Dakin v. Williams

17 Wend. 449
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1837
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 17 Wend. 449 (Dakin v. Williams) 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
Dakin v. Williams, 17 Wend. 449 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1837).

Opinion

By the Court,

Nelson, Ch. J.

The first question in this case is, whether any or all of the facts presented by the special verdict constitute in judgment of law, a breach of the covenant declared upon? The words of it are as broad and comprehensive as the English language could well make it; and [255]*255as is apparent, were deliberately used to guard against the possibility of evading its intent and purport. It winds up by a stipulation that the defendants would not aid or assist, or be in any way or manner accessary to the printing or publishing of any papers, &c. That there has been a literal infraction of this part of the covenant can not be doubted; but we admit this is not always the proper criterion by which to determine whether a covenant has been broken or not, and that the court is bound to give to the words a reasonable construction with a view to arrive at the intent and meaning of the parties; and that this must be first ascertained before it can be determined whether a breach has taken place.

The meaning of the parties here, upon the language used, is plain enough. The plaintiffs had agreed to pay §3000 for the patronage and good will of the paper, and without some stipulation to the contrary, the defendants would have been at liberty to have immediately established another, and thereby have greatly interfered with the expected source of profit of the plaintiffs. The object of the covenant was to prevent the possibility of this injustice; and from the very cautious phraseology, to prevent it directly or indirectly. The defendants are not to print or publish, or aid or assist in, or be in any way accessary to the printing or publishing of any papers.

What constitutes aiding or assisting, or being in any way accessary to the printing and publication of a newspaper, is the question. It [452] must be conceded there may be acts of the defendants tending to promote the objects here forbidden, but which are so remote and accidental as not to be within the contemplation of the parties; and there is a good deal of difficulty in drawing the line between such acts and those intended to be prohibited. Thus, the mere sale of type, or of printing presses, might indirectly aid in the establishment of a paper; yet it could not reasonably have been contemplated by the plaintiffs that the defendant, Williams, was to give up a portion of his ordinary and established business. Many other like instances might be noticed. There is even some difficulty in saying that the sale of the type and renting of the press, - by Williams to Merrill, with a knowledge and for the express purpose of establishing a newspaper, the Intelligencer, in Utica, comes within the spirit of the prohibition; though it comes so near to, if not in fact being an infraction, that the experiment must, at least, be said to have been somewhat hazardous. It may be said in justification, that Williams was only acting in the line of his ordinary business, and that a knowledge of the purposes of his customer would not change the nature of the transaction; as in every case,» the' purchaser possessed the entire control as to the use of the material, and the difference between a purchase, with intent to use the articles for a particular purpose and the power to do so if he chose, so far as respects the covenant, is scarcely deserving the name of a distinction; at least-, we can hardly suppose it entered into the consideration of the parties, or that it would at all have influenced them if it had.

But the printing of the American Citizen is a much more direct and serious instance of an interference with the intent and purpose of the covenant. It is impossible to disguise by words, or deny that this is a political or miscellaneous newspaper, within the contemplation of the spirit and letter of the agreement, or that it was the first number of a series intended to be published, and that the defendant Williams so understood it; that it was not to be continued unless sufficient patronage was extended to it, is true; but this can not alter the nature of the transaction, for the same could probably be said in the case of every paper which he might choose to [453] assist, confessedly in direct violation of the agreement. At least the argument does not sound well from the mouth of the defendants in this case, who were engaged in a service tending to promote the success of the under[256]*256taking. It was an avowed and deliberate undertaking on the part of Wilson, permanently to establish a political newspaper, that must more or less conflict with the circulation and protits of the plaintiffs; and was a direct co-operation and assistance on the part of the defendant Williams. The printing and publishing of the first number was as objectionable, and even more so, as it was aiding in the experiment of the undertaking, as of the second or any subsequent number of the series; and the construction that would take the one out of the prohibition of the covenant under the circumstances, for aught that I can see, would authorize the printing and publication of the series, or of any other paper in the place. That the work was done by the job, or for compensation, does not vary the above view; because it certainly was not contemplated by the parties that the printing and publishing intended to be forbidden was such as should or would be done gratuitously. The plaintiffs would not probably have exacted security against aid or co-operation in commencing and building up a rival establishment on such terms. It could not have been presumed that the defendants would embark without any hope of gain in such an undertaking, to the injury of the plaintiffs. The stipulation, among other objects, was to guard against the influence which the offers or temptation of large profits from the business might have upon the conduct of the defendants. It seems to me, therefore, we are bound to say that here was a direct violation of the two different stipulations in the covenant namely: 1. Of the stipulation that the defendants would not suffer a paper to be printed or published in any building belonging to them, or either of them; and 2. Of the stipulation that they would not aid or assist, or be in [454] any manner accessary to the printing and publishing of the same by any person whatever.

The next question presented upon the above conclusion is whether the sum of $3000 is to be viewed as damages liquidated by the contract of the parties, or only in the light of a penalty ? There are many cases in the English books in which this question has been very fully examined and considered, but it would be an unprofitable consumption of time to go over them with a view or expectation of extracting any useful general principle that could be applied to this case. The following are the leading cases: Astley v. Welden, 2 Bos. & Pul. 346; Burton v. Glover, Holt’s N. P. R. 43, and note; Reilly v. Jones, 1 Bing. 302; Davies v. Penton, 6 Barn. & Cres. 216; Crisdee v. Bolton, 3 Carr. & Payne, 240; Randall v. Everest, 2 id. 577; Kemble v. Farren, 6 Bing. 141. In our court are the following: Dennis v. Cummins, 3 Johns. Cas. 297; Slosson v. Beadle, 7 Johns. R. 72; Spencer v. Tilden, 5 Cowen, 144, and note, p. 150; Nobles v. Bates, 7 id. 307; Knapp v. Maltby,

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Bluebook (online)
17 Wend. 449, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dakin-v-williams-nysupct-1837.