83 Ala. 498 | Ala. | 1887
The bill is one in the nature of specific performance, seeking, by the auxiliary force of an injunction, to prevent the breach of an alleged contract' by the New York Associated Preso selling, as is insisted, to the complainant — the Iron Age Publishing Company — an exclusive right to receive and publish at Birmingham, Alabama, all of the Associated Press Dispatches gathered and prepared for the press by the New York company, and transmitted over the telegraph lines of the Western Union Telegraph Company, which body corporate is also made a party defendant to the bill. The breach complained of is averred to be the delivery of these dispatches, for publication, to the Morning Herald Publishing Company, and the News Publishing Company, which companies publish a daily paper in the city of Birmingham, and are also made parties defendant to the present suit.
The chancellor sustained a demurrer to the bill, and the complainant brings this appeal. Some of these grounds of demurrer we proceed to discuss.
The contract averred to exist between the complainant and the New York Associated Press does not seem to us to possess these requirements. It is not stated with sufficient definiteness, if at all, when the contract was made, nor -where it was entered into, nor where, to be performed, whether in or out of the State of Alabama, — a fact material to the inquiry of jurisdiction. While it is alleged to have been made with an agent of a non-resident defendant, the bill fails to give the name of the alleged agent, that issue may be taken on the fact of his authority. The consideration agreed to be paid by the complainant is not alleged, except that it was a “good and sufficient consideration,” and that the complainant had paid large sums of money, ranging from forty to eighty-five dollars per week. The subsequent averment, in another part of the bill, that the complainant had paid the amount provided for in the agreement, leaves the court to struggle by inference to frame the contract by putting together these several parts. We are of opinion that the description of the contract is not sufficiently certain in these, and, it may be, some other particulars, to justify the intervention of a court of equity for its specific enforcement.
The present case concerns neither land nor personal property, but a contract for personal services. As we have above said, the bill fails to aver, with sufficient certainty, that the contract arose in this State, or was to be performed within its jurisdiction. The place where it was made, whether New York or Alabama, is not stated. Nor does it appear from the bill, with sufficient particularity, that the telegraphic despatches were, under the contract, to be delivered to the complainant by the New York Associated Press, at Birmingham, through the agency of the telegraph company, or only to the latter company in New York, to be by them transmitted to complainant as complainant’s agent, without further liability on the part of the Associated Press. The bill thus fails to bring the case within the class specified by the statute, and, therefore, shows no jurisdiction in chancery.
The facts of the bill show that the court has no such jurisdiction of the Associated Press as to authorize the issue
The case of Manning v. State of Nicaragua, 14 How. Pr. Rep. 517, cited by appellant’s counsel, to say nothing of its questionable soundness, differs from this case in not being one where an injunction was asked, the court regarding the suit as one inviting a foreign State to appear and defend. Here, the court is requested to assume jurisdiction in limine, before' the appearance of the non-resident party chiefly affected by the issue of the writ, and to tie the hands of all parties until the final hearing. This, on the facts stated in the bill, the court has no power to do, the case not being one of the class specified in the statute. — Code, 1876, § 3753.
It is unquestionable, that the courts of equity will not intervene to affirmatively compel specific execution in cases of this kind, because this is impracticable, the only power of the court being, at most, to punish the defendant by fine and imprisonment for refusing to obey its mandates.— Clark's case, 12 Amer. Dec. 213, and note p. 217; Marble v. Ripley, 10 Wall. 339; Pomeroy on Contr., §310. And in many cases the courts have refused to interfere by injunction, or otherwise, to prevent the breach of such contracts, although the remedy by damages at law was not adequate. This is put on the ground, that if the court was unable to enforce
The American courts have generally been disposed to follow the rule declared in Kemble v. Kean, and, as said by Mr. Pomeroy, they have exhibited a strange disinclination to adopt the modern English rule declared in Lumley v. Wagner, enforcing the specific performance of such contracts negatively by means of injunction restraining their violation. The American cases are divided, however, on this subject, with a numerical weight of authority, perhaps, against the later English rule, but, as we apprehend, with a disposition recently to fall into line with the more reasonable doctrine of Lumley v. Wagner. We leave this important question
The general rule, to which it is true there are many exceptions, seems to be, that contracts, in order to' be enforced by specific performance, must be mutual in obligation, as well as in remedy. Mr. Pomeroy says, and such we think is the general rule, that “ it is a familiar doctrine, that if the right to the specific performance of a contract exists at all, it must be mutual; the remedy must be alike attainable by both parties to the agreement.”- — Pomeroy on Contracts, §§ 162-165.
How, it may be asked, is it practicable for the court to compel the complainant to perform personal services, as agent and correspondent of the Associated Press at Birmingham, which it has contracted to perform from year to year, under this agreement? We have seen that the duty involves the exercise of special skill, judgment and discretion, being intellectual as well as -mechanical in its character. These duties are also continuous in their nature, and of indefinite duration. There can be, as we have shown, no specific performance affirmatively of such duties by a court of equity. The most that can be done is to neyatively enforce them by injunction prohibiting their breach, and this only on bill filed praying such particular relief.
It is clear that but one of two decrees can be rendered in this case: (.1) we can tie the hands of the Associated Press, and the other defendants by injunction, forbidding the de- . livery of the press dispatches to any one else than the complainant, as prayed for, and leave the complainant free to terminate the contract at its will without limitation of time or circumstance, or to perform its duties as correspondent as negligently or diligently as discretion may dictate; or (2) to keep the injunction in force so long as the duties imposed by the contract shall be faithfully performed by complainant, ' which may be for all time to come, in view of the possible perpetuity of complainant’s corporate existence. The first decree suggested, would be entirely opposed to all equity precedents and practice; the settled rule being, that the
The second decree above suggested would also be impracticable, not only for the reason that the court can not compel the performance of the personal services assumed to be undertaken by the complainant, involving as they do the exercise of special skill, judgment and discretion, but it would be out of the question for the court to keep this case open for all time, or even for an indefinite term of years, to superintend the continuous performance of these duties by the complainant. This might involve the frequent necessity on the part of the court of hearing complaints from the defendant, charging the complainant with a breach of its duties, or from the complainant, arraigning the defendant for contempt for a violation of the injunction. There would thus be no end to the number of occasions when the court might be called on, from year to year, to say whether the complainant. has performed the duties in question faithfully and efficiently, so as to have kept the injunction in force, or negligently and unskillfully, so as to justify its breach. For these reasons, the rule is, that “ equity will not enforce the performance of continuous duties involving personal labor and care of a particular kind which the court can not superintend.” — Waterman on Spec. Perf., § 49; Richmond v. Dubuque &c. R. R. Co., 33 Iowa, 422; Caswell v. Gibbs, 33 Mich. 331; Port Clinton R. R. Co. v. Cleveland R. R. Co., 13 Ohio St. 544; Atlanta &c R. R. Co. v. Speer, 32 Ga. 550; Blanchard v. Detroit R. R. Co., 31 Mich. 43; Marble Co. v. Ripley, 10 Wall. 339.
The contract being one which can not be specifically enforced in a court of equity against the complainant, we deem it inequitable to enforce it against the defendants.
The demurrer to the bill was properly sustained, and the decree is affirmed.