This action was brought by the plaintiff to recover damages for breach of contract, alleged to have been caused by the defendant’s refusal to make payments to him under a written agreement entered into between the parties under date of November 4,1960.
The terms of this agreement provided that the defendant pay the plaintiff $20,000 during the year ending September 30, 1961, and thereafter, $15,000 a year for the remainder of the plaintiff’s life. The plaintiff agreed to hold himself available for consultation and advice with the company and its officers and not to engage in or be employed by any business enterprise, directly or indirectly, which is
The facts necessary to a disposition of the question involved are undisputed. The plaintiff was employed by the defendant from 1912 until November of 1961, progressively holding the positions of order clerk, traffic manager, salesman, sales manager, president, and chairman of the board. He was president of the company from 1941 to 1958 and a member of the board of directors from 1941 until 1961. From 1958 until his retirement in November, 1961, he served as chairman of the board of directors.
The trial court concluded that there was no consideration for the agreement on the part of the plaintiff and that the directors did not have authority to enter into the agreement. In addition, although the finding is not specific on this point, the court has included facts in some paragraphs of the finding which might be taken to indicate that it favored the special defense that the contract was manifestly unfair to the defendant. These three points will be discussed separately.
I
We first pass to the question of consideration. The doctrine of consideration is of course funda
The recited cоnsideration in the present case consists of the plaintiff’s promise to hold himself available for consultation with the defendant in connection with the defendant’s business and to avoid serving any enterprise in competition with the defendant within a designated area. In essence, what the defendant bargained for, as contained in the terms of the written agreement, was thе exclusive right to the plaintiff’s knowledge and experience in his chosen field for the remainder of his life.
Absent other infirmities, “bargains . . . moved upon calculated considerations, and, whether provident or improvident, are entitled nevertheless to the sanctions of the law.”
United States
v.
United Shoe Machinery Co.,
Under the facts of this case, the recited consideration constituted a benefit to the defendant, as well as a detriment to the plaintiff, and was therefore sufficient consideration under the general rule set out in
Finlay
v.
Swirsky,
supra. An exclusive right to the сounseling of the plaintiff, who had had almost fifty years of experience in the defendant’s business, including some twenty years in positions of ultimate responsibility, and whose capacities are unchallenged, cannot reasonably be held to be valueless. Exactly what value might be placed on such a right is of course irrelevant to this issue. The doctrine of consideration does not require or imply an equal exchange between the contracting parties. “That which is bargained-for by the promisor and given in exchange for the promise by the promisee is not made insufficient as a consideration by the fact that its value in the market is not equal to that which is promised. Consideration in fact bargained for is not required to be adequate in the sense of equality in value.” 1 Corbin, Contracts § 127; see
Clark
v.
Sigourney,
One additional aspect of the issue of consideration needs discussion. The defendant has claimed that the agreement was motivated by a desire to compensate the plaintiff during his retirement years for his past services to the company. Judging from certain language in the preamble to the agreement referring to the company’s custom of paying pensions to its retired personnel, this was undоubtedly true in part. The general rule is that past services will not constitute a sufficient consideration for an executory promise of compensation for those services.
Moore
v.
Keystone Macaroni Mfg. Co.,
II
The special defense that the contrаct was manifestly unfair to the corporation uses the words contained in General Statutes § 33-323, having to do with corporate transactions with directors and others.’ This section of the Stock Corporation Act became effective on January 1, 1961, after the date of this agreement, and is therefore inapplicable to this case. While this section is specifically referred to by both parties in their briefs, the only relevant rule is that contained in
Massoth
v.
Central Bus Corporation,
It is true, as the defendant claims, that the dealings of a director with the corporation are subjected to rigorous scrutiny and must be shown to be in good faith and contain inherent fairness to the corporation. “The essence of the test is whether or not under all the circumstances the transaction carries the earmarks of an arm’s length bargain.”
While it was found by the trial court that some of the directors were longtime friends of the plaintiff, that he had hired one director in 1937 who later became president of the cоmpany when the plaintiff retired, and that the directors had had a long intimate business association with the plaintiff, nowhere in the finding did the trial court find or conclude that the transaction was the result of bad faith, dishonesty or unfairness. From a review of the subordinate facts, it is clear that the plaintiff’s experience was a potentially valuable asset to the defendant, or to any other company engaged in a similar business, and that the annual payments to be made to the plaintiff were in a reasonable amount. The burden of showing that the agreement was fair was thus met by the plaintiff. There was no evidence that the agreement was a product of collusion between the plaintiff and the other members of the board or that it was anything other than an arm’s length transaction initiated by, and in the best interests of, the corporation. The claim that the agreement was unfair or lacking in adequate consideration cannot therefore be supported by the facts as found.
The trial court concluded that the defendant’s board of directors did not have authority to enter into the agreement in questiоn. Under chapter 590 of the General Statutes, in effect at the time this agreement was adopted, the management of a corporation was vested by statute in its board of directors. General Statutes § 33-46 (repealed, effective January 1, 1961, by Public Acts 1959, No. 618, § 137) ;
2
Greenberg
v.
Harrison,
The first of the substantive grounds consists of the conclusion that the directors had no authority to make a grаtuitous award to the plaintiff. Since we have already determined that there was sufficient consideration as a matter of law to support the agreement, its characterization by the trial court as a gratuity cannot be sustained. Therefore, without otherwise considering the merits of this argument, we hold that the agreement is not invalid on the ground that it constituted a gratuitous award beyond the powers of the board of directors.
The second question involving the substance of the contract is whether or not the directors had authority to enter into an agreement providing for lifetime payments to the plaintiff. There is some authority for the proposition that directors have no power to hire an employee on a lifetime basis. 2 Fletcher, Corporations (Perm. Ed. Rev.) § 514, p. 571, and cases cited. Such cases are generally based on the theory that a board of directors, in selecting the management personnel of the corporation, should not be allowed to hamstring future boards in the overall supervision of the enterprise and the implementation of changing corporаte policy. In the present case, however, the agreement between the parties did not contemplate that the plaintiff would undertake specific managerial duties. On the contrary, it contemplated the plaintiff’s retirement from active employment with the defend
Under the facts of this case the contract could nоt continue for an unreasonable length of time in view of the plaintiff’s age — over seventy at the time of its execution and over seventy-four at the time of trial. Lifetime certainly means a limited period of time under these circumstances.
Two matters of corporate procedure remain to be discussed. The first concerns the trial court’s finding that the directоrs were not given formal notice of the November 4, 1960, meeting. All of the
On review of the issues presented, therefore, we hold that the agreement was supported by consideration, was fair to the defendant and was a proper exercise of corporate powers by the hoard of directors.
There is error, the judgment is set aside and the case is remanded with direction to render judgment for the plaintiff in accordance with this opinion.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
The defendant apparently thought that its agreement was an unwise bargain, but a bargain nevertheless, for its president wrote the plaintiff in April, 1963, suggesting that the annual payments be reduced to $7500 and stipulating that “[a]ll other conditions will remain the same.”
General Statutes §33-46 provided: “The property and affairs of each corporation shall be managed by three or more directors. . . .” General Statutes § 33-313, which became effective on January 1, 1961, states: “(a) Subject to any provisions pertaining thereto contained in the certificate of incorporation, the business, property and affairs of a corporation shall be managed by its board of directors.”
If the agreement is a sham, however, or wholly lacking in consideration, or otherwise unconscionable, it may be set aside by the courts.
Beers
v.
New York Life Ins. Co.,
