The Courts in later years have disregarded the old rules by which it was sometimes attempted arbitrarily to fix by measurement the geographical area over which a contract in partial restraint of trade might be made to extend, and to prescribe a limit of time beyond which it could not be made to operate.
The modem doctrine is founded upon the basic principles that one who, by his skill and industry, builds up a business, acquires a property at least in the good will of his patrons, which is the product of his own efforts
(Cowan
v. Fairbrother,
But in our case it was not contended that the area of territory covered by the restrictive agreement was so unreasonably great as to vitiate the contract, but that the time for which the defendants covenanted to refrain from entering into the same business imposed an unnecessary restriction upon the rights of the three defendants, and was therefore contrary to public policy and void. It must be conceded that in so far as it is consistent with the power to sell the property which is the creation of one’s own labor, physical or mental, society has the right to claim
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an open field for every man’s labor, skill and competition with others, both for the benefit of his family and the more direct benefits accruing to society from removing restrictions and encouraging competition in every kind of trade. The reason of the law leads to the adoption of any rule that is calculated to reconcile all conflicts between the proper exercise of
the jus disponendi
of the individual and the interests of society at large. The services of no one person are so valuable to the public, in any field to which his business may extend, as to demand that he shall receive a smaller price for his right of competition, because an arbitrary rule forbids him to extend the restriction in point of time to the term of his own life, or that of the purchaser, or for their joint lives. The enlargement of the restrictive area by later adjudications is founded, therefore, upon a principle which it was reasonable to apply in determining what is the lawful limit of time. Where the contract is between individuals or between private corporations, which do not belong to the
quasi
public class, there is no reason why the general rule that the seller should not be allowed to fix the time for the operation of the restriction so as to command the highest market price for the property he disposes of should apply.
Diamond Match Co.
v. Roeber,
The stipulation on the part of James Y. Old, W. P. Old and W. N Old, to quote the exact language of the contract, is, “that they will not continue business of milling in the vicinity of Elizabeth City after the first day of September, 1891, and the full completion of this agreement. ” The contract having been in other lespects performed,, the agreement is now complete in-the sense contemplated by the parties. The three defendants were at most restricted from engaging in the business for the lives of each and
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every one of them. Such a sale has been upheld upon reason and authority in other courts. The plaintiff bought their right to compete in their own persons in the business to which he succeeded as purchaser. It was not unreasonable that he should insist upon the stipulation that none of the three should interfere while they lived, by competition at the particular place mentioned, either with him as purchaser, or his assignee in law or in fact. In the case of
Morgan
v.
Perhamus, supra,
the facts were that a milliner sold her stock and good will, and engaged “ not to carry on the business
at any time in futrare
at the town of F, or within such distance of said town as would interfere with said business, whether canned on by said L. S. andP. or their successors.” The agreement was held to be binding by the Supreme Court, and the seller was enjoined from resuming business. There, as in our case, the time was not described, except as an inhibition on a particular person, with the implication that it should extend to her life. The law would have construed the contract as conferring the right to sell or transmit to a personal representative as a part of the assets of his estate the property bought, whenever the time was found to be co-extensive with the lives of the three defendants.
Cowan
v.
Fairbrother, supra;
Clark on Contracts, p. 454, 455, and note, p. 456; 2 High on Inj., Sec. 1345;
Lewis
v.
Langdon,
7 Sim., 422;
Bininger
v.
Clark,
It is elementary learning that the single consideration of paying a specified sum of money by one party to a contract is sufficient to support several distinct stipulations by the other party to do or refrain from doing certain things, and it is unnecessary to repeat in every paragraph of the contract that such stipulations are entered into for the consideration once expressed. It is sufficient to set forth that A has paid or agreed to pay a certain sum, and that B has agreed to do or abstain from doing certain things which may be stated seriatim in separate paragraphs. A case almost exactly in point, because it relates to a somewhat similar agreement, is that of Morse, &c., Co. v. Morse, supra.
Though the contract is valid and binding as between the parties, it in no way impairs the right of the defendants, who were not parties, to engage in any kind of business in Elizabeth City. But, as a Court of Chancery, we must declare that, where injunctive relief is asked, it is the duty of the Court to restrain the contracting parties from violating the spirit as well as the letter of the agreement. .Under a fair and just interpretation of its terms, the stipulation meant that the three defendants would not engage in business so as to bring their skill, names and influence to the aid of any competitor carrying on the same trade within the prohibited limits. It was therefore a violation of the contract on the part of the three mentioned, or either of them, to take stock in, help to *12 organize or manage a corporation formed to compete with the plaintiff in his business. Jones v. Hearns, 4 Ch. Div., 636.
While the Courts will not restrain a party bound by such a contract from selling or leasing his premises to others to engage in the business which he has agreed to abstain from carrying on, or from selling to them the machinery or supplies needed in embarking in it
(Reeves
v.
Sprague,
The judgment must be modified so as to restrain only the three defendants who were parties to the original contract from engaging in or from taking stock in or assisting in the organization of a corporation formed with the purpose of carrying on the business of milling .in or in the vicinity of Elizabeth City. The order must be vacated as to the other defendants.
Modified and Affirmed.
