid and enforceable. Section 8-1-1, Ala. Code 1975, provides that contracts restraining business are void, with certain exceptions. The relevant exception here is set forth in § 8-1-1(b):

"[O]ne who is employed as an agent, servant or employee may agree with his employer to refrain from carrying on or engaging in a similar business and from soliciting old customers of such employer within a specified county, city, or part *Page 771 thereof so long as the . . . employer carries on a like business therein."

In construing § 8.1.1, this Court has stated that restraints on trade are disfavored; however, the terms of the noncompetition agreement will be enforced if:

"(1) the employer has a protectable interest;

"(2) the restriction is reasonably related to that interest;

"(3) the restriction is reasonable in time and place;

"(4) the restriction imposes no undue hardship."

DeVoe v. Cheatham, 413 So.2d 1141, 1142 (Ala. 1982). King contends that Head Start did not satisfy each of the four elements.

King's most persuasive argument is that the geographic restriction contained in the noncompetition agreement imposes an undue hardship on her. King argues that the restriction — that she may not be employed by a competing business within a two-mile radius of any Head Start facility — may appear insignificant, but under the circumstances here presented, the restriction is unduly burdensome. Specifically, King states that she is 40 years old, that she has been in the hair-care industry for 25 years, and that it is the only industry in which she is skilled and the only industry in which she can find employment. She further states that, as the trial court found, Head Start has 30 locations throughout the Jefferson County and Shelby County area, making it virtually impossible for her to find employment in the hair-care industry at a facility that does not violate the terms of the noncompetition agreement. According to King, the geographic restriction constitutes a blanket prohibition on practicing her trade. King argues that she will be unable to support herself and her daughter if the geographic restriction is upheld.

King compares her situation to the situation of the employee inSheffield v. Stoudenmire, 553 So.2d 125, 126-27 (Ala. 1989), in which this Court held that a noncompetition agreement restricting an employee from competing within a 50-mile radius of his former employer posed an undue hardship on the employee because he was "50 years old, married, and possesse[d] significant financial obligations." Head Start's response to King's argument is that no undue hardship is imposed because the geographic restriction in the noncompetition agreement here "is only a two (2) mile restriction."

King's circumstances are unique. When she signed the noncompetition agreement, there were approximately 15 Head Start facilities located throughout Jefferson and Shelby Counties. Now there are approximately 30 facilities located throughout the area, dramatically increasing King's difficulties in finding employment in the hair-care industry that does not violate the noncompetition agreement. It cannot reasonably be argued that King, at the age of 40 and having spent more than half of her life as a hair stylist, can learn a new job skill that would allow her to be gainfully employed and meet her needs and the needs of her daughter.

In Calhoun v. Brendle, 502 So.2d 689 (Ala. 1986), this Court declined to uphold a noncompetition agreement that restricted the employee from servicing fire-extinguishing equipment within a 100-mile radius of the business location of his former employer. Evidence was presented showing that the employee was trained and educated only in the field of fire-equipment maintenance. The employee also was supporting his wife and an infant child. Under those circumstances, this Court held that enforcement of the noncompetition agreement imposed an undue hardship on the employee because the *Page 772

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
886 So. 2d 769, 20 I.E.R. Cas. (BNA) 1436, 2004 Ala. LEXIS 6, 2004 WL 68617, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/king-v-head-start-family-hair-salons-inc-ala-2004.