Bettinger v. North Fort Worth Ice Co.

278 S.W. 466
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 21, 1925
DocketNo. 11571.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 278 S.W. 466 (Bettinger v. North Fort Worth Ice Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bettinger v. North Fort Worth Ice Co., 278 S.W. 466 (Tex. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

BUCK, J.

The North Fort Worth Ice Company, a corporation, filed an application for injunction against Frank Bettinger, seeking to enjoin him from soliciting, selling, delivering, or furnishing ice, directly or indirectly, either for himself or as the agent for any person, firm, corporation, or association, within a certain territory and prescribed route, for a period of one year from the date when said Frank Bettinger ceased to work for the petitioner, to wit, on September 17, 1925. It was alleged that the defendant entered into a written contract of employment with the plaintiff on March 1, 1924, whereby the said defendant was employed by the said plaintiff to act as a driver of one of its ice wagons, and in soliciting, selling, and delivering ice along a certain route in the city of Fort Worth, assigned to him by said company.

The. contract of employment, attached to plaintiff’s petition and introduced in evidence, provided that the defendant, designated the driver, bound himself to observe all the rules of the company, and to devote his entire and best attention to the company’s business. It was further provided that either party might terminate this agreement upon 15 days’ written notice, but that the company might discharge the driver at any time for the following reasons: Violations of its rules; insubordination; incivility to its patrons; failing to account promptly and properly for money or property belonging to the company; inattention to its business; unsatisfactory results from the route or improper handling of his outfit; or no need for his services.

It was further provided that the agreement should be in force as often as the driver should be employed by the company, whether his employment was continuous or not.

The contract contained the following:

“In consideration of the premises, driver agrees not to engage in the ice business directly [or] indirectly within the territory covered by the route or routes of which he may have had charge while in employ of company or within five squares of same for a term of one year immediately after his employment shall have ceased, whatever the reason, either for his own account or as agent or employé of any person, persons, corporations, or other'entity, by canvassing or soliciting trade, by selling or delivering ice, by establishing, or endeavoring to establish, or pretending to establish, an ice- route by selling or transferring or giving any one any right he may claim to have acquired in an ice route, nor shall driver assist any one in doing *468 the foregoing acts or give any information regarding said route or routes.
“This agreement is made for the protection of the good will and business which may have been, or may hereafter be acquired upon said route or routes, and in consideration of this agreement driver does here assign and convey to company all interest in good will and business upon said route or routes either existing or hereafter to be acquired or claimed by him in any manner.
“Any re-employment from time- to time of driver by company is hereby mutually recognized and accepted as a renewal- of and ancillary to this original contract the same as if re-executed by each and both without the necessity of actually executing a new contract, the provisions as to time and restrictions dating from last employment.
“Each of the parties thereto have read the foregoing, and affirm that they fully understand same.”

The plaintiff presented the application to the judge of the Forty-Eighth judicial district court of’ Tarrant county on September 24, 1925, who made the following order:

“The clerk is directed to issue notice to the respondent herein, citing him to be and appear before this court on September 29, 1925, at 5 o’clock p.'m. to show cause why the writ of injunction should not be issued as prayed for.”

On September 29th defendant or respondent filed his answer, consisting of a general demurrer, a general denial, and a special exception to plaintiff’s petition, in that, as -claimed, it failed to allege that defendant was selling ice to any of plaintiff’s customers or taking any of its customers away from, it, or that he was selling to any such customers within the territory or radius complained of, .or that he would do so unless restrained, and it wholly failed to set forth any state of facts showing that petitioner had or will suffer any damage or injury either in its good name, good will, or reputation, or from a financial standpoint. He further excepted to plaintiff’s pleadings because they were alleged to be vague, uncertain conclusions of the pleader, and argumentative, and did not ■ directly allege any character of damages that had accrued or would accrue to plaintiff. He further pleaded that the contract relied upon by plaintiff, and made between the plaintiff and the defendant, was null and void for laclr of mutuality, and that it was unilateral. He pleaded that at the time he signed the contract he had been working for the plaintiff company 8 years, and that there was no consideration shown, and in fact there was none, to sustain the contract. He further pleaded that the contract was null and void, in that it deprived him of the right to work and follow his business, and that it was in restraint of trade and against public policy. . He further pleaded that the reasoii ' he quit work for the plaintiff was because the plaintiff demanded that he, the defend- . ant, sell and deliver to its patrons ice, charging the customers for the loss in weight from the melting the ice. Probably other pleaded defenses will be noticed in the course of our opinion.

The court heard the evidence, consisting of the testimony of P.'A. Heeger, who was the president and a stockholder of the ice company at the time the contract of employment was entered into with defendant, but who had sold out his stock, and had resigned his office subsequently; also the testimony of J. D. Tittle, the present president of the company. The contract of employment was offered in evidence. The court gave judgment for the petitioner, issuing a temporary writ of injunction against the respondent, prohibiting the respondent from selling and delivering ice along the designated route, and within five squares thereof. The court found as a fact that the provision and covenant in the contract that the respondent would not engage in the selling of ice, either for himself or for others, along this route, and within five squares thereof, was a material inducement and reason for the employment of said respondent by the petitioner, and that the petitioner would not have employed said respondent nor assigned him to said route upon which he was engaged during his employment except and unless respondent had agreed to and had signed said contract, and particularly the covenant referred to. The court further found that during the time from the execution of the contract until the defendant voluntarily terminated his employment with petitioner that the petitioner paid him approximately the sum of $2,200, that. the route which had been assigned to defendant was established and maintained by said petitioner at a great expense and cost; that the.

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Bluebook (online)
278 S.W. 466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bettinger-v-north-fort-worth-ice-co-texapp-1925.