Hart v. Thompson

10 A.D. 183, 41 N.Y.S. 909, 75 N.Y. St. Rep. 1279
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 15, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 10 A.D. 183 (Hart v. Thompson) 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
Hart v. Thompson, 10 A.D. 183, 41 N.Y.S. 909, 75 N.Y. St. Rep. 1279 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Ingraham, J.:

This action was brought to recover damages for a breach of a contract, whereby the plaintiff was to perform certain work, labor [184]*184and services as a professional actor in a certain part or character called Hiram Pepper,” in a drama, comedy or play called “ The Two Sisters; ” “ that is to say, for a period of forty weeks beginning in August, 1888, at the agreed salary or compensation of seventy-five dollars per week for each'and every week during said theatrical season.” The answer of the defendants denies the making of the contract or agreement alleged in the complaint, and alleges that, on or about the 5th day of March, 1888, the plaintiff was engaged and employed by the defendants to render certain services in a certain play known as “ The Two Sisters; ” that said engagement or agreement was for no definite period, but that the same could be terminated by either party thereto on giving two weeks’ notice of his or their intention to do so ; and that the said notice was given in the middle of September, 1888, whereupon the said contract became terminated and at an end.

The plaintiff, to prove his case, introduced three letters written by the defendant Ryer, with secondary evidence of the contents of the letters written by plaintiff in answer thereto, the original letters written by plaintiff not being produced, evidence having been given that the same had been lost or destroyed. The making of "the contract sued on depended upon the answer by plaintiff to the defendants’ letter of March 1, 1888. The contents of this letter were proved by the evidence of plaintiff. The substance of that answer was, “ I would accept the terms. He said in his letter that $75 was the limit, and, joking, I wrote that ‘ I will play the limit.’ I accepted the terms.” The plaintiff further testified that he did not add any condition; and it is this letter written by the plaintiff in answer to the defendants’ letter of March 1,1888, which the plaintiff alleges made the contract sued on, and which is alleged to he a contract for a specified time, viz., for a theatrical season, a period of forty weeks beginning in August, 1888.

In looking through the letters which have been produced and the testimony of the contents of letters not produced, we look in vain for any statement as to the period for which the plaintiff was to be employed. The first letter of defendant Ryer to the plaintiff, dated February 20, 1888, was a proposition to the plaintiff to take part in a venture of the defendants in the production of a new play which was to commence in August in the neighborhood of New York city. [185]*185In that letter Byer proposed that the plaintiff should take part in the play, in substance asking what salary he would accept, and said that he would submit plaintiff’s proposition to Mr. Thompson, his co-defendant, and would then notify the plaintiff if it was satisfactory. In answer to that letter the plaintiff wrote to defendant Byer, saying that he (the plaintiff) would like to know what the part was so that he could understand it. There was no statement in this letter as to the term of the employment. It was simply a proposition to take part as an actor in the production of a play which the parties then intended to produce in the following August. The defendant Byer wrote to plaintiff in answer to the request before mentioned on March 1, 1888, giving certain extracts from the play, and stated : “The piece is accepted, and will be produced at the Fourteenth Street Theater, N. Y. City, on November 12th, for a run; ” then he told the plaintiff that seventy-five dollars a week was as far as they could go ; that amount is our limit; surely a season at home is of some value to you. Think it over, and if you accept, notify me at once that I may chase away those that may seek Pepper.’ ” It was in answer to this letter that the plaintiff swears that he sent the communication to the defendants in which he said that he would accept the terms. The defendant Byer contradicts the plaintiff as to the terms of the plaintiff’s reply to this letter of March first. Byer says that plaintiff’s reply to that letter of March first was that “ he would play the limit provided I would pay his hotel bills and railroad fares. His salaiy provided I would add to it the railroad and hotel bills.” There is a sharp conflict of evidence as to this reply, plaintiff testifying that it was a mere acceptance of the terms theretofore proposed, the defendant testifying that it was a new proposal, which was to add to the salary of seventy-five dollars a week plaintiff’s railroad fares and hotel bills.

The plaintiff also produced a letter from the defendant Byer, dated March 5, 1888, which contains this statement: “R’R’d fares, yes; Hotel Bills, nay, nay * * * $75.00 and railway fares.” To that letter it is not pretended that any reply was sent, and a question of fact was thus presented as to whether or not the plaintiff ever did accept in writing the defendant’s proposition to employ him at seventy-five dollars a week and railroad fares, whether in fact a contract was made by this correspondence between the par[186]*186ties. The terms of this last letter by defendant Ryer strongly corroborate his testimony as to the claim that at the time it was written no contract had been finally made, but that the proposition of the defendant to plaintiff was met by a counter proposition of plaintiff to defendant that defendant would pay, in addition to seventy-five dollars a week, the plaintiff’s railroad fares and hotel bills while traveling and engaged in the production of the play. Putting it, therefore, most strongly for the plaintiff, a question of fact was presented to be determined as to whether or not any contract was made by this correspondence.

The defendant having denied the receipt of the letter, as testified to by the plaintiff, and having testified that plaintiff’s letter contained anew proposition and not an acceptance of the terms of the letter of March first, the defendant was asked as to what took place between the defendant and Mr. Hart in respect to engaging Mr. Hart to take part in The Two Sisters.” That was objected to as incompetent, and the objection sustained. To that the defendants excepted. A series of questions was then asked the defendant as to what the final agreement was. Objections were made to most of these questions, and were sustained. The defendant, however, was finally allowed to testify that the plaintiff verbally acceded to the terms of seventy-five dollars a week and his railroad fares, and subsequently, on redirect examination, he was allowed to testify: “ At last we arranged matters that it should be for $75, his railway fares and two weeks’ notice to either side — that I could give him two weeks’ notice to quit, or he could give me two weeks’ notice that he would quit. There were other conversations, of course, but I don’t follow them up; I don’t remember them.” The testimony of the defendant as to the contract, having been made verbally between the plaintiff and the defendant Ryer after the return of the plaintiff in March, 1888, was corroborated by several witnesses as to interviews between plaintiff and Mr. Ryer at Mr. Ryer’s house.

We think that the finding of the referee upon this testimony, that any contract was finally made by these letters alone, is against the weight of evidence.- It depends entirely upon the recollection of the plaintiff as to the contents of a letter written several years before the trial. It is contradicted by the letter written by the defendant to the plaintiff, which the plaintiff produced, and from that it [187]

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Related

Frye v. State
192 Misc. 260 (New York State Court of Claims, 1948)
McIntosh v. Miner
53 A.D. 240 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1900)
Hart v. Thompson
57 N.Y.S. 334 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1899)

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Bluebook (online)
10 A.D. 183, 41 N.Y.S. 909, 75 N.Y. St. Rep. 1279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hart-v-thompson-nyappdiv-1896.