Gulf Refining Co. v. Smith

139 S.E. 716, 164 Ga. 811, 1927 Ga. LEXIS 284
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 19, 1927
DocketNo. 5746
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 139 S.E. 716 (Gulf Refining Co. v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gulf Refining Co. v. Smith, 139 S.E. 716, 164 Ga. 811, 1927 Ga. LEXIS 284 (Ga. 1927).

Opinion

Bussell, C. J.

This is the second appearance of this case in this court, the deed and covenant now before us having been the subject of the adjudication in Smith v. Gulf Refining Co., 162 Ga. 191 (134 S. E. 446). At that time this court held that the recital “It is agreed with the parties hereto that the said J. E. Posey is to use the Standard Oil Co. gas and oil as long as the said G. C. Smith acts as agent for said' company and the prices of same are in accord with other gasoline and oils,” embodied in the deed from G. C. Smith to J. E. Posey, was a covenant running with the land, and not a mere personal covenant. Mr. Presiding Justice Beck, speaking for the court, after quoting one of the rules [813]*813laid down in Spencer’s case, 5 Coke 16, held, as to the covenant contained'in the deed from Smith to Posey, that “it relates directly to the-interest in the property conveyed and the mode of the enjoyment of the estate. It has a relation to the interest or estate granted and the acts to be done concerning the interest created or conveyed. Evidently the intention of the parties to the deed was that for the term specified the products of a certain company should be sold there — the products of a company in which the grantor had an interest, and it is inferable that he would not have conveyed the property to the grantee without the protection which rests upon the stipulation against the sale of the products of any other company than that named. Having reached the conclusion that the covenant which we have pointed out was a covenant running with the land, the plaintiff was entitled to an injunction against the violation of the covenant, in view of the other allegations in the petition. Rosen v. Wolff, 152 Ga. 578 (110 S. E. 877).”

Upon the return of the remittitur to the superior court the defendant made- a motion to dismiss the petition, upon the following grounds: (a) Because the covenant in the deed upon which the plaintiff relied for injunction was void and unenforceable, because too vague, indefinite, and uncertain to be capable to enforcement. (b) Becau.se the covenant is illegal and void, in that it is contrary to public policy, because it was a contract in restraint of trade, (c) The covenant was illegal and void, for the reason that it had the effect and was intended to have the effect of defeating and lessening competition. It is insisted by counsel for the plaintiff in error that “(a) The parties failed to agree where or in what territory, or upon what premises Posey agreed to use the Standard Oil Company’s gas and oil. (b) The covenant states that ' Posey was to use ’ Standard Oil Company’s gas and oils. The parties did not state that Posey was to sell the Standard Oil Company’s gas and oils, but was merely to 'use’ the same. The use was not restricted to the premises sold by Smith to Posey, or to any other territory, (c) It does not appear from the covenant, in what capacity Smith was to act as agent of the Standard Oil Company, or in what territory. The covenant simply provides that Posey was to use the Standard oil so long as Smith acts as agent for the company. Agent in what territory? And what sort of agency ? The time is unlimited. The territory is unlimited. The [814]*814position of Smith with the Standard Oil Company is unlimited, (d) And furthermore that the prices of the same (meaning Standard Oil Company) are in accord.with other gas and oils. Prices at what point or place ? The covenant does not state that only so long as the prices on this particular station are the same. It might well be said that if the Standard Oil Company’s prices were the same as the companies dealing in Mexico, then Posey would have to use only the Standard Oil Company’s products. Furthermore, it does not provide what other oils and gas must be at the same price of the Standard Oil Company’s.”

As to the contention (a) that the parties failed to agree where or in what territory, etc., Posey agreed to use the Standard Oil Company’s gas and oil, it seems plain to us that under the terms of the covenant he agreed not to use other gas and oils anywhere, no matter where such premises or territory might be located. The use could have been restricted by confining it to particular territory; but a' general agreement not to do a certain thing, without further limitation, imposes an obligation not to do the proscribed act anywhere, (b) It is very ingenuously argued that an agreement not to use any oil other than that of the Standard Oil Company is not equivalent to an agreement not to sell the oil of other producers or dealers. In the circumstances and from the nature of the case, the language of the stipulation can not be otherwise construed than as an agreement not to sell other than Standard Oil products. A sale is one of the uses to which property can be subjected. As relating to one’s possession, the word “use” includes every purpose for which such property may be used, and when it is considered that in the present case the property had been used for selling and dispensing oils and gasoline and for nothing else, and that it was in the contemplation of both parties that the úse of the premises in the future was to be the same as it had been in the past, it is apparent that there is no merit in the contention that the agreement was restricted to such gas and oil only as Posey might need for his personal úse, when it is evident that the purpose of Posey was to use the station as it had theretofore been used, — for selling oils and gasoline, and that Smith, as the agent of the Standard Oil Company, while he would be but little interested in the amount of gas and oil that one individual, Posey, for instance, might need for his personal use, was no doubt intending to preserve a much [815]*815more considerable interest in retaining all the customers that might buy gas and oil from Posey or any other occupant of the filling-station which Smith had established.

(c) It is insisted that it does not appear from the covenant in what capacity Smith was to act as the agent of the Standard Oil Company or in what territory. The covenant extended as long as Smith was the agent of the Standard Oil Company. In other words, the life of the agreement was contingent upon the duration of Smith’s agency, but it can not for this reason be said to be indefinite any more than a fee in remainder can be said to be indefinite because it does not become effective until the death of a life-tenant, or that an estate described as a life-tenancy is indefinite because it can not be stated with certainty when it will be terminated by the death of the life-tenant. The point can not be more strongly stated for the plaintiff in error than to say that the duration of Smith’s agency is uncertain. It does not follow from this, however, that there is anything vague about the promise to purchase the products of the Standard Oil Company as long as he is agent, (d) The exception presented in this ground of the motion to strike is based upon the contention that the covenant does not state that only so long as the prices at this particular station are the same. As said in the brief, “it might well be said that if the Standard Oil Conrpany’s prices were the same as the companies dealing in Mexico, then Posey would have to use only the Standard Oil Company’s products.” This contention is without merit, because the covenant' is part of a deed in which the premises from which gas and oil are to be sold is fully described as located in Butler, Taylor County, Georgia, and therefore can have reference to nothing except the prevailing prices at which gas and oil can be purchased by dealers for delivery in the town of Butler.

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139 S.E. 716, 164 Ga. 811, 1927 Ga. LEXIS 284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulf-refining-co-v-smith-ga-1927.