243 P. 842 | Wash. | 1926
Lead Opinion
The Ice Delivery Company of Spokane, a corporation, commenced this action against Newell S. Davis seeking injunctive relief, "for such length of time as to the court may seem reasonable," against the defendant, preventing him from serving or soliciting ice customers of the plaintiff, known to the defendant as such by virtue of his former employment with plaintiff, for his present employer or any other employer except plaintiff, over a route known as the Rockwood route, or any part of it, in the city of Spokane, and from interfering in any way with the business of the plaintiff in the territory of that route. *650 An emergency restraining order was issued at the time the complaint was filed, and at the same time an order was entered requiring the defendant to show cause why an injunction pendentelite should not be granted. On the date to which the hearing of the show cause order was regularly continued, the defendant appeared and, among other things, filed a general demurrer to the complaint and a motion to dissolve the restraining order, the motion being supported by affidavits. At that time the right of the plaintiff to have the restraining order continued during the pendency of the action was heard upon affidavits, and denied. At the same time, an order was entered sustaining the demurrer to the complaint. The plaintiff electing not to plead further, a judgment was entered dismissing the action. Plaintiff has appealed.
It is urged on behalf of the appellant that the question is, whether or not the complaint states a cause of action, and, incidentally, whether or not, upon the complaint and affidavits filed, the appellant was entitled to an injunction pendentelite. The latter part of the question is not properly here on the merits.
[1] The order denying injunction pendente lite shows that the hearing was had on affidavits on behalf of both parties, and, although they are in the transcript, they have not been settled or certified by the trial judge in the nature of a bill of exceptions or statement of facts, and under the uniform holding of this court they cannot be considered.
The complaint, filed April 17, 1925, alleged, in substance, that the appellant is a corporation doing business in Spokane, and that about June 1, 1919, the appellant employed the respondent as an ice man and driver of a delivery wagon used in the delivery of ice from the plant of the company to its patrons and customers in what is known as the Rockwood route in *651 the city, and that he was thus continuously employed until October 2, 1924, except a small portion of the year 1920; that, by reason of such long employment, he served many of the appellant's customers for nearly all of that time, and thereby became acquainted with them (ordinarily the lady of the house who looked after the orders for ice), the quantity of ice, and days on which it was needed by the customers; that, when he commenced work for the appellant, there was turned over to him an established business of numerous old customers, which was added to from time to time by the efforts of both the appellant and respondent, and that the good will of the business of the route is a valuable asset of the appellant; that on October 2, 1924, he ceased working for the appellant, and on March 10, 1925, commenced work for a competitor of the appellant, and that, at the date of the complaint, he was serving or attempting to serve the same route formerly covered by him, or a part of it, soliciting those persons by telephone and personal interviews and thereby attempting to divert their patronage from appellant, and that unless restrained he will continue to do so; that irreparable damages will be caused the appellant that are not easy of ascertainment because of the peculiar nature of the situation. That the respondent is insolvent; that, at the time of the commencement of the action, the ice season was just starting; that the respondent was taking former customers of appellant over to respondent's new employer, and that there was need for emergency restraint.
The appellant cites and relies on the case of Davis Co. v.Miller,
The facts and circumstances in that case and those in the present one are not parallel. In that case, the services under consideration were more largely of a personal sort in the performance of duties of the agency. The success of that service depended upon the personal ability of the agent to obtain as high rentals as possible and reasonable from tenants who were responsible and dependable. For those purposes each piece of property handled was a separate and individual thing. Davis Co. had established a large and successful business of that kind, largely through the efforts of Miller within the knowledge of the clientele who were acquainted with him. The service was that of a representative between the owner and the tenant that necessitated the fixing of prices, terms of tenancy and knowledge of the financial standings of all the persons involved, with changes in that respect, if any, as they happened. Handling the business required daily conferences of all the employees and embraced confidences too important for others than John Davis, who was the head of the concern, Miller and one other employee. Miller was always there, he was the one man in the confidence of Davis.
Not so in the present case, which involved the sale of a commodity for consumption. Different from houses and rooms, a pound of ice is like another pound of ice, the same price to all in the same quantity. The customer may take it today and refuse it tomorrow. The substance of the service to the customer is the ice delivered, not the personal service of the carrier who delivers it.
In the Davis case, it was very clear that the disaffection from Davis Co. and the organization of Miller *654 and the two other employees was for the avowed purpose of organizing and conducting a competing business, relying largely upon information and confidences that had been obtained by them as employees of Davis Co. Indeed, they acted with such promptness, certainty and effect that it was charged in the complaint that they were guilty of a conspiracy against Davis Co. Not so in the present case.
[2] The complaint here alleges that the respondent quit work for the appellant. There is no allegation that at that time, or at any other, it was his purpose to enter into a competing business for himself or for another. Some four months later, it is alleged, he entered the employment of a competing firm. There is no allegation that the respondent informed his new employer he had ever worked for the appellant or any other person in the delivery of ice, or that he was to deliver ice in any particular district in the city. Nor is there any allegation in the complaint that, at the time he entered into his new employment, it was understood that he was to deliver in the Rockwood district, or any part of it, or that upon commencing work he did deliver in that district. It is alleged that at the date of the complaint, about a month after the new service commenced, he was delivering in that district, but there is no allegation that he asked to be placed there, or that his employer knew he formerly delivered ice in that district. For aught that appears in the complaint, months after he quit work he obtained employment with another concern without any ulterior motives and without any understanding as to where he should work; and that, sometime afterward, he was put to work delivering ice in that district. What was he to do? Appellant says he should have risked his employment by telling his employer that he refused to do so, because once he had worked for a rival concern in the delivery *655 of ice in that district, or a part of it. Such is in effect the argument of the appellant, to which we cannot consent.
