Jones v. Universal Pictures Co.

114 P.2d 723, 45 Cal. App. 2d 748, 1941 Cal. App. LEXIS 1543
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 7, 1941
DocketCiv. No. 2758
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 114 P.2d 723 (Jones v. Universal Pictures Co.) 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
Jones v. Universal Pictures Co., 114 P.2d 723, 45 Cal. App. 2d 748, 1941 Cal. App. LEXIS 1543 (Cal. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

BARNARD, P. J.

This is an appeal from a judgment decreeing the reformation of a written contract. The parties stipulated as to the amount due to the plaintiff if reformation was granted and the only question here raised is as to the validity of the decree granting reformation.

The action which was filed on July 8, 1938, relates to a contract dated March 31, 1934, and to a renewal thereof dated about March 1, 1935, extending the arrangement for another year. Both of these agreements were assigned by Buck Jones to Buck Jones Productions but, for convenience, we will refer to Buck Jones as the respondent.

Shortly prior to March 31, 1934, the respondent and his agent, a Mr. Vincent, had certain negotiations with Mr. Henigson, an authorized representative of the appellant, which led to the execution of the original contract in question. During these negotiations it was agreed that the respondent, during the ensuing year, would produce from six to eight motion pictures, that the appellant would distribute these pictures, that the respondent would be paid a fixed sum per picture and also a percentage of the net profits, and, among other things, it was agreed that the appellant might deduct the actual cost of its advertising in connection with each picture produced, with the maximum fixed at $5000 per picture. A contract was then prepared by the appellant and submitted to Vincent, to whom the respondent left the details of the [750]*750transaction. When the respondent was asked to sign the contract he asked Henigson if it was “the contract as we talked it over,” and being assured that it was he signed the document without reading it. About a year later the contract was renewed for another year. At the expiration of that year the relationship was continued for a third year by the execution of a new contract. During all of this time and up to October 30, 1937, the appellant accounted to the respondent monthly, each statement listing the amounts actually expended by the appellant for advertising purposes. On October 30, 1937, after the relationship between the parties had been severed as far as the production of any more pictures was concerned, the appellant sent the respondent a statement covering the entire period and making a flat charge against the respondent of $5000 for advertising in connection with each picture produced and distributed.

Paragraph 8 of the original contract dated March 31, 1934, so far as material here, reads as follows:

“All advertising, publicity and/or exploitation in connection with each photoplay shall be handled by Universal. Universal shall expend and advance such sums as it may deem necessary for trade paper, billboard, magazine, cuts, campaign book and/or advertising of the photoplays to be produced and distributed hereunder, and shall be entitled to deduct and retain for its own benefit from the gross proceeds to be derived from said photoplays the sum of Five Thousand Dollars ($5000.00) per photoplay as its advertising charge.”

The decree appealed from ordered this provision reformed so as to provide that the appellant might deduct its actual cost of advertising, not exceeding $5000 for each picture.

The record discloses the following evidence material to this controversy. The respondent testified that he had a conversation with Mr. Henigson, at which Vincent was present, some three weeks before March 31, 1934; that Henigson stated that only the actual cost of advertising would be charged against each production and that he told Henigson that was all right; that he left the details of the contract to Vincent; that Henigson later phoned him and asked him about signing the contract; that he asked Henigson whether the contract “is the contract as we talked it over”; that Henigson said it was and he replied, “That is good enough for me”; and that he then signed the contract without reading it. With reference to [751]*751the execution of the original contract Mr. Muhl, a representative of the appellant, testified that the original draft of the contract which was submitted contained the same provision regarding the costs of advertising which appears in the contract as finally executed, that an attorney acting for Vincent wanted this provision clarified as to whether the appellant would deduct a flat sum of $5000 or the actual cost of the advertising not exceeding $5000, and that he took this up with Henigson who said "that we did not want to give it if we did not have to; but if we had to give it in connection with the closing of the contract it would be o.k. to do so.” He further testified that he later discussed the terms of the contract with Vincent and his attorney, and that he could not recall any discussion as to the charge for advertising but that "it was not changed, however.” He then testified that at the time the respondent signed the contract there was no discussion as to its terms and no one read it. The attorney who represented Vincent testified that when he read the first draft of the contract he told Vincent that the provision as to advertising charges was ambiguous, and that when he went over the redraft of the contract he made a note to the effect that the ambiguity still existed and that he thought it might be construed as permitting the appellant to deduct $5000 for advertising services. There is evidence that this note was sent to Vincent’s office but there seems to be no evidence that he read it.

It appears without contradiction that the appellant sent monthly statements in which the cost of advertising only was charged against the respondent. The respondent testified that in 1935 the appellant asked him about a renewal of the contrast on the same terms, to which .he agreed, and that the appellant wrote him a letter which appears in evidence. This letter refers to the original contract and provides for an extension of one year with a few changes which are not material here.

The respondent testified that in 1936, when the question of another agreement came up, his attorney, Mr. Sherman, who had taken over his business, called his attention to the fact that the provision of the original contract relating to the charge for advertising did not agree with what the respondent had told him the agreement was, and that he instructed him to straighten the matter out. Mr. Sherman testified that [752]*752about the first of March, 1936, he took this matter up with Mr. Muhl telling him that the advertising provision in the original agreement was ambiguous, that the respondent had understood that it was to be the actual cost of advertising with a maximum of $5000, that the appellant had been accounting on that basis at all times and that he wanted that provision “clarified”, that Muhl replied that he did not see any objection to that, that this was his understanding, that the appellant had been accounting on the basis of actual cost of advertising, and that Muhl further stated he would like to discuss the matter with his superior, Mr. Koenig. Shortly thereafter, Muhl wrote a letter with reference to the new contract in which he said: “We shall clarify that the cost only of advertising may be charged to each picture but not in an amount exceeding $5000. ’ ’ Mr. Sherman testified that a little later he had a talk with Mr. Koenig in which he told him the original contract was “a little ambiguous on whether $5000 for a picture should be charged for advertising against Mr. Jones’ production, or whether it should be the actual cost of advertising with a limitation of $5000,” and that Mr. Muhl had agreed to clarify the situation, to which Koenig replied that this was satisfactory.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
114 P.2d 723, 45 Cal. App. 2d 748, 1941 Cal. App. LEXIS 1543, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-universal-pictures-co-calctapp-1941.