after stating the case; delivered the opinion of the court.
Whether the court erred in excluding the evidence offered by the plaintiff tending to show the number of copies of the issue of The Outing; containing a reproduction of the plaintiff’s photograph, which had been printed and delivered to the defendant at any timé within two years prior .to the commencement of this action, is the sole question presented by the assignments of error.
This is an action to recover a penalty of one dollar for every copy of the plaintiff’s photograph, and is based upon Revised Statutes, section 4965, which declares that any person offending against its provisions “ shall forfeit to the proprietor all the plates on which the same shall be copied, and every sheet thereof, either copied or printed, and shall further forfeit one dollar for every sheet of the same found in his possession, either printing, printed, copied, published, imported or exposed for sale, . . . one half thereof to the proprietor and the other half to the use of the United States.” This is clearly a penal statute in that it fixes a single and arbitrary measure of recompense to the plaintiff, irrespective of the damages actually sustained by him, or of the profits realizéd by the defendant; and in the further provision that one half of the amount recovered shall be to the use of the United States. It makes no pretence of awarding damages, and simply imposes a forfeiture of a specified sum. In this respect it differswholly from the following section (4966) recently considered by us in
Brady
v.
Daly, ante,
148, which made a person performing or representing any copyrighted dramatic composition “liable for damages therefor,
*265
'. . . to be assessed at such sum, not less than $100 for the first and $50 for every subsequent performance, as to the court shall appear to be just.” There the award was of damages, and a minimum sum was fixed apparently to cover cases where it was impossible to estimate such damages; but there was no limit to the amount which might be awarded if, in the opinion of the court, it were just to increase the minimum. The idea suggested by the learned judge who delivered the opinion of the court, that as it would be difficult to prove the exact amount of damages suffered by reason of the unlawful representation, the statute provided a minimum sum, leaving it open for a larger recovery upon proof of greater damages, has no application to the section under consideration, where the plaintiff can recover no greater nor less damages than the penalty provided by the section. The penal character of the act is further emphasized by the fact that the plaintiff apparently recovers a moiety for the use of the United States, though perhaps this is not beyond a doubt suggested in
Thornton
v.
Schreiber,
Tiie statute, then, being penal, must be construed with such Strictness as to carefully safeguard the rights of the defendant and at the same time preserve the obvious intention of the legislature. If the language be plain, it will be construed as it reads, and the words of the statute given their full meaning; if ambiguous, the court will lean more strongly in favor of the defendant than it would if the statute were remedial. In both - cases it will endeavor to effect substantial justice.
United States
v.
Hartwell,
The language of this section when examined seems hardly susceptible of two interpretations, unless certain words which are not found there are treated as interpolated. It forfeits to the proprietor of the pirated publication all the plates on which the same shall be copied, and every sheet thereof, either *266 copied or printed, and shall further forfeit one dollar for every sheet of the same found in Ms possession. No remedy is provided by the act, although by section 4970 a bill in equity will lie for an injunction; but the provision for a forfeiture of the plates and of the copies seems to contemplate an action in the nature of replevin for their seizure, and in addition to the confiscation of the copies, for a recovery of one dollar for every copy So seized or found in the possession of the defendant. While the forfeiture is not limited as to the number of the copies, it is. limited to such as are found in, and not simply traced to, the possession of the defendant. Congress may have been perfectly willing to impose a forfeiture of one dollar for every such copy, and have been reluctant to impose it upon the thousands of such copies that may-have previously, been put in circulation. The construction contended for would permit an author to lie by during the two years allowed him for bringing suit, permit another to publish the work during that time, and then recover for every copy so published. Not only this, but as the penalty is imposed upon any person who engraves, copies, prints, publishes or sells a copy, not ' only the publisher, but the printer and bookseller might be liable for every copy traced to his possession. Indeed, the defendant might be made liable for every copy traced to his possession, even though he destroyed the whole edition for the purpose of relieving himself from the penalty.
This case is clearly controlled by that of
Backus
v. Gould,
That case was decided in 1849, and must be regarded as overruling anything to be found to the contrary in Reed v. Carusi, Taney Dec. 72; S. C., 20 Fed. Cases, 431, decided by Chief Justice Taney in 1845; Dwight v. Appleton, 8 Fed. Cases, 143, decided in 1843, and Millett v. Snowden, 17 Fed. Cases, 374, decided in 1844.
The case of
Thornton
v.
Schreiber,
Hád Congress designed the extended meaning claimed for these words “ found in his possession,” it would naturally have used the expression “found or traced to his possession,” or “ found to be, or to have been, in his possession.” It is only by interpolating words of this purport that the statute can receive the construction claimed. We concur with the learned judge who spoke for the Court of Appeals that the words “ found in his possession ” aptly refer to a finding for the purposes of forfeiture and condemnation.. “ The remedy by forfeiture and condemnation is only appropriate in a case where the property can be seized upon process, and where, as here, the forfeiture declared is against property of the ‘ offender ’ is only appropriate when it can be seized in his hands.”
Two other defences are interposed which go to the recov: ery of even the small judgment of one dollar and costs, and which, if sustained, would require the judgment of the court below to be reversed, and ultimately a verdict for the defendant. First, that the notice of the copyright, imprinted on the photograph, did not fill the requirements of the statute; and, second, that the copyright claimed by Bolles is not sanctioned by the Constitution. It is sufficient to say of these that the defendant did not take out a writ of error, and cannot now be heard to complain of any adverse rulings in the court below.
Canter
v.
American &c. Ins. Co., 3
Pet. 307, 318;
Chittenden
V.
Brewster,
The judgment of the court below is
Affirmed.
