Wark v. Ervin Press Corporation

48 F.2d 152, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 4195
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMarch 20, 1931
Docket4492
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 48 F.2d 152 (Wark v. Ervin Press Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wark v. Ervin Press Corporation, 48 F.2d 152, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 4195 (7th Cir. 1931).

Opinion

ALSCHULER, Circuit Judge.

In this ease bill and answer were filed, and, on motion of plaintiff for a decree pro eonfesso, decree was entered accordingly.

The bill charged that the plaintiff had established a business of creating, manufacturing, and selling an advertising service for those engaged in the business of dry cleaning; that plaintiff had customers and business in all parts of the country; that in December, 1927, appellant, Wark, entered plaintiff’s employ as a traveling sales manager at $85 a week, remaining in such capacity until March, 1929, when the employment ended; that after about six months he re-entered plaintiff’s employ as its special sales executive, under written agreement for service from September 1, 1929, to December 31, 1930, at $150 a week.

The sixth paragraph of the agreement (set out in the margin 1 ) provides, in substance, that if, with or without cause, the agreement shall terminate, Wark will not thereafter reveal any of the employer’s trade secrets, nor enter into nor be connected with any other business which sells or supplies advertising material for dry cleaners, and that he will not, for a period of five years from *154 cessation of the employment, engage in the dry cleaning business or be employed in any capacity by any person or corporation engaged in the dry cleaning business, except in the states of New Mexico, Arizona, Montana, North and South Dakota, and Delaware.

The bill further charges that Wark, through his employment and contact with the trade, became acquainted with the plaintiff’s business methods and customers in various parts of the United States through personal calls upon the customers and through meeting them at conventions of the dry cleaning industry, and that on or about January 30, 1930, Wark left plaintiff’s employ, and in February entered the service of C. E. Falls Service Company, another corporation likewise engaged in creating and selling advertising service to dry cleaners; that Wark thereupon availed himself of his knowledge of plaintiff’s business and its business secrets, and of plaintiff’s lists of customers and prospective customers, employing all this knowledge for the benefit of his new employer, and soliciting plaintiff’s customers by personal calls and by correspondence, whereby plaintiff has been and will be greatly damaged; and that such conduct was contrary to Wark’s undertaking in and by 'said agreement.

The bill asks for temporary and permanent injunction restraining Wark from disclosing any of the business methods or secrets of plaintiff, from remaining in the service of his new employer, or from being connected with any such business'for such period of five years in the territory above specified, and from using, or enabling others to use, lists of plaintiff’s customers or prospective customers.

A temporary injunction was granted restraining Wark from disclosing to his then employer, or to any other person, any of the secret business methods or other secrets of the plaintiff, and from soliciting customers or prospective customers of plaintiff whose names were obtained or made known to said Wark while in plaintiff’s employ, and from in any manner using names or lists of names of customers or prospective customers of plaintiff obtained by him while in plaintiff’s employ.

Answer to the bill was filed, in which it was admitted that plaintiff was engaged in the business described in the bill, and that’ plaintiff solicits practically all the leading dry cleaning establishments in the United States. The answer admits the execution of the written agreement, but denies that plaintiff disclosed to Wark any trade or business secrets and lists of customers and prospective customers, but stated that Wark made his own contacts and solicited those engaged in the dry cleaning business wholly from names obtained from trade journals and financial reports. It denies that plaintiff possessed any trade secrets or secret methods of doing business, but stated that its method of designing and producing its products was well known to all those engaged in similar business.

The answer further states that on January 30, 1930, Wark was discharged by plaintiff without cause, and that thereby he was relieved from the obligations of the contract; that he thereafter entered into the service of his then employer as sales manager, and that said employer was and is a competitor of plaintiff and likewise engaged in selling advertising service to dry cleaners, but that its service is in a far broader field, and is not confined exclusively to dry cleaners, as is that of plaintiff; that approximately only half of said employer’s business is devoted to the dry cleaning trade; that Wark does not in any manner participate in designing the advertising service of his employer, nor ip creating and manufacturing it; that said employer solicits the entire dry cleaning trade from its own catalogs and lists of customers, which are compiled as the result of its own efforts, and entirely independent of plaintiff or of any compilation on'the subject by the plaintiff; that said employer was familiar with the entire advertising service and business methods and distribution to the trade of such product long before the time of plaintiff’s employment of Wark; that Wark’s services to plaintiff were not extraordinary or unique; that he has not, since employed by said employer, made use of any trade secrets or methods of plaintiff, or solicited any of plaintiff’s former customers or prospective customers; and that he has not circularized any lists of customers or prospective customers of the plaintiff, or personally solicited any of them. But the answer admits that Wark has sent announcements to personal friends in the trade, advising them of his new connection and employment.

The answer further alleges that Wark’s duties with plaintiff were such that they could be satisfactorily performed, and are being performed, by others, without any difficulty to plaintiff in engaging a successor equally capable, and denies that plaintiff has suffered any damage as a result of Wark’s change in employer. The answer further al *155 leges that paragraph 6 of the agreement is unilateral, unreasonable, unconscionable, and lacking in mutuality, both as to obligation and remedy, and therefore void.

The final decree made permanent the preliminary injunction, and further restrained the defendant, for five years from January 20, 1930, from being associated or employed by or from participating in the business of his then employer, and from being connected with, or entering or engaging in, within the United States, except the above named six states, any business of selling or "supplying •advertising or display service in any form to dry cleaners, and from being engaged or employed in any capacity by any association of dry cleaners. -

Coneededly the plaintiff was not entitled to any relief concerning any allegations of the bill which were sufficiently denied by the answer. The answer sufficiently denied that the plaintiff in its business possessed any trade secrets or secret methods of doing business, and that Wark had imparted to the Falls Service Company any secret information of plaintiff’s business, or had given that employer any list of plaintiff’s customers or information respecting plaintiff’s business, and denied that plaintiff sustained any damage by reason of any of defendant’s alleged acts or doings.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 F.2d 152, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 4195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wark-v-ervin-press-corporation-ca7-1931.