How One Filmmaker’s Failure to Get a Written Agreement Doomed His NY Breach of Contract Case August 24, 2010
There are instances, like the case discussed in my recent blog post, “No Written Agreement? No Problem, Says NY Court,” where the failure to reduce your agreement to writing is not fatal to a breach of contract claim under New York law.
But there are other cases, like Springer v. Linden Seventh Day Adventist Church, where the failure to get a written contract spells death to the claim. And, as painful as it may be to the plaintiff, the Brooklyn judge deciding this case was absolutely right.
First, the plaintiff, who was producing a documentary on behalf of the church, never actually received the church board’s approval for the project. In fact, he never dealt directly with anyone that had authority to bind the church to any agreement. Second, they never agreed on any price for the services that he was going to render.
As noted by the Court, “plaintiff acknowledged that no material terms of the contract (including payment) were ever stated, defined, or agreed upon, and that the Church Board never agreed to pay him … There was no agreement as to the details of what type of film would be made, the starting or ending date of such production, and no price terms were discussed between plaintiff and defendants. Thus, plaintiff cannot sustain his claim for breach of contract (see Matter of Express Indus. & Term. Corp., 93 NY2d at 589).”
Jonathan Cooper is a New York Business Litigation and New York Commercial Litigation Lawyer with a focus on New York breach of contract and New York business fraud claims before the Nassau, Queens, Brooklyn, Bronx, Westchester and Suffolk County courts of New York State. For more information, feel free to contact his Long Island office at 516-791-5700.
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