Lead Opinion
1. Plaintiff with his complaint .'filed a jury demand which defendant moved to strike out. Defendant urges that the relief prayed in the complaint renders a jury trial inappropriate. We do not agree. Plaintiff did not ask for an injunction but solely for damages. Such a suit is an action at “law.”
2. The principal question on this appeal is whether the lower court, under Rule 56,
As to the first — copying—the evidence may consist (a) of defendant’s admission that he copied or (b) of circumstantial evidence — usually evidence of" access — from which the trier of the facts may reasonably infer copying. Of course, if there are no similarities, no amount of evidence of access will suffice to prove copying. If there is evidence of access and similarities exist, then the trier of the facts must determine whether the similarities are sufficient to prove copying. On this issue, analysis (“dissection”) is relevant, and the testimony of experts may be received to aid the trier of the facts. If evidence of access is absent, the similarities must be so striking as to preclude the possibility that plaintiff and defendant independently arrived at the same result.
If copying is established, then only does there arise the second issue, that of illicit copying (unlawful appropriation.).
In some cases, the similarities be
Each of these two issues— copying and improper appropriation — is an issue of fact. If there is a trial, the conclusions on those issues of the trier of the facts — of the judge if he sat without a jury, or of the jury if there was a jury trial — bind this court on appeal, provided the evidence supports those findings, regardless of whether we would ourselves have reached the same conclusions.
3. We turn first to the issue of ■copying. After listening to the compositions as played in the phonograph recordings submitted by defendant, we find similarities ; but we hold that unquestionably, standing alone, they do not compel the conclusion, or permit the inference, that defendant copied. The similarities, however, •are sufficient so that, if there is enough evidence of access to permit the case to .go to the jury, the jury may properly infer •that the similarities did not result from coincidence.
Summary judgment was, then, proper if indubitably defendant did not have access to plaintiff’s compositions. Plainly that presents an issue of fact. On that issue, the district judge, who heard no oral testimony, had before him the depositions of plaintiff and defendant. The judge characterized plaintiff’s story as “fantastic”; and, in the light of the references in his opinion to defendant’s deposition, the judge obviously accepted defendant’s denial of access and copying. Although part of plaintiff’s testimony on deposition (as to “stooges” and the like) does seem “fantastic,” yet plaintiff’s credibility, even as to those improbabilities, should be left to the jury. If evidence is “of a kind that greatly taxes the credulity of the judge, he can say so, or, if he totally disbelieves it, he may announce that fact, leaving the jury free to believe it or not.”
But even if we were to disregard the improbable aspects of plaintiff’s story, there remain parts by no means “fantastic.” On the record now before us, more than a million copies of one of his compositions were sold; copies of others were sold in smaller quantities or distributed to radio stations or band leaders or publishers, or the pieces were publicly performed.
To be sure, plaintiff examined defendant on deposition. But the right to use depositions for discovery, or for limited purposes at a trial,
With all that in mind, we cannot now say — as we think we must say to sustain a summary judgment — that at the close of a trial the judge could properly direct a verdict.
We agree that there are cases in which a trial would be farcical. If, in a
We do not believe that, in a case in which the decision must turn on the reliability of witnesses, the Supreme Court, by authorizing summary judgments, intended to permit a “trial by affidavits,” if either party objects. That procedure which, so the historians tell us, began to be outmoded at common law in the 16th century, would, if now revived, often favor unduly the party with the more ingenious and better paid lawyer. Grave injustice might easily result.
In the equity practice in the federal courts before 1912, extensive use had been made of deposition testimony. But Rules 46 and 47 of the Equity Rules of 1912, 28 U.S.C.A. § 723 Appendix, expressly provided' that in “all trials in equity the testimony of witnesses shall be taken orally in open court” unless there was a “good and exceptional cause for departing from the general rule.” The purpose was to ensure that the trial judge should have “the opportunity to see, hear and observe the actions of the witnesses.”
