Tax Law

Experts discuss the implications of the failed FTC non-compete Ban

In a recent discussion, James A. Paretti, Jr., and Melissa McDonagh, shareholders of Littler Mendelson P.C., shared their insights on the implications of the court rejecting the Federal Trade Commission (FTC)’s proposed nationwide ban of non-compete agreements. The FTC’s rule that prohibited employers from using noncompete clauses was overturned by a federal court in late August. The judge cited the lack of statutory authority for the agency to implement such a broad measure. The judge also quoted the Supreme Court’s Loper Bright case, which overturned the Chevron doctrine to give more authority to the courts instead of federal agencies regarding rulemaking.

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Fundamental flaws in FTC’s approach

Paretti expressed skepticism regarding the FTC’s rule, suggesting that even without the recent Loper Bright decision, the rule would still be fundamentally flawed, as he believes the FTC exceeded its statutory authority. “The idea that for 95 years this agency had the power to do this and just…never bothered to do so…always seemed to me to be a stretch,” he said.

Impact of Loper Bright ruling

However, Paretti noted that the Loper Bright ruling significantly increased the difficulty for agencies to defend their regulations, necessitating stronger justifications to ensure compliance with statutory language, particularly when facing legal challenges.

McDonagh echoed this sentiment, noting that the Loper Bright ruling provided the courts “much more latitude”

in evaluating the validity of agency regulations. “The agency really has a much higher burden to show that…their reading is a justified one,” she said.

Inconsistencies in FTC’s justifications

McDonagh also agreed regarding the arbitrary nature of the FTC’s justifications for the rule by pointing out the agency’s inconsistent treatment of senior executives. She said that the FTC had initially sought to exclude senior executives, but then explained they would be subject to a non-compete clause going forward. “It seemed like they had the outcome they wanted first, and then they went backwards and then sought to justify it however they could.”

Future implications for regulatory agencies

McDonagh believes that in light of the overturning of the Chevron doctrine, regulatory agencies will face increased pressure to provide robust evidence and sound reasoning when creating new rules and to work more diligently to justify their regulations, ensuring that they are well-supported by facts and logic before issuing them.

To that point, Paretti added that he already observed references to Loper Bright in cases that Littler is handling, including a challenge to the white-collar overtime rule, and believes there will be further challenges to other labor and employment rules because the ruling provided the courts “much more latitude.”

Continued importance of non-competes

Despite the ruling on the FTC’s ban on non-competes, McDonagh emphasized the importance of employers being thoughtful and selective when using such agreements or other restrictive covenants. “It’s not to limit what we call ordinary competition,” she began, “

t’s really to prohibit an employee or company from engaging in what we call unfair competition, and that’s always the goal, and how employers with whom we work are using their non-competes.”[i]Paretti also noted that non-compete clause agreements have “always been a fairly regulated field” and that just because the attempt by the FTC to ban these arrangements was “struck down doesn’t change the fact that employers need to…ask themselves” the purpose of the non-compete, if a court will uphold it, or if it is within the state law. “I don’t know that this gives employers much reason to shift horses at this point,” he added.

State and local regulations

Regarding other employment-related topics such as minimum wage and paid leave, states and localities have taken action to implement their own rules in the absence of federal action. Many states and localities have minimum wages, and several states and localities have laws on paid leave. However, neither Paretti nor McDonagh see this trend following with states and localities regarding banning non-compete agreements.

“I think this is something that state legislatures have been looking at irrespective of what the FTC is doing,” Paretti said. He explained that “states have not been shy about moving ahead here in terms of legislating” and “state courts have not been shy about drawing means and bounds around these things.”

McDonagh added that “there’s four states currently that ban non-competes, and three of those states – California, North Dakota, and Oklahoma – have had a ban in place for some time.” The only recent ban on non-competes was Minnesota in 2023. She also noted that most state laws banning non-competes “are targeted and focus on an earnings threshold.”

Global perspective on non-competes

Something of interest that McDonagh did observe regarding the FTC’s recent attempt to ban non-competes is that employers are focusing more on these agreements at a global level. “I think that when our country began to envision a national law, it did spark comparisons with other countries,” she said. “Is there a global approach that could be accomplished?”

McDonagh admitted the difficulty in a worldwide non-compete agreement “because there’s a big range of laws across the world” but added that she thinks a lot of Littler’s clients “who operate globally are starting to think about a uniform, global approach.”

To that end, McDonagh explained that employers must navigate a complex landscape of non-compete rules that vary by state and country when an employee from the United States relocates to another country. The enforceability and validity of non-compete agreements depends on both the state laws in which the employee was born and the regulations of the country where they moved. The employee’s duration of stay abroad can also affect whether U.S. employment laws still apply.

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