TAYLOR, J.
We decline to reconsider the merits of our decision, but grant rehearing in part to correct a statement in the original opinion.
In this appeal of a temporary injunction to enforce non-compete and non-solicitation provisions of an employment contract, the main issue is whether referral sources for home health services are a legitimate business interest entitled to protection under section 542.335, Florida Statutes (2012). Infinity Home Care, LLC, joined by its current employee, Sylvie Forjet, appeals the temporary injunction, relying on the Fifth District's opinion in Florida Hematology & Oncology v. Tummala, 927 So.2d 135 (Fla. 5th DCA 2006). Tummala held that referring physicians are not a legitimate business interest under section 542.335 because the statute requires that prospective patients be specific and identifiable. We decline to follow Tummala in this case for the reasons discussed below and affirm issuance of the temporary injunction.
Amedisys Holding, LLC, provides home health care services such as in-home nursing and hospice care. For eighteen months between January 2013 and June 2014, Forjet was employed by Amedisys as a Care Transition Coordinator (CTC) in Broward County. As a CTC, Forjet was primarily responsible for developing and maintaining Amedisys's relationships with individual case managers at certain health care facilities that referred their patients to Amedisys for home health services.
In June 2014, Forjet left Amedisys to work for Infinity, a provider of home health care services that competes directly with Amedisys. She immediately began soliciting referral sources that had previously referred business to Amedisys. The referral source of concern in this case is the Cleveland Clinic.
Amedisys filed suit against Infinity and Forjet for temporary and permanent injunctions. Essentially, Amedisys alleged that Forjet violated the restrictive covenants in her employment agreement by soliciting Amedisys's referral sources while working for Infinity. Count I of the complaint is a breach of employment contract claim against Forjet, and Count II is a tortious interference claim against Infinity. Infinity moved to dismiss the complaint, arguing that referral sources are not a protectable legitimate business interest under section 542.335, Florida Statutes, and the holding in Florida Hematology & Oncology v. Tummala, 927 So.2d 135 (Fla. 5th DCA 2006).
The trial court held an evidentiary hearing on Infinity's motion to dismiss. Forjet, a registered nurse who has worked in the home health care industry in Broward County since 1992, developed the Cleveland Clinic as a referral source in 2006 while employed with another competitor, Gentiva. One of the reasons Amedisys hired her was because of her substantial relationship with the Cleveland Clinic. When Amedisys hired her in late 2012, however, it specifically required her to honor her non-compete agreement with Gentiva and not solicit referrals from any of the case managers at the Cleveland Clinic until her agreement expired. After her Gentiva agreement expired, Forjet began soliciting referrals from the case managers at the Cleveland Clinic on behalf of Amedisys. Amedisys considered these referral
When she resigned from Amedisys, Forjet began soliciting referral sources that had previously referred business to Amedisys, including the same case managers at the Cleveland Clinic. Amedisys's vice president of business development testified that after Forjet left, Amedisys's referrals from the Cleveland Clinic sharply declined. She could not, however, quantify the decline in referrals from Cleveland Clinic or show that the business it lost went to Infinity.
Forjet testified that she believed the restrictive covenants in her agreement with Amedisys prevented her from using only referral sources she first developed while working at Amedisys, not sources she had used for years. She testified that she did not develop any new referral sources while working for Amedisys, and that all of her referral sources existed before she was hired. However, Forjet conceded that there was a turnover in case managers at the Cleveland Clinic during her employment with Amedisys, and she thus had to develop relationships with the new case managers that referred patients to Amedisys.
After the hearing, the trial court granted Amedisys a temporary injunction for one year. The court found that Forjet was violating the restrictive covenants and that the restrictive covenants were enforceable to protect Amedisys's relationships with specific referral sources in Broward County. In concluding that referral sources are a legitimate business interest under section 542.335, Florida Statutes, the trial court relied on Southernmost Foot & Ankle Specialists, P.A. v. Torregrosa, 891 So.2d 591, 593 (Fla. 3d DCA 2004). The court declined to follow Tummala.
Amedisys sought to establish two legitimate business interests: (1) confidential business information, and (2) referral sources. Although the court found that Amedisys established the existence of valuable confidential business information, it did not find that Forjet had used this information such that an injunction was necessary to protect it. The court, however, found that Amedisys did establish the existence of substantial relationships with referral sources that entitled it to a temporary injunction.
The issue we address in this appeal is whether "referral sources" for home health services are a protectable "legitimate business interest" under section 542.335, Florida Statutes. In Torregrosa, the Third District accepted the trial court's finding that "referral doctors" are a legitimate business interest of the plaintiff's podiatry practice, subject to protection under a non-compete agreement. 891 So.2d at 594. By contrast, the Fifth District held in Tummala that referral doctors are not a legitimate business interest under the statute. 927 So.2d at 139. Infinity urges us to follow Tummala, arguing that it is more on point and provides an analysis of the statute's applicability to referral sources.
