187 P. 279 | Mont. | 1920
delivered the opinion of the court.
This action arises out of the following agreement: “The following agreement between W. W. Wylie and the Wylie Permanent Camping Company, successors to the Wylie Camping
“Witness our signatures to the above agreement, made at Helena, Montana, this 28th day of December, 1905.
“W. W. Wylie,
“Wylie Permanent Camping Company,
“By A. L. Smith, Secy.”
The allegations of the complaint are: That William W. Wylie, from the year 1883 down to and including 1905, was engaged in conducting tourists’ parties through the Yellowstone National Park by virtue of a license issued to him, from time to time, by the Interior Department of the federal government; that in the year 1896 he caused to be organized a corporation, named the Wylie Camping Company, sold to it all the equipment previously used by him in the conduct and maintenance of the business, and, during all of the years from 1896 to and including the year 1905, “remained in actual and personal management of the business, ” as he had prior to its organization; that later, in the summer of 1905, he sold and disposed of all of his shares of stock in that company to Harry W. Child, of Helena, and Arthur W. Miles, of Livingston; that thereafter a new corporation called the Wylie Permanent Camping Company was organized by Child and Miles, and all of its equipment was turned over to the new corporation; that defendant, in violation of its agreement, has failed and refused to pay plaintiff the installment of $750 due on July 1, 1908, and every other
The answer consists of general denials, and the affirmative allegation that the agreement in so far as it purported to be a sale of the goodwill of the business was without consideration and void. The new matter was denied by the replication, and upon the issues thus framed a trial was had with the aid of a jury and evidence adduced on behalf of plaintiffs.
W. W. Wylie was sworn on behalf of plaintiffs, his testimony tending to prove his conduct of the tourist and transportation business in the Yellowstone National Park from 1883 down to the time of the sale of his contract with the Wylie Camping Company and all his shares of stock in that company; he testified that he, together with his wife, attended to correspondence received by him from the time of the making of the contract as late as 1916; and encouraged tourists to go with the new corporation. He further states that he was not called upon to perform any services for the defendant after August, 1907, by any of its officers. He testified also that there was nothing said at the time of the sale of his contract and his stock in the old company concerning the transfer of his goodwill nor his license or “anything of the kind.” He acknowledged receiving a letter of date August 29, 1907, from Mr. A. W. Miles, the president of the new company, in which it was stated that his services would no longer be needed, and inclosing check “for the months of July and August,” and that on September 1, 1907, he replied thereto stating: “You will see by reading the contract for yearly salary that it was made for goodwill of business”; and protesting that he could “not be cut off in this abrupt manner.”
At the close of plaintiff’s testimony a motion for a nonsuit was overruled. The defendant refused to offer any testimony, contending that only questions of law were left for determination and that a verdict should be directed for either the plain
It is asserted by appellant that the contract is in violation of sections 5057 and 5058 of the Revised Codes and, therefore, void; that W. W. Wylie had no vendible interest to sell and hence that the instrument sued on was void for lack of consideration; that, being terminable at the will of either party, it was, by the letter of August 27, 1907, from the president of defendant corporation to W. W. Wylie, ended; that the action is barred by the statute of limitations, and that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the judgment.
In the determination of this appeal, our decision will be made to rest upon the principle that where a stockholder sells his stock, the goodwill of the business goes with it, leaving nothing tangible or of substance upon which to found another consideration touching any part of the same subject matter. If that be so, all the other questions of law and fact here presented are subordinate to, and controlled completely by, that issue.
It may be conceded, as respondent insists, that the goodwill of a business is the expectation of continued patronage (Rev. Codes, sec. 4566); is property subject to ownership and capable of being transferred (sec. 4567); and that one who sells the goodwill of a business may agree with the buyer to refrain from carrying on a similar business within a specified territory, so long as the buyer, or any person deriving title to the goodwill from him, carries on a like business therein (see. £>058); but still, the respondent, having theretofore at the same time and in the same transaction sold “the contract’’ as well as his “shares of stock in the old corporation, ’ ’ he separated himself from, and parted with, the goodwill and delivered himself of all he had to transfer. Goodwill is not a thing apart, but an incident to, and inherent in the thing itself — the business. That Mr. Wylie
This testimony plainly indicates that the sale of the goodwill alone was regarded by him as the essential element of the contract sued on.
“ ‘Goodwill’ can only exist in connection with an existing
In the later case of Metropolitan Nat. Bank v. St. Louis Dispatch Co., 149 U. S. 436, 446, 37 L. Ed. 799, 13 Sup. Ct. Rep. 944, Chief Justice Fuller further says upon the same subject: “It is tangible only as an incident, as connected with a going concern or business having locality or name, and is not susceptible of being disposed of independently.”
Mr. Lindley in his work on Partnership, Volume 2, page 439, says: “It is plain that goodwill has no meaning except in connection with a continuing business.” (See, also, Story on Partnership, par. 99; Parsons on Partnership, 4th ed., sec. 181.)
The court of appeals of the District of Columbia, in Mayer Fertilizer etc. Co. v. Virginia etc. Co., 35 App. Cas. (D. C.) 425, 426, in speaking on this same subject, states that: “Good
The law, as laid down in 12 R. C. L., paragraph 9, page 985, is that “Where a contract for the sale and transfer of a business omits to mention the goodwill, the presumption is that it was the intention of the parties that the goodwill should pass with the other assets. This necessarily results from the fact that the goodwill cannot exist except in connection with the business.” (See, also, 20 Cyc. 1275-1282, title “Goodwill”; Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, title “Goodwill,” 1085-1092.)
It seems, too, to be the law, that a stockholder in a [3] corporation has no interest in the goodwill of the corporation, which he can sell. (12 R. C. L., p. 983.) This seems to be the holding of the supreme court of California, in Merchants’ Ad-Sign Co. v. Sterling, 124 Cal. 429, 71 Am. St. Rep. 94, 46 L. R. A. 142, 57 Pac. 468; Dodge Stationery Co. v. Dodge, 145 Cal. 380, 78 Pac. 879, construing Code sections of that state identical with our sections 5057 and 5058, Revised Codes.
For these reasons, the conclusion must be that whatever of goodwill W. W. Wylie possessed was incidental to the corporate
Counsel, however, insists that, having accepted the services of Mr. Wylie, appellant cannot now escape liability for the ser
The judgment of the district court, under a contract uncertain in terms and indefinite in duration, imposes upon appellant .an obligation to pay respondent $1,500 per annum until such time as Mr. Wylie should consent to his own discharge. The imposition of that burden upon appellant, we are satisfied after a careful review of the whole case, was as far from the contemplation of the parties at the time of the making of the contract as it is without the purview of the law upon the subject.
The judgment and order are reversed, with directions to dismiss the action.
Reversed a/nd remanded.
Eehearing denied March 3, 1920.