Sanitary Appliance Co. v. French

34 S.W.2d 673
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 14, 1931
DocketNo. 3457.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 34 S.W.2d 673 (Sanitary Appliance Co. v. French) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sanitary Appliance Co. v. French, 34 S.W.2d 673 (Tex. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

RANDOLPH, J.

This suit was brought by appellant seeking an injunction to restrain the defendant W. A. French from violating the terms of a contract entered into by the plaintiffs and said French, in which contract plaintiffs allege in their petition the defendant bound and obligated himself to become the agent of the plaintiffs for the sale of Sanitary products. The plaintiffs further allege that said contract provided that the plaintiff was to furnish the defendant with confidential information and with apparatus and business appliances and equipment sold by them. The petition abundantly alleges a violation of the terms of the contract, and also seeks damages against the defendant by reason of his refusal or failure to return the literature, supplies, and equipment furnished him.

The particular part of the plaintiff’s petition charging a violation of the contract by the defendant is as follows:

“The plaintiffs further show to - the court that the general agent, Cullen G. Jackson, immediately went to work under his said contract with the plaintiff, Sanitary Appliance Company, Inc., and obtained the confidential information with reference to said Appliance Company’s business, as general sales agent, employed and contracted with the defendant W. A. French, and that the defendant W. A. French, through said employment and by virtue of said contracts and each of them, did obtain confidential information concerning the business of the plaintiffs and each of them, and concerning the appliances and equipment sold by them, and that the defendant W. A. French actually went to work under said contracts shortly after his employment on the 29th of August, 1929, and sought and obtained confidential information concerning the business of the plaintiffs and the apparatus and equipment sold by them and became familiar with their customers and with the municipalities throughout the one hundred fifty-two counties in Texas mentioned in said contracts, and that shortly after the employment of the defendant W. A. French, he set about to abtain all of the necessary confidential information concerning the business of the plaintiffs and concerning the apparatus and equipment sold by them which would enable him to engage in the same line of business in the sale of apparatus and equipment of other manufacturers used for the same purposes as those covered by and mentioned in the said contracts and that instead of using said information for the furtherance of the business of the plaintiffs, he deliberately began a course of unfair dealing by procuring the names of prospective customers and purchasers in said territory and of visiting them while traveling at the expense of the plaintiffs, *674 and of lining them up for future purchases of apparatus and equipment similar to that which it was his duty t,o sell for the plaintiffs, and after procuring said information and lining up a large number of customers in said territory for the purchase of such appliances and equipment, he then unfairly and deceitfully and for the purpose of injuring the plaintiffs and each of t¡hem, terminated his contract by giving the thirty days notice on or about the 16th day of December, 1929, and withheld from the plaintiffs the business which some of said customers were ready and willing to give him, and after terminating said contract with the plaintiffs, he began substituting the appliances, apparatus and equipment of other manufacturers, and began to offer the apparatus, appliances and equipment of other manufacturers to the customers whose names he had learned while in the employment of the plaintiffs, and concerning whom he had obtained information while in the employment of plaintiffs, and with whom he had begun negotiations while in the employment of plaintiffs, and he began and continued to use the confidential information which he had received under and by virtue of his employment by the plaintiffs, in the sale of apparatus, equipment and appliances of other manufacturers and began to compare such appliances, apparatus and equipment with the appliances, equipment and apparatus which he had been selling for the plaintiffs, so as to induce the purchasers to believe that the appliances, apparatus and equipment of such other manufacturers were superior to and better than the appliances, apparatus and equipment of the plaintiffs, and he began and continued to use the methods of salesmanship which he had been taught by and learned from the plaintiffs, and to use the same means for financing the purchase thereof by the purchasers, and to instruct the purchasers in the matter of the issuance of warrants and the obtaining of credit which would enable them to buy such appliances and equipment and has continued such conduct up to the time of the bringing of this suit, and is now actively engaged in selling and attempting to sell the apparatus, appliances -and equipment of other manufacturers within the territory consisting of the one hundred fifty-two counties referred to and set out in his contract and in the contract written into the same as a part thereof. That he has retained the literature, instructions and supplies furnished him by the plaintiffs for his use as a sales representative of the plaintiff in the sale of the plaintiffs’ products and still retains the same and has refused to return them to the plaintiffs.
“That upon his employment by the plaintiffs, he was furnished with supplies, literature and equipment, such as is furnished by the plaintiffs ⅛> their representative salesmen, consisting of printed descriptions, pictures, photographs, lithographed pictures, instructions to salesmen and advertising matter of the value of $600.00, and upon his notice that he intended to terminate his contract and leave the service of the plaintiffs, he was requested to return all of the plaintiffs’ said properties to the plaintiffs, but failed and refused to return the same to them or to either of them, and still retains said advertising matter, literature, instructions, etc., and plaintiffs are informed and believe that, he is using the same against the plaintiffs to their detriment, by showing them to customers and prospective customers in an unfavorable light and with criticisms of the methods of the plaintiffs, and with representations of inferiority of their appliances and apparatus. That said literature, pictures, printed instructions, etc., do not belong to defendant, but belong to the plaintiffs and were only furnished to the defendant to enable him to successfully show the plaintiffs’ apparatus and appliances and to explain to such customers and prospective customers the good points and the beneficial uses of such appliances and the moderate cost thereof and for the purpose of showing such customers and prospective customers the manner of the installation of such apparatus and appliances and were not furnished to the defendant for the purpose of enabling him to damage the plaintiffs by making disparaging comparisons between the same and the appliances of other manufacturers, and that the use of said literature for said purposes is unfair, unconscionable and in violation of the defendant’s contract.

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Bluebook (online)
34 S.W.2d 673, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanitary-appliance-co-v-french-texapp-1931.