Bradford & Carson v. Montgomery Furniture Co.

115 Tenn. 610
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 115 Tenn. 610 (Bradford & Carson v. Montgomery Furniture Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bradford & Carson v. Montgomery Furniture Co., 115 Tenn. 610 (Tenn. 1905).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shields

delivered, the opinion of the Court.

Compiaintants J. H. Bradford and J. T. Carson, partners under the firm name and style of Bradford & Carson, bring this bill against R. J., B. W. and W. W. Montgomery, partners under the firm name and style of Montgomery Furniture Co., to recover upon a note made to complainants by the defendants on February 2, 1902, for $3,000.

The defense made by answer and cross bill, is that the complainants have breached a contract and agreement made with the defendants in part consideration of the note sued on, and have thus destroyed the consideration of the note and injured and damaged defendants in the sum of $10,000, for which they ask a decree.

The material facts found by the court of chancery appeals are these:

Complainants, who for some years have been engaged in the wholesale and retail furniture business in the city of Nashville, on February 2,1902, sold their entire business consisting of furniture, fixtures and the good will of the firm to defendants, agreeing, at the same time to remain out of the furniture business in Nashville for three yeras, from and after that time. The contract price of the merchandise and fixtures was $28,537.01, and was paid at the time of the sale. The value of the good will of Bradford & Carson, and their contract not to again resume business in Nashville within three years was agreed to be $3,000, and for this the note sued upon was [614]*614made. Complaints delivered their stock, fixtures, and business to the defendants, ceased the furniture business, and complainant Bradford entered and remained in the employ of the defendants, assisting them in conducting their business, for some four months.

That on July 1,1902, the Montgomery Furniture Company sold their entire business to the Montgomery Furniture & Manufacturing Company, a corporation which the defendants were instrumental in creating and organizing for the purpose of manufacturing furniture and dealing in it at wholesale and retail, in the city of Nashville. The defendants were the owners oh $30,000 of the capital stock of the corporation which was $72,000, were its chief officers and had the management of its business. The corporation continued the furniture business in all respects as it had been conducted by the defendants, until January 1, 1904, when it resold this part of its business to the defendants who have carried it on from that time in all things as they did prior to their sale to the corporation.

That on January 1, 1903, the complainant, J. H. Bradford, in connection with his brother and son as partners, again engaged in the wholesale furniture business in Nashville, under the firm name of The Bradford Wholesale Furniture Co., in opposition to defendants, competing with them while stockholders of the Montgomery Furniture & Manufacturing Co., and later as partners under their old firm name and style of Montgomery Furniture Co.

[615]*615Upon these facts the court of chancery appeals held and adjudged that the complainants had breached their contracts not to engage in the furniture business in Nashville for three years, from and after their sale to the defendants, and that this breach constituted a- good defense to any recovery upon the note sued on, and dismissed their bill with cost. That court made no finding upon the subject of damages which the defendants claim they sustained by complainants breach of their contract.

Complainants have appealed from this decree, and assigned errors. We will dispose of the several errors assigned as a whole.'

The first contention of the complainants is that when the defendants sold their- partnership business to the 'Montgomery Furniture & Manufacturing Co., they ceased to be in the furniture business, and complainants were free to again engage in it, and in doing so they were not in opposition to the defendants, and committed no breach of their contract. This contention is predicated upon the assumption that complainants contracted with the defendants as individuals only, and that when the defendants sold their business to the Montgomery Furniture & Manufacturing Co., they as individuals ceased to do business, and that that conducted by the Montgomery Furniture & Manufacturing Co. was a separate and distinct business carried on by another person, a stranger to their contract and in no way entitled to its benefits. They further say that the contract [616]*616which, they had made with the defendants was not assignable, and did not pass to the corporation with the sale of .the business of the defendants, but was lost and destroyed by such sale. In support of this contention they cite and rely upon the case of Bagby & Rivers Co. v. Rivers, 87 Maryland, 400; 67 Am. St. R., 357. That case does go far towards supporting their position. It is there held that Bagby, who had purchased the good will of the firm of Bagby & Rivers, together with the right to continue the business in the old firm name from the retiring partner Rivers, with a contract upon the part of Rivers not to again engage in the same business, in the same place within a limited time, lost the benefit of the contract and released Rivers from his agreement Avhen he assigned said contract to a corporation formed to continue the same business. We are, however, not satisfied with the reasoning of the court in that case, believing it to be too technical, and destructive of the spirit of the contract and the purpose and intention of the parties, and are unwilling to follow it. All contracts should be construed and interpreted, when it is possible to do so, in accordance with the intention of the parties, so as to effect the ends contemplated and contracted for by them. We think the complainants contracted with the defendants not to engage in the furniture busines for three years in competition with them, regardless of whether they conducted their business as individuals, partners, or stockholders in a corporation. The thing contracted for was protection against competition from [617]*617the complainants in order that the defendants might have the full benefit of the good will of the old business they had purchased. It was immaterial to the complainants in what name the defendants conducted their business ; that was a matter in which they were not interested. Their contract was simply not to. engage in a business which would by competition be injurious to, or compete with the capital, energy and ability which the defendants were investing in and devoting to the furniture business in Nashville. Complainants would probably have made the same contract for the same consideration, if defendants at the time had told them they intended to incorporate their business. The entire business of the defendants, including all they had purchased from the complainants, was made over to the corporation, and they became the owners of nearly one-half of the capital stock, and were its chief officers. They had the same money invested in the business of the corporation, and gave that business the same attention as they had previously their partnership business. The business of the corporation, to the extent they were interested in it, was their business and was as much protected by the contract of the complainants as it was while it was conducted in their OAvn name. Certainly after January 1,1904, when they withdrew from the corporation, their business was the same in all respects as it was when the contract was made with the complainants.

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Bluebook (online)
115 Tenn. 610, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bradford-carson-v-montgomery-furniture-co-tenn-1905.