Power v. Brown

15 Ohio C.C. Dec. 420, 2 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 320, 1903 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 246
CourtCuyahoga Circuit Court
DecidedNovember 30, 1903
StatusPublished

This text of 15 Ohio C.C. Dec. 420 (Power v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Power v. Brown, 15 Ohio C.C. Dec. 420, 2 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 320, 1903 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 246 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1903).

Opinion

MARVIN, J.

Suit was brought in the court of common pleas by Brown against Power, claiming to recover a balance due to him for commissions upon certain insurance policies issued by Power to parties who had been taking their insurance from Brown and by his influence had been induced to take policies in companies represented by Power. Both Power and Brown were insurance agents in the city of Cleveland.

On or about November 15, 1897, Brown, deeming it best for some reason to have parties who were insured in the company represented by him reinsured in some other company, entered into an arrangement with Power by which he (Brown) was to transfer certain business to Power. This is evidenced by a writing, in the following words:

“Confirming my proposition, I propose to use my best efforts in placing this business with your company, and on all business so placed and [421]*421■premiums collected, you to allow me full general agent’s commission as per your contract.
“And in consideration of said full general agent’s commission, I agree to turn over my good will and interests in all renewals after the first year, and agree not to solicit said business in the future for this or any other company.”

This was signed by Brown and accepted by Power,

Pursuant to this contract, Brown turned over a considerable amount of business to Power and received from Power a considerable amount by way of commissions on premiums. It is stipulated in the record that the amount of commissions provided for in this contract for the first year, which Brown would be entitled to in case he has not forfeited his right by reason of facts hereinafter to be stated, is $786.11, with interest from October 27, 1899.

It is further stipulated that Brown, after the making of the contract between himself and Power, became the agent of the Maryland Casualty Company and as such agent solicited and secured quite a number of natural persons and corporations to take out policies of insurance in said last named company who had been insured in the 'company which Brown represented at the time he made his contract with Power and who, through his influence, had turned over their insurance to the company represented by Power.

The defense set-up is that this conduct of Brown in thus soliciting and securing parties- tp insure with him in the Maryland company was such a violation of the contract entered into between him and Power as to bar him from any recovery and to entitle Power to recover back the commissions which he had already paid to Brown.

On the other hand, the claim is made thát the contract was a divisible one; that Brown for one single consideration undertook to do- two separate things; that he did one of these two things, to wit, in the language of the contract, used his best efforts in placing the business of insurance which lie then had with the company represented by Power; that the other thing which Brown undertook to do, to wit, turn over his good will and interests in all renewals after the first year and not to solicit said business in the future for any other company, he failed to do; that this failure to do the two things is not a defense to the claim made for doing the first thing, but is only a ground for damages to be asserted by Brown and available in this action only as a counterclaim to whatever claim Brown has for doing the first thing, to wit, the $786.11. This latter view was taken by the trial court and the jury were charged accordingly, and properly charged if this view of the case is correct.

[422]*422There remains, therefore, the question of whether this contract is to be treated-as an entirety or as divisible. We hold that it is divisible. When Brown used his best efforts to place the business which he had with the company represented by Power, he did the first thing which he undertook to do.

Suppose that he had done nothing in violation of any stipulation of his contract until the expiration of one year from its date after having turned over the business, so far as he was able, to Power; could it be doubted that he would then have been entitled to the commissions for that, one year which are provided for in the contract, and that if thereafter he had solicited the same business for his Maryland company Power would have been remitted to his claim for damages because of such actions on the part of Brown ? The time for which Brown contracted that he would not solicit such business was unlimited, and it would seem that it must have been in the contemplation of the parties that if Brown violated his contract by soliciting said business in the future he was to be liable in damages to Power. If this is correct, we are unable to see that his violating the contract in this manner before the expiration of the year gave Power any remedy against him which he would not have had if the violation had taken place after the expiration of the year.

The case of Burckhardt v. Burckhardt, 36 Ohio St. 261, is in point. That was a suit brought by one who had sold the property and good will to his partner in the business of the copartnership. By the contract the plaintiff, among other things, agreed that lie (the plaintiff) would not thereafter do business by or under the name of Burckhardt & Co., which was the name of the copartnership between the parties, in the city of Cincinnati. Immediately after the execution of the contract the plaintiff did enter into business in Cincinnati under the name and style of L. Burckhardt & Co. In purchasing the property the defendant had given to the plaintiff his promissory notes secured by a mortgage. The suit was for a foreclosure of this mortgage. The defendant for answer set up that the plaintiff, having violated his contract, was not entitled to any payment upon the notes and mortgage. The court held that this was not a defense to the action, but that if the plaintiff had violated his contract such violation could only be made available to the defendant as a counterclaim, and on page 280 uses this language:

“The counterclaim to which the defendant was entitled was one for damages only. There was no failure of consideration, in the proper sense of the term, v.hich could be available as a mere defense.”

The case of Courcier v. Graham, 1 Ohio 330, is also in point. The opinion, which is by Judge Hitchcock, is exhaustive and the reasoning is [423]*423sound. In this opinion there is a complete discussion of the matter of mutual and independent covenants in the contract. Many cases are cited in the opinion in support of the views expressed, and we think the case fully justifies the view of the case now under consideration taken by the court below.

If the contention of the defendant here is sound, then Brown was entitled to nothing for the business which he had transferred to Power because, after transferring it, he solicited and obtained for the Mainland company a comparatively small part of the business which Power got from him or by his efforts.

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Related

Courcier v. Graham
1 Ohio 330 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1824)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 Ohio C.C. Dec. 420, 2 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 320, 1903 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/power-v-brown-ohcirctcuyahoga-1903.