Plaintiffs Angelo R. Puddu, and his licensee, Puddu & Martinelli, Inc., a New York corporation of which he is the sole stockholder, appeal from an order of the District Court for the Southern District of New York dismissing two complaints wherein they sought relief with respect to the defendant’s alleged infringement of 12 copyrights owned by Puddu relating to statuettes of elves carrying drums, mandolins, flutes, violins and harps. Four of these copyrights concerned a line marketed by plaintiffs in 1964; the others concerned a line marketed in 1965. 1 Judge Tyler dismissed the complaints on two independent grounds. He considered that the copyrighted statuettes were not sufficiently different from a 1963 uncopy-righted line as to possess the originality required for a copyright. Alternatively he held that the statuettes did not carry notices of copyright adequate to comply with 17 U.S.C. § 19.
Although “[t]he Copyright Act nowhere expressly invokes the requirement of originality,” courts have uniformly inferred this from the constitutional and statutory condition of authorship. Nimmer, Copyright, § 10 at 32 (1971 ed.). However, originality has been considered to mean “only that the work owes its origin to the author, i. e., is independently created and not copied from other works.”
Id.
§ 11 at 33 (footnote omitted). Plaintiffs’ employee, Metcalf testified without contradiction that he had sculpted all the copyrighted statuettes “from scratch.” While there is a strong family resemblance between the copyrighted and the uncopyright'ed models, the differences suffice to satisfy the modest requirement of originality laid down by the Supreme Court in Bleistein v. Donaldson Lithographing Co.,
While we thus cannot hold that the plaintiff’s statuettes lacked that modicum of originality necessary for copyright protection, we sustain the district court’s decision on the alternate ground there advanced. Section 10 of the Copyright Act provides that any person entitled thereto “may secure copyright for his work by publication thereof with the notice of copyright required by this title; and such notice shall be affixed to each copy thereof published or offered for sale in the United States by authority of the copyright proprietor. * * * ” Section 19 of the Copyright Act, as amended in 1954, provides in pertinent part: 2
The notice of copyright required by section 10 of this title shall consist either of the word “Copyright”, the abbreviation “Copr.”, or the symbol “©”, accompanied by the name of the copyrighted proprietor, and if the work be a printed literary, musical, or dramatic work, the notice shall include also the year in which the copyright was secured by publication. In the case, however, of copies of works specified in subsections (f) to (k), inclusive, of section 5 of this title, the notice may consist of the letter C enclosed within a circle, thus ©, accompanied by the initials, monogram, mark, or symbol of the copyright proprietor: Provided, that on some accessible portion of such copies or of the margin, back, permanent base, or pedestal, or of the substance on which such copies shall be mounted, his name shall appear. * * *”
In Herbert Rosenthal Jewelry Corp. v. Grossbardt,
The district court found that plaintiffs endeavored to comply with § 19 in their 1964 line by placing on the base of each statuette “ARP” and a © and embossing on the back of each elf additional markings, “presumably purporting to be the name, Angelo R. Puddu, but which I cannot decipher, even with the aid of a powerful reading glass.” On April 2, 1964, Puddu had filed with the New York County Clerk a certificate of doing business under the name of “ARP.” In the case of the 1965 line, plaintiffs simply embossed on the back of each elf “ARP” with a “©”. The judge found that this was legible only as a result of what he had learned and seen in four days of trial, and also that, in the case of both lines, the material embossed on the back “cannot be observed until the clothing is partially removed, no easy task for a male of the species who is unsophisticated in the fine arts of pinning brocade and other fabrics.”
Subject to the point discussed at the end of this opinion, these findings dispose of the claims with respect to the 1965 line unless they are clearly erroneous. See Nimmer, Copyright § 88.2 and cases cited in notes 180 and 181. Although one would have supposed that, on an appeal such as this, counsel would have had the copyrighted and the accused statuettes in court, they did not. When we asked to see the copyrighted statuettes that had been received in evidence, appellant’s counsel undertook to produce them. He later advised us that they had been lost but that he would furnish others; appellee objected to our considering these. Even if we were to consider the example of the 1965 line so *404 produced, we could not fault the findings of the district judge.
This leaves the 1964 line, with respect to which the court seems to have found the ARP marking on the base to be legible, although the supposed name on the back was not.
3
We noted in Herbert Rosenthal Jewelry Corp. v. Grossbardt,
supra,
Appellants argue finally that full compliance with § 19 is unnecessary since, as a result of an earlier unsuccessful unfair competition suit by them in the state courts, defendant had become aware of the identity of “ARP” before it allegedly copied the copyrighted statuettes. In Herbert Rosenthal Jewelry Corp. v. Grossbardt,
supra,
Affirmed.
Notes
. The complaints also contained claims of unfair competition. Plaintiffs do not dispute that even if the copyright claims were sufficiently “substantial” to afford a basis for pendent jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1338, the unfair competition claims must fail under Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. Stiffel Co.,
. The statutettes fall under § 5 (g) which includes “Works of art,’
. The “1964” statuette submitted to us is obviously different from the one offered in evidence, since it has on the base “1964” preceded by a “©” and, underneath, “Angelo R. Puddu.” The latter words are certainly legible. However, we cannot predicate decision on an unauthenticated exhibit so plainly differing from the one that was before the district court.
. If other requirements were satisfied, we should not suppose it to be fatal that here the initials were on the base since this was an integral part of the statuette.
. Contrast the less rigid provision with respect to patents, 35 U.S.C. § 287.
. All these are by district courts: Trifari, Krussman & Fisliel v. B. Steinberg-Kalso Co.,
. Appellant’s reliance on such eases as National Comics Publications, Inc. v. Fawcett Publications, Inc.,
