Chatelier v. Robertson
This text of 118 So. 2d 241 (Chatelier v. Robertson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Paul A. CHATELIER, Appellant,
v.
John Fite ROBERTSON, As Ancillary Administrator Cum Testamento Annexo of the Estate of Charles Redfield Vose, Deceased, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida. Second District.
*242 Baya M. Harrison, Jr., and Hugh E. Reams, of Mann, Harrison & Mann, St. Petersburg, for appellant.
John Fite Robertson, of Robertson & Robertson, Sarasota, for appellee.
SHANNON, Judge.
Appellant, as plaintiff below, filed his complaint seeking damages for breach of contract, and the trial court, on motion to dismiss filed by the defendant, dismissed the complaint with prejudice, and hence the appeal. The facts contained in the complaint and its amendments set forth that the plaintiff, sometimes known as Dr. Paul A. Chatelier, entered into a contract with Charles Redfield Vose on the 3rd day of June, 1952, wherein, among other things, Vose agreed to employ plaintiff as supervisor at the salary of $100 per week, so long as Chatelier should live and should not be disabled from engaging in the performance of his duties. In consideration thereof the plaintiff sold and transferred to Vose the plaintiff's manufacturing business, known as "Chatelier's Plant Food", together with the name, trade-mark, goodwill, licenses and privileges of said business and said product; by the said contract it was also agreed that the parties thereto would suffer special and irreparable damage in the event that the production and manufacture of said products should for any reason be interrupted for a period of more than sixty days; said agreement further provided that it should be binding upon the respective heirs, personal representatives, successors and assigns of the parties. Also the complaint alleged complete compliance with the agreement on the part of Chatelier. The plaintiff then sought damages alleging he was wrongfully dismissed from his employment on August 6, 1957. For a second cause of action plaintiff alleged compliance with the contract provisions for escrowing papers and assignment of the trade-marks and trade names. He acknowledged that payments were made to him of royalties from 1952 through 1956 although by his amendment he asserted that the payments were not in accordance with the original contract, but rather with a change that the parties made to the contract. He further alleged that the production and manufacture of "Chatelier's Plant Food" and the payment of royalties to him were permanently stopped by the defendant, and claims damages therefor. The contract, being some twelve typewritten pages, is attached to and made a part of the complaint. Portions of the defendant's motion to dismiss contained the following grounds:
"1. The said complaint, and both causes of action, fail to state a cause of action.
"3. The said complaint, and both causes of action, are based upon the written contract attached thereto and by reference made a part thereof, which contract is, in itself, so indeterminable as to time that it is terminable at the will of either party.
"4. The contract upon which the complaint, and both causes of action, are based shows upon its face that the parties thereto had agreed upon the rights and liabilities of the respective *243 parties in case of breach of the terms thereof by decedent Vose and a reverter of all proprietary rights under Section 7 thereof to Dr. Chatelier has terminated all liability of deceased and his Estate."
The chancellor's final order states in part:
"The Court having found that the contract which is the basis for the cause of action is an unambiguous contract the terms of which cannot be altered by parole evidence and plaintiff having stated before the Court that he wished to amend to set forth parole evidence of the facts leading up to and constituting the basis for the contract subsequently entered into and attached to the complaint as exhibit A, the announced purpose being to vary terms of the contract which the Court has found to be unambiguous, but which the Complainant avers to be Ambiguous, and the Court finding that an amendment of that nature would not state a cause of action.
"It Is Further Ordered and Adjudged That the Defendant's Motion to Dismiss the Complaint, as amended, is hereby granted, without leave to amend and with prejudice, on grounds 1, 3 and 4 of said motion."
The plaintiff was allowed to make the amendments referred to in the court's order, supra, but the chancellor still found the complaint insufficient to state a cause. In this opinion we shall treat the chancellor's order, insofar as the amendments are concerned, upon the question of law which the chancellor determined. In the contract under the "whereas" clause it is stated that Dr. Chatelier is in exclusive possession of the formula for, and engaged in the compounding and manufacturing of, a certain chemical plant food known as "Chatelier's Plant Food", with the name and trade-mark thereof duly registered, copyrighted and owned by Dr. Chatelier; that prior to the date of the contract Chatelier and Vose had entered into a certain "Exclusive Distribution and Sale Franchise" agreement; that both parties are now mutually desirous of and have entered into this agreement whereby Vose becomes the owner of Dr. Chatelier's said manufacturing business and Dr. Chatelier becomes an employee of said business under the ownership of Mr. Vose for the consideration and subject to the payment of the royalties and the performance of the other terms and conditions as contained in the said agreement. The contract provides, among other things, that Vose covenants and agrees to pay Chatelier, his heirs or assigns, certain royalties. In the contract it is provided:
"In view of the special and technical knowledge possessed by Dr. Chatelier of the processes and trade secrets involved in the manufacture of the products covered by this agreement, Dr. Chatelier's obligation hereunder to continue such employment in the supervision and manufacture of the same shall be capable of enforcement by specific performance. So long as Dr. Chatelier continues such active employment, Mr. Vose agrees to pay to Dr. Chatelier the sum of $100.00 per week as salary and compensation for his personal services, in addition to and as distinguished from the royalties as hereinabove provided."
Paragraph 7 of the contract provides:
"Mr. Vose agrees that, so long as this agreement is performed by or on behalf of Dr. Chatelier, that Mr. Vose will continue to manufacture and to sell `Chatelier's Plant Food' and such other product or products as may be covered by this agreement, and to use all reasonable diligence in the promotion and sale thereof. Should Mr. Vose abandon the manufacture or sale of such products, then all proprietory and other rights and interests in said products shall revert to and again become the property of Dr. Chatelier, his *244 heirs, personal representatives or assigns."
The plaintiff has assigned five points in his brief, namely:
1. The court erred in holding that the complaint as amended did not state a cause of action.
2. The court erred in holding that the contract, the breach of which is the basis of this suit, was so indeterminable as to time that it was terminable at the will of either party.
3. The court erred in holding that the contract provided for a reverter which terminated all liability of C.R. Vose or his estate for such breach.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
118 So. 2d 241, 39 Lab. Cas. (CCH) 66,293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chatelier-v-robertson-fladistctapp-1960.