McCluer v. Super Maid Cook-Ware Corporation

62 F.2d 426, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 3191
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedDecember 23, 1932
Docket551
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 62 F.2d 426 (McCluer v. Super Maid Cook-Ware Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCluer v. Super Maid Cook-Ware Corporation, 62 F.2d 426, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 3191 (10th Cir. 1932).

Opinions

LEWIS, Circuit Judge.

This appeal presents for our consideration the action of the District Court in overruling appellant’s demurrer to the bill and entry of final decree thereon, appellant having declined to answer. The Super Maid Cook-Ware Corporation, plaintiff: below, an Illinois corporation, and Miller Maid Cookware Company, a Kansas corporation, were engaged in selling aluminum ware suitable for use as cooking utensils directly to housewives. The gravamen of the bill is that the latter company induced representatives of the former to break their written contracts with appellee and accept immediate employment with appellant in the sale and distribution of its aluminum ware in violation of restrictive covenants in said agreement, of which appellant had knowledge. There are two restrictions, (1) That the person contracting with plaintiff: would not for one year after the termination of the contract, for himself or anyone else, sell or solicit the purchase of aluminum cookware in any city or community in which he had operated under the contract with plaintiff nor within a radius of one hundred miles of such city or community; and (2) That he would not within said one year engage in the business of selling such ware directly to the consumer within the United States.

The decree enjoined appellant from violating the terms of the first restriction and further that it should not continue in its employ two named persons whom the bill alleged had been induced by appellant to quit as appellee’s representatives and become engaged by appellant in the sale and distribution of its aluminum ware.

The contract (labeled “Representative’s Rental Agreement”) is so indefinite in statement and so unusual in form and substance as to leave doubt as to the real relation of the parties. Throughout appellee is spoken of as “lessor” and the other party to the contract as “lessee.” There are intimations that appellee manufactures its ware and that lessees might learn the secrets of that art, but this is contrary to the allegations of the bill. The contract begins with the statement that in consideration that lessee will keep and perform the agreement the lessor leases to the lessee one complete aluminum outfit consisting of named articles. It provides that lessee shall pay as rental five dollars per month for twenty-four months. It seems clear that the purpose of leasing the aluminum outfit was to enable the lessee to make demonstrations of its use in cooking, but that is nowhere expressly stated. The contract provides that the “lessor shall not be liable for any damage occasioned by the said lessee in and about the use of said outfit or any part thereof or any demonstration made by said lessee, and it being understood and agreed that the said lessee is acting for and on his own behalf in all matter pertaining to the use thereof or any part thereof or any demonstration made with the same or any part thereof.” It further provides that if the lessee will faithfully “carry out the orders and directions of, the lessor from time to time as indicated by its various rules and regulations, then for the time spent by lessee in school run by lessor in learning the art of selling aluminum cookware, the lessor will pay to the lessee the sum of $35.00 as, if and when the lessee subsequently shall have secured $1,000.00' in bona fide contracts for Super Maid aluminum ware which have been accepted by the said lessor, said sum to be paid directly from the home office of lessor. Besides this, for all bona fide contracts secured by lessee for the purchase of lessor’s aluminum ware (and which contracts are accepted by lessor), the lessor will pay to the lessee a sum equal to the rate published by the said lessor from time to time.” The lessee agreed to immediately surrender the outfit whenever he should cease selling aluminum ware made by lessor or whenever requested to so surrender the same by tho lessor, and if ho failed to surrender the same, it was agreed that lessee should be liable to lessor at the rate of $5.00 per day as liquidated damages. The lessee further agreed that when he stopped selling lessor’s ware an action of trover for the aluminum outfit would lie against him whether demand was made for it or not. The lessee further agreed to insure the safe return of the outfit and every part thereof and that he would be held to strict liability for its value; that in the event lessee made default in payments reserved it would be lawful for the lessor to declare the lease ended and to demand and receive back the aluminum outfit, and for the purpose of its recovery the lessee constituted any [428]*428attorney of any court of record as Ms attorney with authority to enter the lessee’s appearance, to waive process and service, trial by jury and to confess judgment against the lessee in favor of the lessor in any court upon complaint filed therein by lessor, and waive all errors and rights of appeal from the judgment, and consent that execution might be issued; that if the lessee faithfully complied with the contract the lessor would execute and deliver to the lessee a gift certificate of the aluminum outfit leased to him, and after the delivery of the certificate the outfit would belong to the lessee, and not until then; that the lessor was not to return any of the rentals at any time. It was further agreed that the lessee was unacquainted with the art and finesse of successfully selling aluminum cookware, and that the lessor would permit the lessee to attend its school of instructions where the lessor would give him detailed information as to the art of cooking with aluminum ware and at which lessee would learn its general policies in securing sales, and how to approach prospective customers and the art of cultivating their acquaintance. The nineteenth paragraph states that because of the relation established by the contract between lessor and lessee the lessee is about to become vested by the lessor with confidential information of great value in conducting the business of manufacturing and selling aluminum cookware directly to the consumer, that this information has cost the lessor hundreds of thousands of dollars and the proper education of the lessee is about to cost the lessor a considerable sum of money, and that by reason of the contract the lessee will also become acquainted with a large number of persons in various cities throughout the United States with whom he would not be able to get acquainted except for this agreement. The twenty-first and twenty-second paragraphs contain the restrictive covenants.

Notwithstanding the alluring intimations in the contract that the lessor was a manufacturer of aluminum ware and the lessee would in some way learn the art of its manufacture, and further alluring intimations that the lessor ran a school in which the art of manufacturing and selling aluminum cookware was taught and the lessor would pay each lessee $35:00 on the first $1,000.00 in contracts which he might obtain for selling aluminum ware, there is no allegation in the bill that the lessor is a manufacturer of' aluminum ware and no allegation that it-maintains á school of instructions of any kind. As to the first, it is alleged .that appellee, the so-called lessor, was authorized on its incorporation and immediately thereafter commenced the business of the purchase and sale of aluminum cookware, and that it has prosecuted said business ever since,—but there are no allegations of manufacture, nor that lessees were taught that art.

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McCluer v. Super Maid Cook-Ware Corporation
62 F.2d 426 (Tenth Circuit, 1932)

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Bluebook (online)
62 F.2d 426, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 3191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccluer-v-super-maid-cook-ware-corporation-ca10-1932.