117 N.Y.S. 775 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1909
Plaintiff appeals from an interlocutory judgment sustaining a demurrer to the complaint. The action is an equitable one for the enforcement of a negative covenant by defendant not to e'ngage for a limited time in any business which will compete with that carried on by the appellant. The plaintiff is engaged in the business of designing and making dress patterns, printing, publishing and circulating certain fashion publications and general advertising. It does a very large business, divided into different departments, and employs a large number of persons. The defendant, who had been a bookkeeper in a department store, entered plaintiff’s employ in April, 1901, as assistant to the' manager of the sales department, at a salary of twenty dollars per week. His salary was increased from time to time until about October 8,1903, when it became fifty dollars per week. Between April 1, 1901, and January 1, 1905, defendant filled many positions in the sales department, circulating and premium departments, publication department, and as manager of the circulating and premium departments, and factory super
■ On January 23, 1909, the defendant entered into the employ of*' and became president of a rival company engaged in the same business as; plkintiff, or a similar business, and undertook and. attempted-to resign and' relinquish his employment by plaintiff. The plaintiff refused to accept the resignation or consent to the cancellation and abrogation of-the; contract between itself and defendant, and insisted that defendant' should remain in its employment and desist from his employment with the rival company. He refused to accede, and théreupon this action was commenced to obtain an injunction restraining defendant from '-entering into Or continuing in the ■employ or service, Or otherwise, acting in aid of the company with . which he -had associated himself, or any rival company or Concern engaged in the same general line of business as the plaintiff, or a similar, general line of business.
The demurrer was Sustained at Special Term on the .authority of Dockstader v. Reed (121 App. Div. 846), and the defendant now seeks to sustain the judgment by reference to .that and a line of similar cases-in which injunctive relief has. been refused. In- all of these cases, however, the Complaint -has proceeded upon the claim that the defendant’s services to the plaintiff were so special, unique and extraordinary that his place could not be filled, and, hence, that the plaintiff, if deprived of such services, would lose the benefit cf .his contract of employment. In the: present case, the plaintiff does not rest his prayer for relief upon this ground, but upon the ground that by entering the employ of a competitor, in violation of his agreement, defendant threatens to injure plaintiff by building up a competing business upon the foundation of the special knowledge ' and skill acquired during ljis' employment by the plaintiff. This position is based, not upon the claim- that defendant’s services to plaintiff were special, Unique -and-extraordinary (although that fact is alleged), because1 it is not denied that defendant’s place can be filled, but upon the proposition that defendant’s qualifications for
. The judgment appealed from must, therefore, he "reversed, with ■ costs, and the demurrer overruled, with costs, with leave to respondent to withdraw the demurrer and to answer within twenty days .upon payment of said costs.
■’ Ihgbaham, McLaughlih, Laughlih and Clabkb, JJ., concurred^
Judgment. reversed, with costs, and demurrer overruled, with costs, witli leave to defendant to withdraw demurrer and to answer on payment of costs. ' •