2 A.D.2d 494 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1956
The plaintiff has recovered a substantial judgment for damages upon the theory that the defendant maliciously induced the breach of trucking contracts which had been entered into between the plaintiff and a number of dairy farmers.
This case has been tried twice. A verdict in favor of the plaintiff upon the first trial was set aside by the Trial Justice on the ground that it was against the weight of the evidence. The Justice presiding at the second trial indicated that he, too, had been inclined to set aside the verdict but, in view of the fact that two juries had arrived at the same result, he had decided to allow the verdict to stand. We have concluded that the judgment should be reversed and the complaint dismissed.
The plaintiff was engaged in the business of hauling milk from various dairy farms in the vicinity of Downsville, New York, to the defendant’s milk plant at Margaretville, New York. The defendant, as its name indicates, is a co-operative association of dairy farmers. The farmers with whom the plaintiff had contracted for trucking were all members of the defendant association. Prior to 1949, the defendant’s plant had been located at Downsville, New York, and the plaintiff was one of several truckers who hauled milk to the plant for farmers in that area. Because of the condemnation of many farms by the New York City Board of Water Supply, the number of dairy farms operating in the area was greatly reduced and the defendant decided to close the Downsville plant and to transfer the patronage of the farmers in that area to its Margaretville plant, about 20 miles away. There obviously was not enough business to sustain several truckers and the defendant selected the plaintiff and one Williams as the two truckers who would serve the farmers in the Downsville area and bring their milk to Margaretville. While the defendant had operated its plant at Downsville, the cost of hauling the milk to the plant had been borne wholly by the farmers. The truckers’ charges, about 15 cents per hundredweight, had been deducted by the defendant from the amounts owing to the farmers and had been paid over by it to the truckers. Because of the longer haul to Margaret-ville, the defendant agreed to contribute about 5 cents per hundredweight during the summer months and 10 cents per hundredweight during the winter months, as an additional payment to the truckers. The contract of transportation was in each instance made orally between the farmer and the trucker but, since it was not economically feasible for a trucker to engage in the business of transporting milk unless he had a substantial number of customers along the same route, the farmers had to act co-operatively in arranging for the serv
It thus appears that the defendant acted as the agent of the farmers in making arrangements for the trucking, subject to ratification or adoption of the arrangements by the individual farmers. The defendant had an interest in seeing to it that satisfactory arrangements were made, both in order to assure a steady flow of milk at its plant and in order to protect the farmers as its members. In the special case of the transportation to the Margaretville plant, the defendant had an additional interest growing out of the fact that it contributed a subsidy for part of the cost of the transportation.
In 1949, when the plaintiff started to haul milk to the Margaret-ville plant, he had about 23 customers on his route. The New York City water supply project continued to absorb dairy farms and, in the ensuing years, several of the dairy farmers on the plaintiff’s route ceased to operate, with the result that in 1953 the plaintiff had only 13 customers left. The plaintiff contended that this volume of business did not produce a sufficient income at the rates currently paid. He complained about this from time to time to his farmer customers and to the officials of the defendant. The situation came to a head late in 1953. On Wednesday, November 4, the plaintiff telephoned to one Clark, a member of the board of directors of the defendant, who resided in the vicinity, and took the matter up with him. There is a controversy as to the exact content of the conversation. The plaintiff testified that he demanded more money and stated that he was losing money at the current rates but he denied that he threatened to quit if more money was not forthcoming. On the other hand, Clark testified that the plaintiff told him that he would quit if the defendant did not increase the amount of its payment. According to Clark, the plaintiff said that he would give the defendant until the first of the following week to provide additional money and, if it failed to do so, he would quit hauling the milk. The following Friday, November 6, a conference was held at the office of the defendant at which its division representative, its local field representative and the manager of the milk plant were all present. The plaintiff repeated his demands, but the defendant’s representatives told him that they
Accordingly, on Monday, November 9, after the plaintiff had delivered a truckload of milk at the defendant’s plant, the defendant declined to return the empty milk cans to the plaintiff but turned them over to Williams who, in regular course, returned them to the farmers. Thereafter, the farmers continued to ship their milk by Williams’ truck, without protest or objection. The plaintiff then brought this action for damages against the defendant.
It is undisputed that the oral contracts between the plaintiff and the farmers were terminable at will and that the agreement of the defendant to pay a subsidy was also terminable at will. The plaintiff, nevertheless, characterized his action as an action for damages for maliciously inducing the breach of the contracts between himself and the farmers. Since the contracts were terminable at will, the discontinuance of the plaintiff’s services, however induced, could not constitute a breach of contract. The action must, therefore, be regarded as one for damages for inducing the discontinuance of business relations rather than as one for the inducing of a breach of contract. It is settled that such an action can be maintained only upon a showing that the defendant acted solely out of a
“ And the action is brought upon the theory that this defendant maliciously and without legal or social justification caused these producers to discontinue the plaintiff’s services. If the defendant deprived the plaintiff of his employment by means not in themselves unlawful, by acts not in themselves unlawful, have [sic] any proper purpose to serve, they are not liable for any damage they caused. The genesis which will make a lawful act unlawful must be a malicious one, unmixed with any other, and exclusively directed to injury and damage of another.
‘ ‘ In other words it is incumbent upon the plaintiff to establish to your satisfaction that the action of the defendant was without legal or social justification; that their action was not motivated by a proper desire.”
No exception was taken to the charge and there was no request to charge. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff in the amount of $4,357.