Moore discusses in detail the provision of Clause 5 of Rule 26(d) (3), that, where a witness, including a party, is alive, does not reside more than a hundred miles from the place of trial, is not unable to attend the trial — because’ of age, sickness, infirmity or imprisonment — and there is no inability to subpoena him, then it is only upon a showing “that such exceptional circumstances exist as to make it desirable, in the interest of justice and with due regard to the importance of presenting the testimony of witnesses orally in open court”
If defendant, who resides in the district and within a few miles of the place of trial,
4. Assuming that adequate proof is made of copying, that is not enough; for there can be “permissible copying,”
Surely, then, we have an issue of fact which a jury is peculiarly fitted to determine.
We should not be taken as saying that a plagiarism case can never arise in which absence of similarities is so patent that a summary judgment for defendant would be correct. Thus suppose that Ravel’s “Bolero” or Shostakovitch’s “Fifth Symphony” were alleged to infringe “When Irish Eyes Are Smiling.”
At the trial, plaintiff may play, or cause to be played, the pieces in such manner that they may seem to a jury to be inexcusably alike, in terms of the way in which lay listeners of such music would be likely to react. The plaintiff may call witnesses whose testimony may aid the jury in reaching its conclusion as to the responses of such audiences. Expert testimony of musicians may also be received, but it will in no way be controlling on the issue of illicit copying, and should be utilized only to assist in determining the reactions of lay auditors. The impression made on the refined ears of musical experts or their views as to the musical excellence of plaintiff’s or defendant’s works are utterly immaterial on the issue of misappropriation ;
5. In copyright infringement cases cited by defendant,
6. Plaintiff has not copyrighted two of his compositions, “Twilight Waltz” and “Duet” from “Song of David.” Accordingly, the judgment to that extent should be changed to one of dismissal for lack of jurisdiction. The same is true of the judgment concerning the alleged copying of the titles of plaintiff’s songs, “What Is Love” and “Night and Day.” A title cannot be copyrighted.
7. Defendant’s motion papers showed that plaintiff had assigned his copyright to his composition “A Mother’s Prayer” to another person. Plaintiff alleged that, by an oral agreement with the assignee, the copyright was to revert to plaintiff on the assignee’s death, and that the assignee was dead. Defendant contended that the parol evidence rule barred proof of such an oral agreement, and that, therefore, plaintiff, not being able to show his ownership of the copyright, could not maintain suit for its infringement. Defendant asked the judge to take judicial notice of the record of another infringement suit in the same court, Arnstein v. American Soc. of Composers, D.C.,
8. Defendant disregarded that sort of irrelevance in moving in the court below not only for summary judgment but also fdr dismissal of plaintiff’s action as “vexatious.” For in aid of that latter motion, defendant asked the judge to take judicial" notice of five previous copyright infringement actions, including the one just mentioned above, brought by the plaintiff in the same court against other persons, in which plaintiff had advanced some legal arguments like those he advances here, and in which he had been defeated. The judge in his opinion referred to but one of those suits, Arnstein v. American Soc. of Composers, and purported not to pass on the motion to dismiss for vexatiousness. But in his order for final judgment he specifically referred to the “records” of the court in the five cases, naming them, as constituting in part the basis of the judgment.
But, in the spirit of that suggestion, we regard it as entirely improper to give any weight to other actions lost by plaintiff. Although, as stated above, the judge in his opinion, except as to one of the previous actions, did not say that he rested his decision on those other suits, the language of his final judgment order indicates that he was probably affected by them.
Modified in part; otherwise reversed and remanded.
Appendix
1. In the following cases, after a trial before a judge without a jury, the decision was for defendant because there was no copying, so that the issue of illicit copying was not reached. The judge found no access. On appeal the decision was affirmed for the following reasons: (a) The finding of no copying was supported by sufficient evidence so that it was not clearly erroneous. (b) The similarities were not sufficient to preclude coincidence since (1) there was no resemblance to the ear of the lay listener and/or (2) the plaintiff’s contribution was too banal. Arnstein v. Edward B. Marks Music Corp., 2 Cir.,
2. In Wilkie v. Santly Bros., 2 Cir.,
Notes
Pathe Exchange, Inc. v. Dalke, 4 Cir.,
Frazier v. New England Newspaper Pub. Co., D.C.Mass.,
Rule 1 of the Rules for' Practice under § 25, adopted in 1909, see 17 U.S.C.A. following section 25 provided that the “rules of equity practice, so far as they may be applicable, shall be enforced * * This did not eliminate a jury trial where plaintiff sought no equitable relief. See Journal of Commerce & Commercial Bulletin v. Boston Transcript, D. C.,
United States v. Cooper Corp.,
Fleitmann v. Welsbach Co.,
The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S.C.A. following section 723c, are applicable to copyright actions; see amendment, adopted June 5, 1939, to Rule 1 of Rules" of Practice under § 25 of the Copyright Act.
