9 S.E.2d 240 | Ga. | 1940
The instant case can not in principle be distinguished from National Linen Service Corporation v. Clower,
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.
Franco remained with Fulton Bakery Inc. more than twelve months after the making of this contract, when he quit, and at once became an employee of Zakas Bakery as a salesman and truck driver, doing the same kind of work as he was employed to do and did perform for Fulton Bakery Inc. Fulton Bakery Inc. filed its petition alleging, beside the foregoing facts, that in violation of the provisions of their agreement Franco was selling for his new employer articles to petitioner's customers, and calling upon them as he did while employed by petitioner. It was sought to enjoin him from so doing; and it was alleged that the damage he would do, if not enjoined, would be incapable of ascertainment, and that because of his small financial means such damage, even if ascertained, could not be recovered in a suit at law.
The defendant filed no demurrer, but filed an answer, which was sworn to. At interlocutory hearing affidavits were submitted by the plaintiff in support of its petition. The defendant submitted his sworn answer to the petition, and was allowed to give testimony. The evidence for the plaintiff and the defendant was in sharp conflict; but the defendant contended that inasmuch as he had lived in Atlanta for thirty years and had been engaged for eighteen or twenty years in selling bread, the restriction against his continuing his life work in Fulton and DeKalb Counties, with an approximate population of 400,000 people, for a period of one and a half years, was unreasonable as to time and area. The court granted the injunction as prayed, and the defendant excepted.