26 Misc. 2d 273 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1960
In this action plaintiff corporation seeks an injunction against the corporate and individual defendants, as well as an accounting and damages. Plaintiff corporation, operated chiefly by husband and wife, furnishes household services of maids, cooks and special servants for express occasions. The help are paid by plaintiff and the costs are billed to the customers by plaintiff. Customers are apartment and home
Early in October, 1959, defendant Jerrold Taylor was dismissed with a two weeks’ notice. Shortly .thereafter defendant Gritlin was summarily dismissed. After seeking other jobs and advertising for employment, the individual defendants created defendant corporation “Maids Unlimited, Inc.” in November, 1959, and commenced a business in competition with plaintiff in January, 1960. The individual defendants had no written contracts with plaintiff, were employees at will, and for some eight years had been intimately associated with plaintiff’s business, Imew the employee pool personally and there was no known or express secrecy in plaintiff’s customer lists and customers were billed at regular monthly or more frequent intervals for the services rendered of the maids, cooks, cleaning help or others as needed. Such lists were discarded when each new listing for billing was prepared. From the evidence the court can only conclude that no pledge or obligation of secrecy or confidence was exacted with respect to such lists. Nor is there any reason. for the court to conclude that defendants, secretly or otherwise, took such information from plaintiff at the time of their dismissals. The typewritten copy of names of customers found in the vacated desk of defendant Gritlin had been prepared more than a year before in answer to a request for such information by the bonding company in order to have full coverage. This list had been introduced as proof that defendants had made a list of employees for future use and to lure them from plaintiff. The answering testimony constitutes a complete refutation of this and other implications of improper conduct by defendants.
Practically all the important paper work, records, bookkeeping, etc., were handled by defendants Gritlin and Taylor. . On setting forth on their own and in competition with plaintiff corporation, defendants sent notices of their new venture to
There is no moral standard violated by employees, fired by their employers, engaging in a competitive enterprise, where no restrictive covenant is involved. Plaintiff here seeks to escape the hazard of competition without a restrictive contract which it was free to exact but saw fit not to require of defendant employees. Nor do the letters asking employees to “ stop in and say hello ” constitute any actionable wrong. We find here