267 Mass. 256 | Mass. | 1929
This case comes before us by report upon the pleadings and master’s report for the determination of an interlocutory decree. The plaintiff is a corporation engaged in the business of harvesting, storing and selling ice. The defendants are former employees of the plaintiff. The objects of the suit are (1) to restrain the defendants from using confidential information acquired by them while employed by the plaintiff, (2) to restrain the defendants from competing with the plaintiff contrary to an alleged agreement, and (3) to secure an adjudication that the defendants hold for the benefit of the plaintiff the lease of a certain pond in Woburn.
The facts found by the master, so far as pertinent to the grounds of this decision, may be summarized with respect to each of these objects for which relief is sought.
1. The territory in which the plaintiff for many years has carried on business is Woburn, Winchester and most of Stone-ham and of Burlington. The defendants for a number of years prior to the acts here in controversy had been employed by the plaintiff as drivers of ice wagons and in harvesting ice. The list of customers of the plaintiff, because it did a large part of the ice business in Woburn where the defendants worked, was no more than a list of persons using ice; and the knowledge of the plaintiff’s customers and of their requirements was not confidential or in the nature of trade secrets. The first relief sought, therefore, must be denied.
2. In 1925, the plaintiff requested all its employees to sign a contract in writing, agreeing in consideration of the employment not to engage in any branch of the ice business within the territory where the plaintiff did business for a period of five years after the termination of the employment. The defendants refused to sign the contract. The plaintiff’s manager said to each of the defendants that he would have to lay off some of the men during the winter but would give preference to those who signed the contract. In order to avoid being laid off and to secure preferential treatment, each defendant said in substance that he would never hurt the company and never would go into business against it. Manifestly such an unrestricted promise in the circumstances here disclosed cannot be enforced. It is unreasonable in view of
Plainly there are no general principles of law which on the facts found prevented the defendants from leaving the service of the plaintiff and entering into a competing business.
It follows that the plaintiff fails to establish adequate basis for the second relief sought.
3. The plaintiff has two main sources for supply of ice, both in Woburn. It owns land and ice houses on the shore, and the right to cut the ice, of Horn Pond. For a substantial time prior to July 1, 1927, the date of expiration of its last lease, it was also the lessee of the right to cut ice on Mill Pond and of adjacent ice houses. The latter source of supply, although only about one tenth the size of the former, is nevertheless highly important and peculiarly valuable to the plaintiff. This finding is amply supported by subsidiary facts reported by the master, which need not be narrated. Knowledge of such peculiar value to the plaintiff came to the defendants as a result of their employment by the plaintiff. The defendants, although having a definite idea, had no specific information as to the existence or terms of the plaintiff’s lease of Mill Pond, until the spring of 1925, when the lessor, who had become acquainted with one of the defendants through the latter’s employment by the plaintiff, asked him whether he would consider taking the lease. This defendant answered that he would like to take the lease but did not have sufficient money. It was left that if this defendant could handle it when the plaintiff’s lease expired, the lessor would get in touch with him. The plaintiff in the spring of 1927 negotiated with the lessor for a new lease for a considerable period, each haggling for a bargain more favorable to his own interests, until at last, about May 10, the plaintiff offered
An employee, who learns in the course of or by reason of his employment that the premises where his employer’s business is conducted are of peculiar value to his employer or one carrying on his business, has no right without his employer’s knowledge to take a lease of those premises and hold them as his own to the injury of his employer’s property. That principle was declared after a full review of the authorities in an exhaustive opinion written by Mr. Justice Loring in Essex Trust Co. v. Enwright, 214 Mass. 507. It would be vain to traverse that ground again. That principle has been followed in subsequent cases to which it was pertinent. H. C. Girard Co. v. Lamoureux, 227 Mass. 277. Aronson v. Orlov, 228 Mass. 1, 5. See Edisonia, Ld. v. Forse, 25 Rep. Pat. Cas. 546, 552 (1908). It is precisely applicable to the crucial fact that the defendants learned of the special and peculiar value to the plaintiff of the right to harvest, store and use the Mill Pond ice by reason of their employment by the plaintiff.
The interlocutory decree rightly adjudged the defendants constructive trustees of the lease for the benefit of the plaintiff. It also was not erroneous in declaring that the plaintiff is entitled, so far as concerns the rights of the defendants, to an assignment from the defendants of the lease. The question of the rights of the plaintiff to an assignment as against the lessor is not involved in this case because the lessor is not a party to it. There is no ground in law to prevent the operation of the equitable rights of the plaintiff against the defendants as set forth in the interlocutory decree. The defendants are trustees for the plaintiff in the circumstances disclosed. The principle stated in Shankman v. Leavitt, 262 Mass. 501, and Ellis v. Small, 209 Mass. 147, 149, 150, does not forbid the relief here granted.
Interlocutory decree affirmed.