First National Pictures, Inc. v. Pappe

1934 OK 644, 39 P.2d 526, 170 Okla. 279, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 742
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 20, 1934
Docket23238
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1934 OK 644 (First National Pictures, Inc. v. Pappe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First National Pictures, Inc. v. Pappe, 1934 OK 644, 39 P.2d 526, 170 Okla. 279, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 742 (Okla. 1934).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Plaintiff, First National Pictures, Inc., brought this action in the court below against the defendant, Mrs. R. Pappe, Sr., “doing business under the style and name of Grand Theater,” alleging the breach of six written contracts which p’aintiff claimed it had entered into with said defendant, acting through her manager and agent, one Mrs. Jersak, whereby the plaintiff, as a distributor of motion picture films, had agreed to furnish, and defendant, as an exhibitor, had agreed to receive, exhibit, and pay a certain price for use.

The contracts which are made the basis of the action are attached as exhibits to the petition and show dates from 1925 to 1927 and appear to have been variously signed as follows:

“Mrs. R. Pappe, Sr., by Mrs. Wm. Jersak,”
“Mrs. R. Pappe, Sr., by Mrs. Jersak,”
“Grand Theater, by Mrs. R. Pappe, Sr., by Mrs. Jersak.”

The breaches complained of are that some of the pictures were received under each ■contract and paid for, but that about September 2, 1927, defendant notified plaintiff that the theater had been sold and canceling the alleged contracts and refusing to accept and exhibit any further pictures although plaintiff tendered full performance.

Plaintiff asks in damages the full purchase price agreed upon for the. unexhibited pictures under each contract.

Plaintiff presents a seventh cause of action based upon one of the provisions in said contracts for arbitration of differences and the making of an award and the refusal of defendant to abide by the award, but as plaintiff later moved a dismissal of this cause of action, it will not be necessary to further define the pleading in this respect.

Certain motions and demurrers were directed at the petition and defendant answered the petition, denying all the allegations of the petition generally and denying specifically that Mrs. R. Pappe, Sr., was doing business as and under the name and style of Grand Theater as in the petition alleged, denying that Mrs. Jersak was the agent and manager for defendant as alleged, denying the execution of any of the contracts sued on; and then at considerable length and detail sets up the defense that the contracts were and are illegal and unenforceable because made in violation of file Anti-Trust Laws of the United States, *280 and then, still denying execution and agency, asks for damages by way of counterclaim and by way of •cross-petition because of the alleged violation of the anti-trust laws.

The reply denies the material allegations of the answer and cross-petition and sets up the provisions of the contracts regarding arbitration; alleges their irrevokable nature and terms of construction and compliance therewith on the part of plaintiff, and attempting to set up ratification of the contracts, which plea of ratification was later stricken on confessed motion and with it the entry of dismissal of the seventh cause of action.

It was upon this state of the pleadings that the parties went to trial.

It seems reasonably apparent to this court that the plaintiff had the burden of proving, not only that Mrs. R. Pappe, Sr., was beneficially interested in the Gfrand Theater, but that Mrs. Jersak was her manager or agent for the purpose of contracting for films, and also to show that the contracts had been accepted in the manner provided in the contract by plaintiff, and that this it must show by some competent legal evidence before the contracts sued on could be properly considered as evidence in the case.

It was also incumbent upon the plaintiff to offer the contracts in evidence and secure their admission as such before they could be considered, and their admission in evidence was a preliminary or at least an incident to the proof of breach of the conditions thereof, and that it was also incumbent upon the plaintiff to show damages, if other than nominal damages was to be claimed, .under the statutory rules as to measure of damages.

It seems reasonably clear also that if, and when, the plaintiff had sustained the burden, it devolved upon the defendant by some competent and legal evidence to meet the issue of agency and execution, and if same could not be met, then, or in addition thereto, that she prove that at the time of the execution of the alleged contracts, the plaintiff had entered into some sort of agreement, combination, or arrangement for the purpose of preventing lawful competition contrary to the acts of Congress complained of, and that the contracts sued upon were the subject-matter of the unlawful combination, or that same were entered into in furtherance of the carrying out of the combination.

The case was tried in the lower court on July 3, 1931, and the only witness produced and examined was one H. B. Drennan, who described himself as office manager of the plaintiff at Oklahoma City and having access to the books and records of the plaintiff. This witness testified that he had nothing to do with the taking of the contracts, knew nothing of their execution, but merely found them in the office when they went through there in the course of business, and that he knew nothing about who placed the stamp of approval on ■ the contracts, as that was done in New York City.

This witness also testified that the films were made in other states, shipped to Oklahoma City, and then distributed to exhibitors.

Defendant made certain pertinent objections to the evidence regarding the contracts and their execution, and upon their offer in evidence the plaintiff was permitted to supply the necessary proof of execution, but we have examined the record closely and find no proof that defendant, Mrs. R. Pappe, Sr., was ever connected with the Grand Theater, was ever in the picture business, or that she employed Mrs. Jersak as her agent or manager, and no proof of her signature or that she knew that her name was being used in any manner in connection therewith, and we find no place in which the contracts sued upon were admitted in evidence or ever offered after they were rejected upon the first offer.

However, it appears in the record that defendant referred to the contracts as exhibits and upon • cross-examination treated them as if in evidence, and did not specifically call the attention of the court to the fact that they had not been admitted in evidence, and all attorneys as well as the court seem to have treated them as in evidence.

If defendant were serious in her contention that she was not the principal in the contract for the films, was not engaged in exhibiting films, and did not operate the Grand Theater, it is difficult to see why she should have felt that an elaborate defense under the Sherman Anti-Trust Laws of the United States was necessary, for here a few simple words of denial and explanation from either her or Mrs. Jersak would have put an end to the case.

It is equally unthinkable that able attorneys who were confronted with the issue should not have investigated the matter and if, as should have readily appeared if it were a fact, the defendant was not engaged in the business and was imposed upon by one who fraudulently and without authority had used her name without her knowl *281 edge, should not have dismissed the case and sought the correct principal.

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1934 OK 644, 39 P.2d 526, 170 Okla. 279, 1934 Okla. LEXIS 742, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-pictures-inc-v-pappe-okla-1934.