In the Davis case the laundry, milk and tea route cases were referred to, but not discussed. There are such cases which hold that, under their peculiar facts, former employers were entitled to injunctive relief. One of such cases was Grand Union Tea Co.v. Dodds,
Another case, Eureka Laundry Co. v. Long,
In the case of Robb v. Green, 2 Q.B.D. (1895) 315, discussed in the Davis case, injunctive relief was granted a former employer, a dealer in live game and eggs, against defendant who, on quitting work for the plaintiff, had copied from his records the names and addresses of patrons, whose patronage he solicited upon commencing a competitive business of his own. In granting the relief, attention was called to the fact that the defendant was using stolen material, "without which, having regard to the wide extent over which the customers were spread, practically he could not canvass at all. . . . The order book contains collected together the names and addresses of purchases of pheasants' eggs spread over the length and breadth of England, Wales and Scotland."
The case of People's Coat, Apron Towel Supply Co. v.Light,
"The case of People's Coat, Apron Towel Supply Co. v. HarryLight Samuel Cohen,
Injunctive relief was denied in the recent case (1922) ofFulton-Grand Laundry Co. v. Johnson,
"The decisions in this country and in England seem to be fairly harmonious in principle as to the duty of courts to protect owners of trade secrets from disclosure by employees, but the divergences begin when the question to be determined in particular cases is whether the thing sought to be protected should be classed as a trade secret. And this is the real question presented in this case. A thing can hardly be said to be a secret, in the sense that it should be guarded by a court of equity, which is susceptible of discovery by observation, and which is open to the observation of anyone who thinks it worth while to observe. In this case it was not necessary for the new employer of appellee to seek his services in order to obtain the names of appellant's customers whom appellee served. He could obtain this information by the simple process of observing each day for a week where he stopped on his daily rounds. We have no difficulty in reaching the conclusion that there is no trade secret involved in this case."
Then upon referring to cases from other courts relied on by appellant, expressing contrary views, the court further stated:
"But while we do not decide that there might not be cases in which an employer should be protected from the use by an employee of a list of customers fraudulently and surreptitiously obtained, or where, in the nature of the particular case, or by reason of the care used in concealing them, the names of customers are so guarded as not to be easily obtainable by others than confidential employees, we are not willing to hold that, in any ordinary business, an employee, on going into business for himself or into the employ of another, should be enjoined from seeking to do business with friends he has made in the course of a previous employment, merely because he became acquainted with them while so engaged, and as a result of such previous employment." *659
In 1923 the supreme court of Kansas considered this subject in the case of Garst v. Scott,
"An employee who solicits business and delivers work for a laundry may, upon ceasing his employment, engage in a laundry business for himself, or become the employee of another laundryman, in competition with his former employers, and solicit business from their customers from whom he had received laundry work, where he leaves with the employers all lists of the customers, and where there is no contract prohibiting him from soliciting the patronage of such customers."
In the course of the opinion in that case the court said:
"There is a note on this subject, found in an annotation toFulton Grand Laundry Co. v. Johnson, supra, in 23 A.L.R. 423, the first paragraph of which reads: `It is held, in the majority of the cases which have passed on the question, that in the absence of an express contract, on taking a new employment in a competing business, an employee may solicit for his new employer the business of his former customers, and will not be enjoined from so doing, at the instance of his former employer."
In the case of Progress Laundry Co. v. Hamilton,
The authorities above mentioned and those to which they refer cover the field to this date. An examination *660 of them shows that the case of Davis Co. v. Miller, supra, is in harmony with them and was correctly decided. That case involved the use of what may be termed trade secrets within the protection of equity jurisdiction, in that the names and addresses of the clients of the concern were necessarily among its records and files and almost impossible of ascertainment from any other source. Miller's knowledge of them had been acquired while he was engaged as a most trusted and confidential employee, and, as argued by the appellant in its brief in that case, in the month of November, 1916, came the culmination of a long series of differences between John Davis and the other stockholder of the corporation, "when Miller took advantage of the opportunity and demanded that Mr. Davis give up the control he had in the company, and when Mr. Davis refused, started out in a business of his own." It was a case of being bent on mischief in the nature of a positive fraud against John Davis Co., relief against which equity would of course give protection.
Not so in the present case, where there was no scheme, plan, fraud or oppression on the part of the respondent, who, months after concluding the employment of the appellant, took employment in an orderly fashion with another. As said in the Maryland case, for him to be compelled to give up all the friends and business acquaintances, made during his previous employment, would tend to destroy the freedom of employees and reduce them to a condition of industrial servitude. Customers are not necessarily trade secrets, nor are they property. In this case, the customers were fixed and settled in a known district, and the fact of their being patrons of the appellant was in no way covered up, but capable of ascertainment on behalf *661 of the respondent's new employer, or any one else, by an independent canvass at small expense and in a very limited period of time. To hold that the Davis case is decisive of this one would be, in our opinion, an unwarranted extension of the doctrine of that case. The complaint in this action does not state facts sufficient to entitle the appellant to equitable relief.
Affirmed.
TOLMAN, C.J., MAIN, and PARKER, JJ., concur.
Dissenting Opinion
I can not agree with this decision. Every presumption against the sufficiency of the complaint has been indulged in, when the opposite manner of treating complaints is the customary one.