W. H. Kirkland Co. v. King

29 So. 2d 141, 248 Ala. 643, 1947 Ala. LEXIS 562
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedFebruary 6, 1947
Docket7 Div. 903.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 29 So. 2d 141 (W. H. Kirkland Co. v. King) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
W. H. Kirkland Co. v. King, 29 So. 2d 141, 248 Ala. 643, 1947 Ala. LEXIS 562 (Ala. 1947).

Opinion

FOSTER, Justice.

The question in this case, presented in a petition for a declaratory judgment, is whether appellee was justified in cancelling a contract with appellant as exclusive sales *645 agent for his product proposed to be manufactured by appellee, and before any such product was manufactured, on the ground that appellant had acquired a substantial interest in a competitive business.

The contract was in writing, dated May 9, 1944, and was the result of an agreement whereby appellee purchased from appellant certain equipment, machinery, etc., for the manufacture of cast iron soil pipe, fittings and kindred plumbing specialties, then situated at Vincennes, Indiana, to be removed to Anniston, Alabama, and there set up and operated.

Appellant had not . operated the plant, but bought it at a sheriff’s sale, and then sold it to appellee, with the understanding that he was to be the exclusive sales agent of appellee in respect to the product. The contract resulted from that understanding.

Appellant had for many years been engaged in the business of selling such products, and had many customers in that line. Appellant was to have a commission of five percent, and was to continue for at least three years from the date when the foundry so purchased should be placed in operation.

There were relations created by the contract- as to which some contention is made in brief, but, they were .decided in favor of appellant, and are not involved on this appeal. This has particular reference to the matters set up in the amendment to the petition. Compare Sherrill v. Alabama Appliance Co., 240 Ala. 46, 197 So. 1.

Appellant was and is a partnership composed of W. H. Kirkland, his wife Mrs. Almeda Kirkland, and his daughter Mrs. Elise Kirkland Weatherly.

Appellant at the same time had a contract of a similar sort with Russell Pipe and Foundry Company, with its place of business at Alexander City, Alabama. Appellee knew of that contract, and made no objection to it. But appellant had not been engaged in the manufacture of such products nor interested in their manufacture.

Appellee commenced the removal of the plant to Alabama in July or August, 1944, after he had bought it in May, 1944. But he did not begin the construction of the building to house the plant until December, 1945, having obtained a location for it shortly before. The delay was because of the War, when he could not get material and labor necessary for it.

On June 9, 1945, appellee wrote a letter to appellant, stating that “you have purchased or taken over a foundry at Alexander City, and I do not think that an exclusive sales agency . agreement would be satisfactory with me when the party was interested directly or indirectly in a foundry such as is the case of the Alexander City institution.” This referred to the acquisition by appellant of an interest in the Russell Pipe and Foundry Company, supra, which was then engaged in the manufacture and sale of products which would be in competition with the business to be done by appellee with respect to the products covered by the contract between appellant and appellee. There was an answer and further correspondence, appellant insisting that appellee had no right to terminate, the contract, and appellee continuing to insist on its immediate termination.

On June 11, 1945, the Russell Pipe and Foundry Company was incorporated. The shareholders were W. H. Kirkland 10 shares, president; John F. Weathers 125 shares, vice-president; Howard L. Weathers 90 shares, secretary; T. H. Riley 35 shares, treasurer; and W. H. Kirkland Company, a partnership, 240 shares.

This petition for a declaratory judgment was filed at law on April 5, 1946. At that time appellee was constructing the plant. Originally it was contemplated to have it finished about ninety days after buying it, but it did not get into operation until about August 1, 1946.

On June 25, 1946, while this suit was pending, and about a year after appellee undertook to cancel the sales agency agreement, W. H. Kirkland and W. H. Kirkland Company, a partnership, endorsed a transfer to W. S . Weatherly, the son-in-law of W. H. Kirkland, and husband of one of the members of that partnership, the two stock certificates for 10 and 240 shares, respectively, in Russell Pipe and Foundry Company, and on that day a new certificate was issued to W. S. Weatherly for 250 *646 shares. On that day the minutes show a meeting of the stockholders and directors wherein the resignation of W. H. Kirkland as president and director was accepted, and W. S. Weatherly was elected president and director. The minutes do not show any-meeting since that time.

Mr. Kirkland testified that he sold his interest and that of the partnership, which was half of the stock, to his son-in-law, W. S. Weatherly, for $45,000, of which $12,500 was paid in cash, and the balance in notes payable in one, two and three years with interest. The notes are not secured by a pledge of the stock or otherwise, but he considers them collectible. That he has no connection with the company now except as sales agent.

The trial was had on September 23, 1946, before the presiding judge on evidence taken in open court. And upon the basis of principles of law cited in his opinion,the judge found and decreed that appellant had a right to cancel the agency contract, and did so effectually on June 9, 1945, by the letter to which we have referred.

It is to be noted that this is only a declaratory judgment, and not open to the objection urged upon us that it is at law which cannot grant the relief of rescission. But as we interpret the decree, it only declares that appellee had the right to cancel the contract and did so, and not that the court granted affirmative relief in that respect.

The question reverts to the proposition of whether on June 9, 1945, at a time when appellant had a substantial interest in a competitive business, appellee had a right to terminate the contract before he had begun and completed the construction of his plant, and before operations had begun under the contract, whem it is claimed by appellant that by the time such operations began, pending this suit, he had, also pending this suit, undertaken to dispose of his interest in the competitive business.

The legal principle relied on and mentioned in the opinion of the trial court was' restated and approved in an opinion by this Court in Perfection Mattress & Spring Co. v. Dupree, 216 Ala. 303, 113 So. 74, 77, as follows:

“ ‘The courts are agreed that where the business undertaken by the servant is of a competitive nature, which tends to bring his personal interest in conflict with his duty to his master, with resultant injury to the master’s business, he may lawfully be discharged before the expiration of his term of service. * * *
“ ‘ “Manifestly, when a servant becomes engaged in a business which necessarily renders him a competitor and rival of his master, no matter how much or how little time and attention he devotes to it, he has an interest against his duty.

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Bluebook (online)
29 So. 2d 141, 248 Ala. 643, 1947 Ala. LEXIS 562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/w-h-kirkland-co-v-king-ala-1947.