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STATCO WIRELESS, LLC v. SOUTHWESTERN BELL WIRELESS, LLC 284 Cite as 80 Ark. App. 284 (2003) [80 STATCO WIRELESS, LLC v. SOUTHWESTERN BELL WIRELESS, LLC

CA 02-391 95 S.W.3d 13 Court of Appeals of Arkansas Divisions I and II Opinion delivered January 15, 2003

1. COVENANTSCOVENANTS NOT TO COMPETEBURDEN OF PROOF. Covenants not to compete are not favored by the law, nevertheless, they have been enforced in some instances; the bur­den is on the party challenging the covenant to show that it is unreasonable. 2. COVENANTSCOVENANTS NOT TO COMPETESTANDARD OF REVIEW. Covenants not to compete are reviewed on a case-by-case basis; the appellate court will not reverse a trial court's findings regarding a covenant not to compete unless the findings are clearly erroneous; a finding is clearly erroneous when, although there is evidence to support it, the appellate court is left, upon viewing the entire evidence, with the definite and firm conviction that a mis­take has been made.

I The trial court could have revoked appellant's probation and imposed a sentence. See, e.g., Pierce v. State, 79 Ark. App. 263, 86 S.W.3d 1 (2002). However, that was not the action taken here.

STATCO WIRELESS, LLC v. SOUTHWESTERN BELL WIRELESS, LLC ARK. APP.] Cite as 80 Ark. App. 284 (2603) 285 3. COVENANTS COVENANTS NOT TO COMPETE REQUIRE-MENTS FOP- ENFORCEMENT. For a covenant not to compete to be enforced, three requirements must be met: (1) the covenantee must have a valid interest to protect; (2) the geographical restriction must not be overly broad; (3) a reasonable time limit must be

imposed.

4. COVENANTS COVENANT NOT TO COMPETE GROWING OUT OF EMPLOYMENT OR OTHER ASSOCIATIONAL RELATIONSHIP WHEN INTEREST FOUND SUFFICIENT TO WARRANT ENFORCE-MENT. Where a covenant not to compete grows out of an employment or other associational relationship, the courts have found an interest sufficient to warrant enforcement of the covenant only in those cases where the covenantee provided special training or made available trade secrets, confidential business information or customer lists, and then only if it is found that the associate was able to use the information he obtained to gain an unfair competitive advantage.

5. WITNESSES CONFLICTS IN TESTIMONY RESOLVED BY TRIAL COURT. Conflicts in testimony are to be resolved by the trial court, and the appellate court will defer to that court's superior position to judge and determine credibility of witnesses.

6. COVENANTS COVENANT NOT TO COMPETE CUSTOMER LISTS CONSTITUTE VALUABLE ASSET. Customer lists have been looked upon by the courts as a most valuable asset that is especially worthy of protection, particularly in a situation, such as the one here, where an agent is servicing customers away from the princi-pal's place of business and builds up personal relationships that bind the customer to him instead of the principal.

7. CONTRACTS APPELLANT CONTRACTED AS EXCLUSIVE AUTHORIZED AGENT APPELLEE HAD VITAL INTEREST IN PRO-TECTING APPELLANT'S CUSTOMER LIST. The trial court's find­ing that appellee had a vital interest in proteciing confidential information contained in its customer lists, to which appellant had access during its agency, was not clearly erroneous; customer lists provided to appellant by appellee contained not only names of thousands of customers, but valuable information regarding those customers, including the customer's contract expiration date, which information would have allowed a competitor or a former agent to contact the customer at a time when the customer was vulnerable to changing his service provider.

8. CONTRACTS APPELLANT CONTRACTED AS EXCLUSIVE AUTHORIZED AGENT APPELLEE HAD PROTECTIBLE INTEREST

STATCO WIRELESS, LLC v. SOUTHWESTERN BELL WIRELESS, LLC 286 Cite as 80 Ark. App. 284 (2003) [80 IN INFORMATION CONTAINED IN AGENT COMPENSATION PLANS. Where agent compensation plans detailed the particular manner of an agent's compensation for various sales, witnesses testified that companies in the cellular industry do not usually know how their competitors' agents are compensated, and that a competitor who viewed appellee's agent compensation plans could have gained considerable insight into its pricing strategies and could discern what products and services were being emphasized, appellee had a protectible interest in the information contained in its agent com­pensation plans

9. CONTRACTS APPELLANT CONTRACTED AS EXCLUSIVE AUTHORIZED AGENT APPELLEE HAD PROTECTIBLE INTEREST IN SOME BID PROPOSALS. Appellee had a protectible interest in information on some bid proposals, which were written proposals formulated when appellant would compete with other cellular radio service providers for corporate customers, because competi­tors could learn how low appellee could go on its rates and possibly discern appellee's average revenue per unit figure; further, bid pro­posals could give a competitor insight into the manner that the company dealt with corporate customers.

10. COVENANTS COVENANT NOT TO COMPETE MINOR LAPSES IN ENFORCEMENT DID NOT PRECLUDE ASSERTION OF PRO-TECTIBLE INTEREST. Where agents were required to sign confi­dentiality agreements and abide by a code of conduct, appellee was very careful about who it provided with customer lists, and appellee had a policy to retrieve confidential information from terminated agents, the fact that certain agents were able to sell for a competitor did not present the same kind of risk to appellee as the defection of a major agent like appellant; the trial court's finding that appellee presented credible evidence that it took steps to protect the secrecy of information contained in customer lists and other items was not clearly erroneous.

11. COVENANTS ENFORCEMENT OF COVENANT NOT TO COMPETE ABILITY TO USE CONFIDENTIAL INFORMATION TO UNFAIR ADVANTAGE. The fact that it would have been possible for an agent to sell for a competitor without disclosing confidential infor­mation does not necessarily prevent enforcement of the covenant; enforcement of the covenant was appropriate if appellant would have been able to use confidential information to gain an unfair competitive advantage; the very nature of the information at issue, especially customer lists, was such that a former agent would be able to use it to draw customers away from appellee or assist a corn-

STATCO WIRELESS, LLC v. SOUTHWESTERN BELL WIRELESS, LLC

ARK. APP.] Cite as 80 Ark. App. 284 (2003) 287 petitor in a manner that would be impossible had the agent not had access to the confidential information.

12. COVENANTS - COVENANT NOT TO COMPETE - APPELLEE HAD PROTECTIBLE INTEREST SUFFICIENT TO WARRANT ENFORCE-MENT. - Appellee had a vital interest in protecting confidential information contained in its customer lists, agent compensation

plans, and written bid proposals sufficient to warrant enforcement of the covenant not to compete; the three requirements for enforcement of a covenant not to compete were satisfied.

