McIntosh v. Miner

37 A.D. 483, 55 N.Y.S. 1074
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedFebruary 15, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 37 A.D. 483 (McIntosh v. Miner) 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
McIntosh v. Miner, 37 A.D. 483, 55 N.Y.S. 1074 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

Ingraham, J.:

The parties to this action made a contract, dated February 1,1896, by which Miner and Brooks, the defendants, agreed to assume the management of the plaintiff as a star in a theatrical company to be organized by them for the seasons of 1896-1897, 1897-1898, 1898-1899, and the plaintiff agreed to render services as star under the defendants’ managemant in the said company upon the terms and conditions specified in the contract. The defendants agreed to pay the plaintiff $100 per week as compensation for his services, and “ a sum equal to twenty-five per cent of the net profits made by the said enterprise for the first season and thirty-five per cent of the ensuing two seasons.” The first season under the agreement was to commence “ sometime in the month of November, and the two ensuing seasons sometime in the month of September, and shall continue as long as the same may be mutually agreed upon.” The defendants were to engage the members of the company, make the route and select the plays-that were to be performed. The plaintiff agreed not to render professional services between November 1, 1896, and July 1, 1899, except in the State of Nevada, without the written consent of the defendants.

The complaint alleges that the plaintiff performed all the conditions of the contract on his part, and has been ever ready and willing to perform the same, and has demanded from time to time of' the defendants to complete and perform the contract entered into-by them on their part, but that the defendants have neglected and refused to perform the same or any par-t thereof. The allegations as to the performance by the plaintiff and the breach by the defendants are denied by the answer.

[485]*485The court charged the jury that the plaintiff was entitled to recover his damages, as in the case of a breach of contract for his employment. The jury found a verdict for the plaintiff. The defendants insisted in the court below that the contract contemplated another agreement between the parties, by which the term of each season was to be fixed; and that in its present condition it was too indefinite to be enforced, and on that ground moved to dismiss the complaint and excepted to the denial of such motion.

The only provision in the contract as to the duration of the season was contained in the 6th clause, which provided that the first season under the agreement should commence some time in the month of November, and the two ensuing seasons sometime in the month of September, and should continue as long as the same might be mutually agreed upon. Thus, by the contract, the defendants were to act as the plaintiff’s manager for three seasons. The contract varies from that usually presented by which the engagement is either for a season, its duration to be ascertained from a custom or usage in the profession tó which the parties belonged, or for a definite number of weeks or months. Here, the contract contemplated a season, the duration of which was not fixed, either by a reference to the custom and usage in the profession, or by the express terms .of the contract, but was to be fixed by a subsequent agreement. The plaintiff alleged in the complaint that the season referred to in the contract was understood and agreed by the parties to be the usual theatrical season, consisting of thirty-two weeks, unless otherwise extended or continued by mutual agreement. This allegation is contradicted by the terms of the contract, which provides that the season shall continue so long as the same may be mutually agreed upon ; but there was no evidence to show a usage or custom in the profession to which the parties belonged by which a theatrical season continued for thirty-two weeks.

The only evidence on this subject was the plaintiff’s testimony. He was asked: Will you tell the jury what is the usual length of a theatrical season in the city of New York?” The witness attempted to answer, That is a question which ”— when he was interrupted by his counsel, and after a question objected to, the witness continued: I have asked a great many people during the last two or three weeks what their idea of a theatrical season is, and in [486]*486no instance have they been able to give it.” The court then said : “ What we want to know, if there is such a thing, is what is the usual theatrical season 1 ” Counsel for the plaintiff then asked this question : “ What is the usual theatrical season in the city of New York as it is generally understood in the theatrical profession, not taking in occasional cases ? ” To which plaintiff replied, “ I am quite sure it is thirty-two weeks.” This was not sufficient to show that there is any custom which can be presumed to have been intended by the parties as the term for which the employment waste continue in the absence of a subsequent understanding. When asked as to his knowledge of such a custom, all that he had to say was, “ I have asked a great many people during the last two or three weeks what their idea of a theatrical season is, and in no instance have they been able to give it.” That would tend to show that there was no such custom. The fact that the witness was willing to swear that he was- sure it was thirty-two weeks, is no evidence that other persons were sure of it or that thirty-two weeks was recognized as a theatrical season.

We have, therefore, a contract whereby the defendants agree to act as manager for the plaintiff and to pay him $100 a week for a season, the duration of which was to be determined by a subsequent agreement. No such agreement was made, and no evidence was produced to show that there was a custom or usage in the profession to which the parties belonged by which a season was-understood to be any particular period. It is difficult to see how the court could enforce such a contract, or upon what basis the damages could be ascertained in case of a breach. As was said by the presiding justice in Nicholls v. Granger (7 App. Div. 113), “ Where the parties contemplate by their own actions in a formal agreement to make that certain which is uncertain in an informal agreement, which is not intended to be the final agreement, there is nothing which the court has any jurisdiction to enforce. * * * They provided for the execution of an agreement which should contain other provisions than those contained in the informal agreement of August tenth. Under these circumstances, the paper is to be treated as nothing but a step in a negotiation looking to a final settlement.”

I also think that the allegation of the complaint that there was [487]*487a breach of this contract by the defendants was not sustained by the evidence. Up to the interview in the street between the plaintiff and Brooks in October, it would seem that the defendants were engaged in making preparations to carry out the contract. They had procured the play to be written for the company of which the plaintiff was to be the star, and the plaintiff was assured that the defendants would be ready in the month of November, when the season was to commence. At that meeting the first suggestion that the contract was not to be performed came from the plaintiff, and it was in relation to that suggestion that Brooks invited the plaintiff to a subsequent interview. The plaintiff testified that Brooks at such subsequent interview said to him : “ Mr. Miner does not wish to stand in your way, and if you wish to get other employment, why yon may do so.” It was in answer to this statement that the plaintiff proposed that the existing contract be canceled by the payment to the plaintiff of $400. The plaintiff says that Brooks refused such offer.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 A.D. 483, 55 N.Y.S. 1074, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcintosh-v-miner-nyappdiv-1899.