163 Iowa 106 | Iowa | 1913
Plaintiff claims that on the 1st day of February, 1910, he was the exclusive agent for the sale of the New Improved White sewing machine in Lee county and adjoining counties; that the defendant Duncan-Schell Furniture Company, prior to that time, had been selling the same machines for profit, or as agents for the said sewing machine 'company; that, after plaintiff had secured the sole and exclusive agency for said machine, and while he was selling the same as agent, the defendants, for the purpose of destroying plaintiff’s business, and breaking him up financially, and putting him out of business, maliciously and willfully procured various old styles of said White sewing machine, and advertised the same at a price of $24.75, and published that they were selling the latest improved drop head White sewing machine for that price, the same kind of machine which the plaintiff was handling, and was selling for $45; that the selling price of the sewing machines, and' the price at which the defendants sold the machine during the time the defendant company was the agent, was $45 ; that defendants further advertised and published that they had just received new White sewing machines, both rotary and vibrator, which they would sell at $24.75; that they did not have any such
It appears from the evidence that the defendant Duncan inserted in one of the daily papers issued in Keokuk on or about March 2d the following:
Duncan-Schell Furniture Co. March Sale Special.
[Followed by a cut of a White Sewing Machine.]
Automatic Drop Lift White Sewing Machine, both
Vibratory and Rotary, Latest Pattern................$24.75
(And again:)
March Sale Prices on Sewing Machines.
More White Sewing Machines just received. March sale price on White Sewing Machines, the latest patterns, both Vibratory and Rotary....................$24.75
(Again:)
March Sale on Special Sewing Machines.
[With cut of White Machine in advertisement.]
More White Sewing Machines just received.
March Sale Special.
White Sewing Machines in latest patterns, both vibratory and rotary...............................$24.75
(Again, with the same heading:)
. The March Sale of Drop Head White Sewing Machines of the latest pattern..........................$25.00
(Again, with the same caption:)
(Again, the same caption, with cut of White Sewing Machine:)
The best machine at any price...................$25.00
Your money back in 365 days if you are pot convinced you have the best on earth. White Sewing Machine with White Sewing Machine Co. ’s guarantee.....$25.00
(Then in September appeared the following advertisement:)
Duncan-Sehell Furniture Co.’s Annual September Sale.
$25.00 buys the latest improved 6 Drawer Drop Head White Sewing Machine, with Automatic Lift and best set of attachments.
Then follows practically the same advertisement that appeared in March.
It appears that, at the time these advertisements were ■> made, the plaintiff was the sole and exclusive agent for the sale of the machines so advertised by the defendants. The plaintiff testifies that on or about the 1st of February the defendant Duncan called him into his store, and said: “Boggs, I understand that you are going to take the agency for the White sewing machine. You know you have no money, and you cannot get the machines, and, if you do get them, I will run you out of business with the same machine. ’ ’ One Leach, who was the state agent in Iowa for the White sewing machines, testified: “At the time I talked with Duncan, before we changed agents, he talked considerably about Boggs. He told me that, if we gave the agency to Boggs, he could not run, because he had no money, and they would run him out of business in less than six months. This conversation was about the 1st of February.”
The plaintiff further testified that, after these advertisements came out in March, stating that the defendants had received another shipment of machines to be "sold at $24.75, he went to Mr. Duncan, and asked him if he had any new machines, and he said he had second-hand ones. ‘ ‘ Then, turning
It appears from the evidence that, at the time Boggs took this agency for the White Sewing Machine Company, the defendants were engaged in a general mercantile business, handling sewing machines, carpets, rugs, furniture, stoves, washing machines, and other like articles; that they handled four makes of sewing machines, the New Home, Standard, the Duncan-Schell Special, and the White; that the exclusive agency for the White was given by the White Sewing Machine Company from and after the 1st of February to the plaintiff, Boggs.
It appears that the Duncan-Schell Furniture Company, prior to the time Boggs became the sole agent, had handled these White sewing machines, and sold them at retail, and
So it is apparent that, upon the issues tendered by the plaintiff, there was evidence upon which the jury might well find all the material facts, upon which plaintiff bases his right to recover, established, both as to what the defendants did, and as to the motive by which they were actuated in the doing. We do not understand that the defendants seriously questioned this, but contend that, conceding the facts to be established as alleged, and as established by the evidence, still the plaintiff has no right to recover: (1) Because the defendants had an absolute right to publish advertisements complained of, and their motive in so'doing cannot be questioned. (2) That, inasmuch as the advertisements complained of made no attack upon the plaintiff, or upon the machines kept for sale by the plaintiff, no legal right of Boggs was assailed by the defendants, and whether they thought good or ill of him when they published these articles is immaterial. (3) That public policy forbids that the motive of an established trader, in publishing a legal advertisement of his own wares, shall be inquired into or questioned.
Defendants’ contention resolves itself into the proposition that malicious motives in the doing of an act may make
In Guethler v. Altman, 26 Ind. App. 587 (60 N. E. 355, 84 Am. St. Rep. 313), an action in which a merchant sought to recover damages of the members of the school board and a teacher in the school, on the ground that they had willfully and maliciously prevented their students, by threats and intimidations, from trading at plaintiff’s store, alleging that they had talked to the pupils, advising them to stay away
These cases present, as strongly as any, the application of the abstract rule contended for by appellant. They present the general rule to concrete cases that, what a man has a lawful right to do, he may do, no matter what his motive may be, no matter what injuries may result from it, and yet not be called to answer for his conduct.
The case before us does not present a case of lawful competition, but a case of simulated or pretended competition, designed and carried out with malice for the purpose of injury to the plaintiff in his business. At least the jury might have so found from the evidence.
It is the purpose and intent of the law to deal with things as they are and not as they seem, “Seems, Madam. No; it is. I know not seems.”
Every man has the legal right to advance himself before his fellows, and to build up his own business enterprises, and to use all lawful means to that end, although in the path of his impetuous movements he leaves strewn the victims of his greater industry, energy, skill, prowess, or foresight. But the law will not permit him to wear the garb of honor only to destroy. The law will not permit him to masquerade in the guise of honest competition solely for the purpose of injuring his neighbor. The law will not permit him to simulate that which is right for the sole purpose of protecting himself in the doing of that which is palpably wrong.
It is said that a man cannot be called to answer for doing that which he has a right to do, no matter what the effect of the doing may have upon others, and no evil motive can make an act wrong, the doing of which is within the rights granted by law. But the question still stands, Is he within his legal right when he simulates honest competition, not to advance himself or his own interests, but for the sole purpose of inflicting injury upon his neighbors? It is said the law deals only with externals; but the law ought not to be blinded by the lion's skin. It may be that expressed malice in the doing does not, of itself, make the wrong; but malice is implied in the very act of doing, and therefore the act itself is wrong.
In Tuttle v. Buck, 107 Minn. 145 (119 N. W. 946, 22 L. R. A. (N. S.) 599, 131 Am. St. Rep. 446, 16 Ann. Cas. 807), we find this language: “When a man starts an opposition
In Doremus v. Hennessy, reported in 176 Ill. 608 (52 N. E. 924, 54 N. E. 524, 23 L. R. A. 797, 802, 68 Am. St. Rep. 203), the Supreme Court of Illinois, after recognizing the rule of lawful competition, carried on in a lawful way, says: “An intent to do a wrongful harm and injury is unlawful, and, if a wrongful act is done, to the detriment and the right of another, it is malicious, and an act maliciously done, with the intent and purpose of injuring another, is not lawful competition.”
This court recognizes that: ‘ ‘ Every man has a' right, under the law, as between himself and others, to full freedom in disposing of his own labor or capital according to his own will, and anyone who invades that right without lawful cause or justification commits a legal wrong, and, if followed by an injury caused in consequence thereof, the one whose right is thus invaded has a legal ground of action for such wrong.”
The same doctrine is recognized in Panton v. Holland, reported in 17 Johns. (N. Y.) 92 (8 Am. Dec. 369), and in Van Horn v. Van Horn, 52 N. J. Law, 284 (20 Atl. 485, 10 L. R. A. 184), and finally, in Dunshee v. Standard Oil Co., 152 Iowa, 618. In this case the question here under consideration is fully discussed, and the authorities collated. It presents fully and fairly the features which distinguish honest competition, for personal gain or advancement, from pretended competí
Other questions are discussed by counsel; but they are all crystallized in the question herein discussed.
We find no error in the record, and the case is Affirmed.