This is an action on an assigned claim of one Kurt M. Hageman for compensation for services under a written contract of employment executed by the defendant with him on the 18th day of September, 1911, by which he was employed to perform “such duties pertaining to the exhibition of the game of base ball ” as defendant might require of him during the American League season for the year 1912, which embraced the period of six months from April 15, 1912, to October 15, 1912, and for which it agreed to pay him $400 per month. The defendant paid this compensation to Hageman for the first month; and then, by its direction, he reported to and played with the Jersey City club until the twenty-third day of June, and was paid by that club at the same rate for that period. Hageman was required to and did sign a contract with the Jersey City club; and the nonsuit was granted on the theory that the defendant thereupon was released from all liability under its contract with him. The action is brought to recover the compensation provided by the contract for the period from June 23 to October 15, 1912.
Hageman contracted with the Denver club of the Western League as a pitcher for the base ball season of 1911. The Denver club belonged to a minor league known as a Class “A” league of the National Association of Professional Base Ball Leagues. The National League and American Association of Professional Base Ball Clubs and the American League of Professional Base Ball Clubs were major leagues of the same class; and each of them was composed of several clubs, each having a professional base ball team. . There was a formal agreement in writing between the two major leagues and the National Association of Professional Base Ball Leagues, and it will be referred to as the national agreement. The parts of that agreement deemed by counsel material to the issues were offered and received in evidence and are printed in *487the record. Every player who obtains a contract of employment from any club is obliged to agree to be bound by the provisions of the national agreement. That agreement, among other things, purports to regulate the “purchase” and “sale” between the clubs of the players as “property.” The original contract between a player and a club is for the ensuing season; but provisions of the national agreement, which become part of the contract, purport to mortgage the services of the player to the club or to the other clubs, subject to said agreement, for the entire period of his usefulness as a player, under pain of being precluded from obtaining employment from any of said clubs under any other contract unless voluntarily and unconditionally released. The provisions of the national agreement are designed to control the disposition of the players between the clubs composing the leagues, as chattels are controlled by purchase and sale. The players are not consulted and have no voice in the matter, and are described as “the property” of the club by which they are employed. No provision is made for maintaining their salaries at the original figures or for increasing or decreasing them. It is expressly provided in the contract of employment that it is understood and agreed between the parties thereto “that they will respect and abide by the constitution, rules and edicts ” of the league to which the particular club employing the player belongs, “subject only to an appeal for final adjudication to the National Commission, ” and that they will “ also respect and abide by all of the provisions and conditions of the National Agreement and rules of the National Commission.” By the national agreement, to which reference has been made, and to the provisions of which a player becomes obligated by his original contract with a club, it is expressly provided that a major league club “ may at any time purchase the release of a player from a Minor League Club, to take effect forthwith, or at a specified date, provided such purchase is recorded with the Secretary of the Commission and Secretary of the National Association for promulgation within five days of the date of the transaction.” Pursuant to this provision of the national agreement the defendant, which is one of the clubs forming the American League and, therefore, a major league club, purchased the release of Hageman from *488the Denver club prior to the close of the season of 1911, and thereafter it made the contract upon which this action is based with Hageman. Another onerous provision of the contract which Hageman was obliged to make with the defendant, or suffer the penalty of being suspended without pay and without the right to negotiate a contract for employment with any club which was a party to the national agreement, is one by which the defendant was at liberty at any time “ after the beginning and prior to the completion of the period ” of the contract to terminate all liability, under the contract on ten days’ notice in writing to him, but he had no option to terminate his liability under the contract at any time or in any manner. A player originally voluntarily becomes obligated; but it is manifest, that many of the provisions to which he becomes subject are coercive and are so drafted that they may be enforced and applied arbitrarily, as has been done in the case at bar. In so far, therefore, as the provisions of such a contract are sustained as valid, they should be construed liberally in favor of the player.
By the contract the plaintiff’s assignor became obligated to report for practice and to participate in exhibition games as might be required for a period of thirty days prior to the 15th of April, 1912, at such place as defendant might designate, and pursuant to its direction he reported at Cincinnati in the fore part of March and performed such duties there and at Hot Springs, where the club went for practice, as were required of him. He then accompanied the team to Boston and remained with it until'May fifteenth, and in the meantime participated in two official league games as a pitcher. On the morning of that day, while the club was practicing at Boston, Mr. McAleer, the president of the defendant, said to Hageman, “I want you to go to Jersey City, they want a pitcher over there, and Mr. Breen is here, and I want you to go back with him,” to which Hageman replied, “Mr. McAleer, I would rather stay here. It is every ball player’s ambition to get to the city here at the big games,” whereupon McAleer said, “We want you to go over there for a" short period ” and “ then you will come back here. * * * Every one that works for me must pitch and I want you to go over there and pitch.” Hageman then went to Mr. Stahl, who was the manager of the team, and *489reported the conversation he had had with McAleer, and said to Stahl, “Supposing I go over there shall I have to sign a contract?” to which Stahl replied, “Don’t sign a contract;” and thereupon Hageman drew his attention to the fact that the constitution of the league required that he sign a contract or the games could not go on record, and Stahl said: “ If you must sign a contract be absolutely sure that the terms are just the same as the contract that you signed with us,” and thereupon and on the same day he went to Jersey City and reported to the Jersey City club for duty and was required to sign a “regular International League contract,” of which he did not receive a copy, by which he was to receive a salary in the same amount that he was receiving from the defendant. That contract is not in the record and the only evidence with respect to it is that given by Hageman, who at first testified that it provided that he was to play with the Jersey City club for the season of 1912. That league season was between two and three weeks shorter than the defendant’s season. Hageman afterwards testified that he understood that he was released by the defendant to the Jersey City club under an “optional release; ” that no period was specified in the contract which he signed with the Jersey City club; that he was “ under the impression” that he was to return to the defendant “within a period of six or eight weeks;” that “Manager Stahl and President McAleer both said I would be over there only a few weeks, and I was only loaned there to help the Jersey City club out;” and that otherwise he did not know under what conditions he was released or under what agreement between the defendant and the Jersey City club, and that his services were transferred but that he saw no papers. Hageman further testified that he played with the Jersey City club until the evening of June 23, 1912, when the secretary of the club delivered to him a check for his services and made a statement to him, which was not received in evidence but which evidently related to his transfer to the Denver club, for he wired McAleer regarding his transfer to that club, and received a telegram from McAleer in reply as follows: “Jersey City did not want you so have given Denver option on you. You will have to make your terms with Denver. ” Hageman then wired the Den*490ver club, asking for particulars regarding his transfer, and he received a telegram in reply from the president of the Denver club as follows: “Your services purchased from Boston on optional agreement will give you two hundred fifty per month report immediately at Topeka not later than Monday. Buy your own transportation and we will refund.” He thereupon wired the Denver club that the terms were unreasonable and that he could not accept them, and he received a reply from the president of the club as follows: “Best proposition I will make you is two hundred fifty per month when you are ready to report wire me for transportation and will send same or you can furnish your own and we will refund. You are hereby notified that you are suspended until you accept terms and report to us.” He then wired McAleer; but he was not permitted to state the contents of the message and they were not shown. He received a reply, however, to that message from the president of the defendant as follows: “You must do business with
Denver as I have turned you over to them.” Hageman then went to Boston and called on McAleer and said, “I do not like the idéa of going to Denver, because it is a lower league,” and that the terms were unreasonable and that he would not go unless his contract with respect to salary was kept and the defendant made up the difference, which McAleer refused to do, and that he then informed McAleer that there was a manager in the International League who would pay him the salary he was receiving from the defendant and had authorized him to say to McAleer that he would also pay as much or more than the defendant was to receive from the Denver club, and that McAleer replied, “ I do not care, that is the hard luck of base ball, you must go to Denver, or wherever I send you, * * * you have to go where we send you. * * * I won’t make up the difference in salary, you will have to go just the same.” McAleer informed Hageman that the Denver club was giving $500 for his optional release, but that the defendant would release him to another club if he could find some manager who would pay $1,000 more than the Denver club was giving. Hageman says that he found such a manager who would pay him the same salary as he was receiving from the defendant, and would give the defendant $1,500 for his release, and so *491stated to McAleer, who then refused “ to live up to the proposition.” Hageman then informed McAleer that he would remain there and report for duty and hold defendant to its contract, to which McAleer replied: “You are foolish, my boy, you won’t get a cent.” Hageman reported to the club daily for duty until the close of the season, and subsequently assigned his claim for services to the plaintiff, and this action was brought.
After the defendant undertook to transfer Hageman to the Denver club, Hageman communicated by telegram with the national commission with a view to obtaining redress, but neither the date nor the contents of his telegram were shown. The chairman of the commission—whether in reply to his telegram or acting on other information does not appear—wired Hageman under date of July ninth, addressed to him care of “Boston Bed Sox”—by which name defendant’s team was known — as follows: “ Boston Bed Sox purchased your release they could not turn you over to Denver unless all major league clubs waived claim they have acted within their rights the Denver club has a right to regulate your salary, you cannot expect a major league salary in class A co. ” Hageman then wrote the national commission under date of July 15, 1912, setting forth his claims in full and in substance as herein recited, and appealed to the commission to protect him against what appeared to him to be a conspiracy to prevent his obtaining the salary to which he was entitled nnder his contract with the defendant, and which other clubs were willing to pay. He received a letter from the national commission under date of July nineteenth, which is not in the record, to which he replied at length on July twenty-ninth, emphasizing the injustice to which he was being subjected, and in that letter he alluded to a claim, evidently made by the chairman of the national commission, that the waivers required had been obtained by defendant; but he did not admit the correctness of the claim, and it does not appear that he had any information on the subject other than that communicated by the letter to which his was a reply and the telegram already quoted. On August thirteenth he received another telegram from the chairman of the commission as follows: “My letter to you under date of July nineteenth relative to matter you have pending before com*492mission has heen unanimously endorsed by all of the members thereof and you should act accordingly.”
It was expressly provided by rule 34, forming part of the national agreement, that a player purchased by a major league club from a minor league club could not be transferred to any minor league during the year following such purchase, “unless all Major League Clubs in both the National and American League shall have waived claim to his services and if such waiver cannot be secured then the player shall either remain with the club having purchased him or be transferred to the club refusing to waive claim to him by sale to such club; and in such instances, the purchase price shall be the same as is now fixed by the National and American Leagues in like cases, to wit, $1,500.” This provision applied to the case at bar, for Hageman had been purchased by defendant from a minor league club the year before. There is no evidence that the defendant obtained waivers from any or all of the clubs from which it was required to obtain them before it could transfer Hageman to a minor league club. Of course the statement in the telegram from the chairman of the commission to the effect that the defendant was acting within its rights is not proof of the fact that it had obtained waivers.
According to the testimony in this record, during all the negotiations, the claim upon which the plaintiff was nonsuited and upon which the respondent attempts to sustain the judgment, namely, that the defendant was released by Hageman’s signing the contract with the Jersey City club, was never suggested. It is manifest that that claim is untenable. The defendant assumed to reclaim Hageman from the Jersey City club, or to accept him back, and recognized that its contract with him continued in force, and assumed to dispose of his services by virtue of its rights, erroneously asserted under said contract, to the Denver club. There is no presumption that the defendant obtained waivers from all of the clubs from which it was required to obtain them as a condition precedent to its right to transfer Hageman to a minor league club, and the burden was upon the defendant of showing that it had duly complied with the rule, if it claims that as a defense to the action for Hageman’s services.
*493The contract as presented by the record did not expressly authorize the defendant to sell or transfer the services of Hageman to the Denver club or any other club at a lower salary, even though the conditions precedent to its right to demote him were complied with by obtaining waivers from the other major league clubs; and the rule of construction which, as already observed, should prevail, requires that the provisions of the contract with respect to the sale or transfer of the player’s services to another club during the particular season for which he is employed should be upon the same salary.
It was contended on the trial and is suggested here, but not urged, that the assignment to the plaintiff was void. The plaintiff is a membership corporation composed of base ball players, and it was organized to protect their interests and further the interests of organized base ball. The claim has been assigned in writing in due form, and there can be no question but that the defendant will be protected by any recovery in this action. There is, therefore, no merit in the point.
It follows that the judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide the event.
Hotchkiss, J., concurred; McLaughlin and Dowling, JJ., dissented.