152 Iowa 618 | Iowa | 1911
During all the period covered by this controversy, the Standard Oil Company had been a wholesale dealer in oil at the city of Des Moines. In the year 1893 the Crystal Oil Company (plaintiff’s assignor), a local corporation, entered the retail trade in oil, selling its goods from tank wagons hauled about the streets, and delivered to its customers at their homes. Its business grew from year to year until, in 1898, it employed from four to eight wagons, covering the territory of the city very generally. During the period mentioned, the Crystal Company purchased its supplies from the defendant, but in 1898 it for some reason began to make purchases from other wholesale dealers. Trouble at once ensued. ' The defendant, which, up to that time, had abstained from the retail trade, proceeded to equip itself with tank wagons, teams, and drivers substantially equal in number to those of the Crystal Company, and began active solicitation for the patronage of the “ultimate consumer.” At the end of some months of strife, the Crystal Company abandoned the contest and quit the business at a loss, claiming to
As we understand appellants’ contention, it is that their conduct did not transgress the bounds of legitimate competition, and that so long as they kept within this limitation the question of the alleged malice or motive inspiring their acts is wholly immaterial. Oases involving the question thus suggested have frequently arisen, both in this country and in England, and there is much confusion in the expressions of judicial opinion thereon. Many authorities may be found holding without .apparent qualification or exception, that the law takes no account whatever of motives as constituting an element of civil' wrong. In other words, if a man do a thing which is otherwise lawful, the fact that he does it maliciously and for the express purpose of injuring his neighbor affords the latter no remedy at law. Such is the net effect of Raycroft v. Tayntor, 68 Vt. 219 (35 Atl. 53, 33 L. R. A. 225, 54 Am. St. Rep. 882); Jenkins v. Fowler, 24 Pa. 308, and others of that class. If this be the correct-view of the law, a man may excavate the earth near the boundary of his own land for the mere purpose of seeing the foundation of the house of his neighbor slide into the pit thus prepared for it; he may dig through his own soil to the subterranean sources of his neighbor’s spring or well and divert the water into a ditch, where it will serve no purpose of use or profit to himself or anyone else; if a banker or merchant, he may punish the blacksmith who refuses to patronize him by temporarily establishing a shop on the next lot and hiring men to shoe horses without money and without price, until he 'has driven the offending smith to come to his terms or to go out of business; and if a farmer, dependent upon a subterranean supply of water for the irrigation of his soil or watering of his live stock, he may contrive to ruin his competing
It is doubtless true that under many circumstances an act is legally right and defensible without regard to the motive which induces or characterizes it; but there is abundance of authority for saying that this is by no means the universal rule, and that an act which is legally right when done without malice may become legally wrong when done maliciously, wantonly, or without reasonable cause. -In Panton v. Holland, 11 Johns. (N. Y.) 92 (8 Am. Dec. 369), it is stated as a general rule that, “In the exercise of a lawful right, a party may become liable to an action where it appears that' the act was done maliciously.” See, also, Greenleaf v. Francis, 18 Pick. (Mass.), 117; Chesley v. King, 74 Me. 164 (43 Am. Rep. 569); Flaherty v. Moran, 81 Mich. 52 (45 N. W. 381, 8 L. R. A. 183, 21 Am. St. Rep. 510) ; Sankey v. St. Marys, 8 Mont. 265 (21 Pac. 23) ; Harbison v. White, 46 Conn. 106; Stillwater v. Farmer, 89 Minn. 58 (93 N. W. 907, 60 L. R. A. 875, 99 Am. St. Rep. 541); Ohio Oil Company v. Indiana, 150 Ind. 698 (58 N. E. 1124; Barclay v. Abraham, 121 Iowa, 619. The same principle has been frequently applied in the decision of trade and labor controversies, though not without other instances in which it has been repudiated. See People v. Petheram, 64 Mich. 252 (31 N. W. 188); Walker v.
