Last month, two New England
states enacted laws restricting the use of non-competition provisions in
agreements governing an employment, partnership or other professional
relationship of a physician.
Broadly speaking, the aim of
both of these laws is to protect patients’ choice regarding medical care by
limiting the ability of employers or partners to contract with physicians such
that the physicians’ ability to practice medicine would be restricted at the
end of the professional relationship.
Effective on July 12, 2016,
the new law in Rhode Island (R.I. Gen. Laws §5-37-33) prohibits non-compete
language in most physician agreements. It renders void and unenforceable
“any restriction on the right to practice medicine” found in virtually any
contract creating the terms of employment, partnership or other professional
relationship involving a state-licensed physician. The new law therefore
invalidates non-competition or patient non-solicitation provisions for Rhode
Island physicians. The new law does not apply in connection
with the purchase and sale of a physician practice, provided the restrictive
covenant is less than five years in duration.
Effective on July 1, 2016, the
new law in Connecticut (Public Act No. 16-95) is less sweeping than the Rhode
Island law. Rather than prohibiting physician non-competes, the
Connecticut law limits the allowable duration (to one year) and geographical
scope (up to 15 miles from the “primary site where such physician practices”)
of any new, amended or renewed physician agreement.
The new law also
renders physician non-competes unenforceable if the physician’s employment or
contractual relationship is terminated without cause.
Rhode Island and Connecticut
are the latest in a slowly growing number of states that have taken legislative
action to limit the use of physician non-competes. Their neighbor
Massachusetts was an early adopter of such a statute. Mass. Gen. Laws chapter
112, §12X (enacted in 1977) bars physician non-competes which include any
restriction of the right of a physician to practice medicine in any geographic
area for any period of time after termination. Much of the language in
the Massachusetts law appears in the recently enacted Rhode Island statute.
Similar language appears in
Delaware and Colorado statutes dating from the early 1980s, which state that
covenants are void if they restrict the rights of physicians to practice
medicine upon termination of the agreements containing the covenants.
More recently, Texas (in 1999)
and Tennessee (in 2012) both enacted statutes (as did Connecticut) applying
stricter standards to physician non-competes than are applicable to employee
non-competes in general, while stopping short of invalidating such physician
non-competes.
It remains to be seen if the
enactment this summer of these statutes in Connecticut and Rhode Island is
merely a coincidence, or foreshadows more state legislatures pursuing such
limitations of physician non-competes.
No comments:
Post a Comment