38 N.Y.S. 311 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1896
Enough appeared in the papers presented to the judge on the ex parte application for a preliminary injunction in this action to justify his granting it. It was shown by a sworn complaint and a supplementary affidavit of one of the plaintiffs that the defendant had violated the terms of an agreement made by him with the plaintiffs; that such violation consisted in his entering into the employment of a business rival of theirs and in his betraying or profiting by the wrongful use of their trade secrets, a knowledge of which he had acquired while in the service of the plaintiffs, and that by inducing those who had been the plaintiff’s customers to leave them and deal with him, he was causing irreparable injury to them for which no adequate remedy at law could be had.
The plaintiffs’ claim to relief was founded upon the written agreement under which the defendant went into their employment for a compensation of twenty dollars a week and two per cent commission on sales to be made of articles in which they dealt, consisting of sausage casings and butchers’ supplies and butchers’ tools. At the time he entered into their service the plaintiffs presented to him for signature the written instrument referred to, in and by which, in consideration of his employment, he stipulated, among other things, that after leaving them he would not engage, either for himself or as the employee of any other person, in a similar business for a period of three years in sixteen named States and Territories of the United States or in the Dominion of Canada.
When the motion for the continuance of the temporary injunction came on to be heard, an entirely different complexion was put upon the case. The defendant’s verified answer was before the court and also an affidavit made by him in which is set forth in detail the circumstances leading up to the execution of the written agreement referred to, the situation of the parties at the time that agreement was made, what was done by the defendant in the course of his employment under it, and what his condition and situation were in carrying on the business in which he was engaged when
It is quite unnecessary, in disposing of this appeal, to consider the general subject of the enforcibility of contracts of this character in a court of equity. The case is presented only of a person who, being hired as a salesman to make sales of wares and merchandise of his employer, enters into an agreement that, after leaving that service, he will not engage in a similar business for a period of three years.
But the plaintiffs here have sought to anticipate and avoid the effect of that view of the case by setting forth that as an employee entering their service the plaintiff became possessed of trade secrets peculiar to' their special business, the knowledge of which would enable him, if used against them, to work serious injury to their interests, and that the defendant was so doing. That a court of equity ought to interfere and compel the observance by an employee of a stipulation not to engage in the same business rmder such circumstances may be true.
In the well-known case of Rousillon v. Rousillon (L. R. [14 Ch. Div.] 351) a contract was held valid by which the defendant stipulated not to engage with any other dealer in champagne for a period of two years and not to carry on the business of selling champagne for ten years in certain places, in consideration of his having been instructed by the plaintiffs in the secrets of and educated in that business, he having acquired his knowledge as one of their employees. That case illustrates the general principle affecting contracts in restraint of trade as between employer and employee, which present a very different aspect of the question from that arising upon contracts of sale, where the covenant of the seller to refrain from engaging in the same kind of business as that which he has sold is one enforced when it is co-extensive with and necessary to the protection of the buyer in that which he has purchased, and one which is reasonable and proper under all the special circumstances of a given case. But here and upon the papers as they are now before us the fundamental equity upon which the plaintiffs rest their claim is absolutely denied, and there is nothing to corroborate the allegation of the plaintiffs that there were any trade secrets connected with their business or that came to the knowledge of the defendant while he was employed by them, nor is there proof of one single fact adduced to bear out the general statement that the defendant had
The order continuing the injunction pending suit must be reversed, with costs of the appeal and the temporary injunction dissolved, with ten dollars costs.
Barrett, Rumsey, Williams and Ingraham, JJ., concurred.
Order reversed, with costs of appeal and temporary injunction dissolved, with ten dollars costs.