See cases cited in note 18.
See point 5 below .and the Appendix to this opinion.
Post v. United States, 5 Cir.,
Marston v. Dresen,
Even if it turned out that in part plaintiff falsified, that fact would not necessarily discredit his entire testimony, United States v. Greenstein, 2 Cir.,
See, e.g., Wigmore, Evidence, 2d Ed., 1936,11367; Moore, Facts (1898), § 1274; The Ottawa,
He would be so entitled if the trial were before a judge without a jury.
“Sometimes a witness may be unimpeached as to general character, and may be uncontradicted either by others, or be perfectly consistent in his statement; and yet, from his deportment on the witness’ stand, render himself unworthy of credit. A hesitating .or confused manner, or a studied narrative of which a jury may judge from all that accompanies the delivery of the testimony, will justly cast a shade of doubt upon it all.” United States v. Darton, 25 Fed.Cas.14,919, at page 770; Moore, Facts (1898) § 994.
Rule 26(d).
Napier v. Bossard, 2 Cir.,
Barron v. People,
Hammock v. McBride and McBride,
Untermeyer v. Freund, C.C.N.Y.,
Sir John Coleridge, in Atty. General v. Bertrand, 4 Moo.P.C.N.S. 460, 481.
Pinson v. Atchison, T. & S. F. R. Co., C.C.Mo.,
Brewer v. Beckwith,
See Sartor v. Arkansas Natural Gas Corporation,
That the comment in the Sartor case is not to be restricted to the issue of damages is shown by Associated Press v. United States,
The Supreme Court in the Associated Press case also noted (
We do not mean by this illustration that Rule 56 is limited to suits for liquidated claims.
Thus summary judgment would have been proper in the instant case if plaintiff on his deposition had admitted that defendant had no access to plaintiff’s compositions or had not copied any substantial and material part of them. Then the case would have been like Associated Press v. United States,
Lane, The Federal Equity Rules, 46 Hary.L.Rev. (1933) 638, 651.
Moore, Federal Practice (1938) 3064, 3066.
Moore, ibid., 3189. Here Moore is referring to Rule 56(f). If there is impropriety in entering judgment on the grounds he mentions, it is surely not necessary that the adverse party set them forth in an affidavit, and certainly not here where he is a layman,
Emphasis added.
Moore, ibid., 2492, 2493; emphasis added.
The record shows that he resides in a hotel in New York City.
Clause 2 provides that a deposition may be used at the trial if “the witness is at a greater distance than 100 miles from the place of trial or hearing, or is out of the United States, unless it appears that the absence of the witness was procured by the party offering the deposition.” Moore suggests that th* “unless” clause refers, not to absencw from the trial, but to absence from the territory within a radius of 100 miles from the place of trial. On that basis, he says that “a party who resides [italics his] more than 100 miles” distant has not “procured his own absence,” and may therefore offer his own deposition. Whether that interpretation is correct we need not here consider. His discussion of this question (2460, 2461, 2492) nowhere intimates that the same would be true if, a party, a resident of the district and within the 100-mile zone, absented himself for business purposes.
Dymow v. Bolton, 2 Cir.,
Where plaintiff relies on similarities to prove copying (as distinguished from improper appropriation) paper comparisons and the opinions of experts may aid the court.
Cf. King Features Syndicate v. Fleischer, 2 Cir.,
See Arnstein v. Broadcast Music, Inc., 2 Cir.,
It would, accordingly, be proper to exclude tone-deaf persons from the jury, cf. Chatterton v. Cave, 3 A.C. 483, 499-501, 502-504.
In gnch a case, the complete absence of similarity would negate both copying and improper appropriation.
Our comments in this paragraph would be pertinent if the trial were before a judge alone. Of course, a judge trying a case without a jury does not direct liimself to enter a verdict; but the applicable standards are virtually the same, for he is then, in part, a one-man jury.
