Torian v. Fuqua

194 S.W. 359, 175 Ky. 428, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 332
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 4, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 194 S.W. 359 (Torian v. Fuqua) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Torian v. Fuqua, 194 S.W. 359, 175 Ky. 428, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 332 (Ky. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Hurt

Reversing.

The appellants, T. K. Torian and C. R. Sumner were partners and owned a stock of furniture and undertaker’s supplies at Cadiz, in Trigg county, which they sold to the appellee, T. H. Fuqua. The following writing was executed by Torian and Sumner and delivered to Fuqua upon the day the contract was made:

“We have this day sold to T. H. Fuqua our furniture & undertaking business at on the following terms. What goods we have in house at 1.15 on the $1.00 (wholesale or cost price no carriage added). What goods bought by us & not yet received at cost & carriage. Hearse at cost and carriage. We obligate ourselves individually and as a firm not to engage in furniture or undertaking business so long as said Fuqua or any firm in whom said Fuqua is interested in is doing business in the town of Cadiz, Ky. In consideration of the above trade we have accepted said Fuqua’s check for $100.00 on trade,- the balance to be paid in cash when invoice is taken. This 14th day of April, 1914. ,
“Torian & Sumner.”

About the following January, Torian and Sumner again entered into the business of selling furniture and undertaker’s supplies in Cadiz. This action was instituted by Fuqua against them, by which, he sought an injunction to prevent them from the further continuance in the business and the recovery of damages against them for the alleged violation of the contract. Torian and Sumner answered and set up as a defense that the contract was against public policy, and placed an unreasonable restraint upon the right to trade and do business upon their part, and further claimed that at the time the writing was signed, which embraced the contract, that they understood that they were not to engage in a business [430]*430of that character only so long as Fuqua should he conducting the business in the name of Fuqua or Fuqua and Company, and that before they again entered into the business Fuqua had ceased to do business in his own name or as Fuqua and Company, and had entered into a partnership with others and was conducting the business of selling furniture and undertaker’s supplies under the partnership name of Shaw, Fuqua & Co. They set up as a further defense that it was a part of the contract for the sale of their stock of merchandise to Fuqua, that' Fuqua was to employ Sumner at a salary of twenty dollars per month for the remainder óf the year and for three years thereafter, and should in addition to the salary permit him to engage in the business of a cobbler in the building in which the business was carried on, at such spare times, as he was not required to be attending to the duties as an employe of Fuqua, and that Fuqua had prepared a writing embracing the contract to that effect, but which he did not subscribe, but which he fraudulently induced Sumner to accept, and that Sumner was without knowledge of the fact, that it had not been subscribed by Fuqua, until the end of the year, when Fuqua claimed that he had no contract of that kind with Sumner and discharged Sumner from his employment, and that the contract being within the statute of frauds and not enforcible by Sumner, because it had not been signed by Fuqua, and by reason of this fraud perpetrated upon Sumner, that the contract sued on was not enforcible. These grounds of defense by Torian and Sumner were all denied by the replies of Fuqua.

The contract sued upon was prepared by Fuqua himself, and was signed by Torian for the partnership of Torian and Sumner. Neither party alleged or claimed that anything was left out of the writing upon which the action was based by either fraud or mistake or asked for any reformation of it to conform to their claims. The writing was filed with and made part of the petition by Fuqua, who, also, testified that it was in exact accordance with the contract which had been entered into between them,. and that nothing had been omitted from it for any reason.

It appears conclusively from the evidence that the writing sued upon was read over by Torian in the presence of Sumner before it was signed and the only reason given by Torian for executing the contract, when it contained the stipulation, that he and Sumner were not to [431]*431engage in the furniture or undertaker’s business so long' as Fuqua alone or in connection with others was engaged in such business in Cadiz, instead of the stipulation, -that they were not to engage in the business so long as Fuqua conducted the business alone or with his then associates, • was because he had read it hurriedly or was induced from-the actions of Fuqua to believe that the writing contained the agreement as contended for by them. "With regard to the contract for the employment of Sumner, Fuqua contended that it was a separate contract and had no connection with the one made for the purchase of the goods and was entered into on the afternoon of the day, in the forenoon, of which the contract sued on was entered into. Although the unsigned writing, which Fuqua delivered to Sumner, was in exact accordance with the terms of the contract for the employment of Sumner, and although Sumner worked for Fuqua until the end of the year from the making of the contract, in April, without any other contract between him and Fuqua, Fuqua gives no better reason for the discharge of Sumner, at the end of the year, than that the agreement was, that, he was to employ Sumner for three years thereafter, if he should want him, and that he had left out of the writing, which he had prepared himself and delivered to Sumner, the condition, that he was to only employ him for the three years thereafter, if he should want him. As to whether, or not, however, the contract between Fuqua and Sumner for the employment of the latter was a part of the consideration for the sale of the goods and business of Torian and Sumner to Fuqua was a question to be determined from the weight of the evidence and it cannot be. said that the chancellor was in error in adjudging that, it was a separate and independent arrangement from the contract sued on.

■ Hence, it appears that the claim of Torian and Sumner, that the terms of the writing sued on should have only restrained them from engaging in the character of business which they had sold to Fuqua for such a time as Fuqua should be engaged in such business by himself or as Fuqua and Company, seems to be without merit, as there is no allegation on their part that the' writing failed to contain the agreement, as they contend, by any fraud or mistake.

The contention, however, that the- contract as embraced in the writing, and which is sought to be enforced, as written by the appellee, is void as against public pol[432]*432icy, presents a more serious question. A contract, which is against public policy, because its terms impose an unreasonable restraint upon trade, is void, and hence, it is void for all parties and for all purposes.

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Bluebook (online)
194 S.W. 359, 175 Ky. 428, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/torian-v-fuqua-kyctapp-1917.