30 Misc. 733 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1900
This action was brought by the plaintiff to recover the sum of $200, being the amount deposited by bfm with the defendant, upon entering its employ, as security on his part for the faithful performance of the terms and conditions of two written contracts, for the alleged breach of which the defendant had refused to refund the amount aforesaid, so deposited by the plaintiff.
Each of said contracts contained the following clause: “ That he (meaning the plaintiff) would not, within the period of six months after his employment by said company shall cease, directly or indirectly, engage in business in the city of Mew York, or at any point within a radius of ten miles from the city or county of New York, in competition with said company, either on his own account or as servant or employee of others.” The contracts further provided that, in case of a violation by the plaintiff of those conditions, the amount aforesaid, so deposited, should be forfeited and adjudged to be liquidated damages and become the absolute
On the day following his discharge, he entered into the employ of a firm, the members of which were former employees of the defendant, by whom he was furnished with a horse and wagon, and with goods similar in character to those previously sold by him for the defendant, and, until the time of the trial of this action, he was engaged in daily driving over the same routes and endeavoring to sell goods to the' same customers- to whom he had sold while in the employ of the defendant; and he testified, upon the trial, that he had succeeded in retaining a portion of the trade that had previously been directed to and enjoyed by the defendant. It was also undisputed that the defendant had suffered material damages by reason of the sales so made by the plaintiff, contrary to the provisions of the contracts made by him. The plaintiff had a judgment in the trial court for the amount of his deposits, from which judgment the defendant appeals.
The respondent seeks to uphold the judgment, thus obtained, solely upon the ground that the provisions of the contracts made by the plaintiff are harsh, unreasonable and in restraint of trade, and therefore not enforcible. That position is untenable. The plaintiff voluntarily executed the contracts, with full knowledge of their conditions, and makes no claim that he was imposed upon in any way. As a condition of his employment, the defendant required that the plaintiff should agree to refrain from interfering with its business for a limited time and within a limited space, after he should leave the defendant’s employ, and provided for the amount of damages that might result from a breach of such agreement. The value of the defendant’s business consisted, not merely of the property invested and the goods sold by it, but as well, in the knowledge of the location of its routes and the names of the customers to whom it was accustomed to make sales. This
As a new trial must therefore be ordered herein, the other reasons urged by the appellant as grounds for a reversal of the judgment need not be considered.
MacLean and Leventritt, JJ., concur.
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide event.