Supreme Court of Georgia, (June 14, 1966)
Docket number: 23509
ARGUED
QUILLIAN, Justice. - ARGUED
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Supreme Court of Georgia - FOX v. AVIS RENT-A-CAR SYSTEMS, INC., 223 Ga. 571, 156 S.E.2.d 910 (1967)
William W. Daniel, Johnson, Harper & Daniel, for appellee.Westmoreland, Hall & Pentecost, John L. Westmoreland, Jr., Donald E. O'Brien, for appellants.
1. The restrictive covenant sought to be enforced was reasonable as to time and territory and not otherwise unreasonable or unenforceable.2. There being no allegations of malicious tortious conduct on the part of the corporate defendant to induce the individual defendant to terminate his employment with the plaintiff and breach the terms of his contract, no cause of action was set out against the corporate defendant.These two cases arise out of an equitable petition brought by Southeastern Personnel of Atlanta, Inc., to enjoin a former employee, Robert Spalding, and his new employer, Robert Spalding Associates, Inc., from violating restrictive covenants contained in the employment contract between Southeastern and Robert Spalding. The pertinent portions of that contract are here set out. The parties mutually agreed that the company (Southeastern) had established a valuable and extensive personnel business in the Greater Metropolitan Atlanta area; that the company's business had been developed and maintained at great expense and was of great value; that the employee would become familiar with the manner and methods of operation of the company, with confidential information pertaining to the company's business, with the list of potential employers and clients of the company and with other prospects of the company; that the company would suffer great loss and damage if, upon termination of employment, the employee, for himself or on behalf of others by whom he might be employed, should call upon any of the prospective employers and solicit business from them or clients of the company or engage in such business within a radius of thirty miles of the company's main office.The contract then provided that "in consideration of the premises and for the sum of $1.00" the employee covenants and agrees that during his employment and for a period of two years immediately following the expiration or termination of his employment (whether voluntary or involuntary) and within a radius of 30 miles of a named building in Atlanta, the employee, in his own behalf or in the behalf of others, will not "directly or indirectly work or engage in any capacity in which he will perform any of the duties or responsibilities which he has agreed to perform in this contract in (1) any type of personnel placement or employment business or (2) any temporary help or service business, nor in said time or distance will he or she in any way directly or indirectly, for himself . . . , or on behalf of or in conjunction, solicit, divert, or attempt to take away any of the clients or prospective employers or prospective employees, or the business or patronage of such clients or employers."The contract further provided: "If during the term of this agreement the company, in its sole judgment, deems that the employee has violated any provision, term, or condition of this contract, the company may terminate this contract by giving the employee two weeks' written notice. If during the term of this agreement the company violates any provision of this contract the employee may terminate this contract by giving the company two weeks' written notice."The petition alleges: That on January 14, 1965, the individual defendant and the plaintiff executed a written contract covering the terms of employment (of which the pertinent provisions are above set out); that the individual defendant remained in the employ of the plaintiff until he voluntarily resigned on February 15, 1966, without prior notice to the plaintiff; that the individual defendant has been licensed to conduct an employment business in the name of Robert Spalding Associates, Inc.; that on February 17, 1966, the corporate defendant was granted a charter which provided that it could engage in a general personnel placement service; that, on information and belief, the individual defendant owns all, or substantially all, of the corporate defendant's stock; that the defendant and his wife are officers of the corporate defendant; that the defendants are actively engaging in the personnel and employment business at a named location in Atlanta and the individual defendant was actively engaging in such business at that location even before the corporate defendant was organized; that, since the plaintiff's business depends upon personal contracts of its personnel counselors, their loyalty, personality and efficiency are important and necessary elements in the successful operation of the plaintiff's business; that during his employment the individual defendant became familiar with the manner, means and methods of the operation of the plaintiff's business and with potential clients of the plaintiff and, while the individual defendant was working for the plaintiff, a majority of the employers interested in hiring sales personnel and a majority of appellants seeking sales positions were referred to the individual defendant.The petition also alleges: on information and belief, that the individual defendant is interviewing applicants for employment and counseling with them and the defendants are keeping in constant contact with employers for the purpose of securing job listings and arranging interviews for prospective employees with employers; that the defendants are soliciting, diverting and attempting to take away former clients and prospective employers and employees developed by and through the plaintiff; that, notwithstanding the restrictive covenants, the individual defendant caused the corporate defendant to be organized for the purpose of doing the very things the individual defendant agreed not to do; that the corporate defendant was organized as a scheme, device and fraud for attempting to avoid the individual defendant's just obligation under his employment contract, that the corporate defendant is not the alter ego of the individual defendant; that the defendants are engaging in the employment business in direct competition with the plaintiff in the territory included in the restrictive covenant.The trial judge overruled the separate demurrers of each of the defendants and appeals are taken from the two judgments entered thereon.In case No. 23509 the individual appellant contends the contract is unenforceable because: (1) it is unilateral; (2) it is unreasonable as to time and area and otherwise unreasonable; (3) it is vague, indefinite, uncertain and ambiguous.In case No. 23510 the corporate appellant urges that its demurrer should have been sustained because it was not a party to the contract and the petition fails to show any malicious tortious acts on its part to cause any violation of the contract by the individual defendant. 1. In case No. 23509 the individual appellant argues the contract is unilateral since it provided that during the term of the agreement "the company, in its sole judgment, deems that the employee has violated any provision, term, or condition of this contract, the company may terminate this contract by giving the employee two (2) weeks' written notice." Thus, the contract is at the whim of the employer and is for only a 15-day period.Moreover, this court has held that a covenant is not unreasonable merely because the employer reserved the right to terminate the employee's services at any time with or without cause. The Insurance Center v. Hamilton,Try vLex for FREE for 3 days
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