70 N.J. Eq. 291 | New York Court of Chancery | 1905
This is an injunction bill. The defendants are fife insurance companies-—corporations of this and other states. They have, by their agents, formed a voluntary association, called the Newark Fire Insurance Exchange, one of whose principal objects is the establishment of “adequate and just rates of premium,” uniform and obligatory upon all of them. The attorney-general seeks to restrain them from regulating and maintaining these rates. There is no relator, and, consequently, no private right involved. The information seeks to enjoin an agreement, intro vires and enforceable, unless contrary to public policy. It appears to be without support in common law precedent. In some of the western and southern states statutes have been passed condemning combinations among certain kinds of companies, and,- among others, insurance companies. These statutes give to
May agreements, then, because in restraint of trade and commerce, be, in the absence of statutory authority, enjoined in' equity, at the suit of the attorney-general? I do not attach any weight to the suggestion that under the case of Paul v. Virginia, 8 Wall. 168, and the cases which have followed it, the business of insurance is not trade or commerce, for while the distinction is important in its relation to the commerce clause of the federal constitution, it is unimportant where the question arises in the state courts. The principle that condemns such agreements is applied not only to transactions of trade and commerce, strictly so called, but to many other transactions; for instance, to agreements between physicians (Mandeville v. Harman, 42 N. J. Eq. (15 Stew.) 185), between attorneys and their articled clerks (Nicholls v. Stretton, 10 Q. B. *346), between manufacturers relative to the wages of their workmen (Hilton v. Eckersley, 6 El. & Bl. 47), between stenographers (More v. Bennett, 140 Ill. 69).
The point upon which,, as it seems to me, the attorney-general must fail, is this: The common law does not treat agreements in restraint of trade as being illegal in the ordinary sens© of the word, but merely as being unenforceable. As far back as Mitchell v. Reynolds, 10 Mod. *134 (1711), Chief-Justice Parker said: “It is not a reason against them that they are agaJkist law—I mean in a proper sense, for in an improper sense they are.” Mogul Steamship Co. v. McGregor, A. C. 39 (1892), was a suit by a shipowner, injured by the acts of an association of shipowners, formed for the purpose of destroying, by competitive methods, his trade at a Chinese port, and so securing for itself a monopoly of the trade of that port. It was, as o.ne of the judges described it, a scheme, by means of competition in the near future, to prevent competition in the remoter future. In the house of
In the case of United States v. Addyston Pipe and Steel Co., 85 Fed. Rep. 271; 29 C. C. A. 147, Judge Taft, in an exhaustive and illuminating opinion on the subject of contracts in restraint of trade, says: “Contracts that were in unreasonable restraint of trade at common law were not unlawful in the sense of being criminal or giving rise to a civil action for damages in favor of one prejudicially affected therebj’, but were simply void and were not enforced by the courts. The effect of the act of 1890 (the act of congress to protect trade and commerce against unlawful restraints and monopolies) is to render such contracts unlawful in an affirmative or positive sense, and punishable as a misdemeanor, and to create a right of civil action for damages in favor of those injured thereby, and a civil remedy by injunction in favor of both private persons and the public against the execution of such contracts and the maintenance of such trade restraints.”
The same idea is contained in the following passage taken from the opinion of Ellicott v. Chamberlin, in the court of errors and appeals, 38 N. J. Eq. (11 Stew.) 604: “If a contract be illegal as against public policy, its invalidity will be a defence w’hiie it remains unexecuted. If the illegal contract be
These citations show that in this class of cases the common law gave no affirmative relief. When suit was brought upon the agreement the courts refused to enforce it, and that was all. In the Mogul Steamship Case, the judges admitted that the agreement would not have been enforceable among the members of the association, but they said that if did not follow that a stranger might therefore sue because of its damaging effect upon him. If one alleging himself to be specially injured could not sue, it is difficult to see on what ground the attormyr-general can. I have been referred to no common law precedent for such a suit, and I do not think any can be found. This, in itself, is an argument against the jurisdiction. The combination is not indictable, and there is therefore no public wrong inflicted, at least of a punishable kind. The agreement, Lord Halsbury says, is not in any positive sense contrary to law. If not contrary to law in a • positive sense, what ground is there for the state’s action ? The only ground suggested is public policy, but if that is ground for equitable interference in the present instance, then, on the same ground, the attornejr-general may apply for an injunction to restrain employers, on the one hand, and workmen, on the other, from combining to regulate wages; to restrain plrysicians and other professional men from limiting competition with themselves where their agreement goes beyond what may be necessary to afford a fair protection; to restrain people from concluding or enforcing usurious bargains—in a word, to restrain them from making any illegal contract, for I suppose all contracts denounced by the law as illegal are, or are considered to be, contrary to public policy. This would, indeed, be giving to equity a jurisdiction which has not hitherto been attributed to it.
Without, then, deciding whether the articles of association are illegal in the sense that I have mentioned—a question to be determined bjr courts of law—I think the information should, for the reason stated, be dismissed.