10 N.Y.S. 903 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1890
The injunction herein restrained the defendant from• singing or performing for any person or company other than the one under the supervision and direction of the plaintiff at any time, and from in any way publicly singing or performing on any stage, or in any operatic entertainment or concert, for any person or company other than the one under the management of the-plaintiff; and it was in this manner allowed, under a contract entered into between the defendant and the plaintiff on the 6th of May, 1889, by which the defendant covenanted and agreed to sing and perform all parts which might be requested of him by the plaintiff for the “Abbott season” of the years 1889 and 1890. And the season has been shown to include the period between the last of August and the end of the month of May. And for the services which the defendant agreed to perform he was to be paid the salary of $130 per week on the regular salary day. The defendant also covenanted and agreed that during the continuance of the agreement he would not sing or perform under any other management, nor allow his name to be advertised to do so, without having first obtained the written consent of the plaintiff. And it was further agreed by the defendant to give the plaintiff the right to engage his services for the season of 1890 and 1891 on the same terms, provided notice should be given to him by the plaintiff before the close of- the season of 1889 and 1890 that his services would be so required. And by an affidavit made by the defendant he has stated that the plaintiff exercised the option for the next year, contained in this contract, about the 1st of the month of March, 1890, and the plaintiff in his own affidavit states the same fact, although it does not appear that notice of the election to continue the contract through the next season was given to the defendant in writing. Still, as the season does not close until the end of the present month, there is ample time remaining for the service of notice in that manner. The defendant "entered into the service of the plaintiff as manager of the opera troupe under his control, and continued in that service until the 24th of February, 1890; and then he left it at the city of Washington, and has performed no services for the plaintiff since that time, but refuses to continue in his employment.
Objection has been taken that these facts are not sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to the injunction which has been issued, and the cases of Hamblin v. Dinneford, 2 Edw. Ch. 529, and Sanquirico v. Benedetti, 1 Barb. 315, appear to support this objection. And" other authorities are. contained in the books maintaining the same conclusion, and that was the early tendency of the courts both in England and in this country. But since those decisions were made the subject has received more deliberate consideration, and the inclination of the courts now appears to be in a decidedly different direction, and the reason of the case supports this inclination. For, while the party cannot be obliged to perform the contract he has entered into by performing the services he has agreed to render, he may yet be restrained from entering the employment of a rival company, and rendering services to that company, to the injury and detriment of his employer under the contract; and the only remedy to prevent that is an injunction. It is entirely clear that the law can afford no redress by way of damages for the injury which the party entitled to the benefit of the agreement may sustain by the other party’s identifying himself with a rival enterprise, and in that manner diminishing the patronage and profit of the party entitled to the services under the agreement. The only adequate remedy is to prevent the wrong, and that can be no otherwise administered than by an injunction. The defendant is shown to-be a person of superior abilities and acquirements in his pursuit of a tenor singer, and his ad
The defendant, however, has further resisted the allowance of the injunction in this action on the ground that the plaintiff himself has violated the agreement in such essential, respects as entitle the defendant to be discharged from its further performance. This objection has been mainly placed upon the latter paragraph of the eighteenth division of the contract, by which the plaintiff agreed to have a lithograph of the defendant made and distributed as largely as that of any other tenor in the Abbott company, and that he should be as well advertised in programmes and newspaper advertisements. Each of these obligations, it has been charged, the plaintiff failed to observe orperform. He did, however, distribute lithographs of the defendant, but they were not of himself alone. They contained eight leading members of the company, while the defendant insisted that the lithograph of himself should be distinct and separate from that of other persons. It is not, however, important to determine whether he is entitled to this construction of this part-
Van Brunt, P. J., concurs. Brady, ,T„ concurs in result.