Action on a promissory note. Defendant counterclaims for breach of an agreement whereby plaintiff engaged defendant as an actor for the theatrical seasons of 1912-1913 and 1913-1914, for at least thirty weeks during each season at a salary of $700 per week and seven per cent, of the gross receipts above $7,000 per week, alleging that'plaintiff furnished *381him with only twenty-eight weeks ’ employment during the theatrical season of 1913-1914.
Defendant began the 1913-1914 season for plaintiff on September twenty-ninth in a play called “ Indian Suínmer ” and continued therein for six weeks, receiving $700 per week. No percentage was earned. The play was a failure and about ten days after it closed, according to defendant’s version, which for the purpose of this decision is accepted, plaintiff’s general manager informed defendant that plaintiff had an offer from another theatrical manager, Mr. A. H. Woods, to put defendant in a play called “ The Guilty Man,” and asked defendant if he would agree to this. Defendant stated that he would agree provided his contract with the plaintiff continued in force and should not be considered as transferred and that he should be deemed to be playing under his contract with the plaintiff. Plaintiff’s general manager agreed to this, and on November twentieth Mr. Woods wrote to plaintiff’s general manager: “ I am perfectly agreeable to engage Mr. Mason for the leading part for the play entitled ‘ The Guilty Man ’ under the terms and conditions of your contract — for a period of not less than four weeks — to open not later than December 29th, 1913.” “ The Guilty Man ” was never produced, bút Mr. Woods paid the defendant $2,800 for the four weeks guaranteed.
Shortly after December twenty-ninth Mr. Woods asked the defendant to take part in the play that he intended to produce called “ The Yellow Ticket.” Defendant agreed, provided Mr. Woods would carry out the contract that existed between the plaintiff and the defendant, that is, pay $700 per week and seven per cent, of the gross receipts above $7,000. Mr. Woods refused to pay the seven per cent, and an arrangement was concluded to pay the defendant $700 per week and *382in addition, in lieu of the percentage, the lump sum of $1,700. The defendant did not communicate this arrangement to the plaintiff.
The defendant began to play in “ The Yellow Ticket ” on January 5, 1914, and played in it continuously until June 27, 1914, receiving from Mr. Woods in addition to the bonus of $1,700 the sum of $775 a week. Although defendant receipted for these $775 weekly payments as salary, $75 of each week’s payment was for the salary of defendant’s manager and may, for the purpose of this decision, be disregarded,
Defendant claims, that although he continued playing in “ The Yellow Ticket ” until June 27, 1914, the theatrical season referred to in and contemplated by his contract with the plaintiff came to a close on the 30th of May, 1914. If the defendant had played for the plaintiff for the thirty weeks of the 1913-1914 season, the total amount that the plaintiff would have been obligated to pay the defendant would have been $21,000, no bonus having been either earned or guaranteed.
It is to be borne in mind that there is no claim that the plaintiff discharged the defendant or violated his contract in any respect except that he furnished the defendant with twenty-eight weeks of employment instead of thirty weeks.
Defendant’s interest in having plaintiff perform hi..; obligation to furnish him with thirty weeks’ employment during the season at $700 a week lay in defendant’s getting $21,000 therefor, which was all that he could get from plaintiff’s performance of that obligation. Assuming that, as contended for by defendant, the contract was not transferred to Woods, but that the plaintiff continued liable thereon primarily and not merely as surety, and also assuming that the theatrical season ended on May 30, 1914, the undisputed *383evidence shows that defendant received during that period the sum of $22,650. Obviously, if this sum was received under the contract with the plaintiff, no loss was sustained by the defendant under the contract. If, on-the other hand, this sum of $22,650 was received by the defendant under some other contract, namely, a new contract with Woods in which defendant accepted $1,700 in lieu of the seven per cent, of the gross receipts, the plaintiff was released because of this material change in the contract made without the consent of the plaintiff.
Suppose that when the plaintiff’s contract still had twenty weeks to run at $700 a week, Mr. Woods had agreed to pay defendant $800 a week and did pay this for eighteen weeks ending May thirtieth. Defendant would have missed two weeks of “ employment ” but would have received $400 more salary, the difference between eighteen weeks at $800 a week and twenty weeks at $700 a week. Obviously he could not claim to have been damaged because he was provided with eighteen weeks employment at $800 instead of twenty at $700.
Here the additional compensation was included in a bonus of $1,700. Defendant insists that this should not be reckoned in determining whether he was damaged by being employed two weeks less than agreed because it was in lieu of the seven per cent, of gross profits provided for in the original contract. But the seven per cent, was never earned because there were no profits. Whether there would have been any profits in Some other-play or plays in which defendant might have been employed by plaintiff is purely speculative. There being no complaint that opportunity to earn the possible seven per cent, was not afforded, and there having been no seven per cent, earned, the extra payment of $1,700 made to defendant by Mr. Woods was *384merely additional compensation over and above the $700 a week stipulated in the original contract and conclusively establishes that the defendant sustained no damage, even assuming that the season contracted for ended May thirtieth.
Furthermore, the assumption that although the production of “ The Yellow Ticket ” ran right on continuously until June twenty-seventh, the defendant could arbitrarily fix on May thirtieth as the date on which the theatrical season of 1913-1914 ended is a fantastic one. The theatrical season referred to in the contract undoubtedly lasted, and was intended to last, as long as the productions in which the defendant was engaged continued. Owing to the success of “ The Yellow Ticket ” the theatrical season of 1913-1914, so far as this defendant was concerned, was longer than usual and ran nearly through the month of June. Therefore defendant was furnished with more than thirty weeks’ employment during the season, and in addition received the bonus of $1,700, although under the contract with the plaintiff no bonus was earned or due him because of the failure of the play in which he was engaged at the beginning of the season.
But it is unnecessary to enter upon this phase of the matter, for, assuming the facts as contended for by the defendant, no ground whatever exists for recovery against the plaintiff herein. A verdict should have been directed in favor of the plaintiff. While grounds assigned by the Trial Court for setting aside the verdict were not the compelling ones, plaintiff was entitled to have the verdict set aside, and the order is therefore affirmed, with costs.
Guy and Pendleton, JJ., concur.
Order affirmed, with costs.