Page:Bourne v. Walt Disney (2d Cir. 1995).pdf/8

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68 FEDERAL REPORTER, 3d SERIES

the prior business relationship between the companies. The prior agreements between the parties demonstrate that Disney, a motion picture producer, turned to Bourne, a music publisher, to exploit commercially the musical compositions that Disney created in connection with its motion pictures. In each instance, Disney retained certain rights in the compositions so as to allow Disney to continue to put them to the use for which they originally were written. Indeed, the use of the Compositions by Disney in connection with its motion pictures was essential to the purpose of the agreements, since Bourne’s ability to exploit successfully the Compositions depended, in large part, on the success of Disney’s motion pictures. See Saxon Capital Corp. v. Wilvin Assocs., 195 A.D.2d 429, 600 N.Y.S.2d 708, 709 (1st Dep’t 1993) (“[T]he condition [absent from the writing] was so central to the purpose of the [agreement] that the condition might well have been perceived by defendants as self-evident and its omission unremarkable.”).

The parties’ conduct subsequent to the agreement also weighs against finding that the 1937 Assignment Agreement was intended to be an integration. Berlin and its successor, Bourne, certainly were aware of Snow White’s successful theatrical releases. Yet, Bourne never contended, until this litigation, that Disney did not have the right to use the musical compositions written for Snow White in synchronization with the motion picture. Finally, we note that the 1937 Assignment Agreement was a printed-form contract, prepared by Bourne, and apparently signed without extensive negotiations or the involvement of legal counsel. Cf. Braten, 468 N.Y.S.2d at 864, 456 N.E.2d at 804 (in concluding that the contract was a complete integration, the court relied on the fact that “[t]he parties and their counsel negotiated during a two-month period, resulting in a specially drawn document”). Based on the foregoing considerations, we are confident that a New York court would conclude that the 1937 Assignment Agreement was not intended to be a complete integration. See Saxon, 600 N.Y.S.2d at 709. Accordingly, extrinsic evidence properly was admitted to prove that the parties intended to grant back to Disney certain rights in the Snow White compositions.

Although there was little direct evidence of the specific terms of the grant-back, we believe that Disney presented persuasive evidence that the contracting parties intended the grant-back provisions set forth in the 1933 Shorts Agreement to govern Disney’s rights to the Snow White compositions. The 1933 Shorts Agreement, which had been expanded in 1935 and 1936, was the only written agreement between the parties that delineated Disney’s rights in musical compositions that it had turned over to Bourne to exploit. Furthermore, correspondence between the parties indicates that the compositions from Snow White were being delivered to Bourne “for the usual purpose,” evincing an intent to have the matter controlled by a framework already established by the parties. Therefore, the evidence demonstrates an implied understanding between Disney and Bourne that Disney’s rights to the Snow White compositions were to be controlled by the 1933 Shorts Agreement. Accordingly, we conclude that, while the compositions from Snow White do not fall explicitly within the scope of the 1933 Shorts Agreement, the jury reasonably could have found that the parties implicitly incorporated the grant-back provision of the 1933 Shorts Agreement into the 1937 Assignment Agreement. Therefore, the district court did not err in submitting this matter to the jury.

b. Disney’s Rights to Produce Videocassettes

Bourne argues that the district court also erred by submitting to the jury the question of whether the 1933 Shorts Agreement and the 1939 Pinocchio Agreement provided Disney with a license to synchronize the Compositions with its videocassette images (“videocassette rights”). Bourne contends that videocassette rights fall outside the specific language of the grant, and that, because videocassette technology was unknown at the time of the agreements, such rights could not have been within the contemplation of the parties.

The relevant principles of contract construction are well-established. The pri-