Mel Hardman Productions, Inc. v. Robinson

604 P.2d 913
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 7, 1979
Docket16366
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 604 P.2d 913 (Mel Hardman Productions, Inc. v. Robinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mel Hardman Productions, Inc. v. Robinson, 604 P.2d 913 (Utah 1979).

Opinion

CROCKETT, Chief Justice:

Plaintiff Mel Hardman Productions, Inc. (hereinafter Productions) sued defendant Dick Robinson and his corporation, Adanac Film Productions, (hereinafter Robinson) for breach of contract for failing to deliver a nature motion picture based on the life of one Grizzly Adams.

Robinson denied that allegation and filed a counterclaim against Schick-Sunn Classic Pictures, Inc. (hereinafter Pictures), a subsidiary of Productions. Robinson alleges that he fully performed the contract, but that after he had delivered his film to Productions, the latter made a movie based upon his idea, his film and his work, which was profitably sold and distributed, and that Productions breached its agreement when it refused to pay him the “residuals” provided for in their agreement.

At the close of the evidence after a five-week jury trial, Productions and Pictures moved for directed verdicts. The trial court took those motions under advisement and submitted written interrogatories to the jury. 1 After almost two days of deliberation, the jury returned its answers to the interrogatories. They were favorable to Robinson’s contentions: that he had not committed any material breach of his contract; and that, though he had not completed all of his obligations thereunder, the conduct of Productions constituted a waiver of his failure to do so. Similarly, as to the counterclaim, the jury found that Productions or Pictures, its agent, had used and distributed Robinson’s photoplay, as that term was used in the contract.

Both Productions and Pictures then moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. The court adopted the jury’s finding that Robinson had not materially breached the contract and denied Productions any recovery on its complaint. How *915 ever, the court concluded that, since neither Productions nor Pictures distributed any of the actual film which Robinson had. produced and delivered to them, he was “not entitled to any residuals or deferred compensation.” The court therefore granted the motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict and ruled that Robinson should also not recover on his counterclaim. He appeals.

On July 24, 1973, Robinson and Productions entered into a Production Agreement whereby Robinson was to produce a “photo-play” sufficient to produce a feature-length motion picture about one “Grizzly Adams,” a historical character who was known for his friendliness and association with wild animals. Under the agreement, Robinson was to produce a photoplay “to the sole satisfaction” of Productions “sufficient to produce a motion picture of not less than ninety (90) minutes in duration, filmed on location in the wilds, tentatively entitled ‘Grizzly Adams’ based on and pursuant to a final story and script to be submitted” by Robinson, and with him playing the main character.

As payment therefor, Robinson was to receive $150,000 in four installments, plus a percentage of Productions’ gross receipts from the sale, distribution, or other disposition of the photoplay or Productions’ rights therein. The amount he was to receive was subject to deductions provided for in a distribution agreement between Productions and Pictures, and any costs incurred in the distribution, sale, or other disposition of the photoplay not otherwise to be deducted under that agreement.

Robinson began filming in mid-August 1973 and delivered about 20 hours of film to Productions by October 31, 1973. One month later, after it had paid Robinson the $150,000, Productions hired one John Mahon to assemble a preliminary film from the footage that had been submitted by Robinson. After Productions reviewed the film, they allegedly notified Robinson that the result was not satisfactory; and advanced him another $35,000 to complete the motion picture. The position of plaintiffs is that defendant still failed to deliver a satisfactory motion picture; and in April 1974, this action was initiated for the money it had paid him and for claimed loss of profits because of his alleged breach of the agreement.

On June 10, 1974, Productions employed one Charles Sellier “to salvage the Grizzly Adams project.” He reviewed the film that Robinson had submitted and he states that it was his opinion that, due to the deficiencies in the film and Robinson’s lack of cooperation, it could not be used; and that he proceeded to produce a different motion picture, entitled “The Life and Times of Grizzly Adams,” which contained none of the actual film which had been produced by Robinson. This Sellier version of the story was released in November 1974, and is conceded to be a financial success. It was subsequently distributed to theaters throughout the United States and foreign countries, and shown on television. It was also the basis for a weekly television series which ran for over two years. In July of 1975, Robinson filed his counterclaim for percentages of the proceeds plaintiffs had realized from the distribution of that film. Following extensive discovery procedures and after numerous pre-trial motions and conferences, the case came to trial on January 8, 1979.

The position essayed by Productions and Pictures, both in the trial court and on appeal, is that the intent of the term “pho-toplay,” as used in the agreement, was restricted to the specific motion picture on film (with sound and voice recording) actually produced by Robinson, and to the satisfaction of Productions. Whereas the position taken by the defendant is that the meaning intended was more general, including the aggregate of the name, the general concept of the story, and the literary and work product, which he fashioned into the Grizzly Adams story, all of which he delivered to the plaintiffs and which they made use of.

We note our agreement with the thought that it is simply not consistent with principles of-justice and fair dealing for one party to impose upon another a requirement that something be done to his satisfaction and then arbitrarily withhold his approval. Equity and good conscience re *916 quire that he act in good faith, and prevent him from stubbornly refusing to acknowledge satisfaction without some reasonable justification for doing so. 2

In the course of the trial, the jury heard and saw all of the evidence relating to those issues. This included the viewing of the Sellier version, which was distributed, and a three-hour edited version of the film which Robinson had produced and delivered to the plaintiffs.

The jury was given proper instructions as to the issues involved and the case was submitted to them on special interrogatories. Instruction No. 18 was:

This case will be submitted to you in the form of a set of questions to answer which will resolve the factual issues in this case. After you have resolved the factual questions, the court will determine how your factual determinations apply to the legal issues involved here.

As has been stated above, the jury answered the interrogatories generally favorable to the defendant, and this included this pivotal question:.

Did productions or its agent distribute Robinson’s photoplay as that term is used in the contract?

to which the jury answered “Yes.

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604 P.2d 913, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mel-hardman-productions-inc-v-robinson-utah-1979.