Court Opinion

ID: 7959408
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 00:30:11.554884+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:34:22.963924
License: Public Domain

Per Curiam.
Plaintiff instituted this suit for declaratory judgment, seeking to have a provision of a contract between plaintiff and defendant declared void. The trial court ruled in favor of plaintiff and defendant has appealed.
Pursuant to the contract, defendant supplied physicians to staff plaintiff’s emergency room. Upon termination of the contract, plaintiff advertised in various journals for replacement physicians, and among the applicants were some of the staff physicians supplied by defendant. The contractual provision which plaintiff sought to have declared unenforceable (the third paragraph of section 9) provides in substance that during the term of the contract and for a period of one year thereafter, plaintiff will not impair a relationship which exists or will exist between defendant and the physicians, and that the hospital will not make offers or contracts of employment with such physicians. The text of paragraph 9 is as follows:
"9. Offers to Personnel. The parties acknowledge the following:
"a. Hospital Personnel. The employees of the hospital have been or will be trained at great expense by the hospital, and the hospital has a compelling interest in maintaining its contractual relationships and expectancy of future contractual relationships with its employees. In addition, if the employees of the hospital were to terminate their relationship with the hospital and render services to the corporation, the corporation would be unfairly benefited, without adequate compensation to the hospital, by the investment of the hospital.
"b. Corporation Physicians. The physicians to be supplied by the corporation at the hospital have been or will be recruited, oriented and trained at great expense by the corporation, and the corporation has a compelling interest in maintaining its contractual relationship and expectancy of future contractual relationships with the physicians it supplies at the hospital. In addition, if *556the corporation supplied physicians were to terminate their relationships with the corporation and render services to the hospital, the hospital would be unfairly benefited, without adequate compensation to the corporation, by the investment of the corporation.
"Accordingly, each party covenants that it shall not, during the term of this agreement and any renewals thereof, and for a period of one (1) year thereafter, directly or indirectly, impair or initiate any attempt to impair the relationship or expectancy of a continuing relationship which exists or will exist between the other party and the personnel employed or the physicians retained by the other party at any time during the term of this agreement or renewals thereof, or make offers or contracts of employment or offers or contracts for services with such personnel or physicians, or with any partnership, corporation, or association through which such personnel or physicians may render services or employment to the offending, party.” (Emphasis added.)
The statute under which plaintiff argued and the trial court held the contractual provision void is as follows:
"All agreements and contracts by which any person, copartnership or corporation promises or agrees not to engage in any avocation, employment, pursuit, trade, profession or business, whether reasonable or unreasonable, partial or general, limited or unlimited, are hereby declared to be against public policy and illegal and void.” MCL 445.761; MSA 28.61.
Plaintiff argues that the contractual provision in question comes within the purview of MCL 445.761; MSA 28.61 as a promise not to engage in any "employment”. Plaintiff argues that the word "employment” as used in the statute should be given as broad an interpretation as is consistent with the common or ordinary meaning generally ascribed to it. Thus, plaintiff argues, "employ*557ment” includes not just the state of being employed, or an occupation, profession, trade or business, but also includes the act of employing. For example, Black’s Law Dictionary defines "employment” as follows:
"Act of employing or state of being employed; that which engages or occupies; that which consumes time or attention; also an occupation, profession, trade, post or business.” Black’s Law Dictionary (5th ed, 1979), p 471.
Defendant, on the other hand, argues that the Legislature intended to use the word "employment” more narrowly. Relying on the rule of construction known as ejusdem generis,1 defendant argues that the meaning ascribed to the word "employment” for purposes of the statute must only be such as to allow it to remain a logical member of the class including such words as "avocation, pursuit, trade, profession or business”. Defendant argues that to interpret "employment” more broadly would cause it "to stick out like a sore thumb” among all of the words with which it is associated in the law.
The trial court resolved the issue as follows:
"4. Although the issue is not free from doubt, I conclude that the statute does declare void the contract involved here. The statutory prohibition against contracts by which any person agrees not to engage in any employment could be interpreted narrowly, as defendant suggests, and include only those agreements in *558which contracting party A agrees with contracting party B that A will not engage in a given employment. In fact, I understand that defendant has such contracts with its physicians, but those contracts are not now before this court.
"5. On the other hand, the language appears to be sufficiently broad to cover as well the contracts in which contracting party A agrees with contracting party B that A will not employ (as employer) certain persons. That is exactly what the instant contract provides, and is exactly what the statute proscribes.
"6. The statute evinces a strong public policy in favor of a person’s ability to become employed. If the statute were to be interpreted as defendant urges, that policy would be frustrated, albeit in a very limited way.”
We agree with the defendant. The trial court’s broad interpretation of the word "employment” to encompass the act of employing as well as the state of being employed would in fact cause it to "stick out like a sore thumb” among the words with which it is associated in this statute. We believe that the Legislature, in choosing the term here at issue, intended to void any promise by an employee not to compete with his employer at the termination of their relationship. We do not believe that the Legislature envisioned the present situation, i.e., a mutual covenant between two employers not to interfere with the contractual relations of the other.
We recognize that the trial court’s broad interpretation of the statute would tend to further the public policy recognized by the statute. Nonetheless, we are not justified in extending an unanticipated and unintended effect to a statute simply because, in doing so, we would further a recognized public policy. Rather, it is a task of the Legislature, and not of this Court, to devise the means by which a particular public policy will be carried out. MCL 445.761; MSA 28.61, as drafted, *559was not intended to void the contract here in question. Thus, the judgment of the trial court is reversed.
Reversed.

 The rule on construction known as "ejusdem generis” provides that where general words follow a designation of particular subjects, the meaning of the general words will ordinarily be presumed to be and construed as restricted by the particular designation and as including only things of the same kind, class, character or nature as those specifically enumerated. People v Smith, 393 Mich 432, 436; 225 NW2d 165 (1975).