delivered the opinion of the court.
The Revised Statutes of Ohio, in §§ 426 to 435, (title 4, chapter 1, pp. 273, 274, edition of 1879,) provide for the appointment of a reporter by the Supreme Court of that State, to report and prepare for publication its decisions, and for the printing of copies of the reports by the public printer, and for their distribution to public officers, as soon as a form of sixteen pages of printed matter is printed, and also for the binding and distribution of a full volume.
Section 436 provides as follows: “ The reporter shall secure a copyright, for the use of the State, for each volume of the reports so published ; and he shall receive such compensation for his services, not exceeding eighteen hundred 'dollars per year, during the time the Supreme Court Commission is in session; and at all other times not exceeding one thousand dollars yearly, payable out of the state treasury, in such instalments as the Supreme Court by order entered on its journal, directs.”
Section 437, as amended by the act of January 17th, 1881, 78 Laws of Ohio, 14, provides for the mode of doing such printing and binding, under a contract to be made by the Secretary of State with a responsible person or firm, when and as often as he shall be authorized to do so by a resolution
of
• On the 17th of April, 1882, the General Assembly of the State of Ohio passed the following joint resolution, 79 Laws of Ohio, 249:
“Joint resolution providing for the publication of the Ohio State Beports and the advance sheets of the same.
“ Be it resolved by the General Assembly of the State of Ohio, That the Secretary of State be and he is hereby author- . ized to contract with some responsible person or firm to furnish material, print, bind and supply the State with three hundred and fifty copies of the thirty-eighth and any other subsequent' volume ór volumes of the Ohio state reports that may be ready for publication within two years from the 23d day of June, 1882, said oorftract to be made with the lowest responsible bidder, as provided in § 2, article 15, of the constitution, after first giving public notice to bidders for four weeks in some weekly newspaper published in Columbus, Ohio, and of general circulation in the State. Said contract to be made in accordance with the provisions and subject to the limitations and instructions of § 437 of the Bevised Statutes, as to cost and otherwise and shall include the advance sheets provided for in said section. The volume to be, in quality of paper and binding, equal to Volume 1' Ohio State Beports, as provided by law.”
On the 16th of June, 1882, in pursuance of that resolution, the Secretary of State of the State of Ohio entered into a contract, on behalf of that State, and in which it was named as tifo party of the second part, with H. W. Derby & Co., of
'The bill of complaint in the present case was filed by David Banks and A. Bleeker Banks, composing the firm of Banks
_&
Brothers, against G-. L. Manchester, in the Circuit'Court of the United States for the Southern District of Ohio. It sets forth the matters above stated, and avers that Banks
&
Brothers have proceedid to .carry out all the terms and conditions of the contract, and that they and the State.of Ohio are complying with its conditions; that the Supreme Court of Ohio has decreed that Volumes 41 and 42 of the Ohio State Reports shall be published under and . are included in the terms, of the contract, and that no other persons have any right to publish the decisions which are to be contained in said Volumes 41 and 42, except as authorized by Banks & Brothers; that the contract was made in pursuance of §§ 436 and 437 of the Revised Statutes of Ohio; that the plaintiffs, on October 1st, .1884, entered into an arrangement with “ The Capital' Printing and
A copy of the said number of “ The Ohio Law Journal,” with, the book as a supplement, containing 16 printed pages, is attached to the bill. It shows the title of the book, or supplement, as entered in the office of the Librarian of Congress, and as afterwards' issued, namely, “ Cases argued and determined in the Supreme Court and Supreme Court Commission of Ohio;” and, below the title and table of contents, and on the first page of- the book, which is page 17, is printed the following: “ Entered according to the Act of Congress '' the year eighteen -hundred,and eighty-four, by E. L. DeWit for the State of Ohio, in the Office of the Librarian of Con-gr "s, a-t Waslrngton. [All rights reserved.] ”
The mil' avers that .that .title was printed on each copy of
The prayer of the bill is for an injunction perpetually restraining the defendant from printing and publishing the decisions which will appear in Volumes 41 and 42, Ohio State Beports, and for an injunction to that effect pendente lite.
The defendant answered the bill. The answer denies that the Supreme Court of Ohio has decreed that Volumes 41 and 42 of the Ohio State Beports shall be published under and are included in the terms of the contract with Derby & Co., and that no other persons have the right to publish the decisions which are to be contained in said Volumes 41 and 42, except as authorized by the plaintiffs. It also denies that the attempt on the part of Mr. DeWitt, the reporter, to obtain a copyright on the book and printed matter described in the bill, and published by the Capital Printing and Publishing Company, was in pursuance of his duties as. reporter; and denies that the attempted copyright by the reporter wTas for the benefit of the State of Ohio; and denies that the contract referred to was made in pursuance of § 436 of the Bevised Statutes, but avers that it was made under § 437 and the joint resolution
The plaintiffs filed a formal demurrer to the answer; but, no such pleading being authorized by the rules in equity, the case was heard upon bill and answer, and a decree was entered dismissing the bill, from which decree the plaintiffs have appealed.
