Ohio Court of Appeals, 1927

Red Star Yeast & Products Co. v. Hague

Red Star Yeast & Products Co. v. Hague
Ohio Court of Appeals · Decided July 1, 1927 · Levine, Sullivan, Vickery
6 Ohio Law. Abs. 59

Red Star Yeast & Products Co. v. Hague

Opinion of the Court

SULLIVAN, PJ.

1. Contract, employing salesman, and prohibiting him from diverting employer’s customers during employment or within six months thereafter, need not, as-matter of law, be clothed with notarial act, enjoining on employe full knowledge of terms of contract.

2. Contract, employing salesman at monthly salary, is a month to month employment, and containing no provision as to notice, can be terminated and canceled, by mutual consent or otherwise, at end of each month without notice.

3. Under contract employing salesman on a month to month basis, acceptance by salesman of salary in full for month at beginning of which he severed relations established mutual intent of parties that either had right to terminate contract at end of any month for any reason whatsoever.

4. Contract, employing salesman on month to month basis, and providing that salesman shall not divert employer’s customers during employment and for six months thereafter, such restriction was covenant in negative and applied strictly and solely to employe.

5. Under contract of employment providing that employe shall not divert employer’s customers in city during employment and for six. months thereafter, such restriction was covenant in negative and applied strictly and solely to employe.

6._ Under contract prohibiting employe diverting employer’s customers for six months after “leaving its services from whatsoever cause,” word “whatsoever” is an indefinite relative, defined as “all that, no matter what, anything soever which” and prohibits employe from engaging in competition, regardless of person or thing which separates employment, whether voluntary or involuntary, and is not confined to voluntary leaving alone.

7. Under contract for employment prohibiting employe from engaging in competition within six months after leaving employer’s’, service from whatsoever cause, it. is immaterial in what manner relationship was severed,, providing employer seeking to enforce provision was not responsible for breach thereof.

8. In action by employer to enjoin employe from engaging in competitive business under contract prohibiting such competition by employe for six months after leaving employment from whatsoever cause, it was immaterial whether discharge was justifiable.

(Levine, J., concurs. Vickery, J., not participating.)

For reference to full opinion, see Omnibus. Index, last page, this issue.

Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.