What is the Difference Between Garden Leave and a Notice Period?
"Garden Leave" is Not the Same as a Notice Period in a ContractWe have seen people use these terms interchangeably but they are not necessarily the same thing.
'Garden leave' under the Massachusetts Non Compete Agreement Act is the period of time during which you are restricted from competing and being paid at least 50% of your base salary. A 'notice period' refers to a period of time in which you may still be paid after giving notice of your resignation, or after being given notice of termination. This usually only happens if you have an employment contract providing for a certain amount of notice. Why is this important? Because from the employer's perspective, your employment does not end until after the notice period is over. So, although they may be referring to it as "garden leave," your restricted period does not begin to run until your employment ends. For example: you have a 30 day notice period in your contract, and your employer tells you to stop working but still pays you through the 30 days. If you have a 6 month non compete, that non compete lasts for six months from the end of the 30 days, not from when you stopped working. Of course, the employer's obligation to make garden leave payments continues for that same amount of time. Learn more here about the garden leave requirement of the Massachusetts Non Compete Act. |
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Questions About a Non Compete Agreement?
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Meet Our Employment and Non Compete Lawyers
Emily Smith-Lee is the owner and founder of slnlaw. She is a 1996 graduate of Boston College Law School. She was previously a partner at the Boston office of a large international firm, where she worked for thirteen years before starting the firm that became slnlaw in 2009. She has been recognized as Massachusetts Superlawyer each year since 2013, and in 2018 earned recognition as one of Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly's Lawyers of the Year. She has written a book on employment law: Rules of the Road, What You Need to Know About Employment Laws in Massachusetts, been interviewed by the Massachusetts Superlawyers magazine about non compete agreements, and written an op-ed in the New York Times about the dangers of non competes. Along with the rest of the slnlaw team, she has helped hundreds of clients navigate, negotiate, or defend against their non compete agreements.
Rebecca Rogers: Rebecca is a 2006 graduate of Boston College Law School, and has worked with slnlaw since 2013. She previously worked as an intellectual property litigation attorney for Fish & Richardson in Boston, Massachusetts, and clerked for the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court. Rebecca has helped many clients understand and evaluate their non compete agreements and develop strategies for defending against non compete enforcement and negotiating resolution.
Jenna Ordway: Jenna is a 2013 graduate of Quinnipiac Law School, and also earned an LLM in Taxation from Boston University in 2015. She has been affiliated with slnlaw since 2011, first as a law clerk and then as an attorney. Jenna has been recognized since 2019 as a "Rising Star" by Massachusetts Superlawyers. Jenna works with employers to develop reasonable and enforceable employee agreements, including non competes. She has also helped employees understand and evaluate their non compete agreements and develop strategies for defending against non compete enforcement and negotiating resolution.
Elijah Bresley: Eli is a 2014 graduate of Seton Hall Law school, and has worked with slnlaw since 2020. He previously worked for a boutique employment law firm outside of Boston, and then for the Labor and Employment department of a large Boston firm. He also spent a year clerking for the judges of the Superior Court in Hartford, Connecticut. Eli has helped clients both evaluate and negotiate their non compete agreements, and defended non compete claims in state and federal courts.
How We Can Help
We have years of experience helping employees understand, navigate and negotiate non compete agreements, representing people in non compete lawsuits in Massachusetts state and federal courts, and responding to cease and desist letters, and we would be happy to help. You can use the button below to schedule a call back from a member of our team to learn more about how we can help, or give us a call at 781-784-2322.