14 A.2d 739 | Conn. | 1940
Pursuant to the direction of this court in the case of LaFrance v. LaFrance,
The finding in the present case, which is not attacked upon this appeal, establishes these facts, and also among others these further facts. All three defendants had full knowledge of the litigation which eventuated in the injunction of April 20, 1937. The defendants Leo and Ralph had obtained confidential information regarding the plaintiff's customers throughout Connecticut during their employment by him. The temporary injunction referred to in the complaint remained in effect from December 20, 1935, until the issuance of the permanent injunction. During 1936 the defendant Ralph was employed in the defendant Leo's sawdust business, and in the prosecution of it, utilizing his confidential information, solicited orders from and sold sawdust to customers of the plaintiff. Subsequent to April 20, 1937, all three defendants engaged in the sawdust business and participated in *152 other activities incident thereto, as part of a common plan and scheme to accomplish the violation by the defendant Leo of the permanent injunction. The court concluded that all three defendants knowingly conspired to assist, aid and abet the defendant Leo in violating the terms of the injunction, that the various acts done by them in connection with the sawdust business were done in pursuance of this conspiracy, that the plaintiff had suffered irreparable damage in consequence of these actions, and that a continuance of them would cause further irreparable injury to him. By the judgment it enjoined the defendants from conspiring together to solicit sawdust patronage from any who were customers of the plaintiff on December 10, 1935, or prior thereto, and further from actually engaging in any such solicitation affecting the plaintiff's interest.
The court's denial of the defendants' motion that certain issues of fact be tried to the jury is assigned as error. The defendants claim the right to have the question whether or not they conspired, and all issues of fact collateral thereto, so tried. The correctness of the court's ruling depends upon the nature of the plaintiff's cause of action alleged, as is made clear by the recent case of Berry v. Hartford National Bank
Trust Co.,
The court properly denied the defendants' motion to expunge certain allegations of the complaint, which though not strictly necessary to it, tended to state more fully the plaintiff's claim. Bitello v. Lipson,
The exclusion by the court during cross-examination of each of the plaintiff's witnesses Kunofsky and Wolk, of the defendants' question whether he was a customer of the plaintiff in 1935 is assigned as error. Since there is nothing in the record in either instance to indicate that this related to a subject within the scope of the direct examination, or was for any reason germane to proper cross, the court's ruling cannot be held erroneous. The court permitted *155 the plaintiff to ask leading questions of the defendant Muriel, called by him as a witness. From this ruling the inference is that the court regarded her as a witness hostile to the plaintiff. Her previous testimony is not contained in the record, nor are her answers to the questions objected to. It therefore does not appear that the court erred in the ruling complained of. As regards the question asked of the witness Bivena as to whether or not he was a customer of the plaintiff and that asked of Muriel LaFrance whether the defendant Leo LaFrance had sold out to Prete, the record fails entirely to state facts from which we can see that the rulings, even if erroneous, were material in the determination of the case. The further inquiry of her by her counsel as to whether she conspired with the other defendants to avoid the injunction was a question to be resolved by the court, and not by the answer of a witness. The court did not commit prejudicial error in any of its rulings upon evidence.
Error is also assigned in the court's overruling of the defendants' claims of law. One of these is that by reason of the contempt procedure available to the plaintiff under the Town Court's injunction, relief in this case by injunction against conspiracy by the defendants to violate it, is not permissible. While it is the general policy of law that two actions shall not be brought where complete justice can be done in one, this is not a rule of unbending rigor. Farley-Harvey Co. v. Madden,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.