13. COVENANTS - COVENANTS NOT TO COMPETE - MUST PRO-HIBIT MORE THAN ORDINARY COMPETITION. - Restraints imposed by a covenant not to compete must not be broader than necessary to protect the covenantee's interests; the law will not enforce a contract that merely prohibits ordinary competition; if a covenant prohibits the covenantor from engaging in activities that are unnecessary to protect the promise, the covenant is unreasonable.

14. COVENANTS - COVENANTS NOT TO COMPETE - REASONABLE-NESS OF RESTRAINT. - The extent of restraint in a covenant is critical in determining its reasonableness; the test to be employed is

whether the restraint is reasonable as between the parties and not injurious to the public by reason of its effect upon-trade; whether or not the restraint is reasonable is to be determined by considering whether it is such as to only afford a fair protection to the interest of the party in whose favor it is given and not so large as to inter­fere with the interests of the public.

15. COVENANTS - COVENANT NOT TO COMPETE - LEGITIMATE MEANS OF KEEPING FORMER EMPLOYEE FROM APPROPRIATING ITS CUSTOMERS. - Covenants not to compete are a legitimate means of protecting a principal's desire that a former employee not

appropriate its customers.

16. COVENANTS - COVENANT NOT TO COMPETE - COVENANT NOT OVERLY BROAD. - Where the particular restraints of the covenant objected to by appellant reasonably served to protect the principal's desire that a former employee not appropriate its cus­tomers and prevented competitors from acquiring confidential information,,the terms of the covenant were not found to be overly broad; the fact that the covenant's restraints applied for only a one-year period buttressed the view that the covenant was not unrea­sonable in its scope; therefore, the trial court's finding that the cov­enant was reasonably drawn was affirmed.

STATCO WIRELESS, LLC v. SOUTHWESTERN BELL WIRELESS, LLC 288 Cite as 80 Ark. App. 284 (2003) [80 17. APPEAL & ERROR MATTER PLED BUT NOT BROUGHT TO TRIAL JUDGE'S ATTENTION MATTER NOT ADDRESSED. Even if a matter is pled, the appellate court will not address it if it was not brought to the trial judge's attention for a ruling.

18. COVENANTS COVENANT NOT TO COMPETE CONSIDERA-TION ARGUMENT WITHOUT MERIT. Where the trial judge made no ruling regarding consideration, there was consideration for the covenant other than the use of the appellee's marks, and appellee did not begin using the Cingular name in public until after appellant notified appellee that it would begin selling competitive products, appellant's argument that the right to use appellee's marks was consideration for signing the covenant not to compete and that this consideration failed when appellee started marketing its prod­uct under the name Cingular was without merit.

19. BUSINESS & COMMERCIAL LAW TRADE SECRET DEFINED. A trade secret is information, including a formula, pattern, compi-lation, program, device, method, technique, or process that derives independent economic value, actual or potential, from not being generally known to, and not being readily ascertainable by, other persons who can obtain economic value from its disclosure or use and is the subject of efforts that are reasonable under the circum­stances to maintain its secrecy [Ark. Code Ann. § 4-75-601(4) (Repl. 2001)].

20. BUSINESS & COMMERCIAL LAW TRADE SECRET SIX FACTOR ANALYSIS. Arkansas courts rely on six factors to determine whether something is a trade secret: (1) the extent to which the information is known outside the business; (2) the extent to which the information is known by employees and others involved in the business; (3) the extent of measures taken by plaintiff to guard the secrecy of the information; (4) the value of the information to plaintiff and its competitors; (5) the amount of effort or money expended by plaintiff in developing the information; and (6) the ease or difficulty with which the information could properly be acquired by others; to be entitled to injunctive relief, actual or threatened misappropriation must be shown.

21. BUSINESS & COMMERCIAL LAW TRADE SECRETS MISAPPRO-PRIATION DEFINED. Misappropriation means: (A) acquisition of a trade secret of another person who knows or has reason to know that the trade secret was acquired by improper means; or (B) disclo­sure or use of a trade secret of another without express or implied consent by a person who: (i) used improper means to acquire knowledge of the trade secret; or (ii) at the time of disclosure or

STATCO WIRELESS, LLC v. SOUTHWESTERN BELL WIRELESS, LLC

ARK. APP.] Cite as 80 Ark. App. 284 (2003) 289 use, knew or had reason to know that his knowledge of the trade secret was: (a) derived from or through a person who had utilized improper means to acquire it; (b) acquired it under circumstances giving rise to a duty to maintain secrecy or limit its use; or (c) derived from or through a person who owed a duty to the person seeking relief to maintain secrecy or limit its use; or (iii) before a material change of his position, knew or had reason to know that it was a trade secret and that knowledge of it had been acquired by accident or mistake [Ark. Code Ann. § 4-75-601(2) (Repl. 2001)]. 22. BUSINESS & COMMERCIAL LAW TRADE SECRETS INSUFFI-CIENT EVIDENCE OF INEVITABLE MISAPPROPRIATION. There was insufficient evidence to support a finding of inevitable misap­propriation where appellant had given no indication that it would disclose trade secrets, nor was there any evidence that it must nec­essarily do so to conduct its business.

Appeal from Pulaski Circuit COurt, Sixteenth Division; Ellen Brantley, Judge; affirmed in part as modified; reversed in part.

Friday, Eldredge & Clark, by: Harry A. Light and Ellen M. Owens, for aiipellant.

Kaplan, Brewer, Maxey & Haralson, P.A., by: Philip E. Kaplan and Joann C. Maxey, for appellee.

OHN B. ROBBINS, Judge. In this appeal, we are asked to J review an order of the Pulaski County Circuit Court enjoining appellant from violating the terms of a covenant not to compete and from misappropriating trade secrets. We affirm, with slight modification, that part of the order pertaining to the cove­nant not to compete, and we reverse that part of the order pertain­ing to trade secrets.

Appellee Southwestern Bell Wireless (SWBW) is in the busi­ness of selling cellular phone service, sometimes referred to as cel­lular radio service (CRS) or commercial mobile radio service (CMRS). Its service is marketed through three primary channels: company stores, national retailers (such as Best Buy), and exclusive authorized agents. In 1997 and 1998, appellant Statco became an authorized SWBW agent for the Little Rock and Hot Springs areas, selling and promoting SWBW services exclusively in return

STATCO WIRELESS, LLC v. SOUTHWESTERN BELL WIR_ELESS, LLC 290 Cite as 80 Ark. App. 284 (2003) [80 for commissions paid by SWBW. The agency agreements exe­cuted by the parties contained a covenant not to compete in which Statco essentially promised that, for one year following ter­mination of the agreements, it would not induce customers to choose the services of a SWBW competitor, nor otherwise sell or promote services offered by SWBW's competitors.

