White Plains Coat & Apron v. Cintas Corp.
Decision Date | 26 April 2007 |
Docket Number | No. 32.,32. |
Citation | 8 N.Y.3d 422,867 N.E.2d 381 |
Court | New York Court of Appeals Court of Appeals |
Parties | WHITE PLAINS COAT & APRON CO., INC., Appellant, v. CINTAS CORP. et al., Respondents. |
Plaintiff, White Plains Coat & Apron Co., Inc., is a New York-based linen rental business. Its competitor, defendant Cintas Corp., is a nationwide business that rents similar products to commercial customers. White Plains alleges that it had five-year exclusive service contracts with customers and that, knowing of these arrangements, Cintas nonetheless induced dozens of White Plains' customers to breach their contracts and enter into rental agreements with Cintas. White Plains by letter demanded that Cintas desist solicitation and discontinue servicing White Plains' contract customers, enclosing a list of customers allegedly solicited improperly. Cintas denied knowledge of any contracts and continued its solicitation.
White Plains sued Cintas in United States District Court for the Southern District of New York for tortious interference with existing customer contracts. After discovery, Cintas sought summary judgment, arguing that it had no knowledge of contracts with White Plains and had not induced any breach. While noting "a small element of doubt" in New York law (and itself suggesting a need for certification to this Court), the District Court granted summary judgment and dismissed the complaint, ruling orally that Cintas' legitimate interest as a competitor to solicit business and make a profit alone triggered the defense of economic justification. Given Cintas' economic interest, the court concluded, to survive summary judgment White Plains had to show that Cintas acted with malice or illegality, and failed to do so. The court later denied White Plains' motion for reconsideration, finding that defendant did not need an ownership interest in the breaching party's business in order to assert the economic interest defense.
On White Plains' appeal, the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit reviewed New York's law on tortious interference with contract, noting that procuring "the breach of a contract in the exercise of equal or superior right is acting with just cause or excuse and is justification for what would otherwise be an actionable wrong."1 The court observed, however that there was an important open state law question regarding the economic interest defense. While satisfied that the defense applies when the tortfeasor has a preexisting legal or financial relationship with the breaching party — not present in the case before us — the Second Circuit sought clarification as to the broader reach of the defense and therefore certified the following potentially dispositive question to us: "Does a generalized economic interest in soliciting business for profit constitute a defense to a claim of tortious interference with an existing contract for an alleged tortfeasor with no previous economic relationship with the breaching party?"2 We answer that question in the negative.3
It is a familiar proposition that one "who intentionally and improperly interferes with the performance of a contract (except a contract to marry) between another and a third person by inducing or otherwise causing the third person not to perform the contract, is subject to liability to the other for the pecuniary loss resulting to the other from the failure of the third person to perform the contract."4 Though long a part of our law, this commonly asserted tort continues to generate a spate of decisions, with sometimes varying views. At bottom, as a matter of policy, courts are called upon to strike a balance between two valued interests: protection of enforceable contracts, which lends stability and predictability to parties' dealings, and promotion of free and robust competition in the marketplace.
While New York law recognizes the tort of interference with both prospective and existing contracts, "greater protection is accorded an interest in an existing contract (as to which respect for individual contract rights outweighs the public benefit to be derived from unfettered competition) than to the less substantive, more speculative interest in a prospective relationship (as to which liability will be imposed only on proof of more culpable conduct on the part of the interferer)."5
In a contract interference case — as here — the plaintiff must show the existence of its valid contract with a third party, defendant's knowledge of that contract, defendant's intentional and improper procuring of a breach, and damages.6 In response to such a claim, a defendant may raise the economic interest defense — that it acted to protect its own legal or financial stake in the breaching party's business. The defense has been applied, for example, where defendants were significant stockholders in the breaching party's business;7 where defendant and the breaching party had a parent-subsidiary relationship;8 where defendant was the breaching party's creditor;9 and where the defendant had a managerial contract with the breaching party at the time defendant induced the breach of contract with plaintiff.10
A defendant who is simply plaintiff's competitor and knowingly solicits its contract customers is not economically justified in procuring the breach of contract.11 In other words, mere status as plaintiff's competitor is not a legal or financial stake in the breaching party's business that permits defendant's inducement of a breach of contract. We do not subscribe to the District Court's view that "the only answer ... is to go out and do it also to the other guy." Rather, the answer is succinctly articulated in the New York Pattern Jury Instructions: "When the defendant is simply a competitor of the plaintiff seeking prospective customers and plaintiff has a customer under contract for a definite period, defendant's interest is not equal to that of plaintiff and would not justify defendant's inducing the customer to breach the existing contract."12 To conclude otherwise — to answer the certified question in the affirmative — would blur the distinction between tortious interference with existing, enforceable contracts and tortious interference with prospective contractual relations, where, as a...
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