54 Ga. App. 651 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1936
Arthur Neuhoff brought suit against Swift & Company and E. S. Papy, alleging that they had injured and damaged him in the sum of $75,000, by reason of the following facts: On January 5, 1931, and at all times thereafter, as mentioned in the petition, E. S. Papy was general manager of Swift & Company, with authority to employ and discharge persons working with that company. The petitioner was the owner of one hundred shares of the stock of the Neuhoff Company, which owned and operated the White Provision Company, of which petitioner was assistant general manager at a salary of $500 per month. He had never known any form of business except the packing business in which White Provision Company was engaged, of slaughtering and preparing for food various kinds of animals. On January 5, 1931, the Neuhoff Company sold the White Provision Company to Swift & Company, the consideration being unknown to petitioner; and that for and in consideration of "the interest your petitioner had in said White Provision Company and Neuhoff Company, approximately five .thousand dollars, and for further consideration that your petitioner would not, after said sale as aforesaid, enter any kind or form of cofiipetition with it, and the additional consideration of five hundred dollars per month, to be paid each and every month for and during a period of fifteen years from the aforesaid date, this defendant, Swift & Company, employed your petitioner to continue with said plant as manager of the purchasing department thereof.” In consideration of said hiring the petitioner “transferred all of his rights, title, equity, and interest in said White Provision Company and Neuhoff Company to said defendant, Swift & Company,” and executed and delivered to it an agreement not to enter into any form of business in competition with the defendant. Petitioner would not have conveyed his “interest in.White Provision Company and Neuhoff Company save and ex-
Swift & Company filed a demurrer on the grounds that no cause of action was set out; that the alleged parol agreement of employment appears from the face of the petition to constitute an effort to add to or vary a valid written contract, which can not be done by parol; and that it appears that the alleged contract is barred by the statute of frauds, in that it relates to an alleged agreement for employment for more than a year. Papy filed a demurrer on the same grounds, and on the further ground that it did not appear from the petition that he was a party to the alleged contract. There were several special grounds of demurrer. The plaintiff filed an amendment alleging that his action against the defendants was brought in tort; that Papy was an agent of Swift & Company, and was general manager in full charge of the White Provision Company, and, for no reason except to assist in defrauding the plaintiff of his contract of employment and valuable property rights as set out in the petition, Papy conspired with and procured Swift & Company to discharge the plaintiff and breach its contract of employment; that Swift & Company, acting on the advice, representations, and procurement of Papy, did, in furtherance of said collusion and conspiracy, without any cause or legal right whatever, discharge the plaintiff on or about May 17, 1933; that, by reason of Papy illegally and wrongfully counseling, commanding, and procuring Swift & Company to discharge the plaintiff, and Swift & Company, with full knowledge of all the facts set out, acting on the wrongful and fraudulent advice, procurements, and collusions, discharging him, the plaintiff was deprived of his valuable property rights as set out in his petition, and was injured and damaged, by reason of the breach of the contract of employment, in the full amount sued for. The amendment was allowed subject to demurrer. Swift & Company filed a demurrer to the amendment on grounds stated as follows: “1. The said amendment seeks to add a new and distinct cause of action, in that the petition as originally filed plainly and distinctly seeks to set out a case ex contractu, and the said amendment seeks to change the action into an action ex delicto. 2. In the event the foregoing demurrer is sustained and the amendment not allowed, the defendant renews its demurrer heretofore filed upon each and
To test the general demurrer, which admits only facts well pleaded, it is first necessary to arrive at a fair construction of the petition. The “interest” alleged to have been held in the White Provision Company is not shown to be a real or substantial one. It is alleged, however, that the plaintiff owned one hundred shares of stock in the Neuhoff Company, of the approximate value of $5000. The names “White Provision Company” and “Neuhoff Company” import corporations. Mattox v. State, 115 Ga. 212, 219 (41 S. E. 709); Holcombe v. Cable Co., 119 Ga. 466 (46 S. E. 671); Perkins Co. v. Shewmake, 119 Ga. 617 (46 S. E. 832); Hunnicutt v. Reed, 149 Ga. 803 (102 S. E. 421); Tifton Compress Co. v. Robinson, 31 Ga. App. 350 (3) (120 S. E. 701). The total shares of outstanding stock in Neuhoff Company not
The above discussion has been necessary for the purpose of showing that under a proper construction of the petition the oral agreement was between parties who were not the same as those entering into the contract of sale of the White Provision Company; that Swift & Company purchased the interest in White Provision Company, not from the plaintiff, but from the corporation in which he was a minority stockholder; that if Swift & Company obtained any right or interest of the plaintiff in and to the Neuhoff Company, it was acquired from him under a separate agreement of sale of 7m shares of stock. The oral agreement on which he bases his
Judgment affirmed.