Schluter v. McLeod

199 S.W. 311, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 1062
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 28, 1917
DocketNo. 1256.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 199 S.W. 311 (Schluter v. McLeod) 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
Schluter v. McLeod, 199 S.W. 311, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 1062 (Tex. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

HALL, J.

Appellant filed this suit to restrain appellee from engaging in the business of writing and soliciting hail insurance in Childress county, and to recover actual and exemplary damages. Pie alleges, in substance, that with appellee, on January 1, 1916, under the firm name of McLeod & Schlu-ter, they were engaged in writing insurance in Childress county, Tex.; that such business consisted of writing policies for various forms of insurance, and was on said date of the value of $3,000; that the value of the good will of appellee in and to the business was $1,000; that on said date appellant purchased appellee’s interest in the partnership business, paying him therefor the sum of $1,500, at which time appellee entered into a written contract with appellant, by the terms of which appellee obligated and bound himself that'he would not directly or indirectly enter into or engage in the business of writing fire, tornado, plate glass, burglary, or hail insurance in the city of Childress, or in Childress county, Tex., so long as appellant should remain in said business in Childress county; that appellant had been continuously engaged in said business since he purchased the interest of appellee, and, notwithstanding his contract and obligation to engage in the insurance business in said county, ap-pellee did, on the 15th day of April, 191YÍ write hail insurance in said county and held himself out as an insurance agent, soliciting hail insurance to be written by him; that he-will continue to do so unless restrained by the court, to the damage and injury of appellant; that the act of appellee in writing hail insurance in Childress county is a violation of his contract and agreement with appellant and has caused the business of appellant and the value thereof to decrease in the sum of $500; that, if appellee is permitted to continue to write said insurance in said territory in violation of his contract,, it will work great and irreparable damages, to appellant.

Appellant attached to his petition the contract of January 1, 1916, paragraph 2 of which is as follows:

“That for and in consideration of said sale and purchase and of the said sum of money aforesaid, the said W. A. McLeod does hereby bind and ob* ligate himself that he will not directly or indirectly, enter into nor engage in the business of writing fire, tornado, plate glass, burglary and hail insurance nor the writing of indemnity or other insurance other than life insurance in the-city of Childress and in the county of Childress, Texas; and for the faithful performance of this, obligation the said W. A. McLeod does hereby bind himself firmly and by these presents. This contract shall remain in force as long as the said H. A. Schluter remains in said above stated insurance business.”

The answer of appellee, in addition to exceptions and general denial, alleged that the agreement and contract made by and between him and appellant was abrogated, annulled, and dissolved by reason of the fact that appellant and appellee at said time again entered into a partnership, by the terms of which they were to engage in the business of writing hail insurance in Childress county, Tex., and divided the proceeds equally after paying the expense of said business, and that such partnership existed during the remainder of the season of the year 1916; that appellee and appellant did divide the earnings and profits of said partnership-equally; and that by reason of said subsequent contract of partnership appellee, was relieved from the obligations and conditions of his said contract of January 1, 1916. Ap-pellee further alleged by way of cross-action that the injunction was unlawfully and unjustly obtained, and that by reason thereof he suffered damages for which he prayed *313 judgment. By supplemental petition appellant answered specially that he did not enter into a contract of partnership with appellee, but, on the contrary, he employed appellee to solicit and write hail insurance for him, and that the relation of employer and employé existed between them, and that they were not partners. Upon a trial of the case without a jury, judgment was entered dissolving the temporary injunction and decreeing that appellant take nothing by his suit and that appellee take nothing by reason of his cross-action.

Appellee has filed a motion to dismiss the case upon the ground, as shown by affidavit attached to the motion, that appellant has sold to one Biggs the insurance business purchased by him of appellee since the appeal was perfected. As heretofore stated, the suit was for an injunction and to recover $1,000 exemplary damages and $500 actual damages. The court correctly sustained a special exception to the claim for exemplary damages, and appellant did not except to such ruling. It is insisted in the motion that since the claim for $1,000 is not an issue, and since the sale of the business by the appellant has the effect of removing the issue of his right to an injunction from the case, the only question now before this court is the item of $500 damages, and, because the district court would have no jurisdiction of a suit for $500, this court should dismiss the case. The general rule is that the jurisdiction of this courUIs fixed by the status of the case at the time the appellant files his appeal bond. At that time appellant claimed the right to an injunction as well as the right to recover actual damages, which would give this court jurisdiction of the controversy. It is therefore our duty to entertain jurisdiction, unless by reason of something occurring since the appeal there is no longer any controverted issue, or the subject-matter of the suit has been destroyed, or the questions presented are moot. Hart v. Britton, 197 S. W. 592, and authorities cited.

It appears from the judgment of the court that the trial judge dissolved the temporary injunction and rendered judgment against the appellant upon the ground that the written contract of January 1, 1916, was abrogated and annulled as to hail insurance, by the “new contract entered into between plaintiff and defendant for jointly pursuing ¡•.aid. business of hail insurance.” A review of this ruling and the authorities bearing upon it has convinced us that the court erred. The question has never been adjudicated in this state, but we believe that the weight of authority and the better reason sustains the contention of appellant that the original contract was not abrogated, either by a subsequent partnership agreement between appellant and appellee, or by the creation of the relation of employer and em-ployé between them. The only cases where the question has been considered, so far as we have been able to find, are cited in the briefs of the parties. The first case is that of Norris & Cochran v. Howard, 41 Iowa, 508, in which it was held that the formation of a partnership under such circumstances was inconsistent with the prior contract binding one of the parties not to engage in the same business, and at the expiration of the partnership the party bound by the contract was absolved therefrom. In the case of Menefee v. Rankins, 158 Ky. 78, 164 S. W. 365, the Court of Appeals of Kentucky considered the same question arising in a case growing out of a contract where one physician had sold his office furniture and good will to another, agreeing in the contract to 'leave town and to turn over, so far as he was able, all of his practice to the purchaser. The question is discussed at some length, and the opinion of the court is based upon the Norris & Cochran v. Howard Case,' supra, which it cites with approval. We are not disposed to follow the holding in these cases.

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258 S.W. 856 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1924)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
199 S.W. 311, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 1062, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schluter-v-mcleod-texapp-1917.