Associated Cinemas of America, Inc. v. World Amusement Co.

276 N.W. 7, 201 Minn. 94
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedOctober 22, 1937
DocketNo. 31,354.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 276 N.W. 7 (Associated Cinemas of America, Inc. v. World Amusement Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Associated Cinemas of America, Inc. v. World Amusement Co., 276 N.W. 7, 201 Minn. 94 (Mich. 1937).

Opinion

Julius J. Olson, Justice.

The parties to this cause are corporate enterprises, plaintiff’s business being that of procuring copyrights of and distributing to theatre owners moving picture films, largely of foreign make; defendant’s business is that of operating a moving picture theatre in Minneapolis known as the World Theatre.

The action is founded upon three contracts entered into on October 6, 1932. Each contract represented a separate cause of action founded upon defendant’s failure to exhibit the film of the play therein identified by appropriate copyright name. As a matter of fact there were seven such contracts entered into at the time mentioned, but only three are here involved, the others apparently having been performed.- Plaintiff prevailed on trial had before the court. Defendant’s alternative motion for amended findings and conclusions of law, or, if such be denied, for a new trial was denied, and this appeal followed.

Defendant offered no evidence so there are no fact issues to trouble us. The questions of law applicable to the facts- will be discussed later.

The contracts are in writing and were duly introduced -in evidence. All of them are in substance the same, the only difference being the dates when the respective films provided for in each thereof were to be exhibited by defendant. In substance these are the terms: Defendant agreed to run each picture no less than one week. It was to pay plaintiff as a license fee an advance guaranty of $200, such payment to be made upon C. O. D. print, that is to say, when and as the film, advertising matter, and other items were furnished by plaintiff. In addition thereto, defendant was to pay out of the gross receipts from the playing of the films 50 per cent in excess of $1,250 for each week during the time each of the pictures was run. With respect to the first picture, that being the one in *96 volved-in the first canse of'action, defendant agreed “to play and pay for this picture no later than December 22, 1932.” In the event defendant failed or refused to exhibit the photoplay according to the terms of the contract, it agreed with plaintiff that as liquidated damages it would pay, in addition to the advance guaranty of $200, “a sum equal to such percentage of the average daily gross receipts of such theatre during the period of thirty (30) operating days immediately prior to the date dr dates when such photo-play should have been so exhibited.” As to this picture, the court found that it was “made available to the defendant by the plaintiff on or before December 20, 1932; that in fact, December 20 was fixed as a tentative date for the exhibition of this film; that nevertheless the defendant postponed the running of this picture for some time thereafter and finally on or about March 6, 1933, refused to run the picture, thus breaching the contract as to this picture with plaintiff corporation.”

With respect to the second and third contracts the same thing happened. These by their terms were to be played and paid for by March 1 and April 1, 1933, respectively.

We have briefly outlined the duties assumed by defendant under its contract. It is well next to consider what plaintiff’s obligations were. It agreed as distributor to grant to defendant as exhibitor a license to operate “under the respective copyrights of the motion pictures designated and described in the schedule.” This right was further protected to the extent that defendant was to have “the first run” in Minneapolis. In addition thereto, plaintiff agreed under the third article that during “the life of this contract the distributor agrees not to exhibit or license the exhibition of any such photoplays in conflict with the ‘run’ or ‘protection period.’ ” The protection period extended over a period of 60 days “computed from the last date of exhibition of each photoplay as fixed herein.” Under the fourth article plaintiff agreed to deliver to defendant, pursuant to the contract schedule, positive prints “suitable for exhibition of each of such photoplays for exhibition at the said theatre on the dates specified.” Under the seventh article, defendant was not required to accept “any photoplay described in *97 the schedule as the photoplay of a star, or of a director, or based upon a specific story, book or play, or by an identifying description, any other photoplay of a different star or different director, or based upon a different story, book or play, * In the tenth article plaintiff “warrants that the photoplays herein provided for will not contain any advertising matter for which compensation is received” by it. Under the thirteenth article there is a mutual and reciprocal waiver of liability in the event of impossibility of performance of the contract by reason of the elements, accidents, strikes, fires, insurrection, acts of God, the public enemy, public calamity, etc. On the subject of liquidated damages the seventeenth article provides:

“In the event of the failure of the exhibitor to make any payment provided-for hereunder, it is understood that the distributor’s damages are not less than the amount of such'payment, the parties having expressly stipulated and agreed that it would be impossible for the distributor to minimize or reduce its damages by an attempt to dispose of the rights or licenses herein granted to other parties.”

As to the first cause of action, the court found for plaintiff in the sum of $200 as the agreed “guaranteed rental,” but granted no further allowance because the gross weekly receipts during the 30 days next preceding December 22 did not exceed the $1,250 minimum specified in the contract. As to the second and third causes of action, the court, in addition to the guaranteed rental, allowed additional recovery strictly in accordance with each contract, i. e., one-half of the average gross weekly receipts in excess of the contract minimum of $1,250. As to all of the contracts here involved the finding is:

“That the contracts are not wanting in mutuality in obligation or remedy; that all of the films were made available to the defendant and that the defendant breached the contracts by refusing to accept and run said films.”

Defendant’s first assignment of error relates to the admission in evidence of plaintiff’s exhibit 11, a letter admittedly written by *98 defendant’s president, who had executed as such all these contracts and the one who had full and complete charge of defendant’s business. Nor is there any question that the letter relates to the contracts here involved. There was a series of letters passing between the parties. A brief résumé of the correspondence may be helpful. On October 8, 1932, defendant wrote plaintiff inclosing the seven contracts, stating:

“I have made a few changes. * * ® I think - all you are interested in is getting your money for the pictures and I feel sure that you will be satisfied with the way I have made out the contracts. Another thing I have inserted in the contracts sixty days protection. That is for your good as much as mine. * * * I don’t like C. O. D.’s so I am enclosing check for $200.00 for Two Hearts. You will find that your check will always be in in ample time to clear before you make shipment.” (Italics supplied.)

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Bluebook (online)
276 N.W. 7, 201 Minn. 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/associated-cinemas-of-america-inc-v-world-amusement-co-minn-1937.