A non-disclosure agreement (NDA) — sometimes called a confidentiality agreement — is one of the most commonly used business documents in Alberta, yet it is also one of the most frequently drafted poorly. Vague definitions, overbroad restrictions, and missing consideration can render an NDA unenforceable precisely when you need it most. This guide explains how Alberta courts approach NDA enforceability and how to draft an agreement that will hold up.
What Makes an NDA Legally Binding in Alberta
Like any contract in Alberta, an NDA must satisfy the basic requirements of contract formation: offer, acceptance, consideration, and certainty of terms. In employment contexts, an NDA signed at the start of employment is typically supported by the offer of employment itself. However, if an NDA is introduced mid-employment with no new consideration — a raise, promotion, or signing bonus — it may be unenforceable for lack of consideration.
The critical elements of a well-drafted Alberta NDA are:
- A clear definition of what constitutes "confidential information."
- The obligations of the receiving party with respect to that information.
- Permitted exceptions (publicly available information, required legal disclosure, etc.).
- The duration of the confidentiality obligation.
- Remedies for breach.
Defining Confidential Information Precisely
One of the most common NDA drafting errors is defining confidential information too broadly or too narrowly. A clause that says "all information shared between the parties is confidential" provides almost no guidance and may be challenged as unenforceable for vagueness. Conversely, an overly narrow definition may fail to capture genuinely sensitive business information.
Standard exclusions from the definition of confidential information include: information already in the public domain through no fault of the receiving party; information independently developed by the receiving party; and information received from a third party without restriction. These carve-outs are crucial for commercial reasonableness.
Mutual vs. Unilateral NDAs
NDAs come in two basic structures. A unilateral NDA protects one party's confidential information — typically used when only one party is disclosing sensitive information, such as when a business shares its proprietary processes with a potential vendor. A mutual NDA protects both parties' information — common in M&A due diligence, joint ventures, or partnership negotiations where both sides share sensitive data.
In Alberta's business community, mutual NDAs are more common in the energy sector and technology industries where exploratory partnerships involve bilateral information exchange. Unilateral agreements are more typical in employer-employee contexts and when bringing on service providers.
From a legal enforceability standpoint, both structures are valid under Alberta law. The distinction matters most in drafting the obligations section — a mutual NDA must carefully delineate each party's confidentiality obligations to avoid ambiguity about which restrictions apply to which party.
Trade Secrets and Injunctive Relief
Alberta courts recognize the law of confidence (derived from equity) as a basis for protecting trade secrets and confidential commercial information even without a written NDA. However, a written agreement provides far stronger remedies, including the ability to seek an injunction on an urgent basis.
To obtain an interlocutory injunction in Alberta to prevent disclosure or continued use of confidential information, the applicant must establish:
- A serious issue to be tried (i.e., a reasonable claim for breach of confidence).
- That irreparable harm would result if the injunction is not granted.
- That the balance of convenience favours granting the injunction.
Duration of Confidentiality Obligations
How long should an NDA last? In Alberta, courts assess reasonableness in the context of the nature of the information and the industry. A confidentiality obligation that lasts forever is generally enforceable for genuine trade secrets — a formula, a proprietary algorithm, or a client database may legitimately remain confidential indefinitely. However, a perpetual confidentiality obligation for run-of-the-mill business information may be challenged as unreasonable.
For most commercial NDAs in Alberta, a fixed term of 2 to 5 years after the termination of the relationship is common and generally viewed as reasonable. For software companies and tech startups, longer terms or perpetual obligations for specific categories of IP may be justified.
Alberta's Limitations Act, 2000 is also relevant: if you want to sue for breach of an NDA, you generally have 2 years from when you discovered (or ought to have discovered) the breach, with an ultimate 10-year limitation period.
Limitation Periods and Enforcement
The Limitations Act, 2000 (Alberta) establishes a 2-year basic limitation period for most civil claims, including breach of contract claims arising from an NDA. The clock begins running when the claimant knew or reasonably ought to have known of the breach, the identity of the defendant, and that a proceeding would be an appropriate remedy.
Discovery can be a challenge in NDA cases — often, a disclosing party does not know their confidential information has been misused until significant harm has already occurred. This is why NDA agreements often include audit rights and whistleblower provisions that require the receiving party to promptly notify the disclosing party of any unauthorized disclosure.
Drafting for Practical Enforceability
Beyond the legal essentials, there are practical drafting choices that significantly affect enforceability:
- Include a return/destruction clause: Require the receiving party to return or destroy confidential materials upon request or termination of the relationship.
- Specify the purpose: Limit use of confidential information to a defined purpose (e.g., evaluating a potential acquisition). Misuse outside that purpose is a separate breach.
- Address employees and agents: Require the receiving party to bind their employees, contractors, and agents to the same confidentiality obligations.
- Governing law: Specify Alberta law and courts to avoid disputes about which jurisdiction's law applies.
- Liquidated damages: For high-value information, consider including a pre-agreed damages clause to simplify enforcement. Alberta courts will enforce such clauses if they represent a genuine pre-estimate of harm.