Histand v. Nagorski

37 Pa. D. & C.2d 157, 1964 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 71
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Bucks County
DecidedSeptember 11, 1964
Docketno. 2698
StatusPublished

This text of 37 Pa. D. & C.2d 157 (Histand v. Nagorski) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Bucks County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Histand v. Nagorski, 37 Pa. D. & C.2d 157, 1964 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 71 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1964).

Opinion

Satterthwaite, P. J. (Seventh District, Specially Presiding),

By this equity action plaintiff, proprietor of a barbershop, seeks injunctive relief and monetary damages against defendant, formerly employed as a barber in plaintiff’s shop, by reason of defendant’s violation of a noncompetition covenant.

Pleadings presently relevant consist of plaintiff’s amended complaint, defendant’s answer thereto containing new matter, and plaintiff’s reply to the latter. The amended complaint alleged an oral agreement between the parties on or about December 8, 1959, whereby it was agreed that defendant would attend a particular barber school and enter plaintiff’s employ as an apprentice barber at a specified contemplated pay scale, working in plaintiff’s shop on two evenings per week and on Saturdays while still attending barber school and five days per week upon graduation therefrom; and whereby it was further agreed that plaintiff would additionally provide defendant with supplementary instruction and training as a barber and would loan defendant the sum of $137.20, to be applied to the fees and charges of the barber school and repaid under terms to be agreed upon after defendant became employed; and whereby it was still further agreed that if defendant terminated his employment with plaintiff he would not enter the barbering profession within five miles of plaintiff’s shop for a period of ten years from said date of December 8, 1959. The amended complaint further alleged that the parties also agreed that the aspects of their verbal understanding relating to the loan and to the noncompetition covenant should be (and were) reduced to an executed written document; that all conditions precedent under the contract had been performed or had occurred; that on June 24, 1963, defendant terminated his employment with plaintiff and on July 9, 1963, in violation [159]*159of the noncompetition covenant, opened his own shop and commenced business as a barber at the Plumstead Shopping Center, less than five miles from plaintiff’s shop; that defendant’s activities in the latter connection have caused and threatened to continue to cause irreparable damage to plaintiff’s goodwill; that plaintiff’s remedy at law was inadequate; that accordingly defendant should be enjoined from engaging in barbering within five miles of plaintiff’s place of business until December 8, 1969; and that damages and an accounting should also be awarded.

Defendant’s answer and new matter admitted the fact of plaintiff’s loan of $137.20 to defendant for the purpose of paying the barber school fees and the further fact that the parties had agreed upon and executed the writing of December 8, 1959, but denied the other features alleged by plaintiff to have been orally agreed on or about that date. Defendant’s pleaded position was that the conversations between the parties at that time amounted to no more than preliminary discussions of defendant’s independently determined purpose to become a barber, he being previously untrained and unskilled in that profession, his intention to attend barber school, and the tentative possibility of his future employment, pay scale, hours, and the like, after he had been licensed; that no contract of employment in fact did exist until August, 1960 when defendant had successfully completed barber school and was engaged by plaintiff as an apprentice barber. Defendant further alleged that the writing of December 8, 1959, constituted the sole agreement subsisting between the parties as of that date; that said covenant was “abrogated” or modified by the subsequent (and only) employment contract between the parties of August, 1960, which was not attended by any noncompetition clause; that on December 8,1959, plaintiff and defendant could not lawfully have entered into an agreement [160]*160of employment since the latter was not then certified as an apprentice or licensed barber as required by law; that the written agreement of that date was merely a contract of loan, and no employment contract then existed; that the termination of defendant’s subsequent employment by plaintiff as of June 24, 1963, although admitted, was not voluntary on defendant’s part in that he had earlier been informed that plaintiff intended to discharge him and had already secured another to fill his place; that defendant had entered into obligations for rent and costs of utilities under a two year’s lease as of July 1, 1963 for his new shop in the Plumstead Shopping Center, and had incurred other expenses in equipping the same; that he had assumed such obligations, and in fact had originally been induced to execute the writing of December 8, 1959, by reason of and in reliance upon plaintiff’s contemporaneous representation “that such covenant against competition was not legal or enforceable”; that said clause was legally invalid for lack of consideration, for vagueness under the barbering licensing laws if considered as an employment contract, for lack of any contemporary and valid employment contract, and for illegality as an unlawful restraint of trade in that the five-miles geographic and 10-years time limitations thereof were unnecessary, excessive and unreasonable.

Plaintiff’s reply denied many of the allegations of defendant’s new matter and disclaimed knowledge and demanded proof of others. A large number of the manifold collateral issues ostensibly raised by the pleadings, however, have become moot, as the case actually developed, either for lack of proof to substantiate the same, or because of the error or immateriality of certain of the legal propositions upon which the relevancy of certain of these factually disputed aspects was premised.

Two hearings to take testimony have been held by [161]*161the chancellor. The first was shortly after the filing of the original complaint and before defendant’s answer thereto; it was occasioned by plaintiff’s demand for a preliminary injunction. Such extraordinary interim relief was refused without prejudice to the ultimate merits. A subsequent full hearing was held in due course after the pleadings had been closed. Both sides thereafter submitted requests for findings of fact - and conclusions of law, as well as briefs of argument. Upon due consideration of the transcript of the hearings and the requests and arguments of the respective parties, the chancellor makes the following

Findings of Fact

1. Plaintiff is, and since 1951 at all times material hereto has been, a duly licensed and registered barber and the proprietor of a multi-chaired business known as Histand’s Drive-In Barbershop, at 610 Easton Road (Route 611), Doylestown; said shop is located in the Cross Keys section some distance north of the business center of Doylestown, near the intersection of Routes 611 and 313.

2. Plaintiff and defendant, at a time shortly prior to December 8, 1959 and after preliminary discussions, entered into an oral agreement or mutual understanding looking toward defendant’s qualification as a barber, he then having no training or experience as such, pursuant to which he would take up the trade under plaintiff’s tutelage. In effectuation thereof, defendant agreed that he would enroll and attend as a student in a barbering school, would become employed in plaintiff’s shop (parttime while completing the school curriculum and fulltime thereafter, at compensation based on a sliding-scale fraction of the gross receipts attributable to his services therein) and, immediately relevant here, would not engage in the barbering trade as either a proprietor or an employe for 10 years from the date of their agreement at a loca[162]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 Pa. D. & C.2d 157, 1964 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/histand-v-nagorski-pactcomplbucks-1964.