National Enameling & Stamping Co. v. Haberman

120 F. 415, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 5282
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Connecticut
DecidedJanuary 29, 1903
DocketNo. 1,095
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 120 F. 415 (National Enameling & Stamping Co. v. Haberman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Enameling & Stamping Co. v. Haberman, 120 F. 415, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 5282 (circtdct 1903).

Opinion

PLATT, District Judge.

Aside from a minor objection, raised by the defendant with evident seriousness, which will be disposed of hereafter, the broad contention arising in the case at bar which I am asked to consider is this: The plaintiff claims that a restrictive covenant, made by one capable of contracting, which is unlimited as to time, and in area covers the entire United States, and is ancillary to the main lawful contract, being in part consideration of the good will sold, and is reasonable, and is no broader than is necessary to save to the covenantee the rights and privileges for which he has paid, may be enforced. The defendant urges that such a contract is [416]*416in general restraint of trade, and therefore void. It is not thought that any case can be found in the federal courts which sustains flatly and unequivocally the position taken by the plaintiff. Before entering upon the discussion, it may be well to suggest, that no case appears, so far as I am informed, in the courts of England, or of this country, including federal and state, where the controlling feature upon which the contract was declared void has been purely and simply, without more, its unlimited extent. If I am right about this, it follows that all which has been said about such contracts has been obiter dictum, and is peculiarly sensitive to the reasons which have always obtained for scanning such opinions with unusual care. It cannot be disputed that the age of such dicta entitles them to great respect, and that by constant repetition they have become ingrained into the fabric of English and American law and equity. Despite this fact, dicta they are, and can be investigated and analyzed as every dictum ought to be. They will be treated with the veneration and respect due to their distinguished ancestry and extensive service, and such treatment should be the more emphasized, since the critic is a modest explorer in the paths which have been hewn out by .those whom he reveres and emulates.

Passing over the immortal immorality of Hull, J. (2 Hen. V, fol. 5, pl. 26), and the general discussion of the subject to be found in the famous judgment entered by Chief Justice Parker (later Eord Macclesfield) in Mitchel v. Reynolds, 1 P. Wms. 181, and taking up the matter at the point where our own courts began to scrutinize it with care, no better statement of the objections to such a contract can be found than the one expressed by Morton, J., as the unanimous conclusion of the famous Massachusetts court over which the late and lamented Shaw presided as chief justice. Alger v. Thacher, 19 Pick. 51, 31 Am. Dec. 119:

. “(1) Suck contracts injure the parties making them, because they diminish their means of procuring livelihoods and a competency for their families. They tempt improvident persons for' the sake of present gain, to deprive themselves of the power to make future acquisitions. And they expose such persons to imposition and oppression. (2) They tend to deprive the public of the services of men in the employments and capacities in which they may be most useful to the community as well as themselves. (3) They discourage industry and enterprise, and diminish the products of ingenuity and skill. (4) They prevent competition and enhance prices. (5) They expose the public to all the evils of monopoly. And this especially is applicable to wealthy companies and large corporations, who have the means, unless restrained by law, to exclude rivalry, monopolize business, and engross the market.”

And even then, in 1837, in the midst of the stern and inexorable environments which nature provided for the asylum to which our Pilgrim Fathers, fled, the court quoted with approbation the language of Chief Justice Best in Homer v. Ashford, 3 Bing. 322, from which the following excerpt is culled: “Any deed, therefore, by which a person binds himself not to employ his talents, his industry, or his capital in any useful undertaking in the kingdom would be void, because no good reason can be imagined for any person imposing much a restraint upon himself ” The italics are mine. Omniscience is not a prerogative of the earthly judiciary; no human brain could [417]*417conceive, no earthly eye could penetrate, the possibilities which steam and electricity have already converted from the vagaries of the dreamer into practical everyday facts.

In the Addyston Pipe & Steel Co.’s Case, 29 C. C. A. 141, 85 Fed. 284, 46 L. R. A. 122, Judge Taft, with the wave of a wand which in 1837 would have been deemed that of a magician, sweeps away a large portion of the fancied objections presented in Alger v. Thacher.

Before we come to that let us see what Massachusetts has done in the way of reparation. Taylor v. Blanchard, 13 Allen, 370, 90 Am. Dec. 203, was decided in 1866. In that case the facts disclosed that Blanchard, as one of the copartners of Taylor & Blanchard, agreed not to carry on the business of manufacturing and selling shoe cutters in the commonwealth, except with the copartnership, nor to interfere in any way with the business; and further that he would not divulge secrets, etc. The court held the contract void, but in that year and day some glimmering light, shed by the approaching effulgence, entered the eyes of the judges. The plaintiff contended that in this country a contract ought not to bé held void unless it extended throughout the United States. “No,” they said, “we cannot accede to that. A monopoly extending throughout the state may be as really injurious to the people of the state as if it extended throughout the whole country.” And they add this significant and pertinent thought:

“Whether the principle extends to a case where, by means of traveling agents, one has extended his business through a large part of the country, or a large part of the state, and sells the good will of the business with a restriction merely coextensive with that good will, and not extending beyond the actual sphere of the business of the vendor, we need not discuss. The law regards the good will of a particular trade as property having a market value, and protects it to a reasonable extent, depending somewhat upon the nature and character of the business.”

And very soon thereafter (in 1869) along came the case of Machine Co. v. Morse, 103 Mass. 73, 4 Am. Rep. 513. The court therein held a contract valid in which the, defendant agreed “at no time to aid, assist, or encourage in any manner any competition” against a business sold with its good will, and told him that he had sold the good will, which was valuable, and had been well paid for it, and that he could not have so sold it if he had not agreed never to interfere with it, and that by his acts he was taking back a part of what he had sold. The court very distinctly affirms in the opinion that the case does not turn upon the point that a patent is concerned in the contract, and, aside from that consideration, it is very instructive and enlightening, and very much like the one at bar, and I express with pleasure my acknowledgments for its helpful influence.

And again, on May 18, 1898, in deciding Electric Co. v. Hawkes, 171 Mass. 101, 50 N. E. 509, 41 L. R. A. 189, 68 Am. St. Rep. 403, the court was unanimous, speaking through Knowlton, J., in an opinion which seems to give practical assent, certainly not violent dissent, to the broader rule toward which many courts, at home and abroad, are advancing.

The question at issue has received little attention at the hands of the federal courts, but the inferences which may be legitimately drawn [418]

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Bluebook (online)
120 F. 415, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 5282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-enameling-stamping-co-v-haberman-circtdct-1903.