154 N.Y.S. 754 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1915
Defendants are managers of certain theatres, and plaintiff is engaged as a dramatic critic by the New York Times. His attendance at defendants’ theatres has been interrupted. Defendants have forbidden him the privilege of entrance, have refused to honor his tickets of admission and have threatened to eject him by force if he should enter. Defendants claim that dramatic performances to which -the public are invited are on the same plane as private theatricals and that they have the same right to select their auditors in the one case as in the other. Their view is clearly stated in the following extract from the brief filed in their behalf on this motion: “ The defendants claim that no person has any right to enter a theatre unless it be with the consent of the manager or owner.” -Carried into practice, that doctrine would justify any manager in refusing to admit to his theatre and, even after admission, to eject or cause to be ejected any person or persons without cause or reason, except the will of the manager or owner of the theatre. The particular question involving the facts here disclosed has never been decided in this state. In the case of People ex rel. Burnham v. Flynn, 189 N. Y. 180, Burnham, a theatrical manager, was convicted of the crime of conspiracy. The Appellate Division reversed an order dismissing a writ of habeas corpus, and the Court of Appeals concurred. The courts virtually decided that a statement made by Burnham to the members of a theatrical association, of which he was a member, to the effect that one Metcalfe had made libelous attacks upon some members of the association and holding religion up to ridicule, followed by the exclusion of Metcalfe from some of the theatres, did not constitute a criminal conspiracy. Whether a man who behaves himself can be arbitrarily excluded from
Ordered accordingly.