Between 1997 and 2000, Statco became one of SWBW's most successful agents, enrolling thousands of subscribers. How-ever, disagreements arose between the two companies over com-pensation, and Statco notified SWBW that, beginning March 1, 2001, its stores would become "multi-line" stores, offering the services of SWBW competitors. SWBW immediately sought an injunction to enjoin Statco from misappropriating trade secrets and from violating the contractual covenant not to compete. A trial was held, and after an extensive hearing involving thirteen witnesses and seventy-one exhibits, the circuit judge agreed that Statco's decision to market the services of competing carriers vio­lated the covenant not to compete and violated the Arkansas Theft of Trade Secrets Act. The judge entered a twenty-eight-page let-ter-ruling containing her findings and entered the following order:

Statco is permanently enjoined from violating the terms of the noncompete provisions in its agency agreements, including: (1) Entering into any relationship with a SWBW competi­tor to market, sell, or distribute CMRS for a period of one year from March 1, 2001; (2) Marketing, selling, or distributing CMRS for a SWBW competitor for a period of one year from March 1, 2001; (3) In any manner attempting to contact a SWBW CMRS customer with the intent or purpose of inducing or encour­

aging that customer to change service from SWBW to a SWBW competitor; (4) Any further misappropriation of SWBW's trade secrets. Statco filed a timely notice of appeal from that order, and its first argument on appeal is that the trial judge erred in ruling that the covenant not to compete had been violated.

STATCO WIRELESS, LLC v. SOUTHWESTERN BELL WIRELESS, LLC

ARK. APP.] Cite as 80 Ark. App. 284 (2003) 291 [1, 2] Covenants not to compete are not favored by the law. Federated Mut. Ins. Co. v. Bennett, 36 Ark. App. 99, 818 S.W.2d 596 (1991). Nevertheless, they have been enforced in some instances. See Dawson v. Temps Plus, Inc., 337 Ark. 247, 987 S.W.2d 722 (1999); Borden, Inc. v. Huey, 261 Ark. 313, 547 S.W.2d 760 (1977); Girard v. Rebsamen Ins. Co., 14 Ark. App. 154, 685 S.W.2d 526 (1985). The burden is on the party chal­

lenging the covenant to show that it is unreasonable. Moore v. Midwest Distrib., Inc., 76 Ark. App. 397, 65 S.W.3d 490 (2002). Covenants not to compete are reviewed on a case-by-case basis.

Id. We will not reverse a trial court's findings regarding a cove­nant not to compete unless the findings are clearly erroneous. Bendinger v. Marshalltown Trowell Co., 338 Ark. 410, 994 S.W.2d 468 (1999); Jaraki v. Cardiology Assocs., 75 Ark. App. 198, 55 S.W.3d 799 (2001). A finding is clearly erroneous when,

although there is evidence to support it, we are left, upon viewing the entire evidence, with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been made. See Jaraki v. Cardiology Assocs., supra.

[3] For a covenant not to compete to be enforced, three requirements must be met: (1) the covenantee must have a valid

interest to protect; (2) the geographical restriction must not be overly broad; (3) a reasonable time limit must be imposed. Duffner v. Alberty, 19 Ark. App. 137, 718 S.W.2d 111 (1986). Statco does not challenge the geographic or time restrictions in the covenant.

Instead it argues that: (1) SWBW had no valid interests to protect; (2) even if SWBW had valid interests to protect, the covenant was overly broad and not reasonably tailored to protect those interests; and (3) there was a failure of consideration.

[4] Where a covenant not to compete grows out of an employment or other associational relationship, the courts have

found an interest sufficient to warrant enforcement of the cove­nant only in those cases where the covenantee provided special training or made available trade secrets, confidential business infor­mation or customer lists, and then only if it is found that the asso­ciate was able to use the information he obtained to gain an unfair competitive advantage. Duffner v. Alberty, supra.

STATCO WIRELESS, LLC v. SOUTHWESTERN BELL WIRELESS, LLC 292 Cite as 80 Ark. App. 284 (2003) [80 [5] Statco contends that it was provided with no special training by SWBW, but the evidence was disputed on this point. Statco witnesses testified that they received only a short video training session at the beginning of their agency relationship. However, SWBW witnesses testified that agents were provided with various training opportunities, both formal and informal. Subjects of training included not only education in the products and services offered by SWBW, but in sales techniques such as closing, responding to competitors' promotions, and preventing de-activations (churn). Conflicts in testimony are to be resolved by the trial court, and we will defer to that court's superior posi­tion to judge and determine the credibility of witnesses. DeWitt v. Johnson, 349 Ark. 294, 77 S.W.3d 530 (2002). In any event, the furnishing of special training is just one matter to be considered under the Duffner analysis. We must also consider whether SWBW made trade secrets, confidential information, or customer lists available to Statco.

[6, 7] The trial court found that SWBW had a vital inter­est in protecting the confidential information contained in its cus­tomer lists, agent compensation plans, written bid proposals, and marketing strategies, to which Statco had access during its agency. We do not think the trial court's finding on this point was clearly erroneous. Customer lists have been looked upon by the courts as a most valuable asset that is especially worthy of protection, partic­ularly in a situation, such as the one here, where an agent is servic­ing customers away from the principal's place of business and builds up personal relationships that bind the customer to him instead of the principal. See Borden v. Huey, 261 Ark. 313, 547 S.W.2d 760 (1977); Girard v. Rebsamen Ins. Co., supra. The cus­tomer lists provided to Statco by SWBW contained not only the names of thousands of customers, but valuable information regard­ing those customers, including the customer's contract expiration date. This is not the type of information that could be readily ascertained in another manner, such as by looking in the tele­phone directory. See Jaraki v. Cardiology Assocs., supra at 205. Such information would allow a competitor or a former agent to contact the customer at a time when the customer was vulnerable to changing his service provider.

STATCO WIRELESS, LLC v. SOUTHWESTERN BELL WIRELESS, LLC ARK. APP.] Cite as 80 Ark. App. 284 (2003) 293 Statco makes much of the fact that it, not SWBW, developed the customer list and developed relationships with the customers through its own efforts. However, it must be remembered that Statco was acting as SWBW's agent, not on its own behalf. The agency contract recognizes that, when a subscriber is enrolled for services, the subscriber becomes a customer of SWBW.

[8] We likewise agree with the trial court that SWBW had a protectible interest in the information contained in its agent compensation plans and bid proposals, although we recognize that its interest in those items is not as strong or as apparent as its inter­est in the customer list. The agent compensation plans detailed ' the particular manner of an agent's compensation for various ser­vices and features sold. According to SWBW witness testimony, companies in the cellular industry do not usually know how their competitors' agents are compensated. The witnesses also testified that a competitor who viewed SWBW's agent compensation plans could gain considerable insight into SWBW's pricing strategies and that the competitor could discern what products and services were being emphasized, based on incentives given for the sale of those items.

