Oppenheimer v. Sayer

1 Ill. Cir. Ct. 74
CourtIllinois Circuit Court
DecidedJuly 18, 1890
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Ill. Cir. Ct. 74 (Oppenheimer v. Sayer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oppenheimer v. Sayer, 1 Ill. Cir. Ct. 74 (Ill. Super. Ct. 1890).

Opinion

Tuley, J.

The complainants, doing business in New York and Chicago, selling sausage casings, butchers’ supplies, meat and meat products, in 1884 employed the defendant, then about twenty years of age, as a traveling salesman, at a salary of seven dollars per week and one per cent, upon all sales made by him; and a few days after procured from the defendant a written agreement, in substance, that in consideration of such employment and of one dollar and other good and sufficient considerations, not to make known any information or trade secrets relative to the business of complainants, and that neither in Illinois and eighteen other named states, nor in the province of Ontario, Canada, would he, directly or indirectly, engage in the said business for the period of three years from the termination of his employment.

In 1886, complainants having discovered that the defendant was a minor when he signed the agreement, obtained anew agreement or contract confirming that made in 1884.

In December, 1888, defendant left the employment of complainants and soon thereafter entered into a partnership with one Wolf in the city of Chicago and commenced the business-of dealing in sausage casings and butchers’ supplies.

Thereupon, on the 19th of January, 1889, this bill was filed] to restrain the defendant from parrying on such business ini -Illinois, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio and Minnesota, being the-states in which defendant had done business as a traveling-salesman for complainants.

It appears to be admitted that the first contract is not binding on defendant by reason of his being a minor at the time of its execution, imless the confirmatory agreement is binding upon him.

Defendant alleges fraud of complainant in obtaining the execution of the confirmatory agreement of 1886.

Much evidence was taken which is conflicting and irreconcilable. While there is some evidence tending to show misrepresentations made to defendant to induce him to sign the agreement, there was none which in my opinion was of so material a character, or which was so controlling in inducing defendant-to sign the confirmatory agreement as to make the contract void for fraud. It is contended that the evidence shows that at least one hundred and one dollars was paid defendant as an additional consideration for Ms signing the last agreement.

I find from the evidence that the defendant signed the same under a threat of discharge and received no consideration other than a continuation of his weekly employment and probably the one dollar mentioned in the agreement.

The defendant contends that the contract is in restraint of trade and therefore contrary to public policy and void. Covenants in restraint of trade generally are void because contrary to public policy, but where the restraint is only par-dial, the consideration for the agreement is a good consideration, and the restriction is reasonable, such contracts are legal and can be enforced.

The doctrine of the common law that contracts in restraint of trade which embrace the entire kingdom or state are void, has been much modified by the later decisions of the courts.

Justice Bradley in Oregon Steam Navigation Company v. Winsor, 20 Wallace, 64, 67, well claims that “This country is substantially one country, especially in all matters of trade and business, and it is manifest that cases may arise in which it would involve too narrow a view of the subject to condemn as invalid a contract not to carry on a particular business within a particular state,” and that “Cases must be judged according to their circumstances, and can only be rightly judged when the reason and grounds of the rule are carefully considered. ’’

In the modern method of doing business, by means of traveling salesmen, a business ceases to be local or confined to any one state, but the whole territory traversed by the traveling salesman becomes the territorial limits of the business. A covenant not to do business within such limits may not be any more against public policy than, formerly, a covenant not to do business in a certain town or city.

The methods of modem convenience in the transaction of business have done away with the reason of the rale founded upon territorial limitations.

In the Diamond Match Case, 106 N. Y. 473, the covenant included all the United States except one. It was held valid. Beal v. Chase, 31 Mich. 491, is also a very strong case upon this point.

It is contended that the consideration, which was only an •agreement to employ the defendant by the week at cértain wages and the one dollar mentioned in the contract, was inadequate and therefore the contract is void.

At law the consideration—even that of one dollar—is a valuable consideration and sufficient to support a contract—■ sufficient to support this as well as any other contract. If the parties considered the employment and the one dollar a reasonable and adequate consideration, it is not for the court to say that it was unreasonable or inadequate. To hold otherwise it appears to me would be to make the contract rest upon the business capacity and intelligence of the court as compared with that of the complaining party. It is an old saying that the law does not attempt to give any man brains or business sense.

A contract good at law should be good in equity. The only time a court of equity will inquire into the adequacy or sufficiency of the consideration is when the contract is sought to be specifically enforced, directly or indirectly, and the inquiry of the court then is not as to the validity of the contract, but whether the court of equity will lend its aid to enforce it.

The restriction as to the length of time (three years) for which defendant bound himself not to engage in the business, is not unreasonable. I do not understand defendant’s counsel as contending that it is.

The only remaining question is, should a court of equity give its aid towards the enforcement of this contract f It appears to me that the decisions governing courts of equity as to decreeing the specific performance of contracts should control this case. The application of complainant to this court is that this court decree that the defendant specifically perform his contract by decreeing a perpetual injunction against his breaking it. In other words,—that he abstain from going into and doing the business which 'by the contract he agreed he would abstain from for three years. It is the only specific performance of the contract by the defendant which this court could decree.

There are no trade secrets in this business to be divulged, and it is only by the competition of the defendant in business that complainants can be injured.

Pomeroy, in his work on the Specific Performance of Contracts says:

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1 Ill. Cir. Ct. 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oppenheimer-v-sayer-illcirct-1890.