Nor need plaintiff’s bo. See, e.g., Baker v. Selden,
See, e.g., Arnstein v. Edward B. Marks Music Corporation, 2 Cir.,
Even in admiralty, we give the usual weight to the findings of the trial court. Petterson Lighterage & T. Corp. v. New York Central R. Co., 2 Cir.,
We must then assume any possible finding of fact which would support the verdict. A special verdict in, the case at tar might well he desirable.
Cf. Drittel v. Friedman, D.C.,
Warner Bros. Pictures v. Majestic Pictures Corp., 2 Cir.,
Zalkind v. Scheinman, 2 Cir.,
Cf. Aero Spark Plug Co. v. B. G. Corporation, 2 Cir.,
Cf. MacDonald v. Du Maurier, 2 Cir.,
“That one reasonably may surmise that the plaintiff is unlikely to prevail upon a trial, is not a sufficient basis for refusing him his day in court with respect to issues which are not shown to be sham, frivolous, or so unsubstantial that it would obviously be futile to try them.” Sprague v. Vogt, 8 Cir.,
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
While the procedure followed below seems to me generally simple and appropriate, the defendant did make one fatal tactical error. In an endeavor to assist us, he caused to be prepared records of all the musical pieces here involved, and presented these transcriptions through the medium of the affidavit of his pianist. Though he himself did not stress these records and properly met plaintiff’s claims as to the written music with his own analysis, yet the tinny tintinnabulations of the music thus canned resounded through the United States Courthouse to the exclusion of all else, including the real issues in the case. Of course, sound is important in a case of this kind, but it is not so important as to falsify what the eye reports and the mind teaches. Otherwise plagiarism would be
Pointing to the adscititious fortuity inherent in the stated standard is, it seems to me, the fact that after repeated hearings of the records,' I could not find therein what my brothers found. The only thing definitely mentioned seemed to be the repetitive use of the note e2 in certain places by both plaintiff and defendant, surely too simple and ordinary a device of composition to be significant. In our former musical plagiarism cases we have, naturally, relied on what seemed the total sound effect; but we have also analyzed the music enough to make sure of an intelligible and intellectual decision. Thus in Arnstein v. Edward B. Marks Music Corp., 2 Cir.,
It is true that in Arnstein v. Broadcast Music, Inc., 2 Cir.,
Consequently I do not think we should
Though it is most instructive, it will serve no good purpose for me to restate here this showing as to each of the pieces in issue. As an example of the rest, we may take plaintiff’s first cause of action. This involves his “A Modern Messiah” with defendant’s “Don’t Fence Me In.” The first is written in 6/8 time, the second in common or 4/4 time; and there is only one place where there is a common sequence of as many as five consecutive notes, and these without the same values. Thus it goes. The usual claim seems to be rested upon a sequence of three, of four, or of five — never more than five- — identical notes, usually of different rhythmical values. Nowhere is there anything approaching the twelve-note sequence of the Marks case, supra. Interesting is the fact that the closest tonal resemblance is to be found between a piece by defendant written, back in 1930 and an uncopyrighted waltz by plaintiff (rejected here by my brothers because it is uncopyrighted) which was never published, but, according to his statement, was publicly performed as early as 1923, 1924, and 1925.
