Witmer v. Arkansas Dailies, Inc.

151 S.W.2d 971, 202 Ark. 470, 1941 Ark. LEXIS 209
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 12, 1941
Docket4-6426
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 151 S.W.2d 971 (Witmer v. Arkansas Dailies, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Witmer v. Arkansas Dailies, Inc., 151 S.W.2d 971, 202 Ark. 470, 1941 Ark. LEXIS 209 (Ark. 1941).

Opinions

Humphreys, J.

Appellee, Arkansas Dailies, Inc., is a Tennessee corporation having* a capital stock of $10,000. C. E. Palmer and members of his family owned all the corporate stock, except $700 of the stock acquired by appellant during his ten years employment by appellee as manager of his corporation. Appellee, corporation, was organized for the purpose of soliciting advertising from various manufacturers in the east and north and placing same in newspapers which appellee secured as patrons of its organization. The remuneration it received from its patrons was a percentage of the advertising fee which the various newspapers collected from the advertisers. for advertisements which were procured through its representatives in the east and north and perhaps other parts of the country.

C. E. Palmer resided in Texarkana, Texas, and was engaged in other business and employed appellant to manage the business in which appellee corporation was engaged at a fixed annual salary together with bonuses and commissions. Appellant’s chief duty was to obtain as many newspapers as possible as patrons of appellee, coiqDoration, and to make and supervise contracts with them. His position was designated as that of manager of the corporation, and he also acted as secretary and treasurer and had charge of the office in Memphis and the employees of said corporation. He was also selected as a director of appellee, corporation, and served in that capacity with the other two directors, C. E. Palmer and his son-in-law, W. E. Hussman. Under the management of appellant the business expanded during the ten year period of his employment from about eight papers to fifty-four papers or patrons. Appellant during the last half of his employment had in mind a desire to acquire an interest in the business as evidenced by a conversation he had with a man by the name of Murray, an intimate friend, but he never revealed this desire to Palmer or anyone connected with appellee corporation. At the time of his employment by Palmer as manager of appellee, corporation, no definite term of employment was agreed upon so it partook of the nature of a contract of employment at will. In other words, appellee had the right to discharge and appellant had the right to resign when either decided to do so. There was no provision in the contract prohibiting appellant, in case of his resignation, from setting up an independent business of his own of the same character of that of appellee or from soliciting the patrons or customers of appellee from becoming his customers in an independent business.

The time arrived for an arrangement between appellee and appellant for another year’s employment. In response to a letter from C. E. Palmer, appellant, appellee and W. E. Hussman, the three directors met in Hot Springs, Arkansas, to discuss appellant’s remuneration, his salary and bonus arrangement, but no agreement could be reached. Appellant wanted more salary than the others were willing to pay him, and then Palmer asked him what kind of arrangement he was willing to make, and appellant responded that if he remained with the corporation he wanted it to give him a half interest in the business and stated that unless they gave him a half interest therein he would resign, organize a similar company of his own and take all its business with him except the patrons or papers owned by Palmer. This proposal on his part was declined, whereupon appellant resigned as manager, seeretai^y and treasurer of appellee, corporation, effective immediately. At the time, appellant proposed to sell his stock to Palmer, but Palmer replied that he would not buy the stock because the corporation was not going to furnish the capital for him to set up an independent or competitive business. Something was said about him resigning as a director, and he said that he would wait until a little later, and he did resign as a director on the 13th day of December, 1940, and his resignation was accepted.

Both appellant and C. E. Palmer returned to Memphis, and each mailed out a notice to all of the patrons to the effect that appellant -had resigned and was no longer connected with appellee corporation. This notice was mailed out on October 9, 1939. In appellant’s letter to the newspapers in addition to stating that he had sev■ered Ms connections with appellee corporation he also stated that he was going into the same business for himself with headquarters in Memphis .and would operate his new business under the name of Wallace Witmer Company and would soon call upon them. Following the notice to the patrons by appellee corporation, it sent out to the patrons a rather lengthy letter confirming the notice it had sent out on October 9, and saying to the patrons that appellee, corporation, had employed H. K. Howard as its general manager who was thoroughly experienced in the business. It also stated in the letter that W. E. Jordan, the assistant manager, would continue on the staff. It also stated that appellant would not likely be able to successfully organize an agency that would render service to them equal to the service it had rendered, and that it would be able to render, and advising them that it would not be wise to form a new connection. It was also stated that the new general manager would call upon them and discuss matters in detail with them. From that time on it was a race between appellant and the new general manager as to which agency would get their business after their contracts expired with appellee. Appellee secured contracts with a Fayetteville paper, a Harrison paper, a Jonesboro paper, a Batesville paper and others. Later the appellee corporation persuaded the Fayetteville Democrat Publishing Company to make a contract with it and give it an indemnifying bond to protect it against any damages. that might result from a breach of its contract with appellant. The contracts with both the Fayetteville Democrat Publishing Company and the Times Publishing Company at Harrison were entered into with appellant on December 21, 1939, after appellant had resigned as manager, secretary and treasurer and director of appellee, corporation, and was not to take effect until the expiration of their respective contracts with appellee corporation.

Appellant' organized his new company and moved into offices in the same building near the offices occupied by appellee corporation. He did not take out any of the furnishings of the office, or any of the files or any of the contracts it had -with any of the papers, but later did employ Mrs. Herriot who had been acting in the capacity of assistant secretary of appellee, corporation, for about ten years. He also procured the same eastern and northern representatives who had been procuring advertisements for appellee, corporation, as his representatives to procure advertisements for the new company he established. The form of contract he used in making his agreements with the papers was in substance the same kind of a contract that appellee used in contracting with its papers.

The business in which appellee was engaged involved no trade secrets, trade marks, etc. It was technically a service corporation.

About all that appellant took with him when he severed his connections with appellee was the experience and knowledge he had acquired in acting as manager and employee of appellee and the acquaintanceship he had made with appellee’s patrons during the time he had served it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
151 S.W.2d 971, 202 Ark. 470, 1941 Ark. LEXIS 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/witmer-v-arkansas-dailies-inc-ark-1941.