263 Pa. 421 | Pa. | 1919
Opinion by
Plaintiffs since 1892 have been carrying on, in the City of Philadelphia, the business of curing and smoking
“IV. Samuel Sklaroff and Harry Sklaroff, individually and trading under any of the names hereinbefore mentioned, as parties of the second part, are to discontinue their present business of curing and smoking fish, and are not to engage in said business in the States of Pennsylvania and New Jersey.
“V. It is further agreed that neither Samuel Sklaroff nor Harry Sklaroff will hereafter engage in any business pertaining to fish or delicatessen under the firm name of ‘Harry Sklaroff & Son’ or ‘Sons’ or ‘H. Sklaroff & Son’ or ‘Sons.’ ” ■
When the consideration money was ascertained and paid in the manner provided by the agreement, a, bill of sale was executed and delivered which specified, inter alia, as follows: “We Harry Sklaroff and Samuel Sklaroff, individually and trading as Harry or H. Sklaroff & Son, further agree not to engage in the business of curing and smoking fish directly or indirectly in the States of Pennsylvania and New Jersey.”
The present bill in equity avers these defendants are violating the covenants above set forth, and are engaging in the same kind of business through the agency of Harry Granoff and Morris Beloff (or Belofsky), the other defendants, under the name of the Pennsylvania Smoked Fish Company, H. Sklaroff & Son, Samuel H. Sklaroff, S. H. Sklaroff & Co., and Harry Sklaroff & Son.
In their answer the two Sklaroffs denied that they were violating their covenants, asserting that the purchase of their business was in pursuance of a scheme of
The agreement being limited in space, though unlimited in time, is prima facie good, and there is nothing in this case to enable us to review the decision below holding it to be so. Instances may arise in which, without evidence being produced, a court can determine that such an agreement would be unreasonable; as, for instance, in the case of a like restraint on the sale of a small retail grocery business. But where, as in this case, the business is a wholesale business, and all the defendants expressly admit “complainants are engaged in interstate commerce, and are known, as stated in the bill, in the fish markets of the United States, Canada and Europe,” in the absence of proof showing the restraint to be unreasonable, and there is none, we would not be justified in holding it to be so.
Upon the question as to whether or not there was sufficient evidence to support the decree, we need only say that a careful reading of all of it, does not disclose to us any error. From a very careful review thereof, the trial judge concluded that the story of Granoff and Belofsky as to the money they had invested in the new business “was fabricated,” that “the money was Harry Sklaroff’s,” and that “there has been clearly established an intention on the part of defendants to evade the con
The decree of the court below is affirmed, and the appeal dismissed, at the cost of appellants.