[9] Bid proposals were the written proposals formulated when Statco would compete with other CRS providers for cor­porate customers. In doing so, it would submit the proposals to SWBW for special rates, discounts, or features for the customer. SWBW would then reply, on that proposal sheet, regarding whether or not such a bid would be accepted. According to a SWBW witness, the information on some of these proposs would be considered confidential because competitors could learn how low SWBW could go on its rates and possibly discern SWBW's average revenue per unit (ARPU) figure. Further, the bid proposals could give a competitor insight into the manner that the company deals with corporate customers.

Based on the above, we agree with the trial court that SWBW had a protectible interest in the items discussed, in partic-

STATCO WIRELESS, LLC v. SOUTHWESTERN BELL WIRELESS, LLC 294 Cite as 80 Ark. App. 284 (2003) [80 ular the customer lists.' However, Statco argues that the confi­dential value to SWBW of the abovementioned items is belied by SWBW's actions in dealing with its other agents. In particular, Statco points out that (1) SWBW allowed three of its former agents to sell a competitor's product within one year of terminat­ing their relationship with SWBW; (2) certain confidential infor­mation in the hands of those agents was not retrieved by SWBW upon termination of the relationship; and (3) SWBW had no for­mal written procedures for retrieving such information from ter­minated agents or for monitoring an agent's compliance with the covenant not to compete. .

It is undisputed that three former SWBW agents terminated their relationship with SWBW and, when they began selling for one of SWBW's competitors, they were not enjoined by SWBW from doing so. Two of the agents were operating under contracts with AT&T that were entered into before AT&T was acquired by SWBW. The AT&T contract had a covenant not to compete. The third agent was operating under a "McCaw" contract (a com­pany acquired by AT&T prior to 1997), and that contract had no covenant not to compete.

[10] Statco cites no authority for its proposition that SWBW's failure to be diligent in enforcing the covenant against two former agents or in failing to monitor the retrieval of infor­mation from terminated agents precludes SWBW from asserting a protectible interest in the above items; nor have we found any such authority in our own research, although the extent of measures taken by a company to guard its information is a factor in deter­mining whether a matter is a trade secret. See Conagra, Inc. v.

I As for SWBW's marketing strategies, these were contained in marketing bulletins sent by SWBW to its agents. The bulletins communicated SWBW's upcoming promotions as well as strategies for dealing with competitors' promotions. SWBW acknowledged that much of the information contained in the bulletins could be discovered by competitors through "shopping," i.e., calling and pretending to be a customer and that much of the information would lose its confidential status over the passage of time, for example in the case of bulletins that announced upcoming promotions. We agree with Statco that SWBW had no protectible interest in the marketing bulletins but, given our holding that a protectible interest existed in the customer lists, compensation plans, and bid proposals, the operative provisions of the trial court's judgment are not affected.

STATCO WIRELESS, LLC v. SOUTHWESTERN BELL WIRELESS, LLC ARK. Ayr.] Cite as 80 Ark. App. 284 (2003) 295 Tyson Foods, Inc., 342 Ark. 672, 30 S.W.3d 725 (2000). 2 In any event, the trial court found that SWBW presented credible evi­dence that it took steps to protect the secrecy of the information contained in the customer lists and other items, and we do not think that finding is clearly erroneous. Agents were required to sign confidentiality agreements and abide by a code of conduct; SWBW was very careful about who it provided customer lists to; and it had a policy to retrieve confidential information from ter­minated agents. Further, the fact that certain agents were able to sell for a competitor did not present the same kind of risk to SWBW as the defection of a major agent like Statco. SWBW's minor lapses in enforcement in this case do not necessarily pre­clude it from asserting a protectible interest in the items at issue herein.

[11] Finally, Statco argues that SWBW could not show that Statco was able to use the confidential information to gain an unfair competitive advantage. They cite the testimony of former agents and of SWBW's own witnesses that it would be possible for an agent to sell for a competitor without disclosing confidential SWBW information. However, the fact that such a thing would be possible does not necessarily prevent enforcement of the cove-nant. The question is whether Statco would be able to use the information obtained to gain an unfair competitive advantage. See Bendinger v. Marshalltown Trowell Co., supra at 417, n. 3. The very nature of the information at issue here, especially the customer lists, is such that a former agent would be able to use it to draw customers away from SWBW or assist a competitor in a manner that would be impossible had the agent not had access to the con­fidential information.

[12] In light of the foregoing, we conclude that SWBW had a protectible interest sufficient to warrant enforcement of the

2 But see Rector-Phillips-Morse v. Vroman, 253 Ark. 750, 489 S.W.2d 1 (1973), where the court discounted the confidential nature of certain information when twenty-three of thirty-one former RPM salesmen would have been permitted to compete with RPM and use the information. However, that scenario is far beyond the scope of what occurred here.

STATCO WIRELESS, LLC v. SOUTHWESTERN BELL WIRELESS, LLC 296 Cite as 80 Ark. App. 284 (2003) [80 covenant and that the requirements set forth in Duffner v. Alberty have been satisfied. We turn now to Statco's argument that the covenant was overly broad. The covenant reads in pertinent part as follows:

AGENT [Statco] agrees that AGENT, its officers, directors, key employees, principals, sub-AGENTS, any Affiliate or the person or persons owning a controlling interest in AGENT or an Affili-ate, shall during the term of this Agreement and except as noted below, for a period of one (1) year following the later of the expiration or termination of this Agreement[:]

(1) not directly or indirectly induce, influence or suggest to any Subscriber of SWBW's CRS to purchase any other CMRS from another Reseller or provider of CMRS in the Area;

(2) not directly or indirectly influence or suggest to any Subscriber of any other Authorized Service to purchase a competing service from any other provider or Reseller of such competing service in the Area, whether or not the competing service is technologically the same as the Authorized Service in question;

(3) not, under any circumstances or conditions whatsoever, directly or indirectly, as an individual, partner, stockholder, director, officer, employee, manager, AGENT or dealer or in any other relation or capacity whatsoever engage in the sale or promotion of CMRS or any other Authorized Ser­vice on behalf of any competing Reseller or provider of such service in the Are a[;]

(4) not, directly or indirectly, allow any other person, firm, or other entity to use the name, trade name, goodwill, or any other assets or property of AGENT or SWBW in:any manner in connection with such other entity's sale of CMRS or any other Authorized Service on behalf of a competing Reseller or provider of service in the Area, and AGENT specifically agrees not to transfer, assign, authorize or consent to the transfer of an AGENT telephone number to such a competing person, firm or other entity upon the expiration or termination of this Agreement.

STATCO WIRELESS, LLC v. SOUTHWESTERN BELL WIRELESS, LLC ARK. APP.] Cite as 80 Ark. App. 284 (2003) 297 Notwithstanding any language to the contrary, the restric­tive covenants contained herein shall not operate so as to restrict AGENT from the business of providing or selling Paging Serv-ices.

