Wentworth v. Whitney
Wentworth v. Whitney
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
The plaintiff contracted to perform and sing “ whenever and wherever required in the United States and Canada, as the party of the first part (the defendant) may require, during the theatrical season of 1902--3, commencing on or about the first day of October, 1902.” In pursuance of this contract, she played with the defendant’s company at Baltimore during portions of October and November, 1902. At the time for the performance to begin, on the evening of November 3, the plaintiff was present and ready to go on with her part; but the defendant decided to have no performance, and dismissed the audience. On settling with the plaintiff for the week, the defendant deducted from her salary the proportion for that evening, on the ground that it had not been earned, as no performance had been given.
The contract provides for weekly payments, with deductions only “ for any nights or days on which the party of the second part (the plaintiff) may not be able to perform or sing, through illness or other unavoidable cause, or at such times that the company may not be giving performances.” As the plaintiff was not absent, there could be no deduction on that score. Neither was the occasion one of “ such times that the company may not be giving performances.” The company had been giving performances, as set forth in the affidavit of defense, “ during the latter part of October and early part of November,” and it appears from the declaration, and is not denied by the defendant, that these performances were given, at least, throughout the week beginning November 3, except on the evening of that day.
The defendant alleges that the failure to give a performance on the evening of November 3 was because of the absence of certain members of the company, whose places could not at the moment be supplied, and that he was not informed of such absence until after eight o’clock. This, however, is not alleged to have been the fault of the plaintiff, and there is nothing in the contract that subjects her to the loss of the evening’s compensation for such a reason. Neither, indeed, does the failure appear to have been the fault of the defendant, — assuming that the performance could not have been successfully given without
Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.