Standard Newspapers, Inc. v. Woods

110 So. 2d 397
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMarch 6, 1959
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 110 So. 2d 397 (Standard Newspapers, Inc. v. Woods) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Standard Newspapers, Inc. v. Woods, 110 So. 2d 397 (Fla. 1959).

Opinion

110 So.2d 397 (1959)

STANDARD NEWSPAPERS, INC., a Tennessee corporation, Appellant,
v.
J.W. WOODS, Appellee.

Supreme Court of Florida.

March 6, 1959.
Rehearing Denied April 21, 1959.

*398 James M. Smith, Jr., Ocala, for appellant.

Greene, Ayres & Greene, Ocala, for appellee.

THOMAS, Justice.

The appellee sought in the Circuit Court of the Fifth Judicial Circuit a declaratory decree construing and declaring his rights and status under a certain agreement between appellant and himself, declaring the agreement void, and holding him to be free to engage in the newspaper and printing business in Marion County.

From the allegations of his complaint it seems that the appellee, and Clyde Hooker, R.F. Brown and Marion Publishing Company, as parties of the first part, entered into the contract with appellant, as party of the second part, by which they agreed that they would not re-enter the newspaper field in the county, directly or indirectly, as owner, stockholder or partner for a period of five years and would not abet such competition.

The appellee alleged that he was untrained in any other business and could not, therefore, earn a livelihood for his family in the county. He claimed that under Sec. 542.12, Florida Statutes 1957, and F.S.A., the agreement was not binding on him inasmuch as he had not sold the good will of any business, and had not executed it as a stockholder selling his shares in a corporation.

By the law are condemned contracts under which persons are restrained from pursuing a lawful profession, trade or business, with two paragraphs of exceptions. One relates to partners and is not involved here. Sec. 542.12(3), supra. The other appears to exclude from the operation of *399 the law persons in three categories: those who sell the good will of businesses, shareholders who sell all their stock in corporations, and employees or agents. Persons in the first two classes may agree with the buyers to desist from engaging in a similar business for a reasonable time in a reasonable area, while those in the third class, agents and employees, may assume the same obligations and may further agree not to solicit old customers of the former employer. Sec. 542.12(2).

The appellee devoted the allegations in his complaint to the one contract dealing with promises not to compete with the appellant for a stated period in a specified area but it is not possible to decide this controversy on the agreement isolated by him. A few days before it was executed, Marion Publishing Company, as party of the first part had executed a memorandum of agreement with appellant as party of the second part for the sale, by the former to the latter, of The Marion Sun, a weekly newspaper, and all the equipment, circulation lists and good will of the paper.

The appellee, who owned about 25% of the stock of Marion Publishing Company and held the positions of director and secretary in the corporation, was reluctant to sign the ancillary agreement securing the purchaser against competition from the signatories. His associates fearing that the sale, then evidently being negotiated pursuant to the memorandum, might not be consummated unless the agreement not to compete was signed paid him $1,000 consideration for his signature.

In its answer the appellant took the position that the appellee was restrained only from re-entering the newspaper or printing business in the capacity of owner, stockholder or partner and from aiding someone else in the establishment of a competing business. The appellant asserted that Sec. 542.12, supra, had no application to the present situation. Furthermore, appellant charged that the statute was unconstitutional because it so impaired the right to contract as to amount to taking its property without due process of law in violation of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments of the Constitution of the United States. The circuit judge held that the assault upon the statute should fail and the ruling gave this court jurisdiction of the controversy. Leafer v. State, Fla., 104 So.2d 350.

In the appellant's brief there is a dearth of citations to buttress its contention that the primary inhibition in the law unduly restricts the right to contract by condemning agreements designed to prevent a person from following a lawful trade, business or profession.

Originally, under the common law of England, contracts restricting a man's right to follow his calling were considered void as against public policy. This view developed from the requirement that a man could not pursue a trade to which he had not become apprenticed, and that one so committed was subject to penalty if he did not exercise that trade. Consequently an agreement to restrain him from following his trade would result either in his violation of the law or the deprivation of his right to earn a livelihood.

Before the passage of time and the change of conditions brought refinements of the rule there had been reluctance on the part of courts to enforce contracts likely to stifle competition, Dr. Miles Medical Co. v. John D. Park & Sons Co., 220 U.S. 373, 31 S.Ct. 376, 55 L.Ed. 502, or to interfere with a person's right to make a living, Love v. Miami Laundry Co., 118 Fla. 137, 160 So. 32.

In Arond v. Grossman, Fla., 75 So.2d 593, 595, we said that contracts "not to compete or work for a competitor" were unenforceable in the absence of "some special equity." We have furnished italics.

We have referred briefly to the history of such contracts and their fate in the courts because the appellant, in effect, asks us to hold invalid an act that, following the *400 principles announced, generally condemns them with, of course, noteworthy exceptions. We cannot agree that an act is unconstitutional that denounces in the main agreements designed to prevent a person from following his lawful "profession, trade or business" when such agreements in the cases cited and others like them have for so long been rejected by the courts for fundamental reasons.

Moreover, the appellant's challenge is not impressive for under the exceptions may be done what appellant attempted to accomplish, namely, the preclusion of competition by those from whom it had bought the business including the good will. This seems to have been long recognized as an exception to the general rule, Massari v. Salciccia, 102 Fla. 847, 136 So. 522; Wilson v. Pigue, 151 Fla. 734, 10 So.2d 561, and the appellant in undertaking to operate under it was afforded abundant opportunity to protect itself from the competition of the sellers in a reasonable territory for a reasonable time.

We come, then, to the conclusion that the chancellor ruled correctly when he held the act constitutional. As for the appellee, as appellant concedes, he is not prohibited as an employee from securing a livelihood for his family but is only precluded from entering the field as a proprietor.

This view does not, however, mean that we agree with the ultimate decision of the chancellor.

Appellee entered a court of equity and when he did so he became amenable to equitable principles. We take now a close look at the facts to see whether or not he should have been rewarded with a decree declaring him "free to engage in the newspaper business and * * * the printing business in Marion County" without interference from the appellant.

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110 So. 2d 397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-newspapers-inc-v-woods-fla-1959.