Parish v. Schwartz

252 Ill. App. 591, 1929 Ill. App. LEXIS 727
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 20, 1929
DocketGen. No. 33,393
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 252 Ill. App. 591 (Parish v. Schwartz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parish v. Schwartz, 252 Ill. App. 591, 1929 Ill. App. LEXIS 727 (Ill. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice O’Connor

delivered the opinion of the court.

By this appeal the complainants seek to reverse a decree of the superior court of Cook county sustaining a demurrer to their amended bill and dismissing it for want of equity.

By their amended bill complainants sought to enjoin the defendants from violating a convenant contained in a written contract. Complainants purchased from the defendants certain shares of stock in the American Flange and Manufacturing Company, a corporation. The contract provided inter alia that in consideration of the moneys paid, the sellers agreed to turn over their shares of stock in the corporation and further agreed “that they will not, nor will either of them, engage directly or indirectly, either in person-or as stockholders in, or employees of, any other corporation, or as members or employees of any partnership or association, or otherwise, for the period of sixteen years from the date of this agreement in the manufacture or sale of articles relating to bungs or plugs for bungholes, or air-vent openings, in containers; bushings in or at, and for use in or at, bungholes or air-vent openings, tags and sealing devices for bungholes, or air-vent openings and bungs therefor, and mechanisms of bungs and sealing devices, either in the United States of America east of the Mississippi River, or in any territory in which the American Flange & Manufacturing Company is now selling its products and will not employ or offer employment to, or cause others to offer employment to, any person now in the employ of said American Flange & Manufacturing Company.” The bill further alleged facts which show that the defendants were violating the provision of the contract just quoted; and there are further allegations to the effect that the price paid by complainants to defendants for the stock was greatly in excess of the value of the stock unless the sale was accompanied by the restrictive covenant.

As we understand it, the court sustained the demurrer to the amended bill on the ground that the restrictive covenant was contrary to the public policy of the State of Illinois and therefore void. Counsel for the complainants contend that the covenant is valid and enforceable and in support thereof cite an article in 31 Harvard Law Review, 193, by Mr. Albert M. Kales; Hall Mfg. Co. v. Western Steel & Iron Works, 227 Fed. 588; Diamond Match Co. v. Roeber, 106 N. Y. 473; Swigert v. Tilden, 121 Iowa 650; Anchor Electric Co. v. Hawkes, 171 Mass. 101; Cincinnati, Portsmouth, Big Sandy & Pomeroy Packet Co. v. Bay, 200 U. S. 179, and other cases. And they seek to distinguish the cases of Lanzit v. Sefton Mfg. Co., 184 Ill. 326; Union Strawboard Co. v. Bonfield, 193 Ill. 420, chiefly relied upon by the defendants. The late lamented Albert M. Kales, in discussing the question now under consideration, in his article in the Harvard Law Review, said: “Formerly it was urged against the restriction that the seller might become a charge upon the community because he could not carry on his trade or business. This was at once met by the requirement that the seller must have received a substantial consideration for the sale of his business. Recently the requirement has been held to be satisfied if some consideration of value in addition to or including the consideration necessary to make a contract is given. Today the fear of the seller becoming a charge upon the community has practically disappeared. If the business sold is small, the seller may take the consideration and start elsewhere. If the business is so large that the restriction probably covers a wide area, the consideration paid to the seller will usually keep him from becoming a public charge.

“Another ground formerly expressed for holding invalid these restrictive covenants was that they might leave a given community unserved by anyone capable of carrying on a given business. This may have been an important consideration in the case of a business confined to a small territory at a time when others-could not mobilize readily at a given point. It is out of place today, when the ease and freedom of transportation are such that if one man goes out of business in a given locality, there is little need to fear that the public will suffer by reason of the failure of anyone to serve it. Besides, when a business is sold by one to another, the public is substantially as well off as it was before.

“. . . The rational test is the extent of the business sold and not the boundaries of some political subdivision of the country. This is the view of the more recent cases, where the restriction has been held valid even when the sale was to a competitor.”

In the Hall Mfg. Co. case (227 Fed. 588), opinion by Judge Baker of the Circuit Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit, it was held that the validity of a restrictive covenant in a contract in the sale of a business and good will was to be tested not by whether it was limited or unlimited as to time or place, but by determining whether on the facts of the particular case the restraint is greater than is reasonably necessary for the protection of the purchaser. And the Supreme Court of Iowa, in the Swigert case (121 Iowa 650), discussing the validity of restrictive covenants, said (p. 656): “It would therefore be absurd, in the light of this common experience, now to say that a man shuts himself up to idleness or expatriation, and thus injures the public, when he agrees, for a sufficient consideration, not to follow some one calling within the limits of some particular state. There is no expatriation in moving from one state to another, and from such removals a state would be likely to gain as much as it would lose.” This quotation was from a Rhode Island case and which the Iowa court approved. The Iowa court then quotes from a Hew York case as follows: “The doctrine which avoids a contract for being one in restraint of trade is founded upon a public policy. It had its origin at a time when the field of human enterprise was limited, and when each man’s industrial activity was more or less necessary to the material well-being and welfare of his community and of the state. The conditions which made so rigid a doctrine reasonable no longer exist. In the present practically unlimited field of human enterprise there is no good reason for restricting the freedom to contract, or for fearing injury to the public from contracts which prevent a person from carrying on a particular business. . . .” And continuing: “To any one at all familiar with present-day conditions, it requires no argument to demonstrate that public policy requires that in trade matters there shall be no restraints imposed, save in those instances where it is clearly made to appear that the public welfare would be otherwise seriously endangered. And an all-important factor in business life is the right of individual contract — the right to buy and sell, to bargain and convey at will. . . . So, too, note has been taken of the baneful results which follow, seemingly with inevitable certainty, from giving sanction, even negatively, to acts or conduct involving fraud or dominated by bad faith. Certainly it is not going too far to say that there can be no sound public policy which operates to give countenance to the open disregard and violation of personal contracts entered into in good faith and upon good consideration. . . .” In Underwood v. Barker, 68 L. J. Ch. Div.

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Bluebook (online)
252 Ill. App. 591, 1929 Ill. App. LEXIS 727, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parish-v-schwartz-illappct-1929.