Clark v. West

137 A.D. 23, 122 N.Y.S. 380, 1910 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 604
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 31, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 137 A.D. 23 (Clark v. West) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. West, 137 A.D. 23, 122 N.Y.S. 380, 1910 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 604 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

Thomas, J.:

Clark, a book writer, agreed in writing with West to prepare a “ series of text books for law students on the following subjects: * * * Corporations, Torts, Bailments, Agency, and Pléading and Practice, * * * and also write and prepare such other books for said series as the second party may direct,” with authority in. West to direct the order of preparation of the books in the series, and to substitute other sub jects for any of those named. Clark agreed, among other things, to prepare at the rate of not less than 125 pages each month,” and tó deliver to West the manuscript of completed chapters at the end of each month “ for the ■ purpose of obtaining advance payments on account of the [completed book of which said chapters are parts only,” but it was stipulated “ such-delivery is in nowise the delivery of the book, entitling the first party to payments as such upon acceptance of same.” Clark further agreed that he would “ defend the copyright of the same against all adverse claims,” and that the copyright of all books prepared ” by him “ shall be taken out in his name, and imtnedi- . ately thereafter assigned by him to the second party, subject to the conditions of this contract.” Clark further agreed that after publication of any edition of “ said works, and so long as he has an interest in the sales of same,” to collect and prepare new cases and other new matter for addition “ as often as the second party shall desire to publish a new edition.” Clark further grants to West the sole and exclusive privilege and license of printing, publishing, and. selling, or otherwise disposing of said works and all revisions of the same during the continuance of any copyright or renewals thereof, or his interest in the same, and also the right to use any part of the material in said works in local books, and in . monographs, articles, notes, or annotations, or books or other legal topics or on subdivisions of the particular subjects, prior to same becoming the exclusive property of said second party.” West agreed “ that when the manuscript of an entire work has been all delivered to him, he will proceed to examine the same, and he will accept the same within thirty days after the receipt of the same,” [26]*26or return same for correction. The contract provides : “ the second party agrees to pay to the first party $2 per page, * * * on each book prepared by the first party under this contract and accepted by the second party, and if said first party abstains- from the use of intoxicating liquor and otherwise f ulfills his agreements as hereinbefore set forth, he shall be ,paid an additional $4 per page in manner hereinafter stated. * •* * When a completed chapter or completed chapters amounting to not less than 125 pages, to be delivered to the second party each month are so delivered, the second party shall pay to the first party $2 per page. But he shall not be required to pay more than $250 in any one month prior to the acceptance by him of a completed book. These advance payments are to be made as soon as the completed chapters are delivered as above stated, but if, after such delivery and payment, the ■. manuscript shall not be regarded by the second party as satisfactory, no further payment shall be made until the first ¿.arty shall have made the same satisfactory to the second party. All payments on-account of parts of books are to be treated as payments on- account, against books previously completed and accepted. ' They are for accommodation of first party only. After the publication of any book or books prepared by the first party under this contract, he shall at the end of every six months be entitled to receive, and the second party agrees to pay him, an amount equal to one-sixth of the net receipts from the combined sales of all books Which shall have, been prepared by the said first party and published- by the said, second party under this contract, less any and all payments previously made said first party and all money then due the second party from the first party, until the amount of'$6. per page of each book shall have been paid, after which the first party shall have no right, titleor interest in said books or the receipts from the sales thereof. But no accounting shall be made for any copies of said works that may be lost, stolen or destroyed by fire or otherwise, or upon any copies disposed of as a means of advertising and pushing the sale of said-works, or upon five copies of each edition to be given to the first party. * *' * The second party also agrees that if and when he accepts the manuscript of any book prepared by the first party under this contract, he will proceed at once to print and publish the -same in such form as he may deem best, and after its [27]*27publication will advertise arid push its sale to the best of his ability, so long as anything may be due the first party under the terms of this contract.”

Clark prepared a general work dn Corporations, which was in substitution of the smaller work first contemplated for the students’ series, and also 400 pages of Torts, when' he refused to do further work under the contract for the reason given that West had permitted his publishing company to take in its name the copyright of Corporations, and refused and was unable to remedy this breach of the contract.

The plaintiff claims that the contract is divisible, so that the first, cause of action relating to Corporations is independent of his agreement to prepare other books. The same claim is tendered in support of the second cause of action, which is for conversion, of the manuscript of Torts. If this were true, Clark could recover for any failure to pay the two dollars per page for Corporations which was published. But Clark did not recover for the two dollars per page, as that "had been paid, but for .the four dollars per page in addition, the payment of which was conditioned on his faithful performance of the “other conditions of this contract,” and the fulfillment of his agreements, and upon receipt by West of net receipts, one-sixth whereof would measure additional payments to Clark. But the complaint alleges accrued net receipts, and demands judgment for $13,876 and interest, or in the alternative that defendant account, and vest a valid copyright in said treatise on Corporations in the plaintiff, or in the event that a valid copyright “ cannot be, or is not, forthwith vested in the plaintiff,” that he have 'judgment for the sums named. The court directed recovery on Corporations for such amount, which is based entirely on the four dollars per page so promised conditionally, without evidence of the receipt of adequate net profits. So the questions as to this first cause of action are, has it a valid existence; second, is the recovery justified ? The plaintiff seeks to sustain the first cause of action upon the principal ground, as stated, that the contract is divisible. The defendant asserts that it cannot exist as the contract is entire, and that there is no existing breach of it on the part of West. The plaintiff asserts its divisibility, and the defendant affirms its entirety, as a matter of law (Tipton v. Feitner, 20 N. Y. 423; [28]*28Central New York Tel. & Tel. Co. v. Averill, 58 Misc. Rep. 59), upon rules of interpretation to which attention will be specifically called. All rules of interpretation of a contract here involved are aids to one purpose,, and that is to discover the intention of the parties. One element of a contract may be more helpful than another to indicate intention. To.

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Bluebook (online)
137 A.D. 23, 122 N.Y.S. 380, 1910 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 604, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-west-nyappdiv-1910.