Cook v. Wilson

108 Misc. 438
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1919
StatusPublished

This text of 108 Misc. 438 (Cook v. Wilson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cook v. Wilson, 108 Misc. 438 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1919).

Opinion

Hendrick, J.

This is one of several actions brought by various individuals against the defendant Wilson and others, to restrain the defendants in these several actions from conspiring together to compel or induce employees of the various plaintiffs to violate subsisting contracts, and to leave the employ of the plaintiffs while such contracts are in force, to the end that the plaintiffs may be compelled to recognize the Actors’ Equity Association in their dealings with actors. This is not in any phase an action between the so-called Managers’ Association and the defendants. The Managers’ Association is not a party to these actions. The actions are brought by individual employers, based on the allegations in the complaint that valid personal contracts exist between the various plaintiffs and the individual actor defendants, which individual contracts, at the time of the beginning of these actions, were in force and had not expired. The plaintiffs are individual managers of their own business, and it is claimed by them that these contracts are valid, existing contracts between a person in the theatrical business (known as a manager) and a player, by which contracts, in general terms, the player has contracted for a specified sum to render his personal service for a stated time, which had not expired at the time of the beginning of these actions. These employers ask an injunction to restrain the defendants whose contracts have not expired by their terms, and to restrain the defendant the Actors’ Equity Association from in any [440]*440way interfering, by persuasion or threat or intimidation, or by any other means, between the employer and his employee, to the end of inducing or compelling, by intimidation or otherwise, the employee to violate his contract with Ms employer, to the end that by accomplisMng the breaking of individual contracts which are in force, and by doing that generally, in relation to all individual contracts between the individual actor and the individual employer, it may compel another outside organization, not a party to these suits, but composed of the managers and known as the Producing Managers’ Association, and also employers of actors generally, to recognize the Actors’Equity Association, and to deal with actors in relation to future and to present contracts only through the Actors’ Equity Association. In applying for a temporary injunction the plaintiffs set forth, by affidavit, a great many acts which they claim are illegally participated in by the individual defendants, and also participated in by a third agency, which is not a party to these contracts, namely, the Actors’ Equity Association, which acts, they claim, are not only illegal and unjustifiable, but are done for the purpose of compelling the Managers’ Association and the managers generally and individually to recognize the Actors’ Equity Association, and to compel managers to deal in relation to the employment of actors and actresses through and with the sanction of the Actors’ Equity Association. They allege that in pursuance of that plan to compel the recognition of the Actors’ Equity Association the Equity Association has induced these individual defendants to violate their present subsisting contracts in pursuance of a scheme to induce or coerce generally actors and actresses into a violation of their contracts, to the end that they may cripple the business of the employers to such an extent that they will be forced, [441]*441in order to avoid irreparable damage and loss, to recognize the Actors’ Equity Association. We do not need to go into the details of the acts that have been set forth to enlighten the court as to the things that have been done so that the court may reach a conclusion that it is for the purpose above named that these actors have violated their contracts, and -that it is for this purpose that the strike now going on is being conducted. In other words, the fundamental fact here is, as it appears to me, that there is an effort on behalf of an organization not a party to these contracts to compel managers to recognize that association. Now, that being the undisputed fact, there is no question of the illegality not only of the acts of these actor defendants, but of the Actors’ Association. Before me there are no papers and no allegations of any illegal act on the part of the manager plaintiffs or employers in these cases. There is nothing before me to indicate any illegal act by them which could by any means be construed as a violation of the existing contracts between them and their employees, the actors, who are involved in these separate actions. I have before me simply the proof of legal subsisting contracts which have been breached by the defendant actors. There is nothing to controvert that. No opposing affidavits are filed, and there is nothing before me to controvert the truth of the various affidavits that have been filed in support of this motion. So that as the facts alleged by the plaintiffs are not controverted by the defendants, it comes to me only to declare the law governing these actions, and to provide for the enforcement of the law. This legal situation seems almost to dispose of itself. The law is too well settled to admit of argument. The actions of the actors and of the Actors’ Association which have for their object the obstruction of the public in going to the theatres peace[442]*442fully and freely and without molestation, are unlawful; the acts of the strikers, as they are called, which interfere with that right and with the right of the managers to have the public come freely to them and to trade with them without obstruction, whether those acts be acts of threat or persuasion, of themselves are a violation of law. The right of a man to do business, the rights founded on private contract between individuals, are property rights. It is a property right for these men who are running theatres to have the public allowed free, unobstructed access to their theatres and an unrestricted privilege to deal with them. That is as much a property right as is the ownership of the theatres themselves; and if there be any interference, by obstruction or otherwise, with that property right which leads to the destruction of the manager’s business, such-interference is illegal as much as would be the act of a person who took a lighted torch and applied it to the theatre and burned it down. The very recent case of Auburn Draying Company v. Wardell, 227 N. Y. 1, was one very similar to the case under consideration, and in that the law, which has been so frequently stated by the courts, was reiterated, namely, that interference between the public and the plaintiff is interference with a property right, is illegal, and will be enjoined. I wish to emphasize the clear distinction between the right of an employee to decline to enter into a contract, which he may do for any reason, and the right of employees to conspire together to destroy the business of their employers to the end that they may compel those employers to recognize any outside, agency in the transaction of business between them. If an actor breaks his contract with his employer a court of equity will not interfere between the employer and the employee to the end of compelling the employee to [443]*443fulfill Ms contract. The courts will not seek to enforce the performance of a contract for personal services, but will leave the person aggrieved to his remedy at law. The actors may break their contracts, individually or all of them, with or without reason. That is between themselves, their consciences and their employers. The court will not interfere to compel them to fulfill their contracts.

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Related

Auburn Draying Co. v. . Wardell
124 N.E. 97 (New York Court of Appeals, 1919)

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Bluebook (online)
108 Misc. 438, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cook-v-wilson-nysupct-1919.