It is virtually undisputed that the verdict cannot be allowed to stand upon the theory upon which the case was submitted to the jury. It is clear beyond question that the defendant did not act out of “ disinterested malevolence ”, the epigrammatic phrase coined by Justice Holmes in American Bank & Trust Co. v. Federal Reserve Bank (256 U. S. 350, 358). (See Reinforce, Inc., v. Birney, supra, p. 170.) Indeed upon the oral argument, the plaintiff’s counsel disavowed any claim that the defendant had acted only to injure the plaintiff, without any intention to further its own interests.
Whether we take the plaintiff’s version of the conference of November. 6 or the defendant’s version, it is clear that the defendant acted for the legitimate purpose of protecting and furthering its own economic interests and those of its members. Under the defendant’s version, which we believe to be the one supported by the weight of the credible testimony, the plaintiff gave notice at the conference of his intention to quit on the following Monday, if the defendant did not increase the rate of its payments to him; the defendant then naturally proceeded to make other arrangements so that trucking services would be available to its farmer members and so that the flow of millr to its plant would be maintained without interruption. Under this version of the transaction, the termination of the
As has been indicated, the plaintiff’s counsel recognizes, upon this appeal, that the defendant’s action was motivated, at least in part, by a desire to serve its own interests and those of its members and that therefore it could not be found that the defendant’s action had its genesis solely in a desire to injure the plaintiff unmixed with any other motive. _ His principal contention seems to be that the presence of a business motive was immaterial; that the defendant’s desire to serve
The plaintiff falls into the fallacy of assuming that, since a contract terminable at will may be the subject of an action in tort for damages for inducing its termination, the same rules of law are applicable to such a contract as are applicable to a contract having a definite term. But the rules Avith respect to the scope of the defendant’s privilege are wholly different in the two classes of eases. The fact that the contract is terminable at will greatly broadens the scope of the defendant’s privilege. The privilege in such a case is substantially the same as the privilege of inducing third persons not to enter into neAV business relations with the plaintiff. (Restatement, Torts, § 766 and comment c to that section.) Under the principles of the free enterprise system, that privilege is a very broad one and it is forfeited only when the defendant’s action, otherwise lawful, is intended solely to injure the plaintiff without any expectation of social or economic advantage (Beardsley v. Kilmer, 236 N. Y. 80). On the other hand, the furthering of one’s business interests does not ordinarily justify the inducing of the breach of a contract for a definite term. Thus, for example, one may not with impunity seek to gain new customers by inducing them to breach their existing contracts Avith others (Campbell v. Gates, 236 N. Y. 457) but, in the free play of competition, one may seek to win for himself the patronage of the customers of others, by inducing them to discontinue their existing business relations, provided that they are terminable at will. (Restatement, Torts, § 768; Prosser on Torts [2d ed.], pp. 735-738; Coleman & Morris v. Pisciotta, 279 App. Div. 656).
Dean Prosser suggests in his illuminating work that “ So much more is allowed in the way of interference to further the defendant’s own legitimate interests where the contract is subject to such termination, that contracts terminable at will might very well be placed in an intermediate classification of their own, half way between contracts for a definite term and the mere expectancy of prospective advantage” (Prosser on Torts [2d ed.], pp. 726-727; see, also, pp. 741-742). As has been noted above, the American Law Institute goes further and assimilates contracts terminable at will to a mere expectancy of future business relations, so far as the privilege of interfer
It thus appears that, under the theory upon which the case was submitted to the jury, the plaintiff failed to establish a cause of action and that the judgment should be reversed and the complaint dismissed.
There is a suggestion in the plaintiff’s brief of another theory upon which a recovery might be sought, different from the theory upon which the case was submitted. The plaintiff’s counsel points out that, according to the defendant’s own evidence, when the representatives of the defendant called upon the farmers, after the conference of November 6, they told them that the plaintiff had quit and the plaintiff argues that, under his version of the conference of November 6, this statement was false. It is undoubtedly true that if one uses unlawful or improper means to bring about the termination of a contract which is terminable at will, he may be liable for the damages caused, even though his ultimate objective may have been the justifiable one of furthering his own business interests (Restatement, Torts, § 767, comment b). The use of a deliberate falsehood undoubtedly constitutes unlawful means (Al Raschid v. News Syndicate Co., 265 N. Y. 1). But this theory cannot be injected into the case at this late stage to sustain a recovery by the plaintiff. It was not pleaded in the complaint nor was it covered by the plaintiff’s motion made at the end of the plaintiff’s case “ to conform the pleadings to the proof ”. The motion related to points specifically mentioned not relevant here. Furthermore, the proof that the defendant had told the farmers that the plaintiff had quit came in as part of the defendant’s case and there was no such proof in the case at the time of the making of the motion to amend to conform to the proof. The three farmer witnesses, who had been called by the plaintiff to support his contention that he had not quit, all testified that they had not been told by the defendant that the plaintiff had quit.
Apart from this, the proof was insufficient to establish a case against the defendant upon the theory of the use of unlawful means. There was no showing that the defendant’s agents acted in bad faith in making the statement that the plaintiff had quit or that they had any intention to deceive the farmers to whom the statement was made. The most that can be claimed on that score is that there was a misunderstanding and that the defendant’s agents were mistaken in interpreting the plain
In any event, as we have seen, the plaintiff made no request to submit to the jury the theory of the use of unlawful means and he acquiesced in the charge which made the case turn wholly on the presence or absence of a legitimate business motive on the part of the defendant. This became the law of the case (Owen v. Rochester-Penfield Bus Co., 304 N. Y. 457). The sufficiency of the plaintiff’s case must be determined upon this appeal upon the basis of the theory upon which the case was tried and submitted.
The judgment appealed from should be reversed on the law and the facts and the complaint dismissed, without costs.
Foster, P. J., Bergan, Coon, and Gibson, JJ., concur.
Judgment appealed from reversed, on the law and the facts, and the complaint dismissed, without costs.