18 Or. 221 | Or. | 1889
This is a suit wherein the plaintiff, who is a theatrical manager, seeks to enjoin and prevent the defendants, who are acrobats, from performing at a rival theater in the same place. The plaintiff alleges, among
The question whether a court of equity will apply the preventive remedy of injunction to contracts for the services of professional workers of special merit, or leave them to the remedy at law for damages, has been the subject of much discussion, and the existence of the jurisdiction fully established. It is not, perhaps, possible, nor is it necessary, to reconcile the decisions; but the ground of the jurisdiction, as now exerted, rests upon the inadequacy of the legal remedy. In an early English case, where the jurisdiction was invoked to prevent the actor Kean from performing at another theater upon a contract for personal services, at which there was a stipulation to the effect that he should not perform at any other theater in London during the period of his engagement, it was held, as the court could not enforce the - positive part of the contract, it would not restrain by injunction a breach of the negative part. Kemble v. Kean, 6 Sim. 333. But this case was expressly overruled in Lumley v. Wagner, 1 De Gex, M. & G. 604, upon a like contract for personal services, to sing, during a certain period of time, at a particular theater, and not to sing elsewhere without written authority, upon the ground that the positive and negative stipulations of such contract formed but one contract, and that the court would interfere to prevent the violation of the negative stipulation, although it could not enforce the specific performance of the. entire contract. In delivering this opinion, among other things, the lord chancellor said:
In these cases the element of mind furnishes the rule of distinction and decision, as distinguished from what is mechanical and material, and would exclude professional workers, such as dancers and acrobats, whose performances are largely mechanical, however unique or extraordinary such performance may be. But it is apprehended that this distinction cannot be maintained, for the fact is that such actors do often possess special merit of extraordinary qualifications in their line, which makes their professional performances distinctly personal and peculiar; and that, in case of their default on a contract for services, there would be the same difficulty in supplying their places, or
It results, then, that if the services contracted for by the plaintiff to be rendered by the defendants were unique or extraordinary, involving such special merit or qualifications in them as to make such services distinctly personal and peculiar, so that in case of a default by them, the same or like services could not be easily procured, nor be compensated in damages, the court would be warranted in applying its preventive jurisdiction and granting relief; but otherwise, or denied, if such services were ordinary. $id without special merit, and such as could be readily supplied or obtained from others without much difficulty or expense. But the present case is far from being one of such character a” falls under the principle of the authorities in which the preventive remedy by injunction has been' allowed. There is absolutely nothing in the evidence to show that the performances of the defendants were unique or of any special merit. The plaintiff himself will not even admit that they are ; while others say the performances were “great,” “pretty good,” “do a fair act,”
Indeed, according to our view of the evidence, the plaintiff fails to make a case within the principle in which equity allows relief for a breach of contract for personal services, and the court below committed no error in dismissing the bill.