Opinion
This case involves a dispute between a company which owned the rights to the musical output of singer/songwriter Tom
Factual and Procedural Summary
According to the complaint, Waits agreed to render his services as a recording artist and songwriter exclusively to Third Story Productions (predecessor in interest to plaintiff and appellant Third Story Music, Inc.) from 1972 to 1983, pursuant to written agreements dated July 1, 1972, and July 1, 1977. Third Story Productions transferred its rights in Waits’s music to Asylum Records (predecessor in interest to defendant/respondent Warner Communications, Inc.) on August 31, 1972, and to Elektra/Asylum Records (currently a division of Warner Communications, Inc.) pursuant to an agreement dated June 15, 1977. 1 Under these agreements, TSM was to produce master recordings featuring performances by Waits. Warner obtained from TSM the worldwide right to “manufacture, sell, distribute and advertise records or other reproductions (visual or nonvisual) embodying such recordings, to lease, license, convey or otherwise use or dispose of the recordings by any method now or hereafter known, in any field of use, to release records under any trademаrks, trade names or labels, to perform the records or other reproductions publicly and to permit the public performance thereof by radio broadcast, television or any other method now or hereafter known, all upon such terms and conditions as we may approve, and to permit others to do any or all of the foregoing . . . .” This clause of the agreements also specifically stated that Warner “may at our election refrain from аny or all of the foregoing.” 2
TSM was to receive as a royalty a percentage of the amount earned by Warner from its exploitation of the music. In addition, Warner was required to pay TSM a specific dollar amount as an advance on royalties. 3
So far as can be ascertained from the record, the parties operated under these agreements without controversy until 1993. At that time, an affiliate of
Warner demurred to the complaint, alleging that the clause in the agreement permitting it to “at [its] election refrain” from doing anything to profitably exploit the music is controlling and precludes application of any implied covenant. The demurrer was sustained on those grounds. TSM contends on appeal, and argued below, that when a party to a contract is given this type of discretionary power, that power must be exercised in good faith, and that permitting the artist to decide whether a particular licensing arrangement was or was not acceptable did not represent a good faith exercise.
Discussion
I
When an agreement expressly gives to one party absolute discretion over whether or not to perform, when should the implied сovenant of good faith and fair dealing be applied to limit its discretion? Both sides rely on different language in the recent Supreme Court decision in
Carma Developers (Cal.), Inc.
v.
Marathon Development California, Inc.
(1992) 2 Cal.4th
At the same time, the
Carma
court upheld the right of the landlord to freely exercise its discretion to terminate the lease in order to claim fоr itself—and deprive the tenant of—all profit from the expected sublease. In this regard, the court stated: “We are aware of no reported case in which a court has held the covenant of good faith may be read to prohibit a party from doing that which is expressly permitted by an agreement. On the contrary, as a general matter, implied terms should never be read to vary express terms. [Citations.] ‘The general rule [regarding the covenant of good faith] is plainly subject to the exception that the parties may, by express provisions of the contract, grant the right to engage in the very acts and conduct which would otherwise have been forbidden by an implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing. ... [1 This is in accord with the general principle that, in interpreting a contract “an implication . . . should not be made when the contrary is indicated in clear and express words.” 3 Corbin, Contracts, § 564, p. 298 (1960). . . . [*]□ As to acts and conduсt authorized by the express provisions of the contract, no covenant of good faith and fair dealing can be implied which forbids such acts and conduct. And if defendants were given the right to do what they did by the express provisions of the contract there can be no breach.’ ” (
In reaching its holding, the court cited with approval three cases in which discretionary powers were upheld despite claims that they were not exercised in good faith:
Gerdlund
v.
Electronic Dispensers International
(1987)
In situations such as the present one, where a discretionary power is expressly given by the contractual language, the quoted passages from
II
We first emphasize a long-established rule concerning implied covenants. To be imposed “ ‘(1) the implication must arise from the language used or it must be indispensable to effectuate the intention of the parties; (2) it must appear from the language used that it was so clearly within the contemplation of the parties that they deemed it unnecessary to express it; (3) implied covenants can only be justified on the grounds of legal necessity; (4) a prоmise can be implied only where it can be rightfully assumed that it would have been made if attention had been called to it; (5) there can be no implied covenant where the subject is completely covered by the contract.’ ”
(Lippman
v.
Sears, Roebuck & Co.
(1955)
With this in mind, we review the authorities cited in
Carma
for the proposition that a discretionary power must be exercised in good faith. In
Perdue
v.
Crocker National Bank
(1985)
The same resolution was reached in
Cal. Lettuce Growers
v.
Union Sugar Co.
(1955)
In the same vein, covenants to use “good faith” or “best efforts” to generate profits for the licensor are routinely implied where the licensor grants exclusive promotional or licensing rights in exchange for a percentage of profits or royalties, but the licensee does not expressly promise to do anything. (See, e.g.,
Zilg
v.
Prentice-Hall, Inc.
(2d Cir. 1983)
In each of these cases, the courts were forced to resolve contradictory expressions of intent from the parties: the intent to give one party total discretion over its performance and the intent to have a mutually binding agreement. In that situation, imposing the duty of good faith creates a binding contract where, despite the clear intent of the parties, one would not otherwise exist. Faced with that choice, courts prefer to imply a covenant at odds with the express language of the contract rather than literally enforce a discretionary language clause and thereby render the agreement unenforceable. As was said in the most recent edition of Corbin’s treatise on contracts: “The complaint that a promise is illusory often comes in rather poor graсe from the addressee of the allegedly illusory promise, particularly where the addresser is ready and willing to carry out the expression of intention. For this reason, courts are quite properly prone to examine the context to
The need to reconcile contradictory expressions of intent was also the underlying consideration in
April Enterprises, Inc.
v.
KTTV
(1983)
The court in April Enterprises used the implied covenant to interpret an ambiguous discretionary power. As we have seen, the implied covenant of good faith is also applied to contradict an express contractual grant of discretion when necessary to protect an agreement which otherwise would be rendered illusory and unenforceable. Does a different result ensue whеre the contract is unambiguous, otherwise supported by adequate consideration, and the implied covenant is not needed to effectuate the parties’ expressed desire for a binding agreement? We believe it does, and the cases cited by the court in Carma illustrate this point.
In
Balfour, Guthrie & Co.
v.
Gourmet Farms, supra,
a grain producer and a broker contracted for the purchase of grain at a price to be set in the future based on whatever the market was charging when the price was set. The broker paid a specified amount up front and had discretion to set the final price at any time after a missed margin call. Margin calls could be made if
In Brandt v. Lockheed Missiles & Space Co., supra, the employment contract at issue provided that when an employee’s invention was deemed of sufficient value to apply for a patent and the patent application was granted, the employee would in all cases receive a total award of $600. In addition, the agreement said the employer “may, but is not obligated” to grant to any employee an additional “Special Invention Award.” In response to two employees’ claims that failure to make an adequate Special Invention Award in their case violated the covenant of good faith, the court held; “Few principles of our law are better settled, than that ‘[t]he language of a contract is to govern its interpretation, if the language is clear and explicit. . . .’ [Citations.] [^Q Here the language of the parties’ contract of employment, i.e., the patent plan, could not be more clear and explicit. It says Lockheed’s Invention Awards Committee ‘may, but is not obligated to grant a Special Invention Award,’ and that its decision on such matters ‘shall be final and conclusive.’ Lockheed had fully respected the patent plan’s language; it may not reasonably be said that in doing so it violated ‘a duty of good faith and fair dealing.’ ” (154 Cal.App.3d at pp. 1129-1130.)
In
Gerdlund
v.
Electronic Dispensers International, supra,
m
We turn to the question of whether it is necessary in this case to imply a covenant of good faith to protect the enforceability of the contract, or otherwise to effectuate the clear and obvious intent of the parties.
The TSM/Wamer agreement states that Warner may market the Waits recordings, or “at [its] election” refrain from all marketing efforts. Read literally, as the trial court did and respondent would have us do, this is a textbook example of an illusory promise. At the same time, there can be no question that the parties intended to enter into an enforceable contract with binding promises on both sides. Were this the only consideration given by Warner, a promise to use good faith would necessarily be implied under the authorities discussed.
The illusory promise was not, however, the only consideration given by the licensee. Under paragraph 33 of the 1977 agreement and paragraph 34 of the 1972 agreement, Warner promised to pay TSM a guaranteed minimum amount no matter what efforts were undertaken. It follows that, whether or not an implied covenant is read into the agreement, the agreement would be supported by consideration and would be binding. 5
As we see it, Warner bargained for аnd obtained all rights to Waits’s 1972 to 1983 musical output, and paid legally adequate consideration. That it
IV
In its complaint, TSM asserted four causes of action against Warner— breach of contract, conspiracy, rescission, and declaratory relief. All were based on the existence of a duty of good faith in exercising the discretion given to the licensee. As we agree with the trial court that no such duty existed, demurrer was properly sustained to all four causes of action.
Disposition
The judgment is affirmed.
Hastings, J., and Klein (Brett), J., * concurred.
Appellant’s petition for review by the Supremе Court was denied March 21, 1996.
Notes
For case of reference, both Third Story Productions and Third Story Music, Inc., will be referred to hereinafter as “TSM,” and Asylum, Elektra/Asylum, and Warner Communications, Inc., will be referred to as “Warner.”
Nearly identical language appears in the agreements between Waits and TSM.
Paragraph 34 of the 1972 agreement provides: “Conditioned upon your and the Artist’s full and faithful performance of all of the terms hereof, we shall pay you the following amounts: [TO (a) Four Thousаnd Dollars ($4,000.00) concurrently with the execution hereof and Four Thousand Dollars ($4,000.00) upon the commencement of each renewal term hereof, if any; and [H (b) Four Thousand Eight Hundred Dollars ($4,800.00) during the initial term hereof and during each renewal term hereof, if any, payable in twelve (12) equal
The latest edition to the Corbin treatise on contracts puts it more poetically: “If what appears to be a promise is an illusion, there is no promise. Like the mirage of the desert with its vision of flowing water which yet lets the traveler die of thirst, there is nothing there. By the phrase ‘illusory promise’ is mеant words in promissory form that promise nothing. They do not purport to put any limitation on the freedom of the alleged promisor. If A makes an illusory promise, A’s words leave A’s future action subject to A’s own future whim, just as it would have been had A said nothing at all.” (2 Corbin, Contracts (rev. ed. 1995) § 5.28, p. 142.)
The guaranteed payments involved do not appear to be large in relation to what might be earned from the music of a successful recording artist. But unless the consideration given was so one-sided as to create an issue of unconscionability, the courts are not in a position to decide whether legal consideration agreed to by the parties is or is not fair. The $8,800 annual payments due under the 1972 agreement and the $50,000 minimum payment, plus $100,000
Judge of the Municipal Court for the Los Angeles Judicial District sitting under assignment by the Chairperson of the Judicial Council.
