Fatzinger v. DeLong

10 Pa. D. & C.2d 53, 1956 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 326
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Lehigh County
DecidedJuly 30, 1956
Docketno. 14
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Pa. D. & C.2d 53 (Fatzinger v. DeLong) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Lehigh County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fatzinger v. DeLong, 10 Pa. D. & C.2d 53, 1956 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 326 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1956).

Opinion

Henninger, P. J.,

Plaintiff brought this petition for a declaratory judgment to determine whether plaintiff was bound by the terms of an agreement entered into between him, Ernest C. DeLong and five other employes of Office Utilities, Inc., whereby he agreed, upon termination of his employment with Office Utilities, Inc., that: “. . . he will not for the period of three (3) years after severance of employment with the COMPANY, regardless of the reason for said severance, engage in, be connected with, work for, or be associated with, directly or indirectly, any business located within a radius of twenty-five (25) miles from Sixth and Hamilton Streets, Allen[54]*54town, Lehigh County, Pennsylvania, which is in competition with the business of the COMPANY.”

An answer was filed by respondents and testimony was taken. The court makes the following

Findings of Fact

1. Office Utilities, Inc., is a Pennsylvania corporation with offices at 26 North Sixth Street, Allentown, engaged in the business of selling office supplies and equipment, and Ernest C. DeLong is its president and principal stockholder. .

2. The said business was started about 21 years ago, approximately 1935, as an individual proprietorship owned by the said Ernest C. DeLong, and later was incorporated in 1948.

3. Petitioner is 33 years old. He came to work for defendants about 15 years ago in 1940 directly from high school at the age of 18 years and worked continuously for this employer until December 16, 1955, excepting for a period of approximately three years which he spent in the Army, and another lapse of a few months. He started as a stock boy and truck driver. As he learned the business .he was given increasing responsibilities and was advanced to store .clerk and salesman and finally, about 1952, to the position of store manager and purchasing agent.

4. As store manager and purchasing agent, he had full responsibility for all store sales and all buying and purchasing, excepting furniture items and machines. He had full responsibility for the pricing of merchandise. Approximately 60 to 70 percent of the company’s business went over his desk and was subject to his personal care and attention. He also conducted sales meetings. In addition, he had access to all the customers’ lists and knew all the buying habits of purchasing agents who were customers of employer’s business. He had access to all the confidential files, [55]*55that is, the billings, sources of supply and all detailed information concerning the operation of the business, both buying and selling. Petitioner, through his many years of service, had established special relations with employer’s suppliers and the purchasing agents of employer’s customers.

5. When petitioner came to work for defendants he had no trade; his only job, excepting for the period of a few months and his service with the United States Government, was with defendants.

6. Petitioner was defendants’ principal employe and one of the most important members of employer’s organization since 1952.

7. At no time during petitioner’s employment with defendants did he have a written wage agreement, the terms and conditions of his employment being completely oral.

8. On or about June 14, 1952, petitioner, along with five other employes of defendants, namely, Robert B.. Lamson, Irwin A. Henninger, Waldo B. Pelton, Charles L. Vincent and William J. Johnson, entered into what was designated as an “AGREEMENT BETWEEN ERNEST C. DeLONG and CERTAIN EMPLOYEES OF OFFICE UTILITIES, INC.”

9. Robert B. Lamson, Irwin A. Henninger, Waldo B. Pelton, Charles L. Vincent and William J. Johnson were brought into the present action as parties by order of court dated February 16, 1956.

10. By the terms of part I of the aforementioned “Agreement”, defendant DeLong agreed to make a gift of five shares of the common capital stock of Office Utilities, Inc., owned by him, to each employe, subject to certain conditions pertaining to the repurchase by DeLong or Office Utilities, Inc., and also subject to the condition that said stock was to be thereafter transferred back to defendant DeLong to be held in trust by him for five years.

[56]*5611. The par value of the said shares of stock was $100 each, the five shares aggregating $500. The book value of the five shares of the said capital stock on or about the date of the said agreement was approximately- $150 per share, aggregating approximately $750, and the current book value is approximately $223 per share, aggregating approximately $1,115.

12. Part II of said agreement reads as follows:

“In consideration of the foregoing gift by Delong to each one of the undersigned Employees, each one of the undersigned, covenants and agrees that he will not for the period of three (3) years after severance of employment with the COMPANY, regardless of the reason for said severance, engage in, be connected with, work for, or be associated with,-directly or indirectly, any business located within a radius of twenty-five (25) miles from Sixth and Hamilton Streets, Allentown, Lehigh County, Pennsylvania, which is in competition with the business of the Company. The parties understand that in case of breach or violation of the foregoing covenant, that damages would not alone compensate for such breach or violation and that therefore, in such event, either DeLong or the Company shall have the right to apply for and receive from any Court of Equity an injunction or other appropriate order restraining the violation or breach of the foregoing covenant and awarding damages for the breach thereof.”

13. The subject agreement was signed on or about the date thereof, to wit, June 14, 1952, by all the six employes, in the presence of each other and Ernest C. DeLong, in the office of defendant company. Before the agreement was signed, the company’s attorney, Louis M. Stamberg, read out loud the agreement word for word and explained the same to all the assembled employes, whereupon he left; thereupon, Ernest C. [57]*57DeLong again read the agreement word for word to all the assembled employes, and discussed it with them. Each employe was given a copy of the agreement. Before the meeting ended, all the employes, including petitipner, signed the said agreement and thereupon five shares of the capital stock of employer corporation were issued to each of the employes, who then endorsed the stock certificates in blank, which were thereafter held in trust in accordance with the terms of the agreement.

14. Petitioner signed the agreement voluntarily and without duress after he read the same, fully aware and cognizant of the terms of the said agreement.

15. The said agreement provided, inter alia, for the redemption or repurchase of the five shares of stock by defendants from any one of the said employes, (a) in case of death, at the book value thereof, or (b) in cas.e of severance of employment, at the par value thereof.

16. Subject agreement was a sealed instrument and bore the seals of all the parties thereto.

17. On December 5, 1955, petitioner personally notified Ernest C. DeLong that he was quitting and leaving defendants’ employ because he intended to go into a competing business for himself.

18.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Pa. D. & C.2d 53, 1956 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fatzinger-v-delong-pactcompllehigh-1956.