McAnally v. Person

57 S.W.2d 945
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 16, 1933
DocketNo. 9883.
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 57 S.W.2d 945 (McAnally v. Person) 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
McAnally v. Person, 57 S.W.2d 945 (Tex. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinions

On the 11th day of June, 1932, S. J. Person, hereinafter referred to as complainant, filed in the Eleventh district court of Harris county his sworn application for an injunction to restrain F. McAnally, hereinafter referred to as respondent, from working either as deliveryman, solicitor, driver, or salesman in the ice business for himself or any other person, firm, association, or corporation, within the city of Houston, Harris county, Tex., and from the date of filing such application during the remainder of an unexpired term of about twenty-eight months of a three-year term provided for in a written contract executed by the parties, the material and pertinent parts of which are as follows:

"Agreement entered into between S. J. Person of the said County of Harris and State of Texas, doing business under name and style of Brazos Fuel Ice Company; and F. McAnally of the said County, hereinafter called `Employee,' Witnesseth: —

"That said Person is engaged in the business of selling, delivering and distributing ice in and around the City of Houston and in the said County of Harris, in the State of Texas, said sales and distributions being made by means of wagons, trucks and other vehicles as well as at the platforms of ice plants and at various stations established and to be established in the said County and by freight and express, and has employed the said employee as Ice-delivery man, etc., and agrees to pay said employee a weekly-monthly-wage in the sum of ______ Dollars ($______) to be paid on ______ of each week-month hereafter during the term of said employment.

"Said employee in consideration thereof does hereby agree to devote all of his working time and energy to the interests and business of the said Person and hereby agrees that he will to the best of his skill and ability use his best efforts and endeavors to the extension and promotion of the said business, to the procuring of new and further business, the proper servicing and holding of present business ard the protection of the good will of the business of the said Person, both as now enjoyed and hereafter acquired. That any business secured or acquired by said employee during the term of this contract and while in the employ of said Person as Ice-man or in any other capacity that said employee may hereafter be employed by said, Person, shall belong wholly to the said Person and to his heirs and assigns.

"It is expressly agreed that any re-employment of said employee from time to time, whether as such Ice-man or otherwise, shall be deemed as continuous employment, and is mutually recognized and accepted as a renewal of and ancillary to this contract without formal written renewal, and the provisions hereof and this contract are carried into such renewal or extension as fully to all intents and purposes as if new written contracts were entered into and executed. It is agreed that changes in the foregoing wage rate may be made by agreement without vitiating this agreement or the renewals thereof, and that such employment shall continue so long as mutually satisfactory to both parties hereto, provided the same may be cancelled and terminated by either party hereto upon ______ days written notice of such intent.

"It is further agreed, for the considerations aforesaid, and for the protection of the said business and the securing of the good will of the said business of the said Person and because of the trusted and confidential employment of the said F. McAnally and in the event the said employee may hereafter leave the employment of said Person, or should this agreement terminate, or said employee cease to work for said Person; then said employee hereby specially agrees that he will not for a period of three years after the severance — for any cause — of said employment; either for himself or for any other person, firm, corporation or association, sell or offer for sale, canvass, solicit, deliver or offer, ice or ice service to any of the customers, trade or business of the said Person or enjoyed or served by said Person or his heirs or assigns at the time of the termination of such employment, that said employee will not use his knowledge of the business of said Person for the benefit of himself or any other person, that he will not divulge the business affairs or the names of customers, lists or descriptions of routes, names of employees, number or character, of contracts, prices, terms or particulars of the trade and business owned and enjoyed by the said Person, either by sale, gift or by any device, subterfuge or evasion and in all things will in good faith protect the good will of the said business and keep secure his knowledge of the said business and affairs of said Person acquired while in the employ and under the wage of said Person. * * *

"Witness the hands of the parties to two instruments of like tenor and date at Houston, *Page 947 Texas, on this the 15th day of February in the year 1930."

A copy of such contract was attached to complainant's petition or application as an exhibit and made a part thereof.

The cause was transferred from the Eleventh to the Fifty-fifth judicial district court of Harris county.

Complainant alleged and the evidence shows that complainant had no ice factory but engaged in buying ice at wholesale and delivering at retail, more or less peddling, but sold ice to anybody in the city of Houston or Harris county that came to his platform to buy; that is, to the general public, and distributed it over the southern part of town. His only platform was located at 2817 Milam street. He had six other employees at the time respondent quit on the 28th of September, 1931, including among the six respondent's brother. He had been in this business several years.

Respondent went to work for complainant in October, 1929, and was employed as a deliveryman on the 1st of November, 1929, at regular wages. He worked on two of complainant's four routes and about every two or three days sold ice on the platform sometimes until about 7 or 8 p. m. He worked the routes as a rule by himself, driving complainant's truck and selling complainant's ice, working the whole year and not just during the ice season, with a steady job other than when off with an injury, having had an appendicitis operation and two hernias.

Complainant had personal contacts with the customers on the routes to the extent that for about four or five days when respondent first went to work for him, complainant relieved the deliveryman who preceded respondent and was taking a few days vacation; but he was not acquainted with each of the customers his drivers were and could not keep up with them. Respondent learned the route by working with complainant during this few days vacation time and during some three days a little later on, and was paid, like each other deliveryman, from the time he went on.

The contract herein sued upon was not executed at the time respondent first went to work for complainant in October, 1929, or even when he started as a deliveryman on the 1st of November. It bears date as of the 15th of February, 1930, and respondent admits having executed it. Had he refused to sign the contract, complainant would not have continued him in employment, because through respondent's personal contact with customers he might take them as his own, such deliveryman being in a good position to influence customers through seeing and waiting on them daily, and at times attempting to take the business they have been paid to wait on.

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Bluebook (online)
57 S.W.2d 945, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcanally-v-person-texapp-1933.