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Commercial law, contractual law, contract of employment, sale of assets, non-competition clause, non-solicitation clause : In a decision rendered in January 2013, the Supreme Court of Canada decided that the nature of a given contract must first be specified in order to determine the rules that will be applicable to said contract. The interpretation of rules are much more generous in a commercial context than they in a contract of employment, seeing as the latter aims to provide employees with an adequate protection. It is thus necessary to distinguish the scope of a restrictive convenant based on whether the clause is found within a commercial agreement or a contract of employment. In a commercial context, a restrictive covenant will be considered legal and lawful, unless it can be shown that the application of the clause is contrary to public order or has unreasonable effects on a given party. Furthermore, a non-solicitation clause that does not provide a territorial limitation is not necessarily unreasonable, as geographical restrictions in non-solicitaton clauses have generally become obsolete (Payette v. Guay inc., 2013 CSC 45). Dubé Légal inc., Montréal commercial law lawyers.