SHIRLEY MACLAINE PARKER
v.
TWENTIETH CENTURY-FOX FILM
CORP.
89 Cal Rptr. 737, 474
P.2d 689 (1970)
BURKE, JUSTICE. Defendant Twentieth Century-Fox Film
Corporation appeals from a summary judgment granting to plaintiff the
recovery of agreed compensation under
a written contract for her services as an actress in
a motion picture. As will appear, we have concluded that the trial court
correctly ruled in plaintiff's favor and that the judgment should be affirmed.
Plaintiff is well known as an actress, and in the contract between
plaintiff and defendant is sometimes referred to as the "Artist."
Under the contract, dated August 6, 1965, plaintiff was to play the female lead
in defendant's contemplated production of a motion picture entitled "Bloomer
Girl." The contract provided the defendant would pay plaintiff a minimum "guaranteed
compensation" of $53,471.42 per week for 14 weeks commencing May 23, 1966,
for a total of $750,000. Prior to May 1966 defendant decided not to produce the
picture and by a letter dated April 4, 1966, it notified plaintiff of that
decision and that it would not "comply with our obligations to you
under" the written contract.
By the same letter and with the professed purpose "to avoid any
damage to you" defendant instead offered to
employ plaintiff as the leading actress in another film tentatively
entitled "Big Country, Big Man" (hereinafter, "Big
Country"). The compensation offered was identical, as were 31 of the 34
numbered provisions or articles of the original contract. Unlike "Bloomer
Girl." however, which was to have been a musical production, "Big
Country" was a dramatic "western type movie. "Bloomer Girl"
was to have been filmed in California; "Big Country" was to be
produced in Australia. Also, certain terms in the proffered contract varied
from those of the original. Plaintiff was given one week within which to
accept; she did not and the offer lapsed. Plaintiff then commenced this action
seeking recovery of the agreed guaranteed compensation.
The complaint sets forth two causes of action. The first is for money
due under the contract; the second, based upon the same allegations as the
first, is for damages resulting from defendant's breach of contract. Defendant
in its answer admits the existence and validity of the contract, that plaintiff
complied with all the conditions, covenants and promises and stood ready to
complete the performance, and that defendant breached and "anticipatorily
repudiated" the contract. It denies, however, that any money is due to plaintiff
either under the contract or as a result of its breach, and pleads as an
affirmative defense to both causes of action plaintiff's allegedly deliberate
failure to mitigate damages, asserting that she unreasonably refused to accept
offer of the leading role in "Big Country."
Plaintiff moved for summary judgment under Code of Civil Procedure
section 437c, the motion was granted, and summary judgment for $750,000 plus
interest was entered in plaintiff's favor. This appeal by defendant followed.
The general rule is that the measure of recovery by a wrongfully
discharged employee is the amount of salary agreed upon for the period of
service, less the amount which the employer affirmatively proves the employee
has earned or with reasonable effort might have earned from other employment.
However, before projected earnings from other employment opportunities not
sought or accepted by the discharged employee can be applied in mitigation, the
employer must show that the other employment was comparable, or substantially similar,
to that of which the employee has been deprived; the employee's rejection of or
failure to seek other available employment of a different or inferior kind may
not be resorted to in order to mitigate damages.
In the present case defendant has raised no issue of reasonableness of
efforts by plaintiff to obtain other employment; the sole issue is whether
plaintiff’s refusal of defendant's substitute offer of "Big
Country" may be used in mitigation. Nor, if the "Big Country"
offer was of employment different or inferior when compared with the original
"Bloomer Girl" employment, is there an issue as to whether or not
plaintiff acted reasonably in refusing the substitute offer. Despite
defendant's arguments to the contrary, no case cited or which our research has
discovered holds or suggests that reasonableness is an element of a wrongfully
discharged employee's option to reject, or failure to seek, different or
inferior employment lest the possible earnings therefrom be charged against him
in mitigation of damages.
Applying the foregoing rules to the record in the present case, with all
intendments in favor of the party opposing the summary judgment motion - here, defendant - it is clear that the
trial court correctly ruled that plaintiff's failure to accept defendant's
tendered substitute employment could not be applied in mitigation of damages
because the offer of the "Big Country" lead was of employment both
different and inferior, and that no factual dispute was presented on that
issue. The mere circumstance that "Bloomer Girl" was to be a musical
review calling upon plaintiff's talents as a dancer as well as an actress, and
was to be produced in the City of Los Angeles, whereas "Big Country"
was a straight dramatic role in a "Western Type" story taking place
in an opal mine in Australia, demonstrates the difference in kind between the
two employments; the female lead as a dramatic actress in a western style
motion picture can by no stretch of imagination be considered the equivalent of
or substantially similar to the lead in a song-and-dance production.
Additionally, the substitute "Big Country" offer proposed to
eliminate or impair the director and screenplay approvals accorded to plaintiff
under the original "Bloomer Girl" contract, and thus constituted an
offer of inferior employment. No expertise or judicial notice is required in
order to hold that the deprivation or infringement of an employee's rights held
under an original employment contract converts the available "other
employment" relied upon by the employer to mitigate damages, into inferior
employment which the employee need not seek or accept.
Statements found in affidavits submitted by defendant in opposition to
plaintiff's summary judgment motion, to the effect that the "Big
Country" offer was not of employment different from or inferior to that
under the "Bloomer Girl" contract, merely repeat the allegations of
defendant's answer to the complaint in this action, constitute only
conclusionary assertions with respect to undisputed facts, and do not give rise
to a triable factual issue so as to defeat the motion for summary judgment.
In view of the determination that defendant failed to present any facts
showing the existence of a factual issue with respect to its sole defense -
plaintiff's rejection of its substitute employment offer in mitigation of damages
- we need not consider plaintiff's further contention that for various reasons,
including the provisions of the original contract set forth in footnote 1,
ante, plaintiff was excused from attempting to mitigate damages.
The judgment is affirmed.