Section 542.335, Florida Statutes, governs enforcement of non-compete agreements and other restrictive covenants. It requires that a restrictive covenant be justified by a "legitimate business interest" for enforcement. § 542.335(1)(b), Fla. Stat. (2012). Section 542.335 provides a list of "legitimate business interests," but it specifically states that the list is not exclusive. Among the legitimate business interests listed are "[s]ubstantial relationships with specific prospective or existing customers,
In University of Florida, Board of Trustees v. Sanal, 837 So.2d 512 (Fla. 1st DCA 2003), the First District construed the "specific prospective patients" language in the statute in affirming the trial court's determination that the university could not enforce its non-compete agreement with a former physician-employee. The university had sought to prohibit the physician from treating all persons residing in the designated geographic area after his employment with the university ended. The court, however, looked to the "clear and unambiguous" language of the phrase "specific prospective patients" in concluding that the statute limited the restrictive covenant to specific patients — not prospective patients. Finding no "legitimate business interest" in unidentified prospective patients, the First District reasoned:
Sanal, 837 So.2d at 516.
In Tummala, the Fifth District extended the analysis in Sanal when it ruled that referral sources are not legitimate business
Tummala, 927 So.2d at 139 (footnote omitted) (quoting Univ. of Fla., Bd. of Trs. v. Sanal, 837 So.2d 512, 515-16 (Fla. 1st DCA 2003)). In footnote 4, the Fifth District acknowledged that its holding conflicted with the Third District's decision in Torregrosa, which approved the trial court's finding that referral doctors are a legitimate business interest.
The Fifth District opined that referral sources should be recognized as a "legitimate business interest," stating:
Tummala, 927 So.2d at 138. Yet, the Fifth District considered itself hampered by the express language of the statute.
We do not agree that the statute should be so narrowly construed as to exclude referral sources as a legitimate business interest. The statute does not expressly exclude referral relationships and neither does the holding in Sanal. In Sanal, the court correctly found that, with respect to patients of a medical practice, the statute expressly defined "legitimate business interest" to include only specific patients — not prospective ones.
Section 542.335, however, clearly states that the legitimate business interests listed in the statute are not exclusive. This allows the court to examine the particular business plans, strategies, and relationships of a company in determining whether they qualify as a business interest worthy of protection. Relationships with specific referral sources, which are not mentioned in the statute, are not the same as relationships with unidentified prospective patients. Here, it is undisputed that the relationships Amedisys is trying to protect are its referral sources. As the record
In the contract covenant at issue here, "referral sources" are specifically mentioned as a valuable business interest. Amedisys hired Forjet because of her experience and contacts, compensated her accordingly, and supported her in maintaining and expanding those contacts. She, in turn, agreed not to solicit them for a competitor once she left Amedisys.
Infinity argues that, even assuming referral sources are a protectable legitimate business interest, Amedisys did not meet the statutory pleading and proof requirements to enforce the restrictive covenants.
Section 542.335(1)(c) provides:
Infinity argues that Amedisys failed to prove that its business was impacted such that enforcement of the restrictive covenants was necessary. It asserts that Forjet had the Cleveland Clinic as a referral source long before her employment with Amedisys, and thus Amedisys cannot show that she gained some unfair advantage by continuing to communicate with those long-established sources. Additionally, Infinity argues that the referral sources for home health services cannot be legitimate business interests because the patients have choices and ultimately decide which company they want to use.
The record supports the trial court's finding that Amedisys made a sufficient evidentiary showing that enforcement of the restrictive covenants was reasonably necessary to prevent unfair competition. Infinity did not rebut the statutory presumption of irreparable harm and Amedisys established by competent evidence that: (1) as an employee of Infinity, Forjet was soliciting the same referral sources that had referred business to Amedisys, and (2) Cleveland Clinic referrals to Amedisys declined after Forjet left. As Amedisys points out, Infinity failed to cite any authority for its argument that referral from a physician or case manager cannot be a legitimate business interest merely because the patient can decline the referral. Moreover, there is no evidence that a significant
Finally, the record evidence supports the trial court's finding that the restrictive covenants at issue in this case were limited in scope and reasonable. See JonJuan Salon, Inc. v. Acosta, 922 So.2d 1081, 1084 (Fla. 4th DCA 2006).
In sum, we hold that referral sources are a protectable legitimate business interest under section 542.335, Florida Statutes. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court's order granting temporary injunctive relief against Infinity and Forjet.
We hereby certify conflict with Florida Hematology & Oncology v. Tummala, 927 So.2d 135 (Fla. 5th DCA 2006).
Affirmed.
WARNER and CONNER, JJ., concur.