In the light of these utmost claims of the plaintiff, I do not see a legal basis for the claim of plagiarism. So far as I have been able to discover, no earlier case approaches the holding that a simple and trite sequence of this type, even if copying may seem indicated, constitutes proof either of access or of plagiarism. In addition to the cases already cited, see the fine statements of Bright, J., in Arnstein v. Broadcast Music, Inc., D.C.S.D.N.Y.,
But of course as the record now stands, the case is still stronger, for it appears that access must rest only upon a showing of similarities in the compositions. Under the procedure employed, the parties were entitled to require discovery of the case relied »on by the other. Madeirense Do Brasil S/A v. Stulman-Emrick Lumber ‘Co., 2 Cir.,
Since the legal issue seems thus clear to me, I am loath to believe that my colleagues will uphold a final judgment of
The second premise — dislike of the summary-judgment rule — I find difficult to appraise or understand. Seemingly the procedure is not to be generally favored, but with certain exceptions, the extent of which is unclear, e.g., United States v. Associated Press, D.C.S.D.N.Y.,
In fact, however, cases, texts, and articles without dissent accept and approve the summary judgment as an integral and useful part of the procedural system envisaged by the rules. And as the Advisory Committee’s two drafts of proposed amendments show, the demand is not for limitation, but for at least a small extension, of the rule. It is, indeed, more necessary in the system of simple pleading now enforced in the federal courts; for under older procedures, useless and unnecessary trials could be avoided, in theory at least, by the then existing demurrer and motioii' practice. But that stressed pleading forms, rather than
In accord is Shatter, Musical Copyright, 2d Ed.1939, c. 6, particularly p. 205, where the author speaks of “the ‘comparative method,' worked out by Judge Learned Hand with great success,” and “his successful method of analysis,” citing Hein v. Harris, C.C.S.D.N.Y.,
Thus Stewart Macpherson, Professor of Harmony and Composition in the Royal Academy of Music, says in his standard text, Form in Music, Rev.E'd.1930, 1, 2: “Music appeals to us in a threefold way, which may be described under the
“Here then, in order that we may the better arrive at a just and critical appreciation of that to which we may be directing our attention, comes the necessity for the employment of the intellectual faculties of our nature. ‘To judge a composition simply from the manner in which it works upon our feelings, is no better than judging a picture or a poem merely from our sympathy with its subject.’ Sir Henry Hadow, Studies in Modern Music, Vol. II. We here are called upon to exercise our judgment, to decide upon such questions as style, symmetry, and balance of design — to say, in fact, whether the composer has put his thoughts into the most convincing shape, into that form which will best convey their meaning.”
Even his vague and reckless charge of burglary of his various rooming places — a repeated feature of his plagiarism cases, see, e.g., Arnstein v. American Soc. of Composers, Authors and Publishers, D.C.S.D.N.Y.,
The opinion attempts to foreclose use of the depositions at the trial, even though we cannot now Know or guess what circumstances will then develop; and in so doing, it indulges in a wholly strained and hampering construction of F.R. 26(d) (3). Centering attention on subpar. 5, the catchall provision giving general discretion to the district court, it stresses the reference there to “exceptional circumstances” and attempts to make that controlling. But obviously the more immediately pertinent provision is subpar. 2, under which a deposition may be used when the witness, including a party, “is” —not resides — “at a greater distance than 100 miles from the place of trial * * * unless it appears that the absence of the witness Was procured by the party offering the deposition.” Professor Moore shows that a party may properly take advantage of this provision without necessarily being charged with procuring his own absence. 2 Moore’s Federal Practice 2460-2462, 2492. He gives as an example — and of course it is a natural one, suggested by the earlier decisions — the case of a party residing more than 100 miles from the place of trial; but it is a great injustice to his cogent argument to offer it as limiting the rule beyond its words to the one situation only. In view of the clear intent and purpose of the rule there would be no particular reason or sense in substituting a purely arbitrary restriction for the discretionary finding as to the purpose of the absence, required by the rule itself as a condition of exclusion. If a party is in the business of making motion pictures in California and is going about his normal business there when the trial occurs, it is quite clear that the exception limiting use of his deposition does not apply. That would probably have been the conclusion under the old statute, 28 U.S.C.A. §§ 639, 641, where the word “lives” was held to mean where the witness “can be found, and is sojourning, residing, or abiding for any lawful purpose,” thus including going “to Asheville for his health.” Mutual Ben. Life Ins. Co. v. Robison, 8 Cir.,
I suggest that a ease is not made out for sutíh a departure from tried and approved rule-making procedure. It seems to rest upon somewhat vague references to “trial by affidavits,” though this is precluded by the rule itself whenever there is a “genuine issue as to any material fact,” F.R. 56(e), and to some anonymous case where seemingly tho trial judge, being pressed to commit error, inconsiderately refused to do so. Had he committed error, tho appellate courts and the Supreme Court would have been available for its correction; ef. note 6, infra.
Except in one detail, not altogether the fault of the district judges, their use of summary judgment has been generally discriminating, not deserving the criticism in Doehler Metal Furniture Co. v. United States, 2 Cir,
