Field Cordage Co. v. National Cordage Co.

6 Ohio C.C. 615
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedOctober 15, 1892
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Ohio C.C. 615 (Field Cordage Co. v. National Cordage Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Field Cordage Co. v. National Cordage Co., 6 Ohio C.C. 615 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1892).

Opinion

Shauck, J.

On behalf of the plaintiff in error it is contended that its comprehensive stipulation to abstain everywhere from the manufacture of twine and rope of the character named in the contract is not an unreasonable restraint of trade, because it had used the leased machinery in the manufacture of binder twine to be sold in all the markets of the country, and that there could be no effective transfer of the good will of the business to the lessee, without a stipulation of this character. For this reason, it is insisted, the contract is not within the condemnation of Lange v. Werk, 2 Ohio St. 520; and that the stipulation being co-extensive with the interest to be protected, the contract is valid when tested by the doctrines of The Diamond Match Co. v. Roeber, 106 N. Y. 473 ; Hubbard v. Miller, 27 Mich. 15; Oregon Navigation Co. v. Windsor, 20 Wall. 64, and other cases of similar import.

But in these cases, as well as in Lange v. Werk, the stipulations held to be valid, because the restraints which they placed upontrade werereasonablein view ofthe circumstances andpurposes of their execution, were parts of contracts for the actual sale and transfer of property. The restraint was an incident to a transfer of property which, notwithstanding the transfer, was to be used for the purposes of trade and commerce. While this distinction may not be clearly stated, nor always observed, the principles of decision and the conclusion [621]*621reached in the numerous cases to which our attention has been directed, warrant the conclusion that every contract is void whose only purpose is to place a restraint upon trade, however narrow may be the field of its operation. A contract in restraint of trade is always void if nothing more appears.” Morris Run Coal Co. v. Barclay Coal Co., 68 Pa. St. 173; Carroll v. Giles, 9 S. E. R. 422. That which must appear to impart validity to the stipulation which is prima facie void, is that in the transaction he, in whose favor the stipulation is made, has acquired an interest in the property or business, to which the restraint is such a reasonable incident that it ought to supersede the public interest to which it is inimical.

Therefore, in view of the allegations of the answer, the first question in logical order is: Was this contract not to manufacture anywhere, incident to a transfer of the machinery for the term indicated, or was that restraint the only purpose which the partiees had in view? In other words, is the covenant upon which the petition counts, really a covenant to pay rent, or to pay to the plaintiff the price for which it was agreed that it should cease to manufacture twine and rope of the character described?

Looking to the terms of the contract, the words employed by the plaintiff are appropriate to the leasing of property, and in a later provision the machinery described is referred to as said leased property.” The covenant upon which the petition counts is not to pay the $45,000 per annum as rent, but in later stipulations it is referred to as “ rental.” But the form of the contract is less important than its substance. That the parties did not intend that the machinery should pass into the control of the defendant is strongly suggested by the careful provision for its use by the plaintiff during the term for any purpose other than the manufacture of binder twine and rope of the character described, if the defendant should not be actually operating said machinery. That a lessee should pay so large a sum for the probable enjoyment of property by the lessor is not according to the usual course of deal[622]*622ing as -we- have observed it. The provision that the property-should be listed and the taxes thereon paid by the party in actual possession at the date when taxes attach and become a lien ” shows that the continued possession of the plaintiff was within the contemplation of the parties. Machinery which the plaintiff might subsequently purchase was as clearly subject to the lease as that which it then had. After reading the stipulation that the destruction of the machinery should not impair the defendant’s obligation to make the quarterly payments, it is difficult to believe that the use of the machinery was the sole or chief inducement to the covenant to pay; and that difficulty increases when one reads in the same connection that the defendant was not to be responsible for the care of the machinery when, during the term, it should be in possession of the plaintiff.

To the operation of the machinery, a building and power were necessary. The building was not leased, nor did the plaintiff undertake to furnish power. There was no provision for the removal of the machinery from the building, though a part of it was attached thereto. Nor was there any provision that, if the machinery should be removed, the plaintiff should have the use of the building and power elsewhere. It cannot be that the parties contemplated the joint or alternate use of the machinery, since the defendant could not operate it in the plaintiff’s building, and the plaintiff could not operate it elsewhere. Nor can it be that they contemplated its exclusive use by the defendant, since many of the stipulations look to its-use by the plaintiff. Nor does the contract fix any date at which the defendant may take possession. The plaintiff was to remain in possession until it had completed the orders described, within such time as it might choose, the only stipulation being that it should not manufacture in excess of those orders. A careful examination of the contract satifies us that the parties did not intend that the machinery should pass to the possession of the defendant, and the sole purpose was to-remove the plaintiff from the field of competition, and, so far-[623]*623.as it was concerned, to enable the defendant to limit the production and control the prices of binder twine and rope of the character described. . .

This conclusion is strongly confirmed by other evidence in the reeord. Among the facts which it establishes are some of much significance. At the time of the execution of this contract the defendant was the owner of a large number of mills engaged in the manufacture of the product described, and it was then engaged in a comprehensive scheme to get rid of its competitors. The contract was executed in the City of New York, and, within knowledge of the plaintiff's principal representative, there were then or near that time present in that city representatives of five Ohio mill's engaged • in the same production; one at Dayton, one at Miamisburg, two at Xenia, .and one at Zanesville; and one of the plaintiff's representatives assisted the defendant in the “ purchase of the spindles, drawing frames, spreaders, etc.,'' of a mill engaged in manufacturing the same product at Peru, Indiana. It resulted from these negotiations that these and two other Ohio mills entered into contracts with the' defendant; that the defendant did not in fact take possession of the machinery of any of said mills, but all of them ceased ‘to manufacture this product.

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Related

Oregon Steam Navigation Co. v. Winsor
87 U.S. 64 (Supreme Court, 1874)
Diamond Match Co. v. . Roeber
13 N.E. 419 (New York Court of Appeals, 1887)
Arnot v. . Pittston and Elmira Coal Co.
68 N.Y. 558 (New York Court of Appeals, 1877)
Hubbard v. Miller
27 Mich. 15 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1873)
Craft v. McConoughy
79 Ill. 346 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1875)
Richardson v. Buhl
6 L.R.A. 457 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1889)

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Bluebook (online)
6 Ohio C.C. 615, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/field-cordage-co-v-national-cordage-co-ohiocirct-1892.