This is a suit in equity seeking to enforce a negative covenant contained in a contract of employment, under seal, executed by the parties in duplicate on March 8, 1929.
The said contract reads as follows: "Memorandum of
. The defendant’s original answer denied the execution of the contract and the genuineness of his alleged signature; set up infancy; alleged lack of consideration, that the terms of the contract were unreasonably restrictive, and that the plaintiff had failed to perform its part of the contract according to the terms thereof and had broken the same. After the master’s report was filed the defendant was allowed to amend his answer by adding that, at the time
The master’s report, briefly stated, discloses in substance the following facts: The plaintiff is engaged in the business of selling ice at wholesale and retail in the city of Pittsfield, Massachusetts. Since April 13, 1935, it has been operated under the amendment to the Federal bankruptcy act, known as § 77B (U. S. C. Title 11, § 207). William D. Shew and Frederick W. Arnold were duly appointed by the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut, on May 15, 1935, “permanent trustees of The Southern New England Ice Company . . . with the same powers as those exercised by a receiver in equity, to the extent consistent with the provisions of” said § 77B. The defendant executed the contract above set forth on March 8, 1929. He was then nineteen years of age, having been born on January 5, 1910. Prior to the execution of the said contract he had been employed by the plaintiff, doing practically the same work as that contemplated by the written contract. He was then employed from week to week on a per diem rate and was under no legal obligation to remain in the plaintiff’s employ. At the time of the execution of the contract the defendant was informed that those of the employees who signed the written contract would be given a preference as to work. Since the execution of the contract he has received steady employment. He continued in the employ of the plaintiff until May 1, 1935, when he resigned his position and was paid in full in accordance with the terms of the contract.
The master found that after "the defendant became of age on January 5, 1931,. he did nothing to repudiate his contract, nor did he express any dissatisfaction with the same nnt.il at least one and one half years after attaining his majority, at which time he said he was sorry that he had signed the contract. On the evidence the master found that the contract was not unreasonably restrictive. He further found that the defendant was employed by the plaintiff in the capacity of driver to sell and deliver ice at
On recommittal on the questions raised by the amended answer the master found that the defendant “on April 20, 1935, gave notice of his intention to quit his job on May 1, 1935,” stating that he was quitting because he thought “he could better himself”; that at that time there was no conversation as to trustees of The Southern New England Ice Company operating the business; that since May 1, 1935, the business of the plaintiff has been conducted in the same manner as it had for many years prior thereto; that the same number of drivers are employed as were employed at the time the defendant quit his job; and that the plaintiff has continued to pay wages due to its employees on Wednesday of each week and has done this without interruption, the only change being that in some cases the wages of the men have been increased and in no case has there been a reduction in pay.
The defendant filed many objections to the master’s original report and to the report on recommittal. The only exceptions resultant therefrom argued in his brief (all others are taken to be waived) relate to the effect upon the plaintiff’s right to relief of its alleged inability further to perform its part of the written agreement, and of the alleged lack of remedy to the defendant for any breach of the written agreement.
On the facts found, it is plain that the plaintiff did not discharge the defendant, and it is clear that the plaintiff fully performed its part of the contract. The provision in the contract, “That if within six months of the termination or suspension of said employment said employee resumes
Decree affirmed with costs.
48 U. S. Sts. at Large, 912.