Tuttle V Buck
Tuttle V Buck
Tuttle V Buck
BUCK
Supreme Court of
Minnesota, 1909.
107 Minn. 145, 119
N.W. 946.
injury to the individual. So the principle that a man may use his
own property according to his own needs and desires, while true in
the abstract, is subject to many limitations in the concrete. Men
cannot always, in civilized society, be allowed to use their own
property as their interests or desires may dictate without reference
to the fact that they have neighbors whose rights are as sacred as
their own. The existence and well-being of society requires that
each and every person shall conduct himself consistently with the
fact that he is a social and reasonable person. The purpose for
which a man is using his own property may thus sometimes
determine his rights. If there exists, then, a positive duty to avoid
harm, much more, then, exists the negative duty of not doing
willful harm, subject, as all general duties must be subject, to the
necessary exceptions. The three main heads of duty with which
the law of torts is concerned, namely, to abstain from willful injury,
to respect the property of others, and to use due diligence to avoid
causing harm to others, are all alike of a comprehensive nature.
Pollock, Torts, (8th Ed.) p.21.
To divert to ones self the customers of a business rival by
the offer of goods at lower prices is in general a legitimate mode of
serving ones own interest, and justifiable as fair competition. But
when a man starts an opposition place of business, not for the sake
of profit to himself, but regardless of loss to himself, and of the
sole purpose of driving his competitor out of business, and with the
intention of himself retiring upon the accomplishment of his
malevolent purpose, he is guilty of a wanton wrong and an
actionable tort. In such a case he would not be exercising his legal
right, or doing an act which can be judged separately from the
motive which actuated him. To call such conduct competition is a
perversion of terms. It is simply the application of force without
legal justification, which in its moral quality may be no better than
highway robbery.
JUDGMENT AND REMEDY The plaintiffs cause of action was
recognized under Minnesota law. The Supreme Court of
Minnesota concluded that modern business requires certain
protection against abusive business practices. The plaintiff then
returned to the trial court to prove his case. From that point
forward, Minnesota recognized a cause of action for tortuous
interference with business relations.