122 Ga. 509 | Ga. | 1905
The Doctor Blosser Company, a corporation, brought an action against a number of printing concerns using the club or trade name of the “Employing Printers Club of Atlanta,” and composed of individuals, firms, and corporations engaged in the book and job-printing trade in the city of Atlanta, and whose names are set out in the record, asking an injunction and praying damages. The court granted the injunction, and exception is taken to this order. On the interlocutory hearing the defendants urged by demurrer the insufficiency of the facts pleaded to authorize the relief prayed. Notwithstanding the demurrer admitted the truth of all the facts which were well pleaded, the plaintiff submitted proof tending to sustain all the essential allegations.
There can be no doubt that the facts alleged in the petition, if true (and the demurrer admits their truth), establish, not only a conspiracy to fix and control the price of printing in the city of Atlanta, but also a malicious interference with the business of the plaintiff. The scope and purpose of the Employing Printers Club was to create a monopoly and stifle competition in the printing business. A mere agreement to do wrong is not actionable ; but when the parties to such agreement do an overt act in furtherance of the illegal combination, resulting in injury to a third person, the conspiracy becomes actionable, and the conspirators are liable to the injured party for damages proximately flowing from their illegal conduct. It is contended by the plaintiffs in error, that, conceding that the combination among the defendants was an illegal one, the plaintiff in the court below was a party to it, and can not be heard to complain in a court of equity. It is true that at one time the plaintiff was a member of the trust, but when the trust essayed to discipline it, it repudiated the club and informed its officers that it would no longer affiliate with the club. It was then that the club was proceeding to punish it by calling out its employees. The maxim that one must come into a court of equity with clean hands means that he must do equity as respects the defendant’s rights in the particular matter of the suit. 1 Pom. Eq. Jur. § 397. “The rule that a complainant must come into equity with clean hands does not go so far as to prohibit a court of equity from giving its aid to a bad or a faithless man. The dirt upon his bands must be his bad conduct in the transaction complained of. . All complainants in equity are human beings, full of faults and sin, and I doubt if there is one case in ten in which the complainant is not somewhat to blame. If the complainant does equity himself, or offers to do it (except in those cases where the rule in pari delicto, etc.
Independently of the conspiracy, the petition states a case of \ malicious interference with the plaintiff’s contract of employment \ with its employees. At common law the remedies for breach of contract were confined to the contracting parties, and limited to direct damages and consequential damages próximately resulting from the act of him who is sued. This general rule admitted of i one exception, and that was the right of action against a stranger \for wrongfully enticing away a servant in violation of his contract of service with his master. The exception is said to have been based on the ancient statute of laborers. The early English cases limited the action to the enticement of menial servants, but )the later cases, beginning with Lumley v. Gye, 2 E. & B. 216, have extended the doctrine beyond menial servants; and by the modern interpretation of this doctrine by the English courts the rule is extended to a malicious interference with any contract. A brief reference to a few English cases will serve to present tbe evolution and extension of the old common-law doctrine of malicious interference with a contract. Lumley v. Gye, supra, was a suit for the malicious procuring of an opera singer, who had agreed with the plaintiff to perform and sing at his theatre, and nowhere else, for a certain time, to break her contract and
In this State it has been held that when one man employs a laborer to work on his farm, and another man, knowing of such contract of employment, entices, hires or persuades the laborer to leave the service of the first employer during the time for which he was so employed, the law gives to the party injured a right of action to recover damages. Salter v. Howard, 43 Ga. 601. From the reasoning of McCay, J., in Barron v. Collins, 49 Ga. 580, it would appear that he was inclined to the opinion that an action for the malicious breach of contract was limited to cases of servants. The declaration in that case alleged that A, having contracted with one Charles Barron, that he, the said Charles, should furnish himself and his two daughters and one George Barron, to work as laborers on the plaintiff’s land for the year 1872, the plaintiff to furnish the land and mules, and the said Charles to receive one third and the plaintiff two thirds of the crop; and that the defendant, knowing that the said contract had not been abandoned, but still existed, employed the said Charles, his two daughters, and the said George, to work for him for the year 1872. It was held, on demurrer, that no good cause of action was set forth. In the opinion it was said that the gist of the action was enticing away plaintiff’s servants; and that the contract between the plaintiff and Charles Barron did not create the relation of master and servant, but that Charles Barron was a contractor and not a servant. However, within the limits of a very brief opinion, it was pointed out that the declaration was defective in many other particulars. It was defective in not setting
Under the facts in the record the court properly enjoined the defendants from interfering with the plaintiff’s business as a printer engaged in competitive trade, and from unlawfully influencing the labor organization from obstructing its business.
Judgment affirmed.