Court Opinion

ID: 8846092
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-26 16:57:52.387241+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:05:20.887022
License: Public Domain

CALDWELL, Circuit Judge,
(after stating the facts.) The contract between the parties, in legal effect, is a contract of partnership. By its terms one party contributes to the business of the partnership the use of the theater building, and is to pay certain expenses incident to the use thereof, and the other party contributes his time and skill in the management and conduct of the business, and is to pay a fixed sum per month for lighting and heating the building, *443and in addition thereto a fixed sum for rent, and the lessor is to receive, “as additional rent, * :f one half of the net annual profits accruing from the business of the theater,” and each party is to pay one half of the losses of the business. This constitutes them partners. If the agreement between the parties was a lease, simply, the cause would not, upon the allegations of the original bill, be one of equitable cognizance; for, divested of the element of partnership, it would have been a bill for a summary proceeding in the nature of a forcible entry and detainer, or an action of ejectment, and must have been dismissed upon the ground that the complainant had a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy at law. But, in view of the partnership relation created by this contract, the jurisdiction of equity to entertain the original bill seems to be clear. The case of Marble Co. v. Ripley, 10 Wall. 339, 350, is an authority directly in point. That case shows that the contract in the ease at bar is, in the language of Mr. Justice Strong, “in a very practical sense, a com tract of partnership.” The case is also an authority for the rule that equity will interfere by injunction to restrain one partner from violating the rights of his copartner, even when the dissolution of the partnership is not contemplated. The reason for this rule is thus stated by Vice Chancellor Wigraxn in Fairthorne v. Weston, Hare, 387:
*‘If that were the rule of the court, if a Mil would In no case lie to compel a man to observe the covenants of a partnership deed unless the bill seeks a dissolution of the partnership, it is obvious that a person fraudulently inclined might, of his own mere will and pleasure, compel bis copartner to submit to the alternative of dissolving a partnership, or ruin him by a continued violation of the partnership contract.”
This doctrine is well settled. High, Inj. § 1330, and cases cited.
It is not controverted that the defendants in the original bill ejected .the complainant’s manager and employes,"and took possession of the leased premises, if not forcibly, certainly against their will and vehement protest. The contract gives the lessor the right to re-enter without process of law for a breach of any of its covenants by the lessee; and the material question, and the one upon which the case hinges, is, did the lessee fail to perform any of his covenants contained in the lease, for the breach of which the lessor was entitled to re-enter? The right to re-enter is rested chiefly on alleged breadles of the following clause of the contract:
“The party of the first pare further agrees to maintain and operate the theater as a staidly first-class place of amusement, and that no attractions shall be booked at (he said theater of a questionable character, or such as would not be regarded as first-class by the managers of the foliowin-g theaters: The Mew Broadway or Wallaek's, A. M. Palmer’s or the Byeeuin, of New York; McVTcker’s, Hooley’s Chicago Opera House, or the Columbia, Theater, of Chicago; the Olympic or Grand Opera House of St. Louis.”
The proper construction of this clause of the contract is not entirely free from difficulty; but, in the light of the testimony in the case, we have had no difficuliy in arriving at a satisfactory conclusion. We have read the testimony very carefully, and are not satisfied that the complainant did not “maintain and operate the theater as a strictly first-class place of amusement,” or that he booked for the theater attractions “of a questionable character,” as these phras*444es must Rave been understood by tbe parties to tbe contract. In construing the contract of the parties, regard is to be had to the geographical location of Denver, and the character of the theatrical attractions which it is practicable to procure and produce there, and which are commonly produced there. These are considerations which must have been present in the minds of the parties when they entered into the contract. For illustration, there are what are known as “stock theaters,” and “combination theaters.” The former produce plays with their own companies the year round. The plays change, but the companies are the same. The stock theaters are confined to the large cities, which are in the center of dense populations and easy of access. The combination theaters play traveling companies entirely. The parties in this contract obviously understood they were contracting with reference to a combination, and not a stock, theater. The theatrical season at Denver is about 40 weeks, and' there is a different attraction every week, which involves the employment of at least 40 different theatrical troupes during the season. Usually these troupes have to be engaged months before the time they are to play, and the engagement is most commonly made in New York city. It will be seen at a glance that it is no easy task to secure a season’s attractions at a theater in Denver. Experience, energy, taste, and judgment in that line of business are essential to its successful accomplishment. The testimony satisfies us that the complainant displayed a fair degree of all these qualities, and that attractions which he booked for this theater were of a character that might well be booked for a “first-class place of amusement,” and were not “of a questionable character,” within the meaning of these phrases as they were understood by the parties to this contract. Those terms are probably incapable of any very exact and precise definition, as applied to theatrical attractions. Uo general definition can be given which would enable every one to. classify with precision and unerring accuracy every theatrical attraction. Theatrical managers of experience, and play-goers of intelligence, do not differ much in their general definitions of these terms. The difficulty and difference of opinion begins when they come to classify a long list of attractions. Then the fact is disclosed that an attraction which one manager ranks as. first-class in the opinion of another manager falls below that standard. In this matter we think the parties should be bound by the practical construction which they themselves put upon their contract before this litigation began. That the term “first-class attractions,” as used in this contract, was not intended by the parties to restrict the attractions to those plays, only, which occupy a high plane in dramatic literature, and are played by artists of the highest repute, and patronized chiefly by people of culture and refinement, is made apparent by the letter of Mr. Bush to the complainant, of date October 12, 1890, in which he says:
“I think you have done a very good thing in securing the ‘Clemenceau Case,’ Margaret Mather, and Sullivan, [John L. Sullivan, the prize fighter.] While some people may say that the Sullivan attraction is not just the right thing, still I am satisfied that it cannot hurt the house, and it will certainly draw a large amount of money. * ⅜ * I helieve the ‘Clemenceau *445Case’ attraction will be a tremendous liit. The fact of its haying been advertised as it lias been in New York will certainly draw tremendous houses for a few nights, pique Oie curiosity of the vulgar, and even the educated, and you are sure of drawing money out of their pockets.”
