Central New York Telephone v. Averill

55 Misc. 346, 105 N.Y.S. 378
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 55 Misc. 346 (Central New York Telephone v. Averill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Central New York Telephone v. Averill, 55 Misc. 346, 105 N.Y.S. 378 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1907).

Opinion

Andrews, J.

The plaintiff is a corporation organized under the laws of this State, maintaining and operating a telephonic system throughout' Central New York. The defendants are the proprietors of the Yates hotel in the city of Syracuse. On August 18, 1902, the plaintiff entered into a written contract with the defendants by which it agreed to install a telephone exchange throughout the defendants’ hotel, connected with the plaintiff’s lines, with its appropriate switchboards, wires and tubing. In consideration of this agreement the defendants were to furnish certain space and accommodation for the booths and appliances of the plaintiff, were to pay a certain compensation and were to give the plaintiff the exclusive right to place telephones in the hotel, jhe defendants now threaten tp violate this [347]*347moving plaintiff’s system and by installing therein the system of a rival corporation. To prevent this an action was brought and a temporary injunction was obtained. It is now sought to vacate this injunction so far as it prevents the installation of the second system.

The question as to whether the defendants had by the terms of the contract the right to end it upon giving thii’ty days’ notice was decided adversely to them on the argument and will not be discussed here. There remains the question as to whether the contract, so far as its exclusive features are concerned, is void as against public policy and in restraint of trade.

Upon this question briefs were handed to the court in July, 1906, and in that month a decision was rendered holding that the contract was valid. This, decision was based upon the case of Lough v. Outerbridge, 143 N. Y. 271. The court said that it was impossible to distinguish the case cited from the one at bar, and that, therefore, this court was bound by the decision of the Court of Appeals.

Before an order was entered, and in the fall of 1906, a motion was made by the defendants’ attorney for a reargument of the questions involved. That motion was granted and additional briefs were submitted. Since the reargument this matter has been delayed by the suggestion that some arrangement might be made between the plaintiff and the telephone company, whose instruments the defendants seek to substitute, and that, therefore, a decision was unnecessary. The court, however, has lately been informed that such an arrangement is not likely to be made and that, therefore, this motion must be decided. .

The first question to be determined is whether, as the court held upon the original argument, the case of Lough v. Outer-bridge is controlling upon this matter; and this depends upon the precise theory upon which contracts in restraint of trade are held to be void. Originally all contracts restraining trade wholly or partially were void. This was put upon the ground, first, of injury to the public in being deprived of the restricted party’s industry; and, second, of injury to the [348]*348party himself. But the original rule has been greatly modified. “ The latest decisions of courts in this country and in ' England show a strong tendency to very greatly circumscribe and narrow the doctrine of avoiding .contracts in restraint of trade. The courts do not go to the length of saying that contracts which they now would say are in restraint of trade are, nevertheless, valid contracts, and to be enforced; they do, however, now hold many contracts not open to the objection that they are in restraint of trade which a few years back would have been avoided on that sole ground, both here and in England.” Matthews v. Associated Press of the S. N. Y., 136 N. Y. 333.

In this State it has been repeatedly held that contracts which partially restrain trade are not objectionable, so long as the restrictions are only such as to afford a fair protection to.the party in favor of whom they are given, and are not só large as to interfere with the public interests, -

In Oakes v.. Cattaraugus W. Co., 143 N. Y. 430, for instance, Judge O’Brien says that a contract, between a corporation organized to supply a village with water and an individual, that he would not carry .on that business, or organize a corporation for that purpose, or ask or receive a franchise from the town authorities therefor, was valid. Assuming that both plaintiff and defendant intended to apply for franchises, and that the latter persuaded the former to abandon this purpose, there was nothing immoral or that threatened the public interests or the public good. If the business of a private corporation is threatened with competition, it is not-illegal or immoral to persuade a competitor to desist from the enterprise in which they both cannot succeed.

In short, in all such contracts, the public welfare is the first matter to be considered-; and, if it is not involved and the restraint imposed is reasonable, the contract is sustained.

ETor are those rules which say that a given restraint is against public policy to be arbitrarily extended so as to interfere with freedom of contract. It is only where such provisions threaten the public good in a distinctly appreciable manner that they should be held void. The contract must, in some tangible foiip, tb.re.atep. tlje public welfare before the [349]*349courts should interfere. Diamond Match Company v. Boeber, 106 N. Y. 473; Leslie v. Lorillard, 110 id. 519.

This being the rule, I think it quite clear that, if the plaintiff was an individual, or merely a private corporation, engaged in a private business, the contract could not be questioned. A butcher, for instance, could contract with'his customers to supply them with meat at a reduced rate in return for their agreement, to patronize him exclusively.

' The plaintiff, however, is a public corporation. It is, at least, a quasi common carrier; and the public nature and duties of such corporations need to be rather emphasized than restricted. It is intrusted by the State with the power of eminent domain, and is given the right to construct its lines over the public highways. In return for those powers intrusted to it and the rights conferred upon it, on the theory that the public welfare would be thereby promoted, it owes certain public duties beyond and above those owed by others. It is bound, for example, to treat the public without favor or favoritism. It may not refuse its services to one who offers the same terms as are accepted from another. It may not impose unreasonable terms or charge an extortionate price for the service it renders. But may a contract made by such a corporation, which involves the rendition of services, contain a provision, founded upon an adequate consideration, that the patron will not patronize any rival corporation? The question in Lough v. Outerbridge was very similar. There the defendants were common carriers running a line of steamships to Barbadoes. They charged forty cents a barrel for freight, which was a reasonable rate for the services rendered, just as, so far as appears in the case at bar, the plaintiff is charging a reasonable rate for the rent of its telephones. There was a steamer belonging to another company named El Callao trading between ¡New York and South America. As it passed near Barbadoes, its owners conceived the design of filling any unoccupied portions of their ship with freight for that point, and stopping there on its way south to make delivery. To prevent this competition, the defendants made a general offer that, on the weeks [350]

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Related

Central New York Telephone and Telegraph Co. v. Averill
58 Misc. 59 (New York Supreme Court, 1908)

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Bluebook (online)
55 Misc. 346, 105 N.Y.S. 378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-new-york-telephone-v-averill-nysupct-1907.