44 A. 300 | N.H. | 1894
The exceptions relate to the question of damages, and the damages depend upon the construction of the contract.
There is no provision in the contract that the plaintiffs will buy or the defendants sell more blankets at the same or other prices. Whatever either party may have had in contemplation as to further purchases or sales, they came to no agreement or understanding in relation to the matter, and neither could compel the other respectively to buy or sell, nor recover damages for his refusal. The fact that two of the blankets were designated as "sample" indicates that the parties had in mind that the plaintiffs might purchase more blankets of those styles. But the entire absence of any stipulation to that effect is conclusive that neither party understood there was a contract for such further purchase or sale.
The agreement not to sell to others is without limitation as to time. There are cases of contracts in restraint of trade where it has been held that the contract terminated only with the life of the vendor. In Webster v. Buss,
It must be assumed that the plaintiffs paid a larger price than they otherwise would, because of the defendants' agreement not to sell to others in the city where they were engaged in selling blankets. The less competition, the greater ordinarily would be their profits. Contracts in restraint of trade are not favored in the law, and are not to be extended by construction beyond the fair and natural import of the language used. Smith v. Gibbs,
It cannot be supposed the parties intended the restraint to last after the necessity for it ceased to exist. Such a construction would be unreasonable. The object of the parties was the prevention of competition. This case, in principle, does not differ from the cases generally in restraint of trade. In Webster v. Buss, supra, the purchaser could not enjoy the full fruits of his purchase unless the vendor refrained from interference so long as he carried on the business. So here, the object of the parties — the prevention of competition — required the defendants to refrain from sales to other New York dealers until the plaintiffs could sell, in the ordinary course of business, the blankets which they bought on the faith of the defendants' contract. The true rule was given in the instructions to the jury, to wit: The stipulation not to sell to others in New York continued for such length of time as would afford the plaintiffs a reasonable opportunity for disposing of the blankets in the usual course of trade with the exercise of due diligence and skill.
The evidence offered by the plaintiffs and excluded, related to a conversation prior to the negotiation which terminated in the written contract, in which all prior negotiations were merged, and therefore was properly rejected. An additional objection to it is, that there was no agreement for a sale of 3,000 blankets, but a statement merely by the plaintiffs' agent that, if they could have the exclusive sale in New York city, they could probably sell that number of blankets. No time within which they could have sold that quantity, and no price which they would have been willing to pay, seems to have been mentioned.
Evidence of the purchase of 275 blankets in September, 1892, was immaterial. They were not included in the written contract.
The motion to set aside the verdict must be denied, and the
Exceptions overruled.
CHASE, J., did not sit: the others concurred. *219