105 Ga. 821 | Ga. | 1899
Simon Stein entered into an agreement with the National Life Association of Hartford, Conn., whereby he became its general or managing agent in and for the States of Georgia and Alabama, for the purpose of procuring applications for membership in the association, delivering policies issued upon applications so effected, and collecting the first payments "thereon. Under the agreement, by which the managing agent’s authority was expressly limited, Stein was to solicit and procure the applications of persons to become members of the association, procure the appointment of soliciting agents in his territory who should have no claim against the association for commissions or otherwise by reason of their appointment, forward all applications to the home office of the association for approval ■or rejection, receive and deliver policies, and receive the first payment of the premium. The agreement provided certain commissions and charges to be allowed Stein, and specified that .all moneys received and collected for the association by Stein
In August, 1898, the National Life Association filed a petition in the superior court, against Stein, to which was attached a copy of the contract above mentioned. This petition alleged that Stein had, under the contract, been appointed general or
Stein in his answer alleged that he had never abandoned the contract until long after the petitioner had done so and had committed breaches of it which made it impossible for him to continue as its agent under the contract. He claimed that the association had violated its contracts with its policy-holders and admitted in letters to such policy-holders that it had done so. He attached to his answer a copy of the statement of the insurance commissioner of Connecticut, the State of the association’s incorporation, showing that the officers of the association had attempted to mislead and deceive the insurance department and the general public by the suppression of death claims, reporting as payments to beneficiaries payments to other people, entering lapsed insurance, and i-n other ways; that it was their
The case was tried upon the petition and answer and an affidavit signed by certain policy-holders. Exception is taken to the admission in evidence of the affidavit, but, under the view we take of the case, it is not necessary to decide whether or not it should have been admitted. It tended to show only that Stein had attempted to dissuade affiants from continuing their policies. The judge granted an order, to be of force until the final decree in the case, restraining Stein from acting .as agent of the association or collecting any moneys or assets belonging
Careful reading of the contract entered into by Stein and the ■association reveals no stipulation that Stein should, after severance of his connection with the association, represent no other insurance company or refrain from influencing policy-holders to allow their policies to lapse; nor was there language from which such provision should be implied. Hence the cases •cited, which hold that certain contracts in partial restraint of trade are enforceable, are not here in point. Contracts in restraint of trade are enforced only when the restraint is reasonably limited as to time or place. The order granted in the present case is in restraint of trade, presumably in the enforcement of a contract, when not only is there no limitation in the contract of such restraint, but when there is no stipulation in the contract which can be construed as referring to the question -of restraint at all. Courts of equity will sometimes enjoin the commission of a tort, but we can not see that this doctrine can be applied here; for Stein is enjoined from doing things which, however injurious to the association, are certainly not tortious.1 Tt may be that he had been guilty of an actionable tort in making false statements as to the association and to its injury, but he is enjoined, by the judge’s order, not from repeating any such statements, but from using any means whatever to injure the business of the association or to win over its policy-holders to any other insurance company. The injunction must have been granted, as to this matter, by applying to the case the
Reversed.