United Artists Corporation v. Strand Productions, Inc., and Ressan Incorporated, Debtors, Strand Productions, Inc., and Ressan Incorporated, Debtors v. United Artists Corporation

216 F.2d 305, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 4764, 1954 Trade Cas. (CCH) 67,876
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedOctober 15, 1954
Docket13631
StatusPublished

This text of 216 F.2d 305 (United Artists Corporation v. Strand Productions, Inc., and Ressan Incorporated, Debtors, Strand Productions, Inc., and Ressan Incorporated, Debtors v. United Artists Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United Artists Corporation v. Strand Productions, Inc., and Ressan Incorporated, Debtors, Strand Productions, Inc., and Ressan Incorporated, Debtors v. United Artists Corporation, 216 F.2d 305, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 4764, 1954 Trade Cas. (CCH) 67,876 (9th Cir. 1954).

Opinion

216 F.2d 305

UNITED ARTISTS CORPORATION, Appellant,
v.
STRAND PRODUCTIONS, Inc., and Ressan Incorporated, Debtors,
Appellees.
STRAND PRODUCTIONS, Inc., and Ressan Incorporated, Debtors, Appellants,
v.
UNITED ARTISTS CORPORATION, Appellee.

No. 13631.

United States Court of Appeals Ninth Circuit.

Oct. 15, 1954.

Wright, Wright, Green & Wright, Loyd Wright and Charles A. Loring, Los Angeles, Cal., for appellant United Artists.

Reynolds, Painter & Cherniss, Louis Miller, Los Angeles, Cal., for appellant Strand Productions.

Before STEPHENS and CHAMBERS, Circuit Judges, and WALSH, District judge.

CHAMBERS, Circuit Judge.

The questions here arise out of two motion picture contracts bearing dates of March 18, 1948, and June 9, 1948, wherein United Artists Corporation, a Delaware company, is the distributor. Under one, James Nasser Productions, Inc., is the producer and under the other James Nasser individually is the producer.

Strand Productions, Inc., and Ressan, Incorporated, debtors, have succeeded to the Nasser interests. In all respects material to this cause, the substance of the contracts is identical.

Throughout this opinion, United Artists Corporation will be referred to as 'United' or 'the distributor.' For discussion purposes, the original producers will be referred to as 'Nasser' or 'the producer.' The debtors in bankruptcy (Chapter XI) will also be referred to as 'the producer,' 'the debtor' and as 'Strand.' 'Strand' will encompass both Strand Productions, Inc., and Ressan, Incorporated.

Each contract contains 39 printed pages plus several addenda pages. By the terms of the contracts, Nasser undertook to make four feature motion pictures and United agreed to distribute them. Apparently, United is a major distributor, but not a major producer. It restricts its business to distribution of pictures made by others. It is not doing violence to the contentions of either side to say that, at least by volume of content, the contracts concern themselves primarily with distribution of pictures for exhibition in motion picture theatres, containing a great mass of clauses concerning such distribution, evidently worked out and accumulated through the years. The television clauses of the contract are relatively short, but in them is the source of this litigation.

A table of pictures showing (a) the original contract name and (b) the name under which the picture was released, together with the release date, is as follows:

Name of Picture Date Released

1. a. Innocent Affair

b. Don't Trust Your

Husband October 15, 1948

2. a. Some Rain Must

Fall

b. Cover Up March 11, 1949

3. a. Joe Macbeth

b. Without Honor October 21, 1949

4. a. Caesar the Great

b. A Kiss for

Corliss November 29, 1949

A better understanding of the case may be gained if at the outset it is stated that at the time of the trial of the facts below it appears that the major motion picture producers, since the development of the television industry, have adopted a policy of not releasing to television their films originally or currently made for theatre exhibition, although about all have produced new films for television alone.

It seems that United, as a distributor, has attempted to follow, with a few exceptions, the practices of the major producers who ordinarily do their own distributing.1 Therefore, the television industry has been largely dependent, for film stories, upon old films not in the hands of United and the major producers, or upon new films produced exclusively for television.

It is evident that if the debtor Strand can get its four pictures free from the United contract, quick cash can be had from television exhibitors for its creditors.

Identical portions of the contract upon which this controversy turns are as follows:

'Grant

'Producer grants to United and United accepts from Producer the sole and exclusive right, license and privilege to exploit, distribute, exhibit and market, and cause to be exploited, distributed, exhibited and marketed the motion pictures specified herein in all gauges throughout the world, and particularly in the territories set forth in Schedule 'B' hereto attached. Such grant includes the following in addition to any other right which may be set forth herein:

'a) the right to sub-license;

'b) the right to broadcast and televise such parts of any such motion picture as United may deem advisable for the purposes of exploitation and advertising, provided Producer owns such right. All other broadcasting and television rights of every kind and character are reserved by Producer, except as provided elsewhere herein;

'c) the sole and exclusive license under the United States copyright and any other copyright to exploit, distribute, exhibit and market and motion picture so copyrighted and the sole and exclusive right to license others under said copyrights. 'Period of License

'The period of license hereunder for each motion picture in each territory is five (5) years from the date of general release of that motion picture in that territory. But in any event the term of the grant and the period of the license shall terminate and come to an end seven (7) years from the date of general release in the United States of America. 'Television

'The parties hereto agree that television may require a new method, manner or system of marketing motion pictures. Accordingly, United agrees with respect to such motion pictures as to which Producer owns the necessary television rights United will market such motion pictures in relation to television in the same manner and under the same method as may be from time to time adopted by other major motion picture distributors and at rates approximately not less favorable to Producer than those from time to time adopted by other comparable television distributing agencies. If and when television shall become a commercial practice and United shall not then acquire the necessary facilities with which to market motion pictures in the television field in a manner favorably comparable to its present-day standards of distribution, then Producer shall be privileged to dispose of its television rights in the motion pictures to any other party. 'United's Obligations

'United agrees to devote its best efforts to the proper marketing and disposition of the motion pictures delivered hereunder in all the territories wherein it customarily markets motion pictures and to make such marketing as complete and efficient as practicable so that the gross returns from the marketing of the produce hereunder shall be as large as possible and at the same time consistent with the sound business policy of United. 'United's Default

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United Artists Corp. v. Strand Productions, Inc.
216 F.2d 305 (Ninth Circuit, 1954)

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216 F.2d 305, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 4764, 1954 Trade Cas. (CCH) 67,876, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-artists-corporation-v-strand-productions-inc-and-ressan-ca9-1954.