John Roane, Inc. v. Tweed

80 A.2d 290
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedApril 20, 1951
DocketCiv. A. No. 206
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 80 A.2d 290 (John Roane, Inc. v. Tweed) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
John Roane, Inc. v. Tweed, 80 A.2d 290 (Del. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

80 A.2d 290 (1951)

JOHN ROANE, Inc.
v.
TWEED.

Civ. A. No. 206.

Court of Chancery of Delaware, New Castle.

April 20, 1951.

William Prickett, of Wilmington, for plaintiff.

Newton White, of Wilmington, for defendant.

WOLCOTT, Chancellor.

This case has come on for decision after final hearing. The plaintiff seeks to enforce a covenant against competition in a contract of employment between plaintiff and defendant.

The plaintiff is a corporation of Maryland engaged in the independent insurance adjusting business and having a branch office in Wilmington, Delaware. The defendant entered the employ of the plaintiff in 1941 and remained in that employ continuously except for a period during the war, returning on March 1, 1946. In July, 1947, he became manager of the plaintiff's branch office in Wilmington. On January 1, 1949, in Baltimore, Maryland, the parties executed the employment contract in question.

On December 7, 1950, in accordance with the terms of the employment contract, the defendant voluntarily left the plaintiff's employ and opened an independent insurance adjusting office in Wilmington.

The employment contract contained the following covenant:

*291 "6. During the period of his employment under this agreement and for a period of 5 years after the termination thereof, Employee specifically agrees as follows:

"(d) That he will not, directly nor indirectly, for himself or as agent of or on behalf of or in conjunction with any other person, firm, association or corporation, engage in the insurance adjusting business within a radius of fifty miles (50) from any office of Employer where he has served as Manager under this contract."

The parties are agreed that this case is to be decided in accordance with the law of Maryland. In view of their stipulation, I am not called upon to decide the question of whether the enforcement in Delaware of a restrictive covenant in an employment contract executed in Maryland shall be decided in accordance with Delaware or Maryland law. I accept the parties' stipulation.

The law of Maryland governing the enforcement of covenants of this type is embodied in five decisions of the Maryland Court of Appeals, viz.: Deuerling v. City Baking Co., 155 Md. 280, 141 A. 542, 67 A. L.R. 993; Tolman Laundry, Inc. v. Walker, 171 Md. 7, 187 A. 836; Griffin v. Guy, 172 Md. 510, 192 A. 359; Western Maryland Dairy v. Chenowith, 180 Md. 236, 23 A.2d 660; and Tawney v. Mutual System of Maryland, 186 Md. 508, 47 A.2d 372. Two other decisions of the Maryland Courts have been called to my attention but they are inapposite. Rosenstein v. Zentz, 118 Md. 564, 85 A. 675, 44 L.R.A., N.S., 63, considered a restrictive covenant effective only during the term of employment and, as such, is distinguished in the Deuerling case from a restrictive covenant effective after termination of employment. Fulton Grand Laundry Co. v. Johnson, 140 Md. 359, 117 A. 753, 23 A.L.R. 420, is obviously not in point since it dealt with an attempt to enjoin a former employee from competing in the absence of a restrictive covenant to that effect.

The Deuerling case involved an employee of a bakery who, in the course of his employment, served a definite territory. The customers served by him comprised a definite selected group of customers gathered together at the expense of the employer. Under such circumstances, the employer was protected from the unfair competition of his former employee seeking to entice away the same group of customers.

Tolman Laundry, Inc., v. Walker, supra, and Western Maryland Dairy v. Chenowith, supra, are substantially similar in their facts and results.

The defendant at bar relies upon Tawney v. Mutual System of Maryland, supra, the latest expression of the Court of Appeals of Maryland in the field. In that case, the employer, a small loan corporation, sought to enjoin its former manager and cashier from competing with it in the same territory in violation of restrictive covenants to that effect in their employment contracts. The two defendants, after voluntarily leaving the plaintiff's employ and setting themselves up in competition, actively solicited the plaintiff's customers. The result after a period of three weeks was the transferral of one hundred and one of plaintiff's customers to the defendants. The Court of Appeals modified the blanket injunction issued by the trial court and enjoined the defendants from making public the names of the plaintiff's customers and from using information relative to those customers to the disadvantage of the plaintiff for a period of three years, but refused to enjoin the defendants from competing with the plaintiff.

The refusal to enjoin the competition of the defendants with the plaintiff generally was based upon the conclusion that it was not necessary to do so in order to protect the good will built up by the plaintiff. The Deuerling, Tolman and Chenowith cases are cited with approval but distinguished on the ground that the enjoining of competition generally over a particular route established by the employer was necessary in order to prevent the unfair use of knowledge of the list of the employer's customers. This necessity was not found to be present in the Tawney case because of the wide area and large population over which it was sought to place the restriction and, also, because the small loan business is "a business where the occasional financial need of the customer, rather than the recurrent *292 calls of the supplier, is the prime incentive." [186 Md. 508, 47 A.2d 379.]

Plaintiff at bar criticizes the Tawney case and suggests that it was decided on an erroneous basis. In the course of its opinion, the Court in the Tawney case stated that it had never enjoined competition as a result of a restrictive covenant in an employment contract except in a route case. Plaintiff at bar argues that this was not the fact and that, therefore, the injunction in the Tawney case was refused as a result of an erroneous conclusion caused by the court's apparent lack of knowledge of Griffin v. Guy, supra, which, it is argued, was an instance of the enjoining of competition in other than a route case.

Griffin v. Guy, supra, reversed a refusal to enjoin competition. The facts were that both the plaintiff and defendant were barbers in a small town. The defendant was in financial difficulties in his business and entered into a contract with the plaintiff under which he agreed to work in the plaintiff's shop for a percentage of his earnings, the plaintiff paying off the defendant's obligations. The defendant covenanted not to compete as a barber against the plaintiff. In due course, the defendant left the plaintiff's barber shop and established his own shop in the same community. He was enjoined from so doing.

Plaintiff at bar argues that, since the Griffin case is an instance of the enjoining of competition where no route of customers was to be protected, the weight of the decision in the Tawney case is considerably affected by the fact that it is based on a misapprehension of what the law of Maryland was as to restrictions on competition after the end of employment where no customer route was involved.

It seems to me that the failure to cite the Griffin case does not necessarily weaken the Tawney case.

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