Accurate Answering Service, Inc. v. Answering Service, Inc.

394 S.W.2d 765, 1965 Ky. LEXIS 207
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJuly 2, 1965
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 394 S.W.2d 765 (Accurate Answering Service, Inc. v. Answering Service, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Accurate Answering Service, Inc. v. Answering Service, Inc., 394 S.W.2d 765, 1965 Ky. LEXIS 207 (Ky. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

CLAY, Commissioner.

Both parties have appealed from a judgment enforcing an agreement between them. We will consider their contentions following a statement of these somewhat complicated proceedings. Appellant, Accurate Answering Service, Inc., will hereafter be referred to as “Accurate”, and ap-pellee, Answering Service, Inc., will be referred to as “Answering”.

Answering had conducted a telephone answering business in Louisville for approximately 15 years before this controversy arose. In its employ were Lorraine Purcell and Mary Hughes, with whom Answering had a valid agreement that they would not engage in a competitive undertaking in Louisville for a period of two years after the termination of their employment. In September 1962, Answering’s attorney Manny Frockt incorporated Accurate to engage in the same type of business, and the two employees above mentioned resigned from Answering and went to work for Accurate. This was a clear violation of their agreement.

Shortly thereafter Answering filed a suit against Accurate, Frockt, Purcell and Hughes for an injunction and other relief. (A temporary injunction was issued by this Court in March 1964.) On December 3,' 1962, before this case was heard on its; merits, the parties (excluding Frockt) entered into a compromise settlement agreement fixing their rights, and it was incorporated in an agreed judgment. The agreement referred to a list of Answering’s subscribers on file as of December 3, 1962, and its general purpose was to prevent Accurate, Purcell or Hughes from taking these subscribers away from Answering.

On the appeal by Accurate the controversy revolves around two provisions, one in the agreed judgment and one in the agreement. These provided:

1(c) “In the event that the defendants (Accurate, et al.) or any of them obtain any subscribers described in the aforesaid agreement from and after this date * * *, then in that event as liquidated damages, defendants shall pay to plaintiff on demand a sum or sums equal to all service charges paid or owed by said subscribers for a period beginning on the date said subscribers gave their business to any of the defendants, directly or indirectly, and ending on the first day of November, 1964.”
3(a) “Should any present subscriber approach Second Parties (Accurate, et al.), or any of them, to have Second Parties handle their service, Second Parties shall write a letter to the National Office of the First Party (Answering) telling it that said subscriber desires to leave First Party and further desires to use the services of Second Parties. Second Parties, and any of them, shall have the right to accept said subscriber only if written consent is given by First Party to Second Parties. This will apply until November 1, 1964.” (Our emphasis.)

For a while the parties operated under the agreement and the agreed judgment with the net result that Accurate was obtaining more and more of Answering’s original subscribers. Answering had given its written consent to the acceptance of some of these by Accurate under item 3(a) of the agreement quoted above. The present controversy was precipitated when Answering filed a motion for a rule and other relief on the ground that Accurate and its employees were violating the agreement and agreed judgment in many respects. Countermotions were filed by Accurate." The two judgments appealed from in substance adjudged as follows: (1) The parties were bound by their agreement and the agreed judgment and they were entered into in good faith by both parties; (2) Accurate must pay to Answering all fees collected or owed for services rendered by Accurate to customers whose names appeared as subscribers on Answering’s De[768]*768cember 3, 1962, list (with certain exceptions not here involved); (3) Accurate must furnish the court’s Master Commissioner the list of all of its customers since the date of incorporation, and the Master Commissioner was directed to assess and collect the proper charges from Accurate. (A subsequent money judgment was entered pursuant to this last order, which is now pending on appeal but has been ordered held in abeyance until the decision on the appeals we are here considering.)

Accurate’s three contentions are: (1) It should not be required to account for fees obtained for services rendered to former subscribers of Answering whom Answering by written consent had released to Accurate; (2) Accurate should not be required to account for fees obtained for services rendered to former subscribers of Answering (where no written consent was given) who had terminated their subscriptions with Answering without any solicitation on the part of Accurate; and (3) Answering could not refuse its written consent arbitrarily and without just cause.

With respect to the first contention, we think Accurate’s position is well taken. Section 3(a) of- the agreement provided that Accurate “shall have the right to accept” an old subscriber of Answering when the latter gave its written consent. This provision must be construed as modifying section 1(c) of the-agreed judgment which provided that Accurate shall pay as liquidated damages the service charges paid or owed by any former subscribers of Answering obtained by Accurate. It would be meaningless otherwise. What else could Answering be consenting to except the loss of fees from an already lost subscriber?

While there is some substance to Answering’s complaint that the agreement was designed to prevent Accurate from competing with it insofar as its old subscribers were concerned, the language of the agreement must be interpreted to mean that Answering could (in its absolute discretion, as we are hereafter deciding) voluntarily relinquish its claim to the subscriber, and as a consequence its claim to damages as a result thereof. As we have said, Answering’s written consent would be utterly meaningless otherwise, and surely it must serve some purpose in the agreement. Accurate should not have been required to account for these customers.

Accurate’s second contention, that it could properly accept certain customers (without penalty) without Answering’s consent, has no merit. This lawsuit was commenced by Answering to prevent the pirating of its subscribers by Accurate, which was being done through Accurate by Purcell and Hughes in flagrant violation of a pre-existing agreement. It was upon the assurance by those representing Accurate that the latter was going into something other than the pirating business that Answering was induced to forego its clear rights against Purcell and Hughes and its claimed rights against Accurate and Frockt. The tenor of the compromise agreement v/as to compel Accurate to leave Answering’s subscribers alone, and if this was not done, Accurate (and Purcell and Hughes) would pay liquidated damages for exploiting them.

Those subscribers were specified by name and they were “off limits”. Not only did Accurate agree (in paragraph 4) not to solicit these subscribers but they agreed not to give them service. The agreement must be construed as attempting to avoid as much as possible the question of solicitation of Answering’s old subscribers by Accurate (who were actually being solicited indirectly by Accurate’s newspaper advertising) and to avoid a controversy over the time of termination of Answering’s service to its subscribers and the reasons therefor.

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Bluebook (online)
394 S.W.2d 765, 1965 Ky. LEXIS 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/accurate-answering-service-inc-v-answering-service-inc-kyctapp-1965.