Anderson v. Truitt

148 A. 223, 158 Md. 193, 1930 Md. LEXIS 29
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 9, 1930
Docket[No. 41, October Term, 1929.]
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 148 A. 223 (Anderson v. Truitt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Truitt, 148 A. 223, 158 Md. 193, 1930 Md. LEXIS 29 (Md. 1930).

Opinion

Bom>, O. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Purchasers of a business property and good will sue in this case to restrain violation by the sellers of a covenant by them not to enter into a business of a similar nature and character within a limited time, in a specified area. And the trial court, having by its final decree denied the injunction prayed, the purchasers appeal. The decree dismissed the bill of complaint altogether as to one defendant, May IT. Truitt, and enjoined Thomas J. Truitt merely from conducting the new, similar business in such a manner as to harass and embarrass the plaintiffs in the conduct of the business sold to them.

The original business was that of selling furniture in Salisbury, Wicomico County. The style of the business was the T. J. Truitt Furniture Company; and it was carried on in a building owned by Truitt and wife, the two defendants, as tenants by the entireties. The business was declared to be owned by the wife however, and her husband occupied the avowed position of manager; and in the agreement of sale, executed by both husband and wife, for a purchase price stated, the wife alone appears as selling and conveying to Anderson and Bozman two-thirds of the business, and the husband and wife together agreed to convey to them, and later did convey to them, two-thirds of the real property. *196 The Truitts thus retained one-third of the interest previously held by them. The agreement included a covenant that the sellers, in consideration of the sale, would not enter into a business of a similar nature or character either directly or indirectly in Wicomico County, Maryland, during a period of twenty-five years. There was a collateral agreement, furthermore, that a corporation should be formed to take over and carry on the business; and it was formed, under the name of T. J. Truitt Furniture Co., Inc., and the respective shares of Anderson, Bozman, and Mrs. Truitt in the business and property were converted into ownership of thirds of the stock, Mrs. Truitt receiving the whole of the stock representing the purchase price of the sale. Three years later Mrs. Truitt sold her one-third of the stock, constituting all her remaining interest, to Anderson. Subsequent to that sale a similar business was set up by the Truitts on the same street in Salisbury, a short distance from the previous place of business, under the name of the Salisbury Furniture Company. The words “T. J. Truitt, Manager” were displayed under the name of the company on the front of the building. That new business was, still later, incorporated under the same name. There was testimony of resulting confusion in the minds of persons dealing, or intending to deal, with the older company, but this court takes the view that the case is to be cpnsidered only as one upon a violation of contract, and that the confusion, if any, is therefore unimportant.

The new business, that of the Salisbury Furniture Company, with Truitt as manager, was represented to be the business of a daughter or daughters of Truitt and wife, but Truitt in his testimony, while declaring that each of two daughters held twenty shares of stock in the corporation out of a total issue of fifty, and that he himself held the remaining ten, admitted that the money represented by the daughters’ shares had been given them by their parents. The daughters took mr part in the conduct of the business before incorporation and take none now after incorporation, have no power to sign checks, and derive earnings from outside occupations. Truitt and wife, the parties sought to be en *197 joined hero, actively manage the business, both sign checks, always in his name, and both take part in the work as needed every day. The evidence, in our opinion, establishes that they have both been engaging in a competing business contrary to the terms of the contract of sale.

Tlier^ is no uncertainty in the principles of law governing a suit to enforce a covenant to abstain from competition with a business sold. Given the collateral stipulation, founded upon sufficient consideration, to abstain from such a competing business within a reasonably limited area, the;purchasers of the business are, as a general rule, and almost as a matter of course, entitled to the aid of a court of equity by injunction to secure them in their contract rights. “Whether the consideration for the restraint is adequate or not, is a question that the court will not inquire into-. It is sufficient that the contract shows on its face a legal and valuable consideration; but whether adequate or inadequate to the restraint imposed, must be determined by the parties themselves, upon their own view of all the circumstances attending the particular transaction. If it were otherwise, it would he the court and not the parties, that would make the contract. All that the court is required to do, in passing upon the validity of the covenant, is to determine whether the restraint is reasonable and consistent with law, and whether there be a legal consideration to support it.” Guerand v. Dandelet, 32 Md. 561, 568; 4 Pomeroy, Equity Jurisprudence, sec. 1344, and note; Armstrong v. Bitner, 71 Md. 118; Kaliopulus v. Lumm, 155 Md. 30.

The appellees, referring to the analogy of a suit for specific performance of a contract, and the rule that a decree for specific performance is not of absolute right in a party hut of sound judicial discretion, urge that the injunction sought should be refused, for one reason, because the area from which the sellers were by the terms of their contract to be excluded, Wicomico County, was larger than was necessary or reasonable fox tbe protection of the business sold, and that therefore in the exercise of its discretion the court should *198 withhold its aid to enforce it. That argument might still leave open a question of enforcing a more limited restriction, as for instance, one against re-entering the business in the same town. Guerand v. Dandelet, 32 Md. 561, 567. The restriction in this instance is not unusually extensive in area, however. As territory to be reached from the county seat, the whole county seems to be within ordinary and reasonable limits. The restrictions upheld in Guerand v. Dandelet and Armstrong v. Bitner, supra, and in many cases elsewhere, were equally extensive. And under modem conditions of communication and travel there would be even less ground for objection to such a restriction. As Lord Bowen said of the same objection in the leading case of Jacoby v. Whitmore, 49 L. T. (N. S.), 335, 339, “The answer is, that it is not a hard bargain because it is not unreasonably in restraint of trade, and it does not shock the conscience.” The sellers procured a sale of the property by means of the covenant, and if it cannot be impeached for unreasonably, restraining trade for the public interest or shocking the conscience of the court from the standpoint of the sellers’ interests, it must be enforced.

Both of the appellees deny violation of the covenant. Thomas J. Truitt, the husband, denies that he was a party to it, or bound by it, and both he and his wife deny violating it, if both were bound. As already stated, we find from the evidence that both acted in contravention of the covenant, and it is not disputed that the wife was bound by it.

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Bluebook (online)
148 A. 223, 158 Md. 193, 1930 Md. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-truitt-md-1930.