The trial court determined that the covenant's geographic and time restrictions were narrowly drawn and therefore reasona-ble. The court further found:

[SWBW] has invested its resources to enable its agency repre­sentatives to foster a relationship so that the customer will rely on its representative in making purchase decisions. Statco was inti­mately involved in the process of establishing personal relation­ships and soliciting customers. It is only fair that Statco be restrained from taking advantage of its relationship with SWBW's customers, which were built with SWBW's support, until SWBW has had the opportunity to foster the same relationships with Statco's successors.

We do not find the trial court's conclusion to be clearly erroneous because, although the covenant is broadly drawn, it is not unrea­sonably so.'

We begin our discussion of this issue by noting that the cove­nant was part of an arms-length contract entered into between business entities. The covenant was a conspicuous part of the con-tract, and the parties agreed, by the terms of the contract, that:

[T] hey have read this Agreement and understand and accept the terms, conditions and covenants contained herein as being rea­sonably necessary to maintain SWBW, high standards for CRS and other services, thereby to protect and preserve the goodwill of SWBW's CRS, Services and its Marks.

3 Statco points out that the trial court did not specifically rule on whether certain particular provisions of the covenant rendered it unreasonably broad. Were we to fully agree with that characterization of the court's findings, we would decline to address the issue. It is the appellant's burden to obtain a ruling from the trial court and, in the absence of such a ruling, we do not reach the issue involved. See Kangas v. Neely, 346 Ark. 334, 57 S.W.3d 694 (2001). However, our reading of the overall findings and conclusions by the trial judge convinces us that she considered the covenant reasonable in all respects. Thus, we will reach the merits of this point.

STATCO WIRELESS, LLC v. SOUTHWESTERN BELL WIRELESS, LLC 298 Cite as 80 Ark. App. 284 (2003) [80 [13, 14] The restraints imposed by a covenant not to com­pete must not be broader than necessary to protect the cove-nantee's interests. See Girard v. Rebsamen Ins.Co., supra. Also, the law will not enforce a contract that merely prohibits ordinary competition. Federated Mut. Ins. Co. v. Bennett, supra. If a cove­nant prohibits the covenantor from engaging in activities which are unnecessary to protect the promise, the covenant is unreasona-ble. See Easley v. Sky, Inc., 15 Ark. App. 64, 689 S.W.2d 356 (1985). The extent of restraint in a covenant is critical in deter­mining its reasonableness. Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 188, comment d (1981). The test to be employed is whether the restraint is reasonable as between the parties and not injurious to the public by reason of its effect upon trade. Whether or not the restraint is reasonable is to be determined 1:. / considering whether it is such as to only afford a fair protection to the interest of the party in whose favor it is given and not so large as to interfere with the interests of the public. Girard v. Rebsamen Ins. Co., supra at 159.

Statco argues that the covenant is too broad because it applies not only to Statco's owners, officers, and directors, but also to "key employees," a term that is not defined in the contract. It further contends that the covenant does not merely prevent solici­tation of SWBW customers but prohibits Statco from directing any potential customer to another service provider. Additionally, Statco claims, the covenant precludes Statco personnel, even as stockholders, from engaging in the sale or promotion of a com-petitor's service. Moreover, Statco contends that the fourth clause of the covenant would prohibit it from transferring its telephone number or subleasing its premises to a competitor.

[15] We interpret the covenant as being aimed at protect­ing three SWBW interests: (1) keeping its customers from being appropriated by a former agent; (2) keeping the confidential infor­mation possessed by its agent from falling into the hands of a com-petitor; and (3) protecting its name, goodwill, and assets. Our supreme court has recognized that covenants not to compete are a legitimate means of protecting a principal's desire that a former employee not appropriate its customers. See Borden v. Huey, supra; Girard v. Rebsamen Insurance Co., supra. We conclude that the par-

STATCO WIRELESS, LLC v. SOUTHWESTERN BELL WIRELESS, LLC ARK. APP.] Cite as 80 Ark. App. 284 (2003) 299 ticular restraints "objected to by Statco in this case reasonably serve that objective and the objective of preventing a competitor from acquiring confidential information.

Although the term "key employee" has no established defini-tion, it is more restrictive than the term "employee" and indicates a reasonable desire to restrain only important Statco personnel who possess key information from competing with SWBW. As for the fact that the covenant restricts Statco from directing poten­tial customers to a competitor or from promoting a competitor's product as a stockholder, these restrictions legitimately restrain Statco from serving the interests of SWBW's competitors, which could lead to the sharing of confidential information with those competitors. Likewise, SWBW would have an understandable desire that its agent's telephone number and place of business not become a means by which its customers could inadvertently fall into the lap of a competitor.

When these premises are considered, we disagree with Statco that the terms of the covenant are overly broad. We also note that, even though the one-year time restraint is not challenged on appeal, the fact that the covenant's restraints apply only for a one-year period buttresses our view that the covenant is not unreasona­ble in its scope.

Statco further argues that there were other less restrictive means that SWBW could have employed to protect its interests. It points out that the agency contract contained restrictions on Statco's activities, such as a restriction against divulging customer lists and a mandate to return SWBW marketing materials upon termination of the contract. Further, Statco argues that SWBW could simply have included a non-diversion clause in the contract, prohibiting Statco from diverting SWBW customers following termination. [16] Statco's argument would apply to invalfdate virtually every covenant not to compete and, as we have already pointed out, such covenants may be enforceable. A reasonably drawn cov­enant not to compete is an effective means by which a principal may protect its customers and its confidential information from appropriation and use by former agents or competitors. While the

STATCO WIRELESS, LLC v. SOUTHWESTERN BELL WIRELESS, LLC

300 Cite as 80 Ark. App. 284 (2003) [80 alternative methods suggested by Statco could be of some use, they do not substitute for a temporary ban on competitive activity, which assures the principal that its interests will not be compro-mised. We therefore affirm the trial court's finding that the cove­nant in this case was reasonably drawn.

[17, 18] Next, Statco argues that, because the right to use SWBW marks was a consideration for it signing the covenant not to compete, that consideration failed when SWBW began to mar­ket its product under the name "Cingular." We disagree. First, the trial judge made no ruling regarding consideration. Even if a matter is pled, we will not address it if it was not brought to the trial judge's attention for a ruling. Britton v. Floyd, 293 Ark. 397, 738 S.W.2d 408 (1987). Second, as the covenant recites, there was consideration for the covenant other than the use of the SWBW marks. Third, SWBW did not begin using the Cingular name in public until after Statco had sent the letter notifying SWBW that it would begin selling competitive products.

