Opinion
December Term, 1899.
Duncan Edwards, for the appellants.
James C. Church, for the respondent.
The judgment in this action permanently enjoins the defendant John P. Carlson from disclosing to any person any of the formulas now possessed by him for the manufacture of inks or dyes, and also from working in the manufacture of inks and dyes either on his own account or for the defendant Philip Ruxton, and any other person. It also commands the defendant Carlson to place all of the written formulas known to him in a safe deposit box of the Brooklyn Trust Company, and awards to the plaintiff costs against both the defendants.
The doctrine upon which this injunction rests is that where a person has contracted to render special, unique and extraordinary services to another, but refuses to carry out his agreement, equity will restrain him from rendering such services to anybody else.
The contract which the defendant Carlson has refused to perform was made with the plaintiff in the autumn of 1898, when both parties were in the employ of the defendant Ruxton, who was an ink manufacturer, the plaintiff as a salesman and the defendant Carlson as a mixer of inks. The instrument begins by reciting the intention of the parties to form an ink manufacturing corporation, to which the plaintiff is to contribute eighty per cent of the capital and the defendant Carlson twenty per cent, in addition to which the defendant Carlson is to render services to such corporation in the manufacture of inks and colors in accordance with certain secret formulas known only to him. The plaintiff agrees to organize the corporation, promises to assign the contract to it, and covenants that the corporation will perform his engagements thereunder. The plaintiff further agrees to employ the defendant Carlson for three years from December 3, 1896, as superintendent of the ink manufacturing business at a compensation of forty dollars a week, and that upon the formation of the proposed corporation he will sign a contract to act as its president and salesman for three years at the same compensation. On the other hand, the defendant Carlson undertakes to assume charge of the business as practical superintendent and manager, devoting to it all his time and attention and using therein whenever needed such secret formulas as may be necessary and proper to make the required inks. Further provisions relate to the deposit of the formulas for safe-keeping and the disposition thereof at the termination of the agreement.
The present suit was originally instituted against the defendant Carlson alone, by reason of his refusal to fulfill this contract on his part. In justification of such refusal he denied that he had acquired any secret formulas or possessed any high degree of skill in the manufacture of inks, and averred that the plaintiff had procured the execution of the instrument by misrepresentation and fraud. Philip Ruxton, the former employer of both, was subsequently brought in as a defendant. (See Strobridge Lithographing Co. v. Crane, 12 N.Y. Supp. 834.) He interposed an answer averring in substance that the plaintiff, while employed as his salesman, plotted to entice the defendant Carlson from his service as an ink mixer and foreman, so as to start a rival ink manufacturing business and obtain therein the use of the secret formulas known to the defendant Carlson, none of which were the property of the latter, but all of which belonged to the defendant Ruxton.
The learned trial judge has decided in favor of the plaintiff, without, however, expressly passing upon the claim of the defendant Ruxton to the ownership of the secret formulas used by the defendant Carlson. The direction in the decision is that judgment be entered against the latter as prayed for in the complaint. If this direction had been followed the decree would award to the plaintiff the sum of $10,000 damages against the defendant Carlson, in addition to the equitable relief granted; but the terms of the decision in this respect are evidently broader than the learned judge intended.
The rule of equity which the plaintiff has invoked successfully in the case at bar is thus stated by a distinguished author: "Where one person agrees to render personal services to another, which require and presuppose a special knowledge, skill and ability in the employé, so that in case of a default the same services could not easily be obtained from others, although the affirmative specific performance of the contract is beyond the power of the court, its performance will be negatively enforced by enjoining its breach." (Pomeroy on Spec. Perf. [2d ed.] § 24.) Thus, an opera singer, who has agreed to sing only for a particular manager, cannot be compelled to sing for him, but she can be prevented from singing for any one else during the term covered by her contract. In such cases the injunction is a substitute for the decree of specific performance, and it should not be granted where a decree for specific performance would be refused. In determining whether a contract shall be specifically enforced, or whether the injured party shall be relegated to his action at law, it is proper to consider the rights of third persons who are not parties to the agreement, and to withhold the equitable remedy if it will operate upon such persons unjustly. So, in passing upon the question here, whether the plaintiff should have the injunctive relief which he sought against the defendant Carlson, the effect of the desired injunction upon the rights of the defendant Ruxton was a material matter for consideration. If the defendant Ruxton really owned the secret formulas, and no one else had any right to them, as he alleged in his answer, he ought not to be compelled to disclose these formulas to some new workman other than Carlson. The injunction against Carlson, however, would oblige Ruxton to do this, if he desired to continue the business without actually mixing inks himself. Hence, the propriety of awarding the plaintiff equitable, rather than legal, relief depended largely upon the relation of the defendant Ruxton to the secret formulas. The learned court, however, would not allow Ruxton to give evidence tending to prove the ownership which he had set up in his answer. I think that the exception to the ruling on this subject should lead to a reversal of the judgment. In a suit of this kind, the fullest light should be thrown upon the equities of the various parties; and it is not difficult to perceive that a more complete inquiry in the present case might have resulted in remitting the plaintiff to his remedy at law.
Thus far in the discussion I have proceeded upon the assumption that the contract in question contemplated the rendition of personal services by the defendant Carlson to the plaintiff; but I doubt very much whether that assumption is correct. I am rather inclined to regard the instrument as a joint agreement to participate in the formation of a corporation into whose employment both parties were to enter and remain at a stipulated compensation for a period of three years. The plaintiff was not to be the employer of the defendant Carlson any more than the defendant Carlson was to be the employer of the plaintiff, after the corporation was organized. The corporation was to be the employer of both. The evidence strongly indicates that the contract was designed to carry out a plan on the part of the plaintiff, in which he induced the defendant Carlson to participate, to supplant the defendant Ruxton in the ink business; and that after Carlson came to appreciate the true nature of the scheme he abandoned it, and concluded to remain with Ruxton. But however this may be, on the record as it stands and in view of the exclusion of evidence in support of Ruxton's claim of ownership, the equities of the plaintiff are not sufficiently clear to entitle him to the judgment which has been rendered in his favor.
All concurred.
Judgment reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the final award of costs.