Trenton Potteries Co. v. Oliphant

43 A. 723, 58 N.J. Eq. 507, 1899 N.J. LEXIS 142
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJuly 7, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 43 A. 723 (Trenton Potteries Co. v. Oliphant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trenton Potteries Co. v. Oliphant, 43 A. 723, 58 N.J. Eq. 507, 1899 N.J. LEXIS 142 (N.J. 1899).

Opinion

[510]*510The opinion of the court was delivered by

Magie, C. J.

The appeal in this cause is from a decree of the court of chancery, made upon the advice of Vice-Chancellor Grey, dismissing appellant’s bill of complaint and denying the relief sought thereby.

The pleadings in the cause, the issues presented and the facts established by the proofs are set out with such completeness in the opinion of the learned vice-chancellor and the statement preceding it that it is unnecessary to repeat them here.

The bill was filed by appellant against the seven defendants and respondents to restrain the breach of contracts alleged to have been made by them with it. It was dismissed as to all the respondents upon the ground' that the contracts in question were in illegal restraint of trade and against the public policy of the state. As to three of respondents, the dismissal was also put on other 'grounds. As to James V. Oliphant, one of respondents, one additional ground was that he had not become bound to appellant by any such contract. As to him and also as to Richard C. and Henry D. Oliphant, also respondents, the additional ground for dismissal was that the proofs disclosed no breach of the contracts on their part.

The appeal is from the whole decree, but counsel for appellant* conceded in the argument that although Richard C. and Henry D. Oliphant were proved to have been bound to appellant by the contracts which the bill sought to enforce, yet that no sufficient evidence of any breach of those contracts by them appeared. It results that so much of the decree as dismisses the bill as to them must be affirmed.

But appellant contends that the dismissal of the bill as to James V. Oliphant cannot be supported upon the additional grounds assigned therefor. This contention requires a review of the proofs touching the relation of James V. Oliphant to the contracts in question, which were contracts to abstain from the manufacture of pottery ware. The first contract claimed was contained in a letter addressed to one Tapscott, dated January [511]*51123d, 1891, and signed “ Oliphant & Co.,” which is set out in the prefatory statement of the vice-chancellor. The other contract relied on was contained in a sealed instrument, dated July 8th, 1892, purporting to be made between the seven respondents and Tapscott, also to be found in that statement. This writing was executed by all the respondents except James V. Oliphant.

The proofs show that, at the date of the letter in question, James V. Oliphant was not a member of the firm of Oliphant & Company. He became a member about January 1st, 1892. The letter gave Tapscott an option to purchase at a stated price the pottery business carried on by Oliphant & Company, including the real estate, plant and good will, which option was to be exercised within a limited period. That period had expired when James V. Oliphant became a member of the firm. On February 1st, 1892, all the members of the firm, including James V. Oliphant, signed a writing addressed to Tapscott, extending the option originally given for a period of ninety days. The option was accepted by him on May 20th, 1892. On May 21st, 1892, an agreement of sale was signed by all the members of the firm except James "V. Oliphant. But on May 23d, 1892, he executed under seal a memorandum of agreement to the terms and conditions mentioned in the agreement of the other owners of the property which was the subject of the sale. The sale was consummated on June 6th, 1892. Tapscott was acting in the •transaction for those who formed the corporation which is the appellant, and for that corporation after its formation on May 27th, 1892. Appellant acquired all Tapscott’s rights in the contracts with respondents.

The vice-chancellor reached the conclusion that the bill should be dismissed as to James V. Oliphant, because not having executed the sealed instrument of July 6th, 1892, he had not become bound by its covenants, and because the contract of the letter of January 23d, 1891, adopted and ratified by him by his joining in the extension of the option by the writing of February ■1st, 1892, was a joint and not a several contract, and merely bound the firm of Oliphant & Company not to engage in a competitive business.

[512]*512The omission of James V. Oliphant to execute the instrument of July 6th, 1892, unquestionably deprives appellant of any right to enforce its provisions against him in this cause.

If necessary to construe the contract contained in the letter of January 23d, 1891, I think it would be difficult if not impossible to hold it to be a mere partnership undertaking. No doubt an obligation entered into by more than one person is presumed to be joint, and a several responsibility will not arise except by words of' severance. Alpaugh v. Wood, 24 Vr. 688. But the purpose of this letter was to give an option to purchase a business carried on by individuals who were partners. It recites that “we, the undersigned,” do business under a firm name and- own and control the Delaware pottery, which was the subject of the offer to sell. It contains an agreement that, in case of sale, “ we will not, directly or indirectly,” engage in a competitive business. In my judgment, it would not be an unnatural or strained construction to attribute to these words a several force, aud to find that the firm signature thereto bound the members of the firm not merely jointly but also severally. Upon any other construction it is obvious that the protection of the business and good will proposed to be sold would only be partially secured.

But we are not required to construe the terms of the letter by themselves. By the extension of the option by the writing executed by all the firm members, including James V. Oliphant, on February 1st, 1892, a several quality in the contract contained in that letter, either was recognized as originally in it or was imparted to it. By that instrument each partner agreed to an option of purchase for a fixed period, and that such agreement should be part of the original option given by that letter. When they all executed that instrument and declared that it was to be attached to and become part of the original option, the then owners made a new contract, in the terms of the former contract, which bound those signing as if they had signed the original option with the extended term. The contracts thus amalgamated stipulated that in the event of sale “ we will not directly or indirectly” engage in a competitive business. These [513]*513words, over individual signatures respecting a business previously averred to be a partnership business, indicate several as well as joint undertakings. It is as if they undertook that they would not directly, by their joint act as a firm, or indirectly, by any several act of any member, engage in a competitive business. This construction is greatly aided by the exception from the undertaking, whereby the proposing vendors are permitted to engage in the business of manufacturing pottery ware as agent or employe of the proposing purchaser. These words indicate a relation which might be formed between vendors and purchaser in case of sale effected. While the firm could become the purchaser’s agent, it could not in any other sense become his employe. Individual members of the firm might become either agents or employes. The exception therefore indicates that the contract it limited was one affecting individual members of the firm.

As James "V.

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Bluebook (online)
43 A. 723, 58 N.J. Eq. 507, 1899 N.J. LEXIS 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trenton-potteries-co-v-oliphant-nj-1899.