[19-21] The final issue concerns the trial court's finding that Statco misappropriated SWBW's trade secrets. A trade secret is information, including a formula, pattern, compilation, pro-gram, device, method, technique, or process that derives indepen­dent economic value, actual or potential, from not being generally known to, and not being readily ascertainable by, other persons who can obtain economic value from its disclosure or use and is the subject of efforts that are reasonable under the circumstances to maintain its secrecy. Ark. Code Ann. § 4-75-601(4) (Repl. 2001). Arkansas courts rely on six factors to determine whether something is a trade secret: (1) the extent to which the informa­tion is known outside the business; (2) the extent to which the information is known by employees and others involved in the business; (3) the extent of measures taken by plaintiff to guard the secrecy of the information; (4) the value of the information to plaintiff and its competitors; (5) the amount of effort or money expended by plaintiff in developing the information; and (6) the ease or difficulty with which the information could' properly be acquired by others. See City Slickers, Inc. v. Douglas, 73 Ark. App. 64, 40 S.W.3d 805 (2001). To be entitled to injunctive relief,

STATCO WIRELESS, LLC v. SOUTHWESTERN BELL WIRELESS, LLC ARK. APP.] Cite as 80 Ark. App. 284 (2003) 301 actual or threatened misappropriation must be shown. Ark. Code Ann. § 4-75-604 (Repl. 2001). Misappropriation means:

(A)Acquisition of a trade secret of another person who knows or has reason to know that the trade secret was acquired by improper means; or

(B) Disclosure or use of a trade secret of another without express or implied consent by a person who:

(i) Used improper means to acquire knowledge of the trade secret; or

(ii) At the time of disclosure or use, knew or had reason to know that his knowledge of the trade secret was:

(a)Derived from or through a person who had utilized improper means to acquire it;

(b) Acquired it under circumstances giving rise to a duty to maintain secrecy or limit its use; or

(c) Derived from or through a person who owed a duty to the person seeking relief to maintain secrecy or limit its use; or

(iii) Before a material change of his position, knew or had reason to know that it was a trade secret and that knowledge of it had been acquired by accident or mistake.

Ark. Code Ann. § 4-75-601(2) (Repl. 2001). [22] Even if the information acquired by Statco during the course of its agency qualifies as a trade secret, the record is bereft of any evidence that Statco has, or has threatened to, improperly misappropriate a trade secret. Nevertheless, an injunction may issue if there is evidence that an inevitable misappropriation will occur. See Cardinal Freight Carriers, Inc. v. J.B. Hunt Transp. Servs., Inc., 336 Ark. 143, 987 S.W.2d 642 (1999). We do not believe

there is enough evidence in this case to support a finding of inevi­table misappropriation. Statco has given no indication that it will disclose trade secrets, nor is there any evidence that it must neces­sarily do so to conduct its business. As mentioned earlier, there was testimony that a former agent could work for a competitor

STATCO WIRELESS, LLC v. SOUTHWESTERN BELL WIRELESS, LLC 302 Cite as 80 Ark. App. 284 (2003) [80 without using confidential information regarding his former prin-cipal.

Based on the foregoing, we affirm the trial judge's finding that Statco violated the covenant not to compete, and we reverse her finding that Statco violated the trade secrets act. We also modify the third part of the trial court's judgment to add the fol­lowing phrase at the end of the clause: "for a period of one year from March 1, 2001."

Affirmed in part as modified; reversed in part. STROUD, C.J., arid PITTMAN, HART, and BIRD, JJ., agree. GRIFFEN, J., dissents in part. NDELL L. GRIFFEN, Judge, dissenting. The majority Wdecision stands in direct conflict with our own case law. In the name of holding parties to their agreements and based on disregard for both the purpose of the law of unfair competition and economic reality, today's decision violates the longstanding and justified principle that only where goodwill has been trans­ferred ancillary to the sale and purchase of a business, for valid consideration, does a purchaser have a legitimate pecuniary inter­est in protecting that goodwill from competition from a seller. However, even when goodwill has been transferred, our case law requires that contracts in partial restraint of trade, such as clearly involved in this instance, are valid only to the extent reasonably necessary for the purchaser's protection. See Duffner v. Alberty, 19 Ark. App. 137, 718 S.W.2d 111 (1986).

Plainly, this case involves neither the sale and purchase of a business nor the transfer of goodwill attendant to such a transac-tion. It is nothing more than a dispute between an employer-principal Southwestern Bell Wireless (SWBW) and its former agent STATCO Wireless (STATCO) about whether the public will be allowed to choose competing cellular telephone services in the Hot Springs and Little Rock areas through the former agent. Beyond that, the record demonstrates that the non-competition covenant before us was not necessary to protect the legitimate interest of SWBW concerning its customer lists, contracts, and agent compensation plans. Although I agree that the trial court

STATCO WIRELESS, LLC v. SOUTHWESTERN BELL WIRELESS, LLC ARK. APP.] Cite as 80 Ark. App. 284 (2003) 303 erred in finding that STATCO misappropriated trade secrets and agree that SWBW had no proprietary interest in the marketing strategies bulletins, I perceive no material difference between the facts of this case and those presented by our decision in Duffner v. Alberty, supra, where we reached an entirely different result. Therefore, I dissent from the decision to affirm any part of the trial court's decision and judgment.

Duffner involved a covenant not to compete in an employ­ment agreement between an orthopedic surgeon and the practice group with whom he practiced after completing his residency in June 1984. Duffner moved to Fort Smith, joined the well estab­lished orthopedic group headed by Dr. Joe Paul Alberty and Dr. John Wideman, and signed a written agreement containing a cov­enant that stated, should he desire to leave the group, he would not practice within a radius of thirty miles of the group offices for one year from the date of termination. Duffner practiced with the group until late spring of 1985, when he joined another orthope­dic clinic located in the same building where his former associates maintained their practice. As in this case, the chancellor in Duffner entered an order enjoining Duffiler for a period of one year from the date of the order. We reversed that decision in the face of the chancellor's finding that the appellees had a valid and enforceable right to protect their substantial investment in their medical prac-tice, and to protect their established medical clientele. In 'doing so, Chief Judge Cracraft, writing the opinion following this unan­imous en banc decision, stated:

Although contracts between individuals ought not to be entered into lightly, all other considerations must give way where matters of public policy are involved. From our review of all the facts and circumstances, we are of the opinion that the contract provision prohibiting appellant from practicing medicine within thirty miles of the City of Fort Smith constitutes an undue interference with the interests of the public right of availability of the ortho­pedic surgeon it prefers to use and that the covenant's enforce­ment would result in an unreasonable restraint of trade.

Here the contract did not relate to the sale of a business and its goodwill. The appellees' goodwill remained with them. The benefits which the appellant obtained from the reputation and

STATCO WIRELESS, LLC v. SOUTHWESTERN BELL WIRELESS, LLC 304 Cite as 80 Ark. App. 284 (2003) [80 goodwill of his former associates would be no greater than that of an employee in any other established business. It is only in those instances where goodwill has, for valid consideration, been transferred that the purchaser has a legitimate pecuniary interest in protecting against its being drained by competition from the seller. Nor were any trade secrets, formulas, methods, or devices which gave appellant an advantage over the appellees involved here. At the time he joined the association he had received his training and skills elsewhere and brought them with him. There is nothing in the record to indicate that he learned any trade secret or surgical procedures from the appellees which were not readily available to other . orthopedic surgeons. To the contrary, the record reflects that while in the association he performed some orthopedic surgical procedures which the appellees did not perform.

