Hayes v. Willio

4 Daly 259 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1872

By the Coubt.*—Robinson, J.

—The agreement upon which this action is predicated was made in terms between defendant and Imre Kiralfy, as parties, and the case shows it was not executed by the latter as agent of the plaintiff. Upon no legal principle applicable to the law of principal and agent, can plaintiff be held or deemed substituted instead of Kiralfy, as a party to the contract (or entitled to the personal control which the defendant agreed should be exercised over him by Kiralfy exclusively), for his performance in any such theatre, circus, or establishment in the United States as the latter might order or direct, with a provision that defendant should perform in no other without his written permission. Plaintiff had not conferred on Kiralfy any authority to make this engagement, and the want of authority being communicated to defendant, he said “ if the management of the Olympic Theatre would not accept his services, he would go in any place of amusement Kiralfy might send him,” and after some negotiation this agreement was made between them, but as Kiralfy testifies, with the expectation that the *261Olympic Theatre (of which plaintiff was manager) would take him off my hands.” The defendant accordingly thereafter commenced performing at the Olympic, but from some dissatisfaction left. By the orders appealed from, he has been enjoined from performing at any other place of amusement, and has been imprisoned on a ne exeat.

It is evident, from the facts of this case, that the agreement in question was not one made by Kiralfy as agent, but, in view of his want of authority to engage the defendant, and its being problematical whether defendant’s services would be accepted at the Olympic Theatre, the contract was distinctly made with Kiralfy individually. Although Kiralfy had no authority to engage artists for the Olympic of defendant’s particular class, if the contract had been made solely for the Olympic, subject only to plaintiff’s ratification, it might possibly have been sustained as one between him and defendant; but it was one of an entirely different character; it was entirely executory and cautiously made mier jpartes, in anticipation of all apprehended contingencies ; providing for the personal and exclusive control by Kiralfy of defendant’s performances at any such place of amusement throughout the United States as he might direct, and for the payment of defendant’s salary by him. It had no reference to any delegation of any such control to the plaintiff as the manager of the Olympic, either as principal or assignee, nor to the conferring on him of any of its rights or benefits, nor in any way rendered him liable directly to the defendant for the services defendant performed.

As a general rule, a contract for the performance of personal duties or services is unassignable, so as to vest in the assignee the right to compel its execution (Ch. on Cont. 739; Burrill on Assignts. 67, and cases cited, note 3). As to slaves it is different; but as to apprentices, an assignment of their indentures merely operates as a covenant that they shall serve the assignee (Nickerson v. Howard, 19 Johns. 113), except as to the indenture of an infant immigrant to pay his passage, as authorized by 2 R. S. 156, §§ 12, 13, 14; and as to convicts, the right of control still remains in the officer of the State (Horner v. Wood, 23 N. Y. 350).

*262These considerations do not appear to have been presented .on the motion for the orders for the injunction and ne exeat, now under review; they are controlling as to the merits of this controversy, and without discussing the other questions presented on the argument and in the opinion of the judge who granted the orders, these orders should be reversed, with costs, and the ne exeat superseded and discharged.

Order reversed.

Present, Bait, Oh. J., Robinson and Low, JJ.

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