125 Misc. 756 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1925
This is an application by plaintiff, a dealer in motion pictures, in export territory, to restrain the defendant, a producer, from disposing of certain motion pictures for which it is alleged to have contracts with the former. The contract upon which this action is predicated gave to the plaintiff for the period of five years from April 19, 1924, the exclusive foreign rights to all pictures manufactured or acquired by the defendant. As compensation, the latter was to receive seventy per cent of the moneys to be realized from these pictures by the plaintiff. A “ minimum sale ” or “ exhibition value ” of $25,000 was placed upon each picture for the first year. This phrase is interchangeably used with the term “ price expectancy ” in the moving picture industry and seems to denote the minimum receipts which distributors such as the plaintiff expect to realize from the exhibition of the pictures. Forty per cent of this “ value ” thus fixed the plaintiff undertook to pay as an advance to the defendant upon the delivery of the negative, which advance was to be recouped. For the first year of the contract nine specifically named subjects were agreed upon, with the exhibition value fixed as here indicated. No substantial differences have arisen with reference to these. But as regards the subjects for the second year the parties have been thus far unable to agree on the “ value.” The agreement provides that the parties “ agree at the beginning of each season to mutually agree upon a minimum or upset value for each of the pictures to be delivered by the producer for the ensuing year.” Obviously this element is important because the advance to be paid to the producer, the defendant, depends upon the “ minimum value ” as established. Defendant has demanded that such value be fixed at $50,000 to $55,000 for each picture. On the other hand, the plaintiff asserts that these values are unreasonable and urges in support of this that the very announcements issued by the defendant clearly show that the new pictures are not intended to be produced on any more elaborate scale than those hitherto released.