Southland Reship, Inc. v. Flegel

401 F. Supp. 339
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Georgia
DecidedSeptember 26, 1975
DocketC74-727A
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 401 F. Supp. 339 (Southland Reship, Inc. v. Flegel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southland Reship, Inc. v. Flegel, 401 F. Supp. 339 (N.D. Ga. 1975).

Opinion

FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

MOYE, District Judge.

Findings of Fact

1. This suit involves the sale and delivery of magazines, periodicals and paperback books in parts of the states of Georgia, Alabama, Kentucky, Tennessee, Mississippi and South Carolina.

2. Plaintiff, Southland Reship, Inc., is a Texas corporation which was formed by M. H. Elliott and began operations on October 1, 1974.

3. Southland commenced its operations by purchasing from Mid-Continent News Company, a subsidiary of ARA Services, Inc., the records, accounts receivable, equipment, inventory and goodwill of Mid-Continent’s Rome, Georgia, Reship Division. Mid-Continent continued its own reship operations in other parts of the country.

4. Southland allocated $447,000.00 of the moneys paid Mid-Continent and ARA for an agreement from them to refrain from competing with Southland in the Rome, Georgia, reship territory for five years.

5. A Federal Trade Commission consent decree involving ARA and Mid-Continent had required Mid-Continent to divest itself of the Rome, Georgia, Reship Division. Southland’s purchase and operation of what had formerly been Mid-Continent’s Rome, Georgia, Reship Division was therefore with the approval, and perhaps, a sense, under the auspices, of the Federal Trade Commission.

6. The Rome, Georgia, Reship Division of Mid-Continent for many years, and Southland, prior to the matters giving rise to this litigation, each was the only wholesale distributor of paperback books, magazines and periodicals for rural retailers in Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Florida, North Carolina, South Carolina, Kentucky and Tennessee.

7. Defendant, S. Leslie Flegel, is a resident of the State of Mississippi and is the sole stockholder of defendants, Periodical Shippers of America, Inc., SLF News Distributors, Inc., and SLF Reship Corp., all of which are Missouri corporations with principal places of business in Missouri.

8. The defendant Don Hart is a resident of Oklahoma; defendant George *341 Neal is a resident of Kentucky; defendants Ronald Garrison, Stanley Johnston and Robert Blackwell are all residents of Georgia.

9. Periodical Shippers of America, Inc., supplied magazines, periodicals and paperback books to bookstores and distributors throughout the Southeast after its organization for that purpose in December, 1974. One of its customers was a chain of drug stores in South Carolina.

10. Defendant, Don Hart, was, at the time of the purchase by Southland of Mid-Continent’s business in the Rome area, the manager of Reship at Mid-Continent. As such, he was responsible for Mid-Continent’s operations in the Rome reship area. He was personally involved in the negotiations for the purchase by plaintiff of Mid-Continent’s Rome Reship Division, and had responsibility for preparing Mid-Continent’s dealer contracts, accounts receivable, inventory, and other records to be turned over to plaintiff.

11. Defendant George Neal had been a routeman for Mid-Continent in Kentucky where he was under the supervision of Don Hart.

12. Defendants Ronald Garrison and Stanley Johnston had been routemen for Mid-Continent in Georgia where they were under the supervision of Don Hart.

13. Defendants George Neal and Ronald Garrison were offered and accepted positions as supervisors for plaintiff. Defendants Stanley Johnston and Danny Myers, as well as James Brock and James Cheaves were offered, and accepted, positions as routemen for plaintiff.

14. When Southland acquired the Rome, Georgia, Reship Division from Mid-Continent, it solicited most of the Mid-Continent employees working in the Rome, Georgia, Reship Division to become its employees and promised them compensation and benefits equal to that which they had been receiving from Mid-Continent.

15. None of the Mid-Continent employees in the Rome, Georgia, Reship Division had “non-compete” contracts, or contracts of any kind, other than employment terminable at will; and the employees hired by plaintiff did not have “non-compete” contracts or written contracts of any kind, either, and their employment also was terminable at will either by Southland or by the employee.

16. Mid-Continent had contracts with its customers in the Rome, Georgia, Reship territory which stated that, “A written notice allowing ten days on magazines and 30 days on newspapers shall be given your office by me of cancellation of all or any part of this order before same shall be binding on you.”

17. Don Hart, from his years as Reship Manager at Mid-Continent, knew the sales and financial facts about the Rome, Georgia, Reship Division; and Neal, Garrison and Johnson knew its customer list by heart.

18. Hart and King knew the salaries of all Mid-Continent employees in the Rome, Georgia, Reship Division and knew the sales and financia' details relating to the performance of that Division prior to the time Mid-Continent sold that Division to plaintiff. Mid-Continent did not have records of the performance of that division after its sale to plaintiff.

19. Defendants Flegel and Hart, who were acquainted with each other, had discussed, in the Fall of 1974, in addition to the possible employment of Hart in one of Flegel’s operations, the fact that there were quite a few employees at Mid-Continent who were unhappy in their jobs at Mid-Continent.

20. About January 15, 1975, Hart was relieved as manager of Reship at Mid-Continent, and immediately telephoned Flegel to discuss possible alternative employment. Other telephone conversations followed, and a meeting between the two in St. Louis was arranged.

21. Flegel and Hart met in St. Louis during the latter part of January, 1975 *342 (around January 20 according to Flegel —January 27 according to Hart). Hart had with him Mid-Continent’s income statement relating to the Rome Reship operation, which statement had been in his possession as Manager of Reship for Mid-Continent. Also present at that meeting were Alan Poplin, FlegePs attorney, and Fred Steinback, Flegel’s marketing man. During that meeting, Hart and Flegel agreed that Hart would come to work for Flegel in a reship operation, and the two also discussed other employees of Southland and Mid-Continent who might likewise be interested in coming to work for such an operation. George Neal, one of Southland’s two supervisors, was one of the employees so discussed.

22. Thereafter, Hart met with Billy King, a Mid-Continent employee, and discussed his joining Hart in the new venture, as well as other employees of Southland and Mid-Continent. Hart told King that he, Hart, had already discussed the matter with defendant George Neal and indicated that Neal would be leaving Southland to join the new venture, as would Danny Myers, one - of Southland’s routemen in Kentucky. Hart also told King that defendant Garrison, the other Southland supervisor, and two of Southland’s routemen in Rome were also committed to the new operation.

23.

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