This is a declaratory judgment action. It was brought in the trial court by appellants for an adjudication that a written compromise settlement agreement containing covenants against competition was null and void as a matter of law, or, in the alternative, that the restrictions as to time and place are unreasonable and should be modified. The case was tried to a jury which answered all special issues in favor of the appellees, defendants below, and judgment was rendered on the verdict of the jury that all relief sought by appellants be denied.
Initially, appellees were the owners and operators of a beauty salon that was later expanded to two incorporated businesses of the same nature. At different times, each of the three plaintiffs were employed as hairstylists and two of them, at the time of their employment, executed a written contract with their employer providing negative covenants against competition. During employment, and for a period of three years following termination, they were to be prohibited from engaging in the practice of hairdressing or cosmetology in Houston or Harris County or within fifty miles from any beauty salon operated by the employers. The third plaintiff did not execute an employment contract. On different subsequent dates each of the plaintiffs terminated their employment and thereafter began practicing cosmetology within the restricted time and area.
As a result of this action on the part of the former employees, a previous suit was filed by appellees here against two of the appellants in this action for damages and to enjoin such practice. That suit was terminated by the compromise settlement agreement which provided that they, the former employees and appellants here, for a period of ten years, were not to engage in the practice of hairdressing or cosmetology within a portion of Harris County and two additional designated cities. In turn, and for the same period, the employers, and appellees here, were not to practice in the remaining portion of Harris County or in another additional designated city. By a letter agreement, the third plaintiff and appellant here, made himself a party to the compromise settlement agreement. The judgment of the court in that former action recited that all matters in controversy had been settled and that the plaintiffs were to take nothing.
It is the compromise settlement agreement that is here in issue. The trial court was requested, under the Declaratory Judgment Act of this State, Art. 2524 — 1, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St, to declare the compromise settlement agreement to be violative of the Anti-Trust laws of this State, Articles 7426-7438, V.A.C.S., and to be null and void as a matter of law. In the alternative, the trial court was requested to order equitable reformation of the restrictive covenants that the compromise settlement agreement contained.
The jury verdict found that the restrictive covenants against competition that were contained in the compromise settlement agreement were reasonable and necessary and that the appellees here had relied on the provisions of the compromise settlement agreement to their detriment. The judgment of the trial court denied all declaratory and equitable relief sought by the appellants, recited that all matters of fact and law were found in favor of appel-lees and further recited that appellants were without “clean hands.” Appellants made no motion for new trial and their motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict of the jury was overruled in the judgment.
Appellants urge two points of error: that the trial court erred in denying their motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict of the jury because the compromise settlement agreement is invalid as a matter of law, and secondly, that the court erred in denying their motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict of the jury because the reasonableness of the restrictions as to time and area contained in the compromise settle *196 ment agreement were not issues of fact to be determined by the jury but were questions of law to be determined by the court and that the evidence showed that the restrictions were unreasonable and excessive.
This -opinion will be based on appellee’s first counterpoint making it unnecessary to consider the remaining matters that are urged by appellees. It is that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying appellants’ declaratory relief since appellants’ proof failed to establish a justiciable controversy within the requirements of the Texas Declaratory Judgment Act.
It is basic that “a justiciable, actual, real and bona fide controversy” is essential to the maintenance of a declaratory judgment action. Harris County Tax Assessor-Collector v. Reed, Tex.Civ.App.,
In the case at bar, one of the appellants testified that’ the terms of the compromise settlement agreement were “unreasonable” and that he had not “wanted” the ten year restriction when- he signed the settlement agreement. He further testified that he had taken no action toward negotiation for lease space in the prohibited area and that “we have never done anything” about it. He was asked specifically, “and at this time you have no basic intention of opening a shop up within the area of restriction in the compromise agreement?” His answer, “No, sir.” The record makes apparent that the plaintiffs were “not pleased,” were “not happy” and did not “like” the agreement they had previously made. It is equally apparent that they deemed the terms of the agreement “unreasonable.” Nowhere, however, does the record reflect a present or prospective intention on the part of the appellants to engage in the practice of cosmetology in the prohibited area. The record does not indicate the imminence of litigation between the parties unless the contractual uncertainties were judicially declared. “A. mere difference of opinion, not involving the assertion of adverse interests, is not sufficient to support an action for declaratory judgment.” 26 C.J.S. Declaratory Judgments, § 29, p. 106.
In Spradley v. Whitehall, Tex.Civ.App.,
In California Products, Inc. v. Puretex Lemon Juice, Inc.,
We are of the opinion that the plaintiffs’ proof in this record presents no “actual, genuine, live, controversy.” A declaratory judgment in this instance would be in the nature of an advisory opinion that might or might not affect the future relations of the parties, that might or might not afford “specific relief,” that might or might not affect the “legal relations” of the parties. Whether or not it did so, in each instance, would have to be later determined by what, if any, subsequent action the parties took. “The court will not declare rights on facts which have not arisen or adjudicate matters which are contingent, uncertain, or rest in the future. A future right or interest which is dependent on a contingency or event which may never happen is not the proper subject of a declaratory judgment.” 26 C.J.S. Declaratory Judgments, § 28, p. 104.
The record that is presently before this Court does not portray a justiciable controversy that is essential to jurisdiction.
The absence of a justiciable controversy to confer jurisdiction is presented for the first time to this court; however, it does not appear that it was presented or urged before the trial court. The burden of establishing jurisdiction, of proving a justiciable controversy, clearly falls on the moving party, appellants here. “Ordinarily one who first requests the intervention of a court in his behalf — who asserts a right or a duty and demands a remedy' — is properly required to carry the burden of proving his right to the remedy * * *. When, by statute, a litigant is allowed to initiate judicial action merely to determine his legal relationships, the logic of the above situation is unchanged.” Pace Corp. v. Jackson,
In Orange Independent School Dist. v. West Orange Independent School Dist., Tex.Civ.App,
*198 “It is elementary law that courts have no jurisdiction to render declaratory a judgment in the absence of a justiciable or actual controversy — in other words the existence and presentation to the court of an actionable or justiciable controversy is essential to the exercise of jurisdiction by the court appealed to.” Anderson, Actions for Declaratory Judgments, Vol. 1, Sec. 16, pp. 65-67.
Proof of a justiciable controversy is an essential element of jurisdiction. In the absence of its proof the trial court lacked jurisdiction and, as the Beaumont Court recites, so does the appellant court.
For the reasons stated, the cause is dismissed for want of jurisdiction.
