37 F. 103 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania | 1888
The plