City Ice Delivery Co. v. Evans

275 S.W. 87, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 660
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 23, 1925
DocketNo. 9567.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 275 S.W. 87 (City Ice Delivery Co. v. Evans) 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
City Ice Delivery Co. v. Evans, 275 S.W. 87, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 660 (Tex. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

JONES, C. J.

This is an appeal from an order of the district court of Dallas county, dissolving the temporary writ of injunction that had theretofore been granted ex parte in a suit filed by appellant, seeking an injunction restraining appellee from violating certain negative covenants in a written contract that had been entered into between the parties. The facts forming the basis of this suit are as follows:

Appellant is a corporation engaged in the business of delivering ice in the city of Dallas, both by retail to the domestic consumer and by wholesale to other consumers. To facilitate the transaction of its business, appellant owned and operated a number of ice delivery wagons, in charge of its employés. The territory in which appellant operated was divided into districts, and each employé to whom had been intrusted a delivery wagon was assigned to one of these districts and his work restricted to the territory assigned. The district in question was that territory located in the city of Dallas and bounded on the east by Ervay street, on the south by Forrest avenue, on the west by Wall street, and on the north by the tracks of the Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fé Railway Company. Appellant had purchased the ice business and good will of Phillips & Hall at about the time appellee entered appellant’s employment. Previous to this employment, appellee had been in the employ of Phillips & Hall, in charge of an ice wagon, and for about 5 years had operated an ice wagon under a contract similar to the one he entered into with appellant. During this previous employment the territory covered by appellee was approximately the same territory as that above described. In order that it might secure the benefit of the good will that was a part of the consideration for the purchase price paid Phillips & Hall, appellant endeavored to secure as employés all of the delivery men who were working in that capacity for Phillips & Hall at the time the purchase was made. There is some evidence in the case that appellant made it a condition precedent to its purchase of said business that the employés of Phillips & Hall who operated ice wagons enter into contracts with it. On November 28, 1924, the contract in question was executed, and appellee became an employé of appellant under its terms and conditions. Among other stipulations, the said contract Contained the following, which is a suflieient quotation for the purpose of a determination of the issues involved on this appeal:

“The company employs the driver for the purpose of driving an ice wagon and to serve customers assigned to him, to canvass for new customers, to instruct other drivers and em-ployés as foreman when.detailed so to do, and ,to perform such other duties as may from time to time be delegated to him by the company; and the company agrees to pay the driver a salary of not less than twenty-one dollars per week.
“Said driver binds himself to, at all times, observe all rules and regulations of said company, and to give his entire time and best attention to its business. * * *
“In consideration of the promises, the driver agrees not to engage in the ice business within the territory covered by the route, or routes, of which he may have had charge while in the employ of the company, or within five squares therefrom, for a term of three years immediately after his employment shall, for any cause, cease, either on his own account or as agent or employé of any person, persons, corporation, or corporations, by canvassing for and soliciting trade, by selling or delivering ice, by establishing or endeavoring or pretending to establish an ice route, by selling, transferring, or giving to any one any right he may claim to have acquired in any ice route, nor by assisting any one in doing any of the foregoing acts or things, nor in any manner whatsoever said driver agrees not to furnish any one information as to said route or the names of said customers. * * *
“This agreement is made for the protection of the good will and business which may have been or may hereafter be acquired upon said *89 route, and, in consideration of this agreement, said driver does hereby assign and convey to the company all interest in the good will and business upon said route now existing or hereafter to be acquired or claimed by him in any manner. * * * ”

The above-described district was assigned to appellee under this contract of employment, and he at once began the delivery of ice for appellant to the customers residing in said territory Appellee continued in said employment until on or about the 16th of February, 1925, when he entered the employment of a competing company and began the delivery of ice for such competing company within the same district. During his employment appellant’s business in said district amounted to the daily delivery of about a ton or a ton and a half of ice. Following the employment of appellee by the competing company, appellant’s business in said district only amounted to a daily delivery of about 100 pounds of ice. The evidence warrants the conclusion that those in said district who had theretofore been customers of appellant through the influence of appellee became the customers of the said competing company, and that the good will of the Phillips & Hall business that had been purchased by appellant and the good will of appellee that had been assigned by the terms of the contract to appellant had been completely lost.

Appellee filed a duly verified motion to dissolve the writ of injunction, and upon the issues joined by the pleadings the court heard evidence on which the order is based dissolving the injunction. Appellee’s contentions with respect to the issues so joined may be summarized as follows: (a) That the portion of the contract that bound appellee not to engage in a similar business for himself or for another within the said territory or within 5 squares adjacent to said territory, for a spáce of 3 years from the time of his employment with appellant ceased, was without consideration and void; (b) that such stipulation in the contract is against public policy and void, in that it restricts appellee’s freedom of employment to labor and- earn the money necessary for the support of himself and family; (c) that such stipulation is void, in that its tendency is to destroy competition in the business of delivering ice and to give appellant a monopoly in such business within said district.

It is undisputed evidence that the summer months are the months in which ice companies make their profits; that during what is called the “lean months” the business is operated at a loss, and that during the time appellee was in the employ of appellant the business was operated at a loss; that, in order to give appellee and similar employés employment for 12 months in the year, it was necessary to secure to appellant the good will built up through the personal contact with the customers by such employés, and this could only he accomplished by the covenant in said contract; that some of the time during the months in which the business was light was always spent by the employe, to whom had been- given .a district, in canvassing his district in behalf of the company and soliciting new customers; that the officers of appellant and those in general charge of the business did not come in personal contact with the trade; and that this personal contact'with its-customers and the good will of the business resulting therefrom was committed to such employés.

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Bluebook (online)
275 S.W. 87, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 660, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-ice-delivery-co-v-evans-texapp-1925.