This is a motion to dissolve an injunction granted ex parte, which restrained the defendant from interfering with the trade, custom or good-will of the plaintiff’s business, or making use of the knowledge or information gained from or contained in plaintiff’s original list, compilation or collection of names and addresses of customers, or from calling upon, canvassing, soliciting, accepting or filling orders for goods similar in kind to those carried by the plaintiff from the persons whose names and addresses are contained in the schedule attached to the complaint, being customers of the plaintiff, upon whom the defendant had been accustomed to call to obtain orders.
The substantial facts in the case are that the plaintiff is a corporation, engaged in the general business, in the city of Buffalo, of dealing in teas, coffees, baking powder, spices, cocoa, flavoring extracts, sugar, fine groceries, etc.; that it maintains a general store in the city of Buffalo, with branches in the cities of Batavia, Jamestown and Miagara Falls; that its retail business is done upon a general cash
It further appears that, shortly prior to the commencement of this action, the defendant abandoned the service of the plaintiff and entered the employ of the Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company; that he has furnished to said tea company a list, in whole or in part, of the addresses and names of the customers of the plaintiff along his said route whom he was accustomed to visit for the purpose of obtaining orders and delivering goods desired by them from the plaintiff; that he threatens and insists upon his right to continue to solicit trade from said customers for and on behalf of said Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company, and will do so unless restrained by the order of this court. Other facts in relation to the case are hereinafter mentioned, and set forth in subsequent parts of this opinion.
The defendant now moves for a vacation of such injunction order, which is opposed by the plaintiff.
We are of the opinion that the injunction should be continued. This conclusion, we think, is supported on several well recognized principles of law and equity.
The plaintiff contends the defendant’s acts were in violation of his contract with the plaintiff, in' which the defendant agreed that he would not, on the termination of his employment, engage in the same or a similar line of business, either for himself, or as the employee of any individual, firm or corporation, for the period of two years, nor furnish to any firm or corporation or individual “ any list or lists of customers, or information of any kind or nature pertaining to the plaintiff’s business.”
The plaintiff also contends that the defendant’s acts are in direct violation of the provisions of section 642 of the Penal
The plaintiff further contends that, independently of the contract between the parties and by virtue of general principles of equity, the defendant should be enjoined from enticing away or dealing with such of the plaintiff’s customers as had heretofore given orders to the plaintiff through the defendant.
We think the plaintiff may well rest its case on the last ground alone, and that the injunction is well sustained on principle and well considered authority.
The doctrine is broadly stated by Hr. Justice Story in his work on Equity Jurisprudence (§ 952), where he says: “ Courts of equity will restrain a party from making disclosures of secrets communicated to him in the course of a confidential employment; and it matters not, in such cases, whether the secrets be secrets of trade or secrets of title, or any other secrets of the party important to his interests.”
High, in his excellent work on Injunctions (§ 19, Vol. I, 4th ed.), declares that: “The disclosure of secrets which have come to one’s knowledge during the course of a confidential employment will be restrained 'by injunction. And where a confidential relationship has existed out of which one of the parties has derived information concerning the
The doctrine has been most frequently applied to cases where some secret process or formula of manufacture has been involved. The following decisions illustrate the rule when applied to such situations: Tode v. Gross, 127 N. Y. 480; Tabor v. Hoffman, 118 id. 30; Eastman Kodak Co. v. Reichenbach, 79 Hun, 183; National Gum & Mica Co. v. Braendly, 27 App. Div. 224; Little v. Gallus, 39 id. 646; Eastern Extracting Co. v. Greater N. Y. Extracting Co., 126 id. 928; Stone v. Goss (N. J. Eq.), 63 L. R. A. 344; Peabody v. Norfolk, 98 Mass. 452.
The principle of law, however, is not confined to secret processes of manufacture or methods of doing business, but has a much wider application, as stated by Hr. Justice Story. The names of the customers of a business concern whose trade and patronage have been secured by years of business effort and advertising, and the expenditure of time and money, constituting a part of the good-will of a business which enterprise and foresight have built up, should be-deemed just as sacred and entitled to the same protection as a secret of compounding some article of manufacture and commerce.
The Legislature of this State has recognized these rights of the business public, and has made it a penal offense for any one having or obtaining access, with, or without, the consent of the lawful owner, to any original list or compilation or other collection of the names of customers or subscribers used in connection with any lawful business or occupation whatsoever, to copy, or cause to be copied, any such list or compilation, or make any use of any such list or compilation, “ or of the information contained in any such list, compilation, collection * * * for his own benefit or advantage, or that of any person other than said lawful owner.” Penal Code, § 642.
Independently of the question whether the defendant in this case has been guilty of such a violation of this section as would support a conviction or not, it still must be perfectly
In recent years there has been developed, by the adjudications of our courts and by legislation, a considerable body of law, looking toward the protection of the business world against unfair competition; and, if we correctly interpret these decisions, a court of equity stands1 ready to restrain such acts.
We, therefore, are of the. opinion, that, independently of any express contract 'between the parties, equity will restrain the acts of which the plaintiff complains, and which the defendant threatens and claims the right to do. This arises out of a violation of duty, having its origin in the relation of employer and employed, and an implied contract that an employee will not divulge confidential knowledge gained in the course of his employment, or use such information to his employer’s prejudice.