The decision of the Circuit Court is reported in 23 Fed..Rep. 143. That court held (1) that no duty was imposed upon the reporter by the statutes of Ohio before mentioned, to secure a copyright, for the use of the State, for any volume of reports published by virtue of a contract made by the Secretary of State under § 437; (2) that there was nothing in the statute which authorized the reporter, or any other person to acquire a copyright.in the opinions or decisions of the judges; (3) that the copyright of a volume would not interfere with the free publication of everything which was the work of the . judges, including the syllabus and the statement of the case, as well as the opinion, but would protect only the work of the reporter, namely, the indexes, the tables of cases, and the statements of points made and authorities cited by counsel.
The copy of the supplement.to No. 9 of Volume 6 of “The Ohio Law Journal” appended to the bill, shows that what Mr. DeWitt undertook to obtain a copyright for, for the State ' of Ohio, in respect of the two cases referred to, was a report of each, consisting of the head note or syllabus, the statement' of the case, the names of the counsel for the respective parties and the decision or opinion of the court, all in identical language, in each case, with what was so afterwards printed and published by the defendant in “ The American Law Journal,” except that in the case of “The Scioto Valley Railway Company v. McCoy,” the words, “ (To appear in 42 Ohio St.,) ” and in the case of “ Bierce et al v. Bierce et al,” the words, “ (To appear in 41 Ohio St.,)” printed in the publication in “ The Ohio Law Journal,” do not. appear in the defendant’s publication. It is, therefore, clear, that, in respect of the publication complained of, the reporter was not the author of any part of the matter for which he undertook to take a copyright, for. the State of Ohio.
Although the Constitution of the United States, in § 8 of article 1, provides that the Congress shall have power “to
Section 4952 of the Eevised Statutes of the United States provides, that “ any citizen of the United States or resident therein, who shall be the author, inventor, designer, or proprietor of any book, . . . and the executors, administrators or assigns of any such person shall, upon complying with the provisions of .this chapter,” (chapter 3 of title 60,) “ have' the sole liberty of printing, reprinting, publishing, completing, copying, executing, finishing, and vending the same.” This right is granted for the term of twenty-eight years from the time of recording the title of the book in the manner directed in the statute; and § 4954 provides, that “ the author, inventor, or designer, if he be still living and a citizen of the United States or resident therein, or his widow or children, if he be dead, shall have the same exclusive right continued for the further term of fourteen years,” upon recording the title of the work a second • time, and complying with all other regulations in regal’d to original copyrights, within' six months before the expiration of the first term.
"We are of opinion that these provisions of the statute do not cover the case of the State of Ohio in reference to what Mr. DeWitt undertook to obtain a copyright for, for the benefit of that State, in the present instance. Mr. DeWitt, although he may have been a citizen of the United States or a resident therein, was not the author, inventor, designer, or proprietor of the syllabus, the statement of the case, or the decision or opinion of the court. The State, therefore, could not become the assignee of Mr. DeWitt, as such author, inventor, de
The copyright claimed to have been taken out by Mr. DeWitt in the present case, being a copyright “ for the State,” is to be regarded as if it had been a copyright taken out in the name of the State. Whether the State could take out a copyright for itself, or could enjoy the benefit of one taken out by an individual for it, as the assignee of a citizen of the United States or a resident therein, who should be the author of a book, is a question not involved in the present case, and we refrain from considering it and from considering any other question than the one above indicated. In no proper sense can the judge who, in his judicial capacity, prepares the opinion or decision, the statement of the case and the syllabus or head note, be regarded as their author or their proprietor, in •the sense of § 4952, so as to be able to confer any title by assignment on the State, sufficient to authorize it to take a copyright for such matter, under that section, as the assignee of the author or proprietor.
Judges, as is well understood, receive from the public treasury a stated annual salary, fixed by law, and can themselves have no pecuniary interest or proprietorship, as against the public at large, in the fruits of their judicial labors. This extends to whatever work they perform in their capacity as judges, and as well to the statements of cases and head notes prepared by them as such, as to the opinions and decisions themselves. The question is one of public policy, and there has always been a judicial
consensus,
from the time of the decision in the case of
Wheaton
v.
Peters,
The decree of the Circuit Cou/rt is affirmed.
