86 A. 564 | Conn. | 1913
This action is brought to enforce a contract entered into on June 1st, 1908, between the plaintiff and defendant for the period of one year, by which the defendant, a physician and surgeon, agreed for a stipulated consideration to take charge of the plaintiff's business as a physician and surgeon in New Britain. The fifth clause of the contract was as follows: "It is agreed by and between the parties hereto that this agreement may terminate at any time when desirable by either party. In that event the said Waterman Lyon agrees that he will not locate or open an office within the limits of the town of New Britain for the practice of his profession." This contract was continued by the parties, and on May 17th, 1911, an amendment thereto relating to the consideration to be received by the defendant was made. Thereafter, in 1912, the defendant left the employ of the plaintiff, and subsequently opened an office for the general practice of medicine in said New Britain.
The assignment of errors is confined to the overruling of the defendant's demurrer to the complaint. The first ground of demurrer is that the restriction against the defendant practicing his profession in New Britain took effect only in the event that the agreement of hiring terminated within the specified period of one year, being the life of the contract. The complaint, fairly construed, alleges the continuance of the contract until the defendant left the employ of the plaintiff. The continuance of the contract may have been by renewal from year to year, or by general agreement or acquiescence of the parties. If its continuance was under a general agreement or acquiescence, all of its provisions, so far as applicable, remained in force; and *26 such provisions as were inapplicable to the period beyond the term of the original contract ceased to be effective. The only provision of the contract falling within this ineffective class was that providing that the contract should continue "for a period of one year." Obviously this could apply only to renewals of the contract for the term of one year. The provision of restriction was a necessary part of the contract, containing, as it did, protection for the experienced practitioner against the taking away of his practice by his assistant upon leaving his employ, in which the assistant had had the opportunity to gain the confidence and favor of the patients of his employer. The continuance of the contract continued the restriction.
We agree with the defendant that Exhibit B, amending the terms of the contract, did not renew the contract; all that it did was to modify the terms of the consideration of an existing contract. The defendant says this amendment is equivalent to saying "either party may terminate this agreement during said term of one year." Such a construction does violence to the language used, and goes counter to the plain intent of the contract. If the defendant could begin practice the day after the year ended, he would be in a better position to hold his employer's practice than if he had left the employ in the middle of the year. Grounds one and two are not well taken.
The demurrer further attacks the validity of this contract because it is (1) an agreement in restraint of trade, and (2) so inequitable, oppressive, and contrary to public policy, as to be unenforceable in a court of equity. This contract is not claimed to be one in general, but in partial, restraint of trade. A contract of this character, if not against public policy, is valid if it be founded upon a legal consideration and be reasonable.Cook v. Johnson,
The defendant insists there is a distinction between a business and a profession; that while the period of restriction as to a business may be unlimited, the rule should not apply to a profession, since it is a purely personal relation whose benefits cease upon death or the cessation from practice. We do not think the distinction tenable. A profession partakes on its financial side of a commercial business, and its good will is often a valuable asset. It is true the profession has its personal side, but it is not true, except under exceptional circumstances, that a professional man is indispensable to any community. The distinction sought is made in a few cases, i. e. Mandeville v. Harman,
The authorities generally are in accord upon the rule of law governing this action. A contract between an employer and employee providing for the restraint of the latter, after ceasing to be in his employ, from continuing in a similar employment, will be sustained if it be not against public policy, and be not unreasonable under the circumstances of the case, and be made on good consideration.
The facts of the complaint — and each case must be governed by its own facts — show no circumstances of hardship attendant upon the making of the contract, and no advantage taken of the employee and no wider restriction than is reasonably necessary for the protection of the employer; therefore the restrictive covenant cannot be held to be unreasonable.
The defendant points out that the restrictive covenant is unlimited in time, while the judgment limits the period of restriction to the time the plaintiff shall or may be practicing his profession in New Britain, and from this fact he argues that the contract as written was too unreasonable for enforcement. This limitation in the judgment was admittedly inserted at the *30
request of the defendant and with the acquiescence of the plaintiff. The defendant's argument rests upon a fact of his making, and not upon one of the court's making. The restriction, though in specific terms not limited in time, was by the fair construction of other provisions of the contract limited to the lifetime of the plaintiff. Webster v. Buss,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.