It is quite clear from the testimony that no attractions were booked for this theater which did not, in point of dramatic excellence and moral tone, equal the attractions which Mr. Bush, in his letter, specially approved and indorsed. Assuming, as we must, that both parties "to this contract regarded these attractions as first-class, and not of a questionable character, then it is apparent that no attraction was produced at the Broadway Theater by the complainant which was an infraction of the contract, according to the standard erected by the parties themselves. Mr. Bush is not the only' witness who makes the box receipts, and not the moral tone and dramatic excellence of the play, the test of its being a first-class attraction. But, undoubtedly, this test cannot be accepted as the best and only one. An attraction of the highest dramatic excellence may be played at a loss, and one of a highly questionable character at a profit. Plays which unite the highest dramatic excellence with large profits are, in the opinion of theatrical managers, ideal first-class attractions. Yet they all agree that plays which fall below this ideal standard are nevertheless ranked as first-class attractions. But it is said that the contract commits the decision of this question to the managers of certain named theaters.- If this is true, in the sense that their determination of the question is to he binding upon the parties and the court, it is because the parties have by their contract constituted them arbitrators for that purpose. Assuming, but not deciding, that this fluctuating body of managers are constituted arbitrators, and that under the contract they are the sole arbiters of this question, then it, is very clear the defendants have failed to establish the alleged breach of the covenant by the complainant, upon which the right to re-enter is rested. At common law, all those named as arbitrators must act, and they must all act together, and they must all concur in the award, unless the parties have agreed that it ma,y be made by less than all. The authorities to this effect are uniform in England and in this country. Buss. Arb. 216; Morse, Arb. 151,162. The defendants have produced no award of the arbitrators, and have not shown, in any mode, a concurrence of opinion among them, that a single attraction produced at the Broadway Theater under the complainant’s management was not first-class, or was of a questionable character. The Colorado Code has not made any change in the common-law rule on this subject which affects this case. The Civil Code of that state of 1887 (section 285, p. 180), provides that “any arbitrator may administer oaths to witnesses, and, when there are three arbitrators, two of them may do any act which might be done by all.” This clause has no application to the case- at bar, because under this contract there must be at least four arbitrators, and may possibly be ten, depending upon the construction placed upon the clause of the contract under consideration.
Whether the contract constitutes the managers of the named theaters arbitrators, or whether the case is to be determined on the *446weight of testimony, or upon the practical construction given to the contract by the parties themselves, the result is the same,— the defendants have not shown any breach by the complainant of the covenants we have been considering. We attach no importance to the claim that the complainant did not attend personally to the management of the theater building. It is quite obvious that his time and services in New York and elsewhere were more valuable to the business than they would have been in Denver. Besides, his local manager and treasurer, who had immediate charge of the theater, seem to have been competent persons for the work. It is not open to the defendants to question their competency and efficiency; for, when they re-entered and took charge of the theater, they themselves retained these employes in the same positions they had occupied under the complainant.
The complainant’s employes, upon one occasion, did not open the box office for an hour after the usual and advertised time, and this action seems to have been the immediate cause of the re-entry; but it is plain that it did not justify it. The contract expressly provides that the lessor “shall have-no control, authority, or voice in the conduct, management, or affairs of said theater business, but this shall be exclusively under the control of the” lessee. Under this clause ■the complainant had the undoubted right to open the box office at such hours of the day as he deemed best, and a failure to open it on a single morning, at the hour advertised, did not work a forfeiture of the lease, or give the lessor a right to re-enter.
Upon the occasion of the Bernhardt attraction, the complainant’s employes, without his knowledge or consent, speculated in the seats by selling tickets, or causing them to be sold, outside of the box office. This was done by employes whose appointment had been recommended by Mr. Bush, and for one of whom he was surety, and both of whom he retained in their positions, with full knowledge of the facts, after his re-entry. The partnership lost nothing by the speculation, because every ticket sold was accounted for at the price fixed by the manager for that attraction. It is needless to say that upon these facts that transaction afforded no ground for re-entry. The conclusion reached upon the original bill makes it unnecessary to consider the cross bill.
The decree of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause remanded, with direction to dismiss the cross bill for want of equity, and to enter a decree on the original bill to the effect that the complainant is entitled to the occupation and possession of the leased premises, under the terms and conditions of the lease, so long as he observes the covenants thereof, and enjoining the defendants from taking possession of the leased premises, or in any manner interfering with the complainant’s possession thereof, for any alleged breaches of the covenante of said lease by the complainant which happened prior to the filing of the cross bill in this case.