Singer Sewing-Mach. Co. v. Union Button-Hole & Embroidery Co.

22 F. Cas. 220, 4 O.G. 553
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedSeptember 15, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 22 F. Cas. 220 (Singer Sewing-Mach. Co. v. Union Button-Hole & Embroidery Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Singer Sewing-Mach. Co. v. Union Button-Hole & Embroidery Co., 22 F. Cas. 220, 4 O.G. 553 (circtdma 1873).

Opinion

LOWELL, District Judge.

There is no dispute that the two companies, complainant and defendant, made the contract, A, annexed to the bill, by which the former is to have the exclusive right of selling the patented machines, excepting in two excepted localities; that the defendant Wood had full knowledge of the contract, and that the defendants are about to carry out a course of action which will have a strong tendency, to say the least, to defeat the contract. In such a state of things a court of equity readily grants an injunction until the merits of the case can be inquired into, because, if it refuses to interfere at first, rights may be acquired and innocent third persons may become interested in the property in a way that will embarrass the final action of the court, and perhaps work injustice to those innocent persons. It is the direct opposite of a case in which the court is asked to interfere with existing rights upon the strength of some supposed paramount title, and to break up an established order of things. Here the defendants are breaking the established order, and are the actors in fact, and the court is asked to keep things as they are and were agreed to be, until the full evidence is taken. “It is certain,” said a learned lord chancellor, speaking of a case of this kind, “that the court will in many cases interfere and preserve property in statu quo during the pendency of a suit in which the rights to it are to be decided, and that without expressing, and ofts.i without having the means to form, any opinion as to such rights.” He then cites several authorities, and continues: “It is true that the court will not so interfere if it thinks there is no real question between the parties; but, seeing there is a substantial question to be decided, it will preserve the property until the question can be disposed of. In order to support an injunction for such a purpose, it is not necessary for the court to decide upon the merits in favor of the plaintiff.” Great Western Ry. Co. v. Birmingham & O. J. Ry. Co., 2 Phil. Ch. 602. The decision of this motion, then, depends upon whether the complainant has made such a reasonable prima facie case for the relief, or some substantial part of the relief, which it seeks, that it is fairly entitled to maintain the status quo. Upon the matters of fact I find that they have such a case.

The two points of law are not without difficulty. The relief asked is specific performance and Injunction. It is argued with great ability by the defendants, that the complainant is not entitled to specific performance, and that, therefore, it cannot have an injunction which is merely auxiliary. Granting the premises, I am not prepared to concede the [222]*222conclusion. If the court cannot order a contract for the making of button-hole machines to be specifically performed by reason of the impossibility of superintending the details of such a business, it does not follow that the bill may not be retained as an injunction bill. It was formerly thought that an injunction would not be granted to restrain the breach of any contract, unless the contract were of such a character that the court could fully enforce the performance of it on both sides. Upon this ground there were many decisions refusing to interfere with contracts for per- j sonal services, however flagrant might be the ■ breach of them. Kemble v. Kean, 6 Sim. 333; Kimberley v. Jennings, Id. 340; Baldwin v. Society for Diffusion of Knowledge, 9 Sim. 393, in which the ■ courts refused to restrain actors and authors from violating their engagements, because they could not oblige them, specifically to keep them. But all these cases were overruled by one of the ablest chancellors who has adorned the wool- j sack, in Burnley v. Wagner, 1 De Gex, M. & G. 616. In that case a singer had agreed to sing at the plaintiff’s theatre for three months, and not to sing at any other, and the court enjoined her from performing at a rival establishment, though it was clear and was admitted that the court could not oblige | her to sing for the plaintiff. This case was ¡ fully in accord with Morris v. Colman, 18 Ves. 437, which had been disregarded or explained away in many of the intervening cases. It is now firmly established that the court will often interfere by injunction when it cannot decree performance. Thus it is said that the writ may issue to restrain the use of a ship contrary to an agreement for charter, though the agreement was not personally binding on the defendant, who was a mortgagee. De Mattos v. Gibson, 4 De Gex & J. 276; that a tenant may be restrained from doing any thing which will prevent the demised premises being used as an inn, though he cannot be forced to keep the inn as he had covenanted to do. Hooper v. Brodrick, 11 Sim. 47; that where two railway companies had made an agreement for the ! use by each of the road of the other, the court might enjoin the obstruction of such use by one of the parties, though it could not enforce full performance of the whole agreement. Great Northern Ry. Co. v. Manchester, S. & L. Ry. Co., 5 De Gex & S. 138. The ease of Lumley v. Wagner, 1 De Gex,. M. & G. 604, has been followed in numerous eases concerning actors, authors, and publishers. Webster v. Dillon, 5 Wkly. Rep. 807; Stiff v. Cassell, 2 Jur. (N. S.) 348. The case of Feehter v. Montgomery, 33 Beav. 22, sometimes cited as opposed to these decisions, is not so at all; the decision there was, that the actor had the right to renounce his engagement because tire manager had not fulfilled his part of the contract. See, also, Slee v. Bradford, 4 Giff. 262; Rolfe v. Rolfe, 15 Sim. 88. Dietrichsen v. Cabburn, 2 Phil. Ch. 52, has much resemblance to the case at bar. The defendant owned a patent medicine, and appointed the plaintiff his wholesale agent for the sale of it, and agreed to-supply him with all the medicine he should order at forty per cent discount from the current retail price, and covenanted not to-sen to any one else at a greater discount than twenty-five per cent above that current price. On demurrer, the lord chancellor, overruling the vice-chancellor, sustained the bill which sought to enjoin the defendant from selling to any one else at less than the agreed discount, and for an account. It is plain, I think, that the decision would have been the same if the defendant had agreed not to sell to any one else on any terms. This case virtually overruled Hills v. Croll, Id. 60, decided a year earlier. See the able note of the reporter at the end of the last-mentioned case. These are but a few of the decisions, though they are among the most important of them.

This is certainly a subject upon which it is almost impossible to reconcile the decisions, and of such inherent difficulty, that I know of no other in which the appellate courts have so often reversed the decisions below. I have examined a great many of the cases, and some apparent contradictions may be understood by recollecting that the granting or refusing an injunction is scarcely ever a matter of strict right, and that any attempt to lay down precise and invariable rules on the subject must necessarily fail. There are many cases in which injunctions have been refused in behalf of the employed, when, upon the precedent of Lumley v. Wagner, and that class of cases, they would have been, granted to the employers. This seems unequal. The explanation, such as it is, appears to be, partly, that courts of equity are unwilling to force upon any one an agent or servant who is personally disagreeable, if the relation between the parties is at ail a personal or confidential one; and partly, that, on the part of the agent or servant, the remedy at law is usually adequate, both from the nature of the contract and the standing of the parties. See Mair v.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Daniels v. Brown Shoe Co.
77 F.2d 899 (First Circuit, 1935)
Nokol Company v. Becker
300 S.W. 1108 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 F. Cas. 220, 4 O.G. 553, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/singer-sewing-mach-co-v-union-button-hole-embroidery-co-circtdma-1873.