Diamond Match Co. v. . Roeber

13 N.E. 419, 106 N.Y. 473, 11 N.Y. St. Rep. 47, 61 Sickels 473, 1887 N.Y. LEXIS 899
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 4, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by234 cases

This text of 13 N.E. 419 (Diamond Match Co. v. . Roeber) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Diamond Match Co. v. . Roeber, 13 N.E. 419, 106 N.Y. 473, 11 N.Y. St. Rep. 47, 61 Sickels 473, 1887 N.Y. LEXIS 899 (N.Y. 1887).

Opinion

Andrews, J.

Two questions are presented: First. Whether the covenant of the defendant contained in the bill of sale executed by him to the Swift & Courtney & Beecher Company on the 27th day of August, 1880, “ that he shall and will not, at any time or times within ninety-nine years, directly or indirectly engage in the manufacture or sale of friction matches (excepting in the capacity of agent pr employe of *478 said The Swift & Courtney & Beecher Company), within any of the several States of the United States of America, or in the territories thereof, or within the District of Columbia, excepting and reserving, however, the right to manufacture and sell friction matches in the State of Nevada and in the territory of Montana,” is void as being a covenant in restraint of trade; and, Second, as to the right of the plaintiff, under the special circumstances, to the equitable remedy by injunction to enforce the performance of the covenant. There is no real controversy as to the essential facts. The consideration of the covenant was the purchase by the Swift & Courtney & Beecher Company, a Connecticut corporation, of the manufactory No. 528 west Fiftieth street, in the city of New York, belonging to the defendant, in which he had, for several years prior to entering into the covenant, carried on the business of manufacturing friction matches, and of the stock and materials on hand, together with the trade, trade-marks and good will of the business, for the aggregate sum (excluding a mortgage of $5,000 on the property, assumed by the company) of $46,724.05, of which $13,000 was the price of the real estate. By the preliminary agreement of July 27, 1880, $28,000-of the purchase-price was to be paid in the stock of the Swift & Courtney & Beecher Company. This was modified when the property was transferred August 27,1880, by giving to the defendant the option to receive the $28,000 in the notes of the company or in its stock, the option to be exercised on or before January !> 1881. The remainder of the purchase-price, $18,724.05, was paid down in cash, and subsequently, March 1,1881, the defendant accepted from the plaintiff, the Diamond Match Company, in full payment of the $28,000, the sum of $8,000 in cash and notes, and $20,000 in the stock of the plaintiff, the plaintiff company having, prior to said payment, purchased the property of the Swift & Courtney & Beecher Company and become the assignee of the defendant’s covenant. It is admitted by the pleadings that in August, 1880 (when the covenant in question was made), the Swift & Courtney & Beecher Company carried on *479 the business of manufacturing friction matches in the States of Connecticut, Delaware and Illinois, and of selling the same “in the several States and territories of the United States and in the District of Columbia; ” and the complaint alleges, and the defendant in his answer admits, that he was at the same time also engaged in the manufacture of friction matches in the city of Hew York, and in selling them in the same territory. The proof tends to support the admission in the pleadings. It was shown that the defendant employed traveling salesmen and that his matches were found in the hands of dealers in ten States. The Swift & Courtney & Beecher Company also sent their matches throughout the country wherever they could find a market. When the bargain was consummated, on the 27th of August, 1880, the defendant entered into the employment of the Swiff & Courtney and Beecher Company, and remained in its employment until January, 1881, at a salary of $1,500 a year. He then entered into the employment of the plaintiff and remained with it during the year 1881, at a salary of $2,500 a year, and from January 1,1882, at a salary of $3,600 a year, when a disagreement arising as to the salary he should thereafter receive, the plaintiff declining to pay a salary of more than $2,500 a year, the defendant voluntarily left its service. Subsequently he became superintendent of a rival match manufacturing company in Hew Jersey, at a salary of $5,000, and he also opened a store in Hew York for the sale of matches other than those manufactured by the plaintiff. The contention by the defendant that the plaintiff has no equitable remedy to enforce the covenant, rests mainly on the fact that contemporaneously with the execution of the covenant of August 27, 1880, the defendant also executed to the • Swift & Courtney & Beecher Company a bond in the penalty of $15,000, conditioned to pay that sum to the company as liquidated damages in case of a breach of his covenant.

The defendant forlhis main defense relies upon the ancient doctrine of the common law first definitely declared, so far as I can discover, by Chief Justice Parker (Lord Macclesfield) in *480 the leading case of Mitchel v. Reynolds (1 P. Williams, 181), and which has been repeated many times by judges in England and America, that a bond in general restraint of trade is void. There are several decisions in the English courts of an earlier date in which the question of the validity of contracts restraining the obligor from pursuing his occupation within a particular locality were considered. The cases are chronologically arranged and stated by Mr. Parsons in his work on Contracts (Vol. 2, p. 748, note). The earliest reported case, decided in the time of Henry Y, was a suit on a bond given by the defendant, a dyer, not to use his craft within a certain city for the space of half a year. The judge before whom the case came indignantly denounced the plaintiff for procuring such a contract, and turned him out of court. This was followed by cases arising on contracts of a similar character, restraining the obligors from pursuing their trade within a certain place for a certain time, which apparently presented the same question which had been decided in the dyer’s case, but the courts sustained the contracts and gave judgment for the plaintiffs; and, before the case of Mitchel v. Reynolds, it had become settled that an obligation of this character,limited as to time and space, if reasonable under the circumstances and supported by a good consideration, was valid. The case in the Year Books went against all contracts in restraint of trade, whether limited or general. The other cases, prior to Mitchel v. Reynolds, sustained contracts for a particular restraint, upon special grounds, and by inference decided against the validity of general restraints. The case of Mitchel v. Reynolds was a case of partial restraint and the contract was sustained. It is worthy of notice that most, if not all, the English cases which assert the doctrine that all contracts in general restraint of trade are void, were cases where the contract before the court was limited or partial. The same is generally true of the American cases. The principal cases in this State are of that character, and in all of them the particular contract before the court was sustained (Nobles v. Bates, 7 Cow. 307; Chappel v. Brockway, 21 Wend. 157; *481 Dunlop v. Gregory, 10 N. Y. 241). In Alger v. Thacker (19 Pick.

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Bluebook (online)
13 N.E. 419, 106 N.Y. 473, 11 N.Y. St. Rep. 47, 61 Sickels 473, 1887 N.Y. LEXIS 899, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/diamond-match-co-v-roeber-ny-1887.