Weight Watchers of Louisiana, Inc. v. Ryals
This text of 289 So. 2d 531 (Weight Watchers of Louisiana, Inc. v. Ryals) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
WEIGHT WATCHERS OF LOUISIANA, INC.
v.
James Q. RYALS.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.
Cameron C. Gamble, New Orleans, for appellant.
Charles W. Franklin, Baton Rouge, for appellee.
Before SARTAIN, TUCKER and WATSON, JJ.
TUCKER, Judge.
Plaintiff employer, Weight Watchers of Louisiana, Inc., seeks to enforce a contract whereby defendant James Q. Ryals, its former employee, agreed that upon termination of his employment he would not compete with Weight Watchers in the manner set forth in the contract for a period of two years and within a three hundred mile radius of plaintiff's offices. Defendant, a former "Weight Watcher" himself, who had lost approximately one hundred pounds while participating in plaintiff's program, had begun part-time employment with plaintiff on or about May 29, 1970. On August 30, 1970, defendant became a full time employee of plaintiff and continued to work for it in various capacities until October 19, 1972, when he resigned to go into business with "Diet Workshop." Plaintiff brought suit to enjoin him from all business activities in breach of its contract with him. The trial court ruled in favor of the defendant and granted judgment rejecting plaintiff's demands. The plaintiff has appealed, stating two grounds of error as follows:
I. The Lower Court erred in following National Motor Club vs. Conque, 173 So. 2d 238 (La.App. 3d Cir. 1965) and holding that plaintiff must prove it expended substantial sums in advertising defendant's connection with plaintiff's business rather than following this Circuit's decision in Aetna Finance Company vs. Adams, 170 So.2d 740 (La.App. 1st Cir. 1964).
II. The Lower Court erred in finding that plaintiff failed to prove that it had incurred substantial expense in the training of the employee or the advertisement of employer's business under La.R.S. 23:921.
*532 After a careful review of the jurisprudence interpreting R.S. 23:921, as amended in 1962, which governs this case, we conclude that the trial judge was correct in using the Conque case as the basis of his decision, rather than the Aetna Finance case. As the trial judge pointed out, these two cases seem to be in conflict in interpreting R.S. 23:921; yet the Louisiana Supreme Court denied applications for writs of certiorari in both cases, stating that the respective appellate courts were correct in the interpretation of the facts of the particular cases before them. We agree with Professor J. Denson Smith that "It is to be regretted that, in view of the fundamentally diverse holdings in the Aetna Fin. Co. and National Motor Club cases, the Supreme Court did not take the opportunity to save the law in this area from a lack of clarity which has proved to be troublesome." [26 La.L.R. 497 (1966)] In the numerous cases interpreting the Conque and Aetna Finance cases, the courts have been very careful to distinguish the facts of those cases from the case being decided without interpreting the pertinent words of the statute "... an expense in the training of the employee or incurs an expense in the advertisement of the business that the employer is engaged in ..." (emphasis added). We are aware of the language used by our brothers of this Circuit in the Aetna Finance case, at 170 So. 2d 744, which reads as follows: "... where, as here, the legislature has itself spoken in clear and unambiguous language, the Court properly will not substitute its opinion of public policy for that which has been specifically expressed by the legislature." The Louisiana courts have consistently interpreted R.S. 23:921 as stating a declaration of public policy by the legislature against restrictions on the spirit of free labor. Standard Brands, Inc. v. Zumpe, 264 F.Supp. 254, 264 (U.S.D.C. E.D.La.1967). We could easily find that the facts of the Aetna Finance case distinguish it from the instant case; for in the former, the employee Adams was undergoing training at all times, since, even though he was a manager he was supervised directly by an officer of the company which furnished him with various manuals of operation and legal bulletins at an expense to the company. We prefer to say, however, speaking almost nine years after the decision of the Aetna case, that the "clear and unambiguous language" of R.S. 23:921 must be interpreted in the light of the legislative intent of the 1962 amendment, which was to permit a limited exception to a broad public policy. As the organ of the court in the Conque case, Justice Tate opined as follows:
"Even prior to the enactment by Act 33 of 1934 of this prohibition against exaction of noncompetitive agreements from employees, they were consistently held to be unenforceable. Cloverland Dairy Products v. Grace, 180 La. 694, 157 So. 393 (1943); Blanchard v. Hager, 166 La. 1014, 118 So. 117 (1928). See 27 Tul. L.Rev. 364 (1953). (In most states other than Louisiana, however, noncompetitive contracts are recognized if reasonably restricted as to time and area. See Annotations at 41 A.L.R.2d 15 and 43 A.L. R.2d 94.) In the absence of an enforceable contract to other effect, an employee has the absolute right to actively serve a business competing with his former employer after leaving the latter's service, Jones v. Ernest & Ernest, 172 La. 406, 134 So. 375 (1931); as, for instance, does a former officer who actively competes with his former corporate principal, Marine Forwarding & Shipping Co. v. Barone, La.App.Orl., 154 So.2d 528 (1963).
As noted in these decisions, their essential basis is the right of individual freedom and of individuals to better themselves in our free-enterprise society, where liberty of the individual is guaranteed. A strong public policy reason likewise for holding unenforceable an agreement exacted by an employer of an employee not to compete after the latter leaves his employment, is the disparity in bargaining power, under which an employee, *533 fearful of losing his means of livelihood, cannot readily refuse to sign an agreement which, if enforceable, amounts to his contracting away his liberty to earn his livelihood in the field of his experience except by continuing in the employment of his present employer.
These fundamental principles must be borne in mind in interpreting and applying to the present facts the 1962 amendment providing a limited exception to the above-quoted basic provision of LSA-R. S. 23:921, that noncompetitive agreements exacted of employees `shall be null and unenforceable in any court.'
The 1962 amendment did not repeal the broad statutory provision that noncompetitive agreements exacted from an employee were null and unenforceable. See Appendix A.
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289 So. 2d 531, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weight-watchers-of-louisiana-inc-v-ryals-lactapp-1974.