158 Ga. 201 | Ga. | 1924
It is established by the record in this case that 0. F. Taylor and Reamer Todd owned a wholesale gasoline and motor-oil business in the City of Atlanta, known by the name of the White Eagle Oil Company and the Todd Oil Company, and that they sold this business and its good will as well as its personal property and equipment to L. M. Morris, C. R. Morris, and J. E.
Under section 4253 of the Civil Code (1910), primarily contracts in restraint of trade are void. • It is very evident in this case from
Judging the language used in the covenant by the definitions which we have quoted as applicable to business relations, it appears to us that Taylor had covenanted not to become a constituent part, sharer in, partaker of, or engage in or reap the benefits from the sale of gasoline and oil within 20 miles of Atlanta; and the fact that he was engaged as an employee of the Continental Oil Company would be no less a violation of the covenant than if he conducted the business in his own name. The purpose of the covenant was to remove from competition with the Morris-Forrester Oil Company the popularity, the intelligence, the personal acquaintanceship, and the business experience of O. F. Taylor, whether as a purchaser or a salesman of oil; and under existing