Morgan's Home Equipment Corp. v. Martucci

136 A.2d 838, 390 Pa. 618
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 22, 1957
DocketAppeals, 226-228
StatusPublished
Cited by267 cases

This text of 136 A.2d 838 (Morgan's Home Equipment Corp. v. Martucci) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morgan's Home Equipment Corp. v. Martucci, 136 A.2d 838, 390 Pa. 618 (Pa. 1957).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Cohen,

The Central Home Furnishing Co. was engaged in the installment selling of household articles through door-to-door salesmen-collectors. Each salesman was given a confidential route of cutomers to whom he sold and from whom he collected weekly payments. The contacts between salesmen and customers were on a regular and reoccurring basis.

In February, 1955, Morgan’s Home Equipment Corporation purchased the assets of the Central Company. Of the $150,000 purchase price, only $25,000 was paid *621 for merchandise inventory; the remainder was paid for accounts receivable, customer lists and “good will.” Within a month after Morgan had purchased Central, a meeting was held at which those employes of Central who were to be retained by Morgan were requested to execute an agreement wherein each employe promised for a period of one year after termination of employment not to compete with Morgan within a radius of 100 miles from Philadelphia, and not to solicit, divert or take away customers whom he had been serving. The instrument further recited that the employe would keep confidential the names and addresses of Morgan’s customers, and that he would not cause any customers to withhold their patronage. The consideration stated in the agreement for these employe covenants was the taking of employment with Morgan. Additionally, the contract contained the language: “I intend to be legally bound hereby.” When each employe signed the agreement he was promised, and did receive, various benefits incident to employment with Morgan including an insurance policy, a raise in wages and additional customers.

One salesman, Morris Spiller, voluntarily left Morgan’s employ on April 15, without signing the contract, and immediately thereafter began a competing business under the name of Variety Sales Corporation. Two other salesmen, John Martucci and Dan Spiller, signed the restrictive agreement and continued as employes of Morgan. On May 22, Martucci left Morgan to go with Variety, and on July 30, 1955, Dan Spiller did likewise. They then began to solicit and serve the customers of Morgan on their former routes on behalf of Variety. Other collector-salesmen, all of whom had been former employes of Morgan, were hired by Variety and actively solicited the patronage of Morgan’s customers.

*622 Morgan’s Home Equipment Corporation filed a complaint in equity in August, 1955, in the Court of Common Pleas No. 5 of Philadelphia County, charging Martucci and Dan Spiller with breaking their restrictive covenants, misusing secret information obtained while employes of the plaintiff and misleading customers by using forms which gave the impression that the defendants were still soliciting on behalf of Morgan. Morris Spiller was charged with conspiring with the other defendants to divert Morgan’s customers and entice away its employes.

The chancellor found that the restrictive covenants lacked consideration and, hence, were unenforcible. The •chancellor also concluded that a conspiracy had not been proven, and that the defendants had neither misled customers, misused confidential information, nor enticed away any of Morgan’s employes. Exceptions to this adjudication and to the decree nisi which followed it were filed. The court en banc, (including the chancellor), reversed unanimously, and entered a decree enjoining defendants Martucci and Dan Spiller for one year from the termination of their employment with the plaintiff from divulging the names and soliciting the patronage of customers who became known to. them by reason of their former employment. The decree further enjoined the two defendants from attempting to divert any of plaintiff’s business and from persuading plaintiff’s customers to refrain from continuing their patronage. All of the defendants individually and trading as Variety Sales Corporation were prohibited from using customer lists, soliciting customers, persuading customers not to patronize, attempting to divert business, enticing employes, and using deceptively similar eards and records to the detriment of Morgan. Finally, all defendants were directed to account for profits obtained as a result of ••the *623 violations of the agreement and the solicitation of plaintiffs customers. From the final decree of the court en banc the defendants prosecute these appeals maintaining that the covenants were unenforcible for lack of consideration, that the reversal of the chancellor’s findings by the court en banc constituted an abuse of discretion and that the relief granted was oppressive.

I.

The Disclosure Of Confidential Customer Information

In many businesses, permanent and exclusive relationships are established between customers and salesmen. The customer lists and customer information which have been compiled by such firms represent a material investment of employers’ time and money. This information is highly confidential and constitutes a valuable asset. Such data has been held to be property in the nature of a “trade secret” for which an employer is entitled to protection, independent of a nondisclosure contract, either under the law of agency or under the law of unfair trade practices. 1 In Macbeth-Evans Glass Co. v. Schnelbach, 239 Pa. 76, 85-86, 86 Atl. 688 (1913), we had occasion to discuss the nature of “trade secrets” and the reasons underlying their judicial recognition: “It may now be accepted as settled *624 law, under the authority of English and American cases, that courts of equity if the facts warrant will restrain an employee from making disclosure or use of trade secrets communicated to him in course of a confidential employment. The character of the secrets, if they be peculiar and important to the business, is not material. They may be secrets of trade, ... or any other secrets important to the business of the employer. They, however, must be the particular secrets of the complaining employer, not general secrets of the trade in which he is engaged. . . . The duty of the servant not to disclose the secrets of the master may arise from an express contract, or it may be implied from thew confidential relations.

“Where confidence is reposed, and the employe by reason of the confidential relation has acquired knowledge of trade secrets, he will not be permitted to make disclosure of those secrets to others to the prejudice of his employer.” (emphasis supplied)

We agree that confidential customer data are entitled to protection as a trade secret within the meaning of the Macbeth-Evans rule. 2

In the present case there is no dispute that the customer data of the plaintiff company was both confidential and highly valuable, and the court en banc so found. Whether this information was embodied in *625 written, lists or committed to memory is, we believe, of no significance; in either case the data are entitled to protection. 3

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Bluebook (online)
136 A.2d 838, 390 Pa. 618, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morgans-home-equipment-corp-v-martucci-pa-1957.