Comstock v. Biltmore Amusement Co.

116 N.E. 531, 227 Mass. 146, 1917 Mass. LEXIS 1104
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 25, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 116 N.E. 531 (Comstock v. Biltmore Amusement Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Comstock v. Biltmore Amusement Co., 116 N.E. 531, 227 Mass. 146, 1917 Mass. LEXIS 1104 (Mass. 1917).

Opinion

Braley, J.

If not expressly conceded it is undisputed that under the contract between the plaintiff and the Wilbur Theatre Company, he obtained the right to present to the public at the Wilbur Theatre in Boston for an indefinite period beginning February 22, 1915, a play or drama known as “The Third Party,” which he either owned or controlled, and of the gross receipts the Wilbur Company was to receive forty per cent, the remainder being retained by him. At the time this contract was made a prior contract dated June 16, 1914, had been entered into between the Wilbur Company and the Biltmore Amusement Company giving to that company the use of the theatre for eight weeks beginning December 28, 1914, during which a play owned by the Biltmore Company and called "A Pair of Sixes,” was “to be put on the boards,” the division of the gross receipts being on the same percentage as in the contract of the plaintiff. The Biltmore play being prior in time was duly presented, and the patronage of the public made the engagement so successful that as it drew to a close a prolongation of the period was deemed desirable by one Frazee, the manager of the Biltmore Company, and one Wilbur, the treasurer of the Wilbur Company. But, as this could not be accomplished unless some arrangement could be made with the plaintiff, negotiations to this end followed. It is at this point that the controversy begins. The defendants contend, that on the telegrams, letters and oral evidence the jury were not'warranted in finding, as their verdict shows they found, that the joint contract declared on in each case had been proved. The question was' one of fact for the jury under proper instructions. It could be found on the testimony of one Murry, to the admission of which [149]*149no exception was taken, that he was connected “with the Shuberts, the theatrical managers, as their booking manager,” of whom “Lee Shubert was president of the Wilbur Theatre Company,” and in which the Shuberts owned a half interest, and that “he had always done business in connection with the Biltmore Amusement Company with Mr. Frazee” its manager. Having first heard from Wilbur and Frazee “of a desire to continue the 'A Pair of Sixes’ at the Wilbur beyond February 20,1915,” he wrote to Wilbur that Shubert had asked him to take up with Mr. Comstock the matter of cancelling 'The Third Party ’ at the Wilbur Theatre, Boston,” and “I think we could get him to do this if you agreed to pay him $500 a week between yourself and Mr. Frazee, this amount to be taken out of the gross receipts. I think Mr. Frazee will be willing to pay his share of this $500. If Comstock was not a client of ours, we might be able to cancel this time, but we cannot arbitrarily do so under the circumstances. Please wire me upon receipt of this, what you think of the proposition.”

The relations between the defendant companies thus having been shown, and the defendants having admitted that the contract between them was for the use of the theatre in connection with “A Pair of Sixes,” the contract itself was properly admitted in evidence. In the absence of proof of any by-law limiting the authority of the president of the Wilbur Company, or of its treasurer, to bind the company in the management of its business, on the telegrams passing between Murry and Wilbur, all of which were introduced without objection by the defendants, the jury would be warranted in finding that the terms for the extension of “A Pair of Sixes” proposed by Murry were accepted by the Wilbur Company, and on the plaintiff’s testimony, that he acquiesced in and acted upon this proposal. But, as what had been done did not specifically bind the Biltmore Company, Murry further testified, and on his testimony the jury well could find, that he then “took the matter up at Mr. Frazee’s office and gave them a new contract —■ that is, a new contract between the Biltmore Amusement Company and the Wilbur Theatre Company for the continued production of 'A Pair of Sixes’ at the Wilbur Theatre after February 20, 1915,” and that after several conversations with Frazee in which the matter was discussed the new contract was made. The plaintiff then offered this contract dated February 4, 1915, in [150]*150evidence. It was admitted properly. It is not contended that the vice-president of the Wilbur Company and Frazee as manager of the Biltmore Company were unauthorized to bind their respective companies. The jury properly could find that the contract embodied the result of Murry’s negotiations with Frazee, for the instrument recites: “It is mutually agreed upon between the parties hereto that the sum of Five Hundred Dollars is to" be deducted from the gross receipts every week during this engagement, which amount is to be paid to F. Ray Comstock, Manager of The Third Party Company, in consideration of his consenting to the cancellation of the contract he now has for his attraction at the Wilbur Theatre beginning Feb. 22, 1915.” The jury further could find from Murry’s evidence, that, after the agreement had been executed, “The Third Party” was cancelled with the plaintiff’s assent, and that the new contract was forwarded to the manager of the theatre, and “a duplicate to Mr. Frazee” by whose company a check for $500 payable to the plaintiff’s order was sent on March 9, 1915. And the parties agreed that “‘A Pair of Sixes’ played at the Wilbur Theatre up to and including the week ending May 29,” 1915.

If during the course of a long and exhaustive cross-examination Murry may have made some statements at variance with his direct examination, his credibility was for the jury who could accept such parts of his testimony as they believed to be true. Tierney v. Boston Elevated Railway, 216 Mass. 283. It also appeared in the testimony of Murry that the telegram of April 17, 1915, was dictated,, signed and sent by Frazee. But, Frazee having denied that he was present, the counsel for the plaintiff, after having admitted the statement to be true, asked him in cross-examination, “Do you mean to say, and do you want, in leaving your testimony in that way, to let this jury infer that that telegram was a faked up affair? ” to which the witness answered that so far as he was concerned it must be; and added, that his “representative in his New York office was Mr. Hopkins. He did not know that Mr. Hopkins had sent that telegram.” The question although excepted to was within the discretion of the court. Jennings v. Rooney, 183 Mass. 577.

A letter then was offered purporting to be signed by the Biltmore Company acting by Frazee, and addressed to the Wilbur [151]*151Company, the contents of which referred to the Comstock agreement. In view of Frazee’s further evidence that this letter was signed by Hopkins, meaning, as the jury could say, that Hopkins was authorized to sign Frazee’s name, and the testimony of Hopkins, that he had sent the telegram also purporting to be signed by Frazee and dictated the letter, we cannot say that the admission of the letter as having some bearing on the fairness and good faith of Frazee as a witness to which the evidence was limited, requires the granting of a new trial. Maguire v. Pan-American Amusement Co. 211 Mass. 22, 27. St. 1913, c. 716, § 1. The defendants’ motion that the telegram and all of the evidence of Hopkins relating thereto be stricken from the record also was denied rightly. The telegram was introduced during the direct examination of Murry without exceptions being taken by the defendants.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Gold v. Spector
141 N.E. 665 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1923)
Commonwealth v. Russ
232 Mass. 58 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1919)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
116 N.E. 531, 227 Mass. 146, 1917 Mass. LEXIS 1104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/comstock-v-biltmore-amusement-co-mass-1917.