5 min read · Alabama Business Law · Birmingham & Hoover
Yes, an Alabama employer can sue a former employee in certain circumstances, most commonly for breaching an enforceable non-compete or non-solicitation agreement, misappropriating trade secrets, breaching a duty of loyalty or fiduciary duty, or causing harm through improper conduct. The employer must have a valid legal basis and be able to prove resulting damages, and available relief can include injunctions and money damages.
When a key employee leaves and starts competing, taking clients, or using company information, employers often ask whether they can sue. The answer depends on what the employee agreed to and what they actually did.
This guide explains the common grounds on which an Alabama employer can sue a former employee, and the limits on those claims. It is educational and not legal advice on your situation.
The most frequent claims involve breach of a restrictive covenant, such as a non-compete or non-solicitation agreement, misappropriation of trade secrets, and breach of the duty of loyalty an employee owes while still employed.
Other claims can arise from conduct like diverting company opportunities, taking confidential data, or improperly soliciting coworkers or customers in violation of an agreement.
If the claim rests on a non-compete or non-solicitation agreement, the agreement must actually be enforceable under Alabama law, meaning it protects a legitimate interest and is reasonable in scope. An unenforceable agreement provides no basis to sue.
Trade secret claims, by contrast, do not require an agreement, but they require that the information qualify as a trade secret and that the employer took reasonable steps to protect it.
Employers often seek an injunction first, a court order stopping the former employee from continuing the harmful conduct, because ongoing competition or disclosure can cause damage that money cannot fully repair.
Money damages for losses caused by the breach may also be available. The strength of the case depends on enforceable rights and provable harm, so an early, honest assessment is valuable before committing to litigation.
A Hoover firm's top salesperson leaves and immediately begins soliciting her former clients using a contact list she took, though her non-compete is arguably overbroad.
The employer may still have claims, for trade-secret misappropriation or breach, even if the non-compete itself is vulnerable to challenge as too broad. Acting fast matters, because delay can undercut a request for an injunction.
This scenario is a simplified, illustrative hypothetical to explain how the law generally works. It is not a real case and is not a prediction or guarantee of any particular outcome.
Our Birmingham and Hoover business litigators handle these matters every day. Learn how we can help with non-competes & trade secrets, or call for a free, confidential consultation.
This guide is provided for general educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice or create an attorney-client relationship. Alabama law and its application depend on the specific facts of your situation and can change over time. For advice about your matter, speak with a licensed Alabama attorney.