Eisel v. Hayes
Decision Date | 04 April 1895 |
Docket Number | 17,190 |
Citation | 40 N.E. 119,141 Ind. 41 |
Parties | Eisel et al. v. Hayes |
Court | Indiana Supreme Court |
From the Jackson Circuit Court.
The judgment is affirmed.
B. H Burrell and F. Brannaman, for appellants.
O. H Montgomery and D. A. Kochenour, for appellee.
This was an action brought by the appellee to restrain the appellant John Eisel, and the other appellants as his employes, from conducting a butcher business in the town of Brownstown and vicinity, in violation of an agreement made between the appellee and the said John Eisel.
The cause was submitted to the special judge below, and on the final hearing a decree was entered restraining the appellant John Eisel and the other appellants, "as employes, agents, servants, or copartners of or with said John Eisel, from engaging in or in any manner carrying on the butcher business in Brownstown," etc., "so long as plaintiff, William H. Hayes, carries on the butcher business at Brownstown."
From a consideration of the record and the evidence, we are satisfied that the judgment should be affirmed, unless the contract upon which the complaint is based is itself unlawful.
The contract is as follows:
Appellants contend that the contract does not show any consideration for their promise not to engage in the butcher business at the place and during the time named; that the forty-five dollars was given only for the implements purchased.
We are of opinion that the whole contract must be taken together, and that the money paid by Hayes was for the transfer of not only the tools sold, but also the good-will promised. The contract is a unit. Martin v. Murphy, 129 Ind. 464, 28 N.E. 1118.
Besides, "the mere purchase of the stock in trade of a party is a sufficient consideration for that party's agreement to abstain from carrying on the particular trade in the place where the purchaser is to engage in it." Beard v. Dennis, 6 Ind. 200.
In the absence of fraud, the parties are presumed, as in case of any other contract, to have determined the question of consideration for themselves, and the court will not determine its adequacy. Duffy v. Shockey, 11 Ind. 70.
It is also argued that the contract is illegal as being in restraint of trade. This objection is unfounded. There is no general restraint of appellant's...
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Eisel v. Hayes
...141 Ind. 4140 N.E. 119EISEL et al.v.HAYES.Supreme Court of Indiana.April 4, Appeal from circuit court, Jackson county; W. K. Marshall, Special Judge. Action by William H. Hayes against John Eisel and others. From a judgment for plaintiff, defendants appeal. Affirmed.Burrell & Branaman, for ......