Although the chancellor found that the appellant had access to appellees' confidential patient files, there was no evidence that he attempted to memorize them or use information from those files to entice any of their former patients to become patients of his new association. Although there was evidence that he obtained the files on twenty-eight persons from the appellees, it was explained that these were not new patients but those who were receiving follow-up medical attention after having undergone surgery by the appellant during his association with the appellees. Other than those twenty-eight persons receiving post-operative care, he testified that he had not seen more than two of appellees' former patients.

We cannot conclude from the evidence that appellant maintained a personal relationship or acquaintance with appellees' patients or that their "stock of patients" was appropriated by the appellant when he left their offices. . . . We conclude that the enforcement of this covenant would do no more than prohibit ordinary competition.

Id. at 141-42, 718 S.W.2d at 113-14. (Emphasis added.) Contracts in partial restraint of trade, where ancillary to a sale of a business or profession with its goodwill, are valid to the extent reasonably necessary to the purchaser's protection, and are looked upon with greater favor than such an agreement ancillary to an employer-employee or professional association relationship. Madi­son Bank & Trust v. First Nat'l Bank, 276 Ark. 405, 635 S.W.2d 268 (1982); Marshall v. Irby, 203 Ark. 795, 158 S.W.2d 693

STATCO WIRELESS, LLC v. SOUTHWESTERN BELL WIRELESS, LLC ARK. APP.] Cite as 80 Ark. App. 284 (2003) 305 (1942); Easley v. Sky, Inc., 15 Ark. App. 64, 689 S.W.2d 356 (1985). Where the covenant grows out of an employment or other associational relationship, our appellate courts have found an interest sufficient to warrant enforcement of the covenant only in those cases where the covenantee provided special training, or made available trade secrets, confidential business information or customer lists, and then only if it is found that the associate was able to

use information so obtained to gain an unfair competitive advantage. See Orkin Exterminating Co. v. Weaver, 257 Ark. 926, 521 S.W.2d 69 (1975); Rector-Phillips-Morse, Inc. v. Vroman, 253 Ark. 750, 489 S.W.2d 1 (1973); All-State Supply, Inc. v. Fisher, 252 Ark. 962, 483 S.W.2d 210 (1972); Girard v. Rebsamen Ins. Co., 14 Ark. App. 154, 685 S.W.2d 526 (1985). The validity of these covenants depends upon the facts and circumstances of each particular case. Evans Laboratories, Inc. v. Melder, 262 Ark. 868, 562 S.W.2d 62 (1978). The general rule is that a contract in restraint of trade ancillary to a sale or a business transaction, which is reasonably limited as to time and place, is not against public policy and is not invalid. Madison Bank & Trust v. First Nat'l Bank, supra; see also

Bloom v. Home Ins. Agency, 91 Ark. 367, 121 S.W. 293 (1909); Webster v. Williams, 62 Ark. 101, 34 S.W. 537 (1896); United States v. Empire Gas Corp., 537 F.2d 296 (8th Cir. 1976), cert. den. 429 U.S. 1122 (1976); 17A C.J.S. Contracts § 249 (1999); 54A Am. Jur. 2d Monopolies, Etc., 853 (1996).

The courts view a restraint of trade agreement ancillary to the transfer of a business with greater liberality, being "more prone to uphold restrictive clauses" than employer/employee covenants. Madison Bank & Trust v. First Nat'l Bank, 276 Ark. at 409, 635 S.W.2d at 270; see also McLeod v. Meyer, 237 Ark. 173, 372 S.W.2d 220 (1963); 42 Am. Jur. 2d Injunctions § 141 (2000); and 54A Am.Jur.2d Monopolies, Etc. § 853 (1996). In Little Rock Towel & Linen Supply Co. v. Independent Linen Service Co., our supreme court said, "Owing to the possibility that a person may be deprived of his livelihood the courts are less disposed to uphold restraints in contracts of employment than to uphold them in con­tracts of sale." 237 Ark. 877, 879, 477 S.W.2d 34, 36 (1964). Whether a restraint provision is reasonable or unreasonable is a question to be determined under the facts of each case. McLeod v.

STATCO WIRELESS, LLC v. SOUTHWESTERN BELL WIRELESS, LLC

306 Cite as 80 Ark. App. 284 (2003) [80 Meyer, supra. The trial court's findings will not be reversed unless clearly erroneous. Ford Motor Credit Co. v. Yarbrough, 266 Ark.

457, 587 S.W.2d 68 (1979); Ark. R. Civ. P. Rule 52(a).

The non-competition covenants before us plainly do not arise from the sale of an established business or profession. There is no proof that SWBW sold its cellular phone service business to STATCO. No evidence supports a conclusion that SWBW would be deprived of its livelihood unless the non-competition covenant in these agreements is upheld. Thus, the more liberal standard applicable to agreements which restrain trade ancillary to the transfer of a business has no application to this case.

While it is true that the party challenging the validity of a non-competition covenant arising from an employment or associ­ational relationship has the burden of proving that the arrange­ment violates public policy, that burden of proof does not weaken the threshold principle that such arrangements are not favored under the law and that even if created to protect legitimate busi­ness interests, it must be shown that the person restrained by the covenant was able to use information obtained by the employment or associational relationship to gain an unfair competitive advan-tage. Orkin Exterminating Co. v. Weaver, supra. The law does not prohibit a former associate or employee from altogether compet­ing against an employer or principal, but merely prohibits the use of confidential information gained from the former employer or principal to attain an unfair competitive advantage.

By relying on the non-competition covenant, SWBW seeks to blur, if not altogether erase, the rather fundamental distinction in our restraint of trade jurisprudence between non-competition covenants attendant to the sale of a business and such covenants contained in employment or associational agreements such as the one it had with STATCO. Yet, that distinction is both plain and sound. Someone purchasing a going concern and its goodwill should not be vulnerable to the obvious competitive disadvantage of competing with the seller for the goodwill and patronage of the seller's former customers. On the other hand, someone who merely contracts to work for another person should not be restrained from offering his services to other contractors after leav-

STATCO WIRELESS, LLC v. SOUTHWESTERN BELL WIRELESS, LLC ARK. APP.] Cite as 80 Ark. App. 284 (2003) 307 ing a former associational or employment relationship unless there is no other less restrictive remedy available to protect the former employer from unfair competition. In this case, SWBW not only failed to immediately seek return of the information it deemed proprietary—even to the date it filed suit to enforce the non-com-petition covenant—but produced no proof that STATCO's con­tinued presence as a seller of competing cellular phone service posed the risk of unfair competition.

A glaring example, but by no means the only one, that proves that the anti-competitive effect of the non-competition covenant went far beyond anything needed to protect the customer list, agent compensation plan, and contract bid documents from exploitation is found in sub-paragraph 4 of Paragraph 18, the par­agraph containing the non-competition covenant. At sub-para-graph 4, the agreement provides that STATCO will .

not, directly or indirectly, allow any other person, firm, or other entity to use the name, trade name, goodwill, or any other assets or property of AGENT . . . any manner in connection with such other entity's sale of [cellular phone service] or any other Authorized Service on behalf of a competing Reseller or pro­vider of service in the Area, and AGENT specifically agrees not to transfer, assign, authorize or consent to the transfer or an AGENT telephone number to such a competing person, firm or other entity upon the expiration or termination of this Agreement.

There was no proof that SWBW had any proprietary interest in STATCO's phone number, office lease, or trade name. There was no proof that SWBW had any interest in whether anyone besides STATCO engaged in the "sale of [cellular phone service] . . . on behalf of a competing Reseller or provider of service in the Area," aside from hindering customers from the chance to obtain cellular phone service from SWBW competitors. The notion that SWBW needed to prevent STATCO from leasing its office space to one of its six competitors (Alltel, Sprint, Cricket, Nextel, Cen-turyTel, and SunCom) in order to protect the proprietary nature of the customer lists, agent compensation plans, and contract bid proposals is patently absurd. By affirming the trial court's decision enforcing the non-competition covenant in the face of this

STATCO WIRELESS, LLC v. SOUTHWESTERN BELL WIRELESS, LLC 308 Cite as 80 Ark. App. 284 (2003) [80 absurdity, the majority defies the longstanding principle that even when non-competition covenants arise out of the sale of a business with its goodwill, they are enforced only if necessary to protect the purchaser from unfair competition.

It is certainly true that STATCO agreed to the non-competi-tion covenant that SWBW placed in the exclusive agency agree-ments. However, that fact has never been controlling or directed our understanding of the legal principles applied to cases involving the enforceability of non-competition covenants. No matter what parties write into their agreements, the public has the right to free and open markets for goods and services. This right, not the wording of non-competition covenants, is the fundamental princi­ple before which all contracts must yield if the notion of free enterprise is to be anything but a fiction. In this case, that means the public has the right to select cellular phone service from whomever can make that service available. The non-competition covenant upheld today restrains the public's exercise of that right by restricting access to competing cellular phone service in the same geographic market with SWBW.

The proprietary information contained in the SWBW cus­tomer lists, agent compensation plans, and bid proposals falls far short of the kind of sensitive and personal information exchanged between patients and their physicians. Even so, we reversed the injunction in Duffner. Here, as in Duffner, the non-competition covenant did not arise out of the sale of a business and transfer of goodwill. As in that case, the record before us does not show that STATCO made any attempt to retain or exploit any of the propri­etary information to "entice" any SWBW customers to convert their cellular phone service to a SWBW competitor.

I am unimpressed by the argument that our decision in Duffner resulted because we found something peculiar about the practice of orthopedic medicine such that our holding in that case should not apply to a case involving the availability of cellular tele­phone service. Duffner, we are told according to that argument , is not controlling on this case because there is a legally material dis-tinction, insofar as the law of unfair competition and restraint of trade is concerned, between practicing orthopedic medicine (a

STATCO WIRELESS, LLC v. SOUTHWESTERN BELL WIRELESS, LLC ARK. APP.] Cite as 80 Ark. App. 284 (2003) 309 professional calling) and marketing cellular telephone service. We should not read Duffner or the rest of our case law in this area in such simplistic terms.

In fact, a survey of our decisions dealing with challenges to non-competition covenants quickly disproves the notion that the law makes such a distinction between professional undertakings and other commercial or business pursuits. In Rector-Phillips-Morse v. Vroman, supra, our supreme court affirmed a trial court's decision to deny an injunction to enforce a three-year non-com-petition covenant between a real estate agency and one of its for­mer salesmen because the three-year restriction was not -reasonably necessary to protect the realtor from unfair competition. In Orkin Exterminator Co. v. Weaver, 257 Ark. 926, 521 S.W.2d 69 (1975), the supreme court similarly affirmed a trial court's denial of an injunction to enforce a two-year non-competition covenant between a pest control company and a former employee who re­entered the pest control business in partnership with another for­mer employee within a week after being discharged. Justice George Rose Smith's analysis of the proof in that case is both instructive as well as dispositive of the view that the law should somehow protect certain employers from what amounts to ordi-nary, as contrasted to unfair, competition. Justice Smith wrote:

The basic flaw in Orkin's position is that its contract, according to its own proof, is directed not against unfair competition but against competition of any kind on the part of its former employ-ees. . . . If Orkin's position is sound, then any employer in any business devoted to selling - whether the sales be of insurance, real estate, clothing, groceries, hardware, or anything else - can validly prohibit its former salesmen from engaging in that busi­ness within the vicinity for as long as two years after the termina­tion of employment. Needless to say, the law does not provide any such protection from ordinary competition.

Id. at 929-930, 521 S.W.2d at 71. (Citations omitted.) Our decision in Duffner, like the decisions by our supreme court and other case law dealing with unfair competition and cov­enants not to compete, does not turn on the peculiarities of a given business, profession, trade, or craft. Our law dealing with non-competition covenants is based on whether such a covenant

STATCO WIRELESS, LLC v. SOUTHWESTERN BELL WIRELESS, LLC 310 Cite as 80 Ark. App. 284 (2003) [80 in whatever enterprise amounts fo an unfair restraint on ordinary competition. In Duffner, Chief Judge Cracraft concluded the opinion by observing "that the enforcement of this covenant would do no more than prohibit ordinary competition." 19 Ark. App. at 142, 718 S.W.2d at 114. That inquiry is valid no matter what the enterprise may be that is subject to the non-competition covenant.

I am equally unpersuaded by the majority view that STATCO's position would invalidate every covenant not to com-pete. The law does not guarantee anyone a right to be free from ordinary competition. Nor does the law justify "a temporary ban on competitive activity, which assures the principal that its inter­ests will not be compromised" where goodwill has not been trans­ferred ancillary to the purchase and sale of a business. That principle was clearly controlling in our Duffner decision. The majority does not explain why it does not govern this case, let alone justify departing from it.

For the reasons stated by Chief Judge Cracraft, the holding in Duffner should apply to the facts and dictate the outcome of this case. There is nothing wrong with ordinary competition and nothing unfair about having to engage in ordinary competition against former business associates for the patronage of valued cus-tomers. No matter what parties write into their employment agreements, public policy holds that there is something fundamen­tally wrong about denying people freedom to choose where they want to do business by preventing them access to outlets where competitors can operate. That is why non-competition covenants are disfavored by our law.

I dissent.

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