1

I'm a resident of a south american country, working remotely for an US company, which I'm going to call "the client".

I've signed a contract with a firm through which I work for "the client". Let's call this company "the contractor" company.

Both companies are US based.

On my contract there's a non compete clause (I'm translating this, since the original is not in English. Please ask for further clarification if the precise wording matters):

During the validity of the present agreement and during the period of the following 24 months to its termination under any circumstance, the "provider" (me) can't directly or indirectly solicit, interfere, or try to lure, alone or in a partnership or any other company or organization any "client" from company X with which he's been involved through any service lent through this agreement. If any of these items is not met, the "provider" has to pay company X 20k USD

Now, the situation is that "the client" has offered me a full time position in an office in Ireland. If I decide to take that offer, would that incur in a breach of that term?

Is this something that they can enforce on a different country?

The amount is not something that "the client" wouldn't want to pay for the transfer, but it would be nice to avoid having any trouble.

1 Answer 1

1

If you did not "directly or indirectly solicit, interfere, or try to lure, alone or in a partnership or any other company or organization" the job then you are not in breach. This means that you must have never suggested to the client in any way that you would be open to working for them directly - that is, their job offer to you is entirely on their own initiative.

Yes, these can be enforced in different countries.

The best option is to point this clause out to the client and have them approach the contractor and agree on a transfer fee - one month's salary is pretty typical for these types of things but if the client is a good client and you have been working for several months the contractor may waive this entirely.

2
  • Alright, I'll let them handle this, good idea. Thanks! Commented Feb 18, 2019 at 3:57
  • Looks like the client wants to avoid confrontation with my client, so I might end up passing up on this one sadly Commented Feb 27, 2019 at 2:50

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .