Mashburn Drug Co. v. Valdosta Drug Co.

184 S.E. 903, 53 Ga. App. 88, 1936 Ga. App. LEXIS 14
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 24, 1936
Docket24698
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 184 S.E. 903 (Mashburn Drug Co. v. Valdosta Drug Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mashburn Drug Co. v. Valdosta Drug Co., 184 S.E. 903, 53 Ga. App. 88, 1936 Ga. App. LEXIS 14 (Ga. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

Stephens, J.

On November 1, 1932, Mashburn Drug Company filed suit against Valdosta Drug Company on a note for $8000 dated April 1, and due October 1, 1932. The petition alleged that both companies were Georgia corporations; that the note was endorsed by three persons who were made defendants with the Yaldosta Drug Company; that notice of the intention to claim attorney’s fees had been given; that the defendants had refused to pay the note or any part of it on demand; and copies of note and notice were attached to the petition.. The defendants answered admitting all the allegations, except that of indebtedness to the plaintiff on the note or for attorney’s fees; and denying that they owed the alleged indebtedness or any part thereof. Further answering as “an affirmative defense” they narrated a long series of facts, of which the material portion may be abbreviated as follows: On September 23, 1929, and prior thereto, Yaldosta Drug Company and Mashburn Drug Company were both engaged in the wholesale-drug business in the City of Yaldosta and transacted business in South Georgia and North Florida and particularly within a radius of 110 miles from Yaldosta. On the date stated a contract was [90]*90made between them whereby the Valdosta Drug Company purchased the stock in trade and fixtures then owned by the Mashburn Drug Company and paid therefor the sum of $75,000, of which $25,000 was paid in cash and the balance in installments. In connection with this sale the Valdosta Drug Company also purchased, for an additional consideration of $12,500, the good-will of the Mashburn Drug Company, as to which as set out in the contract in paragraph 9: “It is further agreed between the parties that the good-will of the party of the first part is a valuable asset and that the party of the first part agrees to sell to the party of the second part, and the party of the second part agrees to purchase from the party of the first part, the good-will of the party of the first part at and for the sum of $12,500,” the payment of which was to be evidenced by a promissory note dated contemporaneously with the payment of the $25,000 and delivery of the stock of goods, due October 1, 1930, and payable to the order of the party of the first part (Mashburn Drug Company) with interest at six per cent.; it was further agreed that this note should be renewed for twelve months on payment of accrued interest and $2500 on the principal, the renewal to be evidenced by a promissory note for $10,000 due October 1, 1931, payable to the order of the party of the first part and bearing interest at six per cent. Paragraph 10 of the contract provided: “In consideration of said sum of $12,500 referred to in the next preceding paragraph of this contract, the party of the first part agrees not to engage for a period of five years from October 1, 1929, directly or indirectly, in the wholesale drug or druggists’-sundries business in the City of Valdosta, Georgia, or within a radius of 110 miles therefrom, the City of Jacksonville, Florida, excepted, and not to permit during such time certain of its officers, to wit: F. W. Webb and M. W. Fry to engage in such business within said territory.” On the same date when the contract between Mashburn Drug Company and Valdosta Drug Company was entered into, a separate contract was entered into between Valdosta Drug Company and F. W. Webb and M. W. Fry, who were officers of Mashburn Drug Company, in which said Fry and Webb, in consideration of the benefits received by them from the contract of sale between Mashburn Drug Company and Valdosta Drug Company, and in consideration of $10 to them in hand paid, agreed “not to engage, for a period of five years from October 1, 1929, [91]*91either directly or indirectly, as owners, employer, employee, principal or agent, in the wholesale drag or druggists’-sundries business in the City of Valdosta, Georgia, or within a radius of 110 miles therefrom, the City of Jacksonville, Florida, excepted, except and unless they or any one of them should be permitted to so engage in such wholesale drug or druggists’-sundries business within said territory by written consent of the party of the first part (Valdosta Drug Company) endorsed upon this contract or any duplicate thereof.” Pursuant to the contract between Mashburn Drug Company and Valdosta Drug Company, the latter executed and delivered to the former its note for $12,500. At the maturity of this note the Valdosta Drug Company paid $2500 and the accrued interest and gave another note for $10,000 due October 1, 1931, on which date the accrued interest and $2000 of the principal was paid, and another note was given for $8000 due April 1, 1932, on which date the accrued interest was paid, and a new note was given for $8000 due October 1, 1932, which is the note sued on, and represents part of the purchase-price of the good-will of Mashburn Drug Company which it sold to Valdosta Drug Company under the agreement of September 23, 1929.

After the delivery of said contract and of the contract between Valdosta Drug Company and F. W. Webb and M. W. Fry, “the defendants herein never at any time up to the date of the breach of said agreement on the part of the Mashburn Drag Company and F. W. Webb, as will hereinafter be set out” failed to pay any of the notes described in the contract, within ninety days from maturity, except the note for $12,500 and the decreasing balances thereon which were renewed from time to time, and defendants otherwise complied fully with all the terms in the contract by them to be performed. However, the plaintiff and its president F. W. Webb breached that part of the contract between Mashburn Drug Company and Valdosta Drug Company in which the former agreed not to engage for a period of five years from October 1, 1929, directly or indirectly, in the wholesale drug or druggists’-sundries business in the City of Valdosta or within a radius of 110 miles therefrom, the City of Jacksonville, Florida, excepted, and not to permit, during such time, certain of its officers, to wit: F. W. Webb and M. W. Fry, to engage in such business within said territory, “for that the said Mashburn Drug Company did, on or about [92]*92the 1st day of January, 1932, the exact time being to defendants unknown, permit F. W. Webb, its president, to acquire a stock interest in and to become elected president of Southern Drug Company, a corporation with its principal office at Jacksonville, Florida, and then and there to assume the complete management of the business of said corporation, which was then and there engaged in the wholesale drug and druggists’-sundries business within a radius of 110 miles from Valdosta, Georgia, as will be hereinafter particularly set out.” At the time Yaldosta Drug Company purchased the stock of merchandise and good-will of Mashburn Drug Company, the Southern Drug Company did not send a traveling salesman in any part of the territory within a radius of 110 miles from Yaldosta, the City of Jacksonville, Florida, excepted, and including 24 named towns all in the State of Florida. Prior to the sale by Mashburn Drug Company to Yaldosta Drug Company, both of these companies sent traveling salesmen periodically to all the towns within the' described territory for the purpose of soliciting orders for merchandise handled by them. Up to the time “said contract was breached by the Mashburn Drug Company, as aforesaid,” defendant sent its salesmen to the towns aforesaid to solicit orders for merchandise, and up to said time the Southern Drug Company, did not send its salesmen or solicit business in said cities. Prior to October 1, 1929, E. Y.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
184 S.E. 903, 53 Ga. App. 88, 1936 Ga. App. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mashburn-drug-co-v-valdosta-drug-co-gactapp-1936.