In the Van Horn case, supra, the court says: “While a trader may engage in the sharpest competition with thdse in like business by holding out extraordinary inducements, . . . yet, when he oversteps that line and commits an act with the malicious intent of inflicting injury upon his rival’s business, his conduct is illegal, and if damage results from it the injured party is entitled to redress. Nor does it matter whether the wrongdoer effects his object by persuasion or by false representation. The court looks through the instrumentality or means used to the wrong perpetrated with the malicious intent and bases the right of action on that.” Quoting this language in Barr v. Council, supra, the same court adds: “The right of action depends, then, not so much upon the nature of the act, as upon the intent with which it is done, always assuming that injury has attended the doing of it.” In Parkinson v. Council, 154 Cal. 581 (98 Pac. 1027, 21 L. R. A. (N. S.) 550), the court, while reaching the opposite conclusion generally, concedes it to be the law that: “Any injury to a lawful business, whether the result of conspiracy or not, is prima facie actionable, but may be defended on the ground that it was merely a lawful effort
Dealing with the perplexities arising in the effort, to sustain, on the one hand, the widest practicable liberty of men to engage in any and every line of business, and, on the other, to protect the business of each from wrongful encroachment or interference by others, the New Hampshire court, after reference to many of the decided cases, has lately said: “The more, recent authorities reason that, as the right to deal or not to deal with others is inherent in the idea of Anglo-Saxon liberty, prima facie a man may demand an open market, and, since this is so, one who interferes with this'open market must justify his acts, or respond in damages. Thus far the authorities are uniform, but when they proceed to the determination of what amounts to a justification they differ widely. The cause is not far to seek. The rule they apply is that of reasonable conduct; yet they decide each case as though it involved only a question of law. In reality, the issue is largely one of fact, and the result is what would be expected. Judges are men, and their decisions upon complex facts must vary as those of juries might on the same facts. Calling one determination an opinion and the other a verdict does not alter human nature, nor make that uniform and certain which from its nature must remain variable and uncertain. While these cases go too far, in what they decide as questions of law, yet the test they constantly declare they are applying is the true one. The standard is reasonable conduct under all the circumstances of the case.” ^ Huskie v. Griffin, 75 N. H. 345 (74 Atl. 595, 27 L. R. A,. (N. S.) 966). See, also, Doremus v. Hennesy, 176 Ill. 608 (52 N. E. 924, 54 N. E. 524, 43 L. R. A. 797, 802, 68 Am. St. Rep. 203) ; Horan v. Burns, 72 N.
Coming to the case in hand, we may concede to the appellants the undoubted right to establish a retail oil business in Des Moines, to employ agents and drivers, and send them out over the same routes and make sales to the same -people with whom the Crystal Oil Company was dealing; but in so doing it was bound to conduct such business with reasonable regard and consideration for the equal right of the Crystal Company to continue its business and to continue supplying oil to such of its customers as desired to remain with it. If, however, there was no real purpose or desire to establish a competing business, but under the guise or pretense of competition, to accomplish a malicious purpose to ruin the Crystal Company or drive it out of business, intending themselves to retire therefrom when their end had been secured, then they can claim no immunity under the rules of law which recognize and protect competition between dealers in the same line of business seeking in good faith the patronage of the same people. And if, under such pretense of competition, defendants maliciously interfered with the business of the Crystal Oil Company in the manner charged, and injury to the latter was
Of the cases which directly 'or indirectly sustain this view there are many, but we shall not extend this discussion to make extended reference to them. Sufficiently analogous in fact to illustrate the principle is Tuttle v. Buck, 107 Minn. 145 (119 N. W. 946, 22 L. R. A. (N. S.) 599, 131 Am. St. Rep. 446.) There the plaintiff had an established and profitable business as a barber, and defendant, a banker, owned a building which he wished plaintiff to occupy with his shop. This being declined, it was alleged that defendant sought to punish the plaintiff by injuring his trade and driving-him out of business. To that end defendant employed other barbers to occupy the shop and entice a-way the plaintiff’s patrons, whom he personally and persistently solicited to no longer employ plaintiff’s services, and by these and other wrongful
II. In ruling upon the defendants’ motion for a directed verdict, the trial court seems to have held or suggested that proof that defendants, in pursuance of their alleged conspiracy, had interfered with contracts made between the Crystal Company and its patrons would give rise to a cause of action, and upon the final submission of the cause it instructed the jury, as a matter of law, that the display of the green cards were orders upon the Crystal Company for the delivery of oil, and that a malicious interference by the. defendants with the filling of such orders by the Crystal Company would be a wrong for which an action would lie, if such interference was in pursuance of a conspiracy between the defendants to injure the business of said company. Of this instruction both parties complain, and we are inclined to the view that it can not be sustained as broadly as stated.
But we are not of the opinion that an actual, contract must exist before wanton interference by a third party would amount to a legal wrong. Bor illustration, if, instead of displaying cards, it was the habit of the Crystal Company’s customers to communicate their wants by messenger or by telephone, and defendant in the zeal of competition should maliciously intercept the messenger and induce him to reveal the nature of his errand, or should maliciously tap the telephone wire and with the advantage thus acquired should rush their wagons to the front and deprive the company of the sales which it would otherwise have made, we think no advocate of the widest allowable license of unrestricted competition would contend that this would not constitute a legal wrong, even though the conduct complained of did not in fact amount to an interference with an existing contract. Bor the same reason we think the defendants could not, upon the plea of competition, justify any malicious interference with existing contracts or orders of the Crystal Company, or interfere with or remove the cards posted as an invitation or notice to said company for the delivery of oil; but we think the court can not assume to say, as a matter of
The points made by counsel and already discussed are sufficient to dispose of the appeal, and we can not prolong this opinion to consider other questions raised, except to say we discover nó error in the rulings to which exceptions are taken.
For the reasons stated, the judgment of the district court is reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial. —Reversed.