33 A.D.2d 766 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1969
These are two appeals which for purposes of convenience are consolidated for disposition. In the (first, defendants appeal from an interlocutory judgment entered December 10, 1968 in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendants after a non jury trial. Plaintiff cross-appeals from so much of the judgment as denied the plaintiff punative damages. In the second, defendants appeal from so much of an order entered April 27, 1967 as granted plaintiff’s motion for a protective order terminating the defendants’ examination before trial of the plaintiff and to the extent that such order denied defendants’ renewal motion for a bill of particulars. The order granting the protective motion and denying defendants’ renewal motion for a bill of particulars was properly entered and is unanimously affirmed. The interlocutory judgment appealed from is modified, without costs or disbursements, on the law and the facts as follows: In the first ordering paragraph the words “forever enjoined and restrained” which appears at lines 9 and 10 of the first ordering paragraph are stricken, and the following words inserted: “ are temporarily enjoined and restrained pending the hearing before and report of the referee herein, after which such injunction shall terminate, from.” The second ordering paragraph is stricken in its entirety. The third -ordering paragraph is modified as follows: to insert after the words “ shall account ” which appear in the third line the following: “ as an item for the ascertaining and calculation of damages.” We find and conclude that no fiduciary relationship exists between the parties. We find and conclude that this was a purely commercial relationship and a purely commercial transaction. The action more properly may be considered an action for breach of contract with demonstrated failure by defendants to use their “ best efforts ”, as they agreed to do under the publishing contract, for the continued promotion and sale of plaintiff’s books (cf. Wood v. Duff-Gordon, 222 N. Y. 88; Nelson v. Mills Music, 278 App. Div. 311; 279 App. Div. 990, affd. 304 N. Y. 966). As such damages will afford the plaintiff adequate relief. The destruction of the Mileaf books as directed in the interlocutory judgment would destroy Mileaf’s rights and Mileaf is not a party to this action. Moreover, this is not an action for copyright infringement. Indeed if it were relief