Langever v. United Advertising Corp.

258 S.W. 856
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 7, 1924
DocketNo. 10891.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 258 S.W. 856 (Langever v. United Advertising Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Langever v. United Advertising Corp., 258 S.W. 856 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

DUNKLIN, J.

On June 1, 1910, J. J. Lang-ever, Ike Epstein, and Mose Epstein, partners doing business under the trade name of Independent Bill Posting Company, executed a written contract in favor of the Robinson Posting Service, a partnership composed of Mitchell W. Greenwall and George Robinson. In that contract the Independent Bill Posting Company was designated as parties of the first part, and the Robinson Posting Service as party of the second part. The instrument recites a cash consideration of $237.50 *857 paid to parties of the first part by party of the second part, for which parties of the first part transferred and conveyed to the Robinson Posting Service the business good will of the grantors, and certain billboards and leases, on which the same had been erected, with warranty of good title to the billboards so conveyed. The instrument contains this further provision:

“In consideration of the purchase of said billboards and the payment of said sum of money aforesaid, the said parties of the first part hereby contract, covenant, and agree with said parties of the second part not to hereafter engage in the bill-posting business in the city of Fort Worth, Tex., either individually or in connection or partnership with any other person or persons, or as a corporation or otherwise.”

At the time that instrument was executed, the grantors and grantees were all engaged in the bill-posting business in the city of Port Worth, Tex. Thereafter George Robinson sold and conveyed to Mitchell W. Greenwall all his interest in the partnership business of the Robinson Posting Service, and in consideration of said conveyance contracted and agreed not to further engage in the bill-posting business in the city of Forth Worth in competition with Greenwall. Eater, Green-wall, who was then doing business under the trade-name of Fort Worth Poster Advertising Service, sold and conveyed to the United Advertising Corporation of Texas all the physical properties, advertising conttacts, leases, franchises, business good will, trade-names, and other rights and benefits, corporeal and incorporeal, owned and used by Greenwall in the bill-posting business, and further covenanted with the grantee not to engage in the same business in the city of Fort .Worth or Dallas of Waco within ten years from the date of the conveyance. All of those conveyances were by express terms made assignable, and title to the property and rights conveyed was warranted to the grantees and their assigns.

The company last named instituted this suit to restrain J. J. Langever from engaging in the bill-posting business in the city of Fort Worth, in violation of the terms of his contract with the Robinson Posting Service, referred to above, to the injury of plaintiff, who is now engaged in the bill-posting business in the city of Fort Worth, and who it is alleged had acquired the right to the relief prayed for, under and by virtue of the foregoing conveyances.

From an order by the judge of the district court, granting the temporary writ of injunction prayed for, Langever has prosecuted this appeal.

The hearing of the .application for a temporary writ of injunction was solely upon the pleadings of the parties, all of which were duly verified. The contract and conveyances referred to above were attached to the plaintiff’s petition as exhibits, and there was no denial of their execution as alleged, nor was there any plea of want of considerations recited therein as having been paid.

Following numerous exceptions to plaintiff’s petition, the defendant filed a special answer in which it was alleged that at the time the Independent Bill Posting Company executed the instrument in favor of the Robinson Posting Service, those two firms were the only competitors in the bill-posting business in the city of Fort Worth, and that the Robinson Posting Service procured the execution of the same for the sole purpose of preventing competition in the bill-posting business and controlling prices therefor, and- that, prior to the making of that contract, the Independent Bill Posting Company was engaged in doing business at a cheaper rate than that done by the Robinson Posting Service, and that by reason of those facts the contracts sued on by the plaintiff are in violation of the anti-trust statutes of the state of Texas, prohibiting monopolies in this state, and are therefore void and unenforceable.

The defendant further denied that he ever contracted to refrain from engaging in the bill-posting business in the city of Fort Worth in competition with the Fort Worth Poster Advertising Service or with the plaintiff. Defendant further denied that either plaintiff or the Fort Worth Poster Advertising Service ever purchased the contract sued on, and further alleged that the plaintiff is endeavoring by and through this suit to stifle and prevent legitimate competition in the bill posting business in the city of Forth Worth, where the defendant is its only competitor.

In support of his contention that the contract executed by him and relied on by plaintiff is void and unenforceable, appellant has cited the following provisions of article 7796, Revised Statutes:

“A ‘trust’ is a combination of capital, skill or acts by two or more persons, firms, corporations or associations of persons, or either two or more of them for either, any or all of the following purposes:
“1. To create, or which may tend to create, or carry- out restrictions in trade or commerce or aids to commerce or in the preparation of any product for market or transportation, or to create or carry out restrictions in the free pursuit of any business authorized or permitted by the laws of this state.
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“7. To abstain from engaging in or continuing business, or from the purchase or sale of merchandise, produce or commodities partially or entirely within the state of Texas, or any portion thereof.”

Appellant also cites Comer v. Burton-Lingo Co., 24 Tex. Civ. App. 251, 58 S. W. 969, in which it was held that an agreement by one firm, which was doing a lumber business in the city of. Cleburne, Tex., to cease the pursuit of that business and to refrain from en *858 gaging in the same business in the same town for a period of 10 years, in consideration of' the purchase of its business by three other firms engaged in the same business, in pursuance of an agreement between them to make such purchase in order to suppress competition in the business, was a violation of the statute above quoted and was therefore void. But in that opinion the decision of our Supreme Court in.Gates v. Hooper, 90 Tex. 563, 39 S. W. 1079, was cited but' was distinguished by reason of the fact that in the Gates v. Hooper .Case the purchaser was a single person or firm. In the latter case it was held that where the purchase and sale is between two parties only there is, no combination in restraint of trade, within the meaning of the anti-trust statute referred to above. To the same effect is Erwin v. Hayden (Tex. Civ. App.) 43 S. W. 611. We are of the opinion that the two decisions last cited are applicable to the present suit, since the contract relied on by the plaintiff was between two firms only, and the agreement sought to be enforced was not in violation of the antitrust statute.

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258 S.W. 856, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/langever-v-united-advertising-corp-texapp-1924.