Where, however, as in this case, there is a written agreement that a party will not, after leaving his master’s employ, engage in the same line or a similar line of business, and will not furnish to others lists of customers, or information of any kind or nature pertaining to his employer’s business, that fact supplies an added ground for the interference of a court of equity in enforcing an observance of that agreement. Davies v. Racer, 72 Hun, 43; Eastman Kodak Co. v. Reichenbach, 79 id. 183; Little v. Gallus, 4 App. Div. 569; Rational Gum & Mica Co. v. Braendly, 27 id. 224; Peabody v. Norfolk, 98 Mass. 452.
The affidavits read on this motion strongly tend to show that the Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company, a corporation engaged in the same general business as. that "conducted by the plaintiff, has for some time been engaged in a systematic effort to procure the trade built up by the plaintiff, and that in furtherance of this purpose the tea company has
The defendant has, as it appears, lent himself to "the scheme to destroy or injure the plaintiff’s business, and, apparently, in violation of the provisions of the Penal Code, above cited, making it a misdemeanor to use the information contained in such list either “ for his own benefit or advantage, or that of any person other than said lawful owner.”
It is clear he should be restrained; and there are reported cases where the courts have enjoined persons from doing practically the same thing the defendant here seeks to do, and under substantially like circumstances.
In the case of Reynolds Co. v. Dreyer, 12 Misc. Rep. 368, the plaintiff was engaged in business as a wholesale dealer in cheese, butter and groceries, its sales being mainly effected through the agency of salesmen driving over established routes and supplying goods to grocers doing business on the line of said routes. The defendant was given a wagon driving over one of the routes, and contracted with the company that he would not, “ after his employment in said business should cease, directly or indirectly, engage in business in the city of Hew York, or within a radius of ten miles from said city, in competition with his said employer, either on his own account or as the servant or employee of others.” He was discharged for cause, and he then drove a horse and wagon, carrying supplies of the same kind, soliciting cus
In Davis v. Racer, 72 Hun, 43, the plaintiffs were forwarding agents and custom-house brokers, and entered into an agreement with the defendant whereby they employed him as a clerk to receive, influence and procure orders and goods from shippers in consideration of a salary. In the agreement of employment, the defendant agreed not to engage in the city-of Hew York, or within fifty miles thereof, either directly or indirectly, in a similar business, or interfere with any of the plaintiffs’ customers. The defendant left the plaintiffs’ employ and engaged as a clerk with a firm in Hew York doing a similar business, and, it was alleged, interfered with the customers of the plaintiffs by a systematic solicitation of their business. The court enjoined such acts.
In Tolman v. Mulcahy, 119 App. Div. 42, the plaintiff was engaged in the business of making loans of money to individuals and firms. The plaintiff alleged that his business required a unique, technical, special and peculiar knowledge, as well as methods and forms for its conduct, which were taught to the defendant after her execution of a contract not to divulge or reveal to any one outside the service of the plaintiff, for a period of two years after leaving the plaintiff’s employ. It was alleged that the defendant left the plaintiff’s employ and, in violation of her agreement, engaged with another firm and communicated her knowledge of the plaintiff’s business to her new employers. The answer alleged the agreement was unconscionable, against public policy and in restraint of trade, and was induced by false and fraudulent representations, and without knowledge on defendant’s part of its contents. The justice at Special Term enjoined the defendant from communicating and revealing the plaintiff’s forms or methods, directly or indirectly, and from sending letters to plaintiff’s customers relative to such matters, but denied the motion for a temporary injunction restraining the defendant from entering the employment of the firm she engaged with. The Appellate Division said that, in so doing, the Special Term was clearly right.
It only remains to notice, very briefly, some of the arguments made by defendant’s counsel.
It is contended that the customers named in the complaint are the defendant’s customers and not the customers of the plaintiff. In this view we cannot concur. The contract with the defendant was one of hiring. He was employed and agreed to enter the plaintiff’s service as a salesman, canvasser, collector and delivery man, such employment to be at all times under the direction and supervision of the plaintiff. It does not need argument to show that, under such circumstances, every customer procured was the customer of the plaintiff and not of the defendant.
It is urged that the written contract was procured by fraud and misrepresentation as to its contents and purport. I am not impressed with this claim. The blanks in the contract were filled out in the defendant’s own handwriting, and its contents and provisions were perfectly plain. The defendant admitted he was told by the plaintiff to read the contract before signing it. I believe he fully knew and understood its contents and provisions. But whether he did or not, in my judgment, is not very material in the disposition of this motion; for the court is of the opinion that, in the absence of any written contract or agreement, the plaintiff would still be entitled to the relief asked.
The counsel for the defendant contends that the contract is unconscionable, unjust and against public policy, and, therefore, void, and, therefore, one which a court of equity will not enforce. To the extent that the contract restrained the defendant from engaging to work for any individual, firm or corporation engaged in a similar line of business in the State of Hew York for a period of two years after the termination of the defendant’s employment with plaintiff, the contract will undoubtedly be refused enforcement ip 9
The plaintiff in this case does not seek to restrain the defendant from entering the employment of the Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company, or of any other rival concern. It does not complain of his acts in so doing, hut it does ask that he he restrained from interfering with the trade, custom or good-will of the plaintiff, and from making use of the knowledge- or information gained from or contained in plaintiff’s original list of customers, and from canvassing and soliciting orders from the plaintiff’s former customers.
This the plaintiff is entitled to; and it works no hardship to the defendant, or to the Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company, who now employs him. Such a limited restriction on the defendant’s activities has been held over and over again as not an unlawful restraint of trade.
Let an order be entered denying the motion to vacate the temporary injunction heretofore granted, with ten dollars costs of the motion.
Motion denied, with ten dollars costs of motion.