Fink v. Goodson-Todman Enterprises, Ltd.

9 Cal. App. 3d 996, 88 Cal. Rptr. 679, 169 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 106, 1970 Cal. App. LEXIS 2013
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 27, 1970
DocketCiv. 33731
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 9 Cal. App. 3d 996 (Fink v. Goodson-Todman Enterprises, Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fink v. Goodson-Todman Enterprises, Ltd., 9 Cal. App. 3d 996, 88 Cal. Rptr. 679, 169 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 106, 1970 Cal. App. LEXIS 2013 (Cal. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

*999 Opinion

REPPY, J.

This is an appeal from a dismissal judgment issued after a declination by plaintiff-appellant (hereinafter, plaintiff) to amend following the sustaining of a general demurrer interposed by defendants-respondents (hereinafter, defendants) 1 to counts for (1) breach of an express contract requiring payment of damage-type compensation for production of a television series based upon the whole or any material part of a synoptic “presentation” made by plaintiff to defendants, (2) breach of implied contract calling for reasonable value compensation if defendants produced a series based on the whole or any material part of plaintiff’s presentation, (3) breach of defendants’ fiduciary (quasi-contractual) obligation never, without plaintiff’s consent, to make use of the whole or any material part of plaintiff’s presentation, resulting in destruction of its value, (4) infringement of plaintiff’s common law copyright interest in his presentation resulting in destruction of its value, and (5) fraudulent preclusion of plaintiff from vending his presentation to other producers, resulting in damages equivalent to its reasonable value. 2

Pursuant to section 426, subdivision 3, Code of Civil Procedure, the trial court had before it, as if part of the pleading: (1) plaintiff’s “Presentation” explaining the central theme and the nature, form and content of the proposed television series, giving the time and place setting, a biographical and character sketch of the hero and some information about the other characters in the series, and presenting a plot summary for 15 of an apparently intended series of 39; (2) the full script and production ingredients for the initial episode of plaintiff’s proposed program (designated “pilot script”); (3) a less pretentious “presentation” 3 authored by “Larry Cohen” upon which the allegedly offending series televised by defendants was based; and (4) some of the components of that series, to wit, the complete script for 7 out of the 39 individual episodes 4 and the script and song for a prologue for each episode.

A general review of this material at this point will lend understanding to *1000 our more detailed summation of the various counts of the complaint and to our treatment of the judicial problems at hand.

The Augmented Pleading

Plaintiff’s proposed program is called “The Coward.” Its basic theme is the concept that a person who has undergone an experience which casts his courage in doubt, both to himself and others, may have a continuing compulsion to place himself in positions of peril and, by his conduct in meeting the dangerous circumstances, to prove to himself and others that he was and is not a coward, that he does have the attribute of courage. The hero is Dundee. His initial motivating experience occurs in World War II when, as a young lieutenant, he takes command of a company at the time his superior officer is killed. The commander had received orders from General Patton not to surrender, but before dying he directs Dundee to use his best judgment in the deployment of his troops. Although, after Dundee took over, Patton’s order is repeated over a loud-speaker, under circumstances wherein resistance would have meant annihilation, Dundee surrenders his company, asking the enemy commander to honor the Geneva convention with respect to his men. The enemy commander acknowledges that Dundee acted in good faith, but he ignores the convention except as to Dundee as an officer, and has all of Dundee’s men machine-gunned to death. Dundee is court-martialled. His attorney gets him acquitted on the technicality that his superior’s direction had relieved him of the obligation of following Patton’s explicit command, it being found inconsequential whether or not he had heard the Patton order or had made the surrender in an effort to save the men from annihilation. Afterwards, Dundee tells his attorney that he really did not know if he were guilty or innocent, but the attorney, dropping a nickel in front of Dundee, says, “[Yjou’re courage . . . is worth this much. . . .” The question of the validity of this aspersion rankles in Dundee’s mind.

After the war Dundee becomes a police officer in Greenwich Village. The time setting for the depicted events is around 1960. Each episode finds Dundee involved in an encounter with crime, mostly murder. He conducts himself with daring and bravery. To remind himself of his psychological mission, he carries nickels and has the habit of tossing one away at the end of each exploit. Although he is admired by young recruits for his courage, there are those who know of his military experience and his reaction to it. 5

*1001 The motivating back story is briefly brought out in what is proposed as the signature for each episode, and it is fully depicted in a dream flashback included in the pilot script. In the presentation plaintiff indicates that through similar techniques the audience will be kept mindful of the back story and motivation for Dundee’s conduct and attitude in the various episodes.

A segment of the presentation (and some of it was music) advises that music unique to “The Village” will be a strong factor in depicting the atmosphere of Dundee’s area of operations; and it makes the comparative observation, incidentally, that “[t]he western has its ‘ballad’.”

The alleged offending series, which was telecast about five years after plaintiff submitted his proposed program to defendants, is called “Branded” (a title which plaintiff suggests means, when all is known, “branded as a coward”). The basic theme of the “Branded” series is the same as that of plaintiff’s program. Its hero is McCord. His initial experience which ends up with him in perplexity about his courage occurs at a time when United States troops are battling American Indians in the early West. The company to which McCord is attached as a young officer comes under attack by a vastly superior force of Indians. McCord’s commanding officer, who had had a distinguished career in the service, unfortunately has become senile. He does not appreciate the impossible odds; rather, in a dreamy trance of past exploits, he sees another glorious victory. When the situation is extremely desperate McCord, who out of devotion to his superior had been delaying the move, finally relieves him of command. Immediately thereafter the commander is killed. McCord starts a last-minute retreat, but it is too late. He is hit and put in a coma. The others are killed or are seriously wounded and ultimately die. McCord is the only survivor. He is court-martialled, apparently on the basis of a report by one of the dying men that he had run off from the affray. Out of respect for his beloved commander, he refuses to put up his only defense. He is found guilty. In the course of what is akin to an allocution he is stripped of military insignia and has his sword broken in front of him. The incident is publicized and McCord gets the reputation of being á coward. Although McCord is to be considered innocent in a sense, it is made known that he, himself, is not so sure.

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9 Cal. App. 3d 996, 88 Cal. Rptr. 679, 169 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 106, 1970 Cal. App. LEXIS 2013, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fink-v-goodson-todman-enterprises-ltd-calctapp-1970.