The plaintiff seeks an injunction restraining defendants from making or selling any office filing equipment or desks, basing its claim for relief upon an agreement wherein, it is claimed by plaintiff, defendants agreed to refrain from so doing for the period of time stated in the agreement. This is an appeal from the order of Special Term which dismissed the complaint as insufficient on defendants’ motion under subdivision 4 of rule 106 of the Rules of Civil Practice. The court held that the restrictive clause in the agreement is ‘ ‘ too broad on its face ” and therefore unenforcible.
The covenant in question was part of a more comprehensive agreement and therefore in testing the sufficiency of the complaint due consideration must be given to all the terms of the entire agreement as alleged. The complaint contains allegations to the following effect: plaintiff for many years has engaged in the business of manufacturing and selling office filing equipment, desks and other office equipment. In 1946, defendant Gunzburg, who had before that time been associated with plaintiff, went into a new business — the manufacture and sale of electronic and electrical equipment. For that purpose Gunzburg formed and operated a new corporation — the defendant Art-Lloyd Metal Products Corp. The new corporation had difficulty in obtaining business and accordingly approached plaintiff with the offer that defendant corporation, in order to carry itself over the initial difficult period, would engage temporarily in the manufacture of office equipment for the plaintiff. This was satisfactory to plaintiff on defendants’ assurance that they had no intention of going into the office equipment business as a competitor. Thereupon plaintiff loaned the defendants $25,000 to enable them to continue in business and defendants, in consideration of that loan, expressly agreed not to sell office filing equipment for a period of three years after completion of the last order for plaintiff. The complaint then alleges that
Clearly, when plaintiff made this substantial loan to the defendants, thus enabling them to continue in business, it was not unreasonable in requiring as a condition for such loan some provision which would, for a limited time at least, prevent the defendants from becoming one of its active competitors. The question then is whether the restrictive covenant contained in the agreement is so broad or so unreasonable as to make it unenforcible.
The covenant here is not subject to the condemnation of the restrictive covenant in Lynch, v. Bailey (
Whether a restrictive covenant should be enforced depends upon 11 what is fairly necessary, in the circumstances of the particular case, for the protection of the covenantee ” (Miles Medical Co. v. Park & Sons Co.,
Bbeitel, J. P., Bastow, Botein, Rabin and Bergan, JJ., concur.
Order and judgment unanimously reversed, with $20 costs and disbursements to the appellant, and defendants’ motion to dismiss the complaint for insufficiency denied, with $10 costs.
