Court Opinion

ID: 3606066
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 23:51:29.371174+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:07:28.629149
License: Public Domain

[EDITORS' NOTE:  THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 547 
The appellant has raised two questions with respect to the validity of the contract sued upon. In the first place, it is contended that it was wholly without any consideration; for the reason that, when it was made, there was in force a prior contract, made in 1893, which required the plaintiff to do every act and thing required of him by the contract of *Page 549 
1895; invoking a familiar principle in the law of contracts. (Vanderbilt v. Schreyer, 91 N.Y. 392, 401.) I think that there are two answers to this. The writing of 1893 was of a twofold nature. It was, in part, an acknowledgment by the plaintiff of the receipt of the sum of $250, as payment in full for all debts, services, demands, etc., and it was, in part, an agreement by the plaintiff to render to the defendant his "services in selling moulding sand for them" and "not to allow any other person to use his name in the purchase, or the sale, of moulding sand." The payment of $250 would not appear to be the consideration for the agreement by the plaintiff to render future services, but, rather, to be, simply, the receipt, or acknowledgment of payment, of something which was then due the plaintiff. The further statement as to compensation for those services confirms this interpretation, and it is, in fact, borne out by the plaintiff's evidence that the $250 was paid him, at the time, on an old contract. But, if we could assume that it was the consideration for the plaintiff's agreement to render the future services, still, I think it is clear that that agreement was essentially other than the contract which the parties made in 1895. The plaintiff, by his agreement of 1893, was to serve the defendant in selling moulding sand for it and in any other way it might require. He agreed to become its agent and his agreement did not compel him to cease dealing in the sand, for his own account. But, by the subsequent contract of 1895, such an obligation, to cease the business of dealing in Albany moulding sand, was imposed upon, and assumed by, him. Then, further, I do not think that the finding of fact, that the agreement of 1893 was treated by the parties as at an end, is without support in the evidence. The trial judge could reasonably infer from the facts testified to, that the defendant had stopped paying to the plaintiff the fifteen dollars a month, for some two months before the agreement of 1895, and that the plaintiff, thereupon, had resumed his dealings in sand until the contract of 1895 was made, that the parties regarded their arrangement as terminated and had abandoned it. *Page 550 
I think, therefore, that the contract of 1895, which is found to have been made by the parties and carried into execution, was valid and enforceable; unless, as it is, in the second place, contended by the appellant, it was against public policy, as being in restraint of trade, and, therefore, void. The argument, in that respect, seems to be that the contract was the plaintiff's covenant not to do business in moulding sand anywhere and was not connected with a transfer of anything in the way of a business, or a plant. As to the plaintiff's agreement, the appellant is incorrect as to the general nature of its restraint upon the plaintiff. The finding is, and the evidence supports it, that the plaintiff's agreement related only to the purchase and sale of Albany moulding sand; that is, moulding sand from the county of Albany. However, I should not regard it as of any controlling importance, if it were as broad as the appellant claims. The feature, which is said to distinguish this case from our prior decisions upon the subject, is that the plaintiff's agreement was unaccompanied by the sale of any business plant, or stock. At the time of contracting with the defendant, he had neither. He was engaged in the business of buying and selling Albany moulding sand and was, presumably, a business rival of the defendant. By this contract, he agreed to discontinue his business and to turn over to the defendant all orders for sand, which he then had, or might thereafter receive. The effect of the arrangement was to transfer to the defendant the good will, or custom, of the business which he had built up, and to cease to be its competitor to the extent described. That a man may not contract, as he will, with respect to himself, or to his property rights, demands the intervening of some authoritative reason, founded in considerations of public policy. The denial of the right can only be reasonable, when to permit its exercise is seen to be fraught with consequences injurious to the interests of society. The state has a right to limit individual rights, when their exercise touches the public interests and, if unrestrained, would be prejudicial to order, or to progress. The doctrine, which avoids a contract for being *Page 551 
one in restraint of trade, is founded upon a public policy. It had its origin at a time when the field of human enterprise was limited and when each man's industrial activity was, more or less, necessary to the material well-being and welfare of his community and of the state. A discussion of the doctrine and the history of the law appear in the cases of Diamond Match Company
v. Roeber, (106 N.Y. 473) and of Leslie v. Lorillard,
(110 N.Y. 519). The conditions, which made so rigid a doctrine reasonable, no longer exist. In the present practically unlimited filed of human enterprise, there is no good reason for restricting the freedom to contract, or for fearing injury to the public from contracts which prevent a person from carrying on a particular business. Interference would only be justifiable when it was demonstrable that, in some way, the public interests were endangered. But contracts between parties, which have for their object the removal of a rival and competitor in a business, are not to be regarded as contracts in restraint of trade. They do not close the field of competition, except to the particular party to be affected. To say, at the present day, that such a contract as was made in this case was affected by a public interest and was a matter of public concern would be, in my opinion, unreasonable. Such a contract not only does not obstruct trade; but it may be for the advantage of the public as well as of the individual. (Story on Contracts, § 551.) Heretofore, in most of the cases which have come before the courts, the covenant to refrain from a calling within a territory described accompanied a sale of the business itself, with all its appliances or appurtenances. For obvious reasons, that would be so; but, if the calling be one which is followed without a business plant, is any principle of public policy the more violated by a covenant to discontinue it? Clearly not and this court has not held to that effect. Indeed, its utterances have intimated to the contrary. Leslie v. Lorillard, (supra), is much in point; where the contract was that a steamship company would, in consideration of monthly payments, discontinue its business of running vessels *Page 552 
between certain ports. The contract was not considered to be objectionable. Quite recently, it was said by Judge LANDON, speaking for this court, in the case of Cummings v. Union BlueStone Co. (164 N.Y. 401), that "it may be conceded that the law, as now understood, restrains no one from selling his property, nor does it compel any one to continue a business which he can sell, or finds it to his interest to abandon; much less to continue it for any time, or in any particular manner or place." The Diamond Match case, the Leslie case and the case ofTode v. Gross (127 N.Y. 480), were cited and relied upon. InBrett v. Ebel, (29 App. Div. 256), Mr. Justice BARRETT considered a similar question and it was there held that the contract in question, which involved only the sale of the good will of the particular business, was not within the application of the doctrine. The plaintiff exercised his right to agree to go out of the business, for an advantage deemed to be gained by him in so agreeing, and he, also, agreed to turn over to the defendant his good will and custom. I think the contract did not come within the condemnation of the law.
The case of Francisco v. Smith, (143 N.Y. 488), is not at all opposed to this view. It was stated in the opinion, what is an evident fact, that an agreement not to engage in a particular business is a valuable right, in connection with the business it was designed to protect, and that if the business had not been disposed of there would have been nothing for the agreement to operate upon. In that case, the covenant accompanied the transfer of the business and the vendee was held capable of further assigning the covenant, in connection with his sale of the business, to another.
I think the judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
PARKER, Ch. J., O'BRIEN, CULLEN and WERNER, JJ., concur; HAIGHT, J., absent; LANDON, J., not sitting.
Judgment affirmed. *Page 553