106 Minn. 119 | Minn. | 1908
This action was brought to restrain and enjoin defendants from engaging in the laundry business within a radius of five miles from the city of Northfield. Defendants interposed a general demurrer to the complaint and appealed from an order overruling it.
The complaint alleges that prior to December 21, 1906, defendants had established, and for several years theretofore had conducted, in the city of Northfield a steam laundry under the copartnership name of Davison & Lyman, and were enjoying a large and profitable trade; that on the date stated plaintiffs and defendants entered into a contract under and by which plaintiffs purchased from defendants said business and all property used in the operation and conduct of the same for the consideration of $5,000. The contract was in writing and contained, among other things, the following stipulation: “It is further stipulated that vendors hereby sell and transfer the good will of the Davison & Lyman steam laundry to the vendees herein and agree not'to engage in the laundry business within a radius of five miles from the city of Northfield, Minnesota.” The complaint further alleges that thereafter, and notwithstanding the sale of said business and the good will thereof, as above stated, defendants in violation of the above agreement, organized and equipped a corporation for the purpose of conducting and carrying on a laundry business in said Northfield, and that they are now operating the same with others associated with them. The prayer for relief is that plaintiffs recover of defendants $5,000 damages for the violation of the contract, and that defendants be restrained and enjoined from continuing in said business either as members, stockholders, or agents of the corporation, or as individuals.
The sufficiency of the complaint is challenged in three respects; (1) That the contract by which the good will of the steam laundry was sold to plaintiffs is void for the reason that it is unlimited as to time; (2) that the contract bound defendants only as copartners, and not as individuals; and (3) that the contract is void for want of a suf-. ficient consideration to support it. The objections are not well taken.
2. There is no special force in defendants’ second contention that the contract bound them only as copartners. It is thoroughly settled that the good will of business concerns is, though intangible, a species of property transferable from hand to hand as other property. Bradford v. Montgomery, 115 Tenn. 610, 92 S. W. 1104, 9 L. R. A. (N. S.) 979; Williams v. Wilson, 4 Sandf. Ch. (N. Y.) 379; Hitchcock v. Coker, 6 Adol. & E. 438. And, if sold by a copartnership, the transfer necessarily vests the entire beneficial interest in the purchaser, to the exclusion of any right of the individual members of the selling firm. It stands, so far as bargain and sale is concerned, as other partnership property; and, as an ordinary sale of an article owned by the firm binds all the members thereof, the sale of the good will has the same effect. It would be a far-fetched doctrine that would enable one of the partners to set up his individual claim to property sold by the firm in the usual course of business on the theory that the sale only affected his rights as a copartner. Hubbard v. Miller, 27 Mich. 15, 15 Am. 153. And to construe the contract in harmony with defendants’ contention would expressly destroy the purpose intended by the transaction, viz., the prevention, of defendants, either as partners or individuals, from competing in the laundry business in Northfield. And, though contracts of this kind are generally strictly construed, the rule is not so severe as to justify a con7 elusion at variance with the plain purpose and intention of the parties. Any other conclusion would not only enable the individual partner to reclaim partnership property sold for value during the existence of the firm, but justify the commission by him of a palpable fraud by doing indirectly that which he could not do as a member of the firm. Eisel v. Hayes, 141 Ind. 41, 40 N. E. 119.
3. The contract is shown to have the support of a valuable consideration in the purchase price of the property with the good will as an incident. Eisel v. Hayes, supra. The complaint also sufficiently alleges a violation of the contract. It charges that defendants have been instrumental in the organization of a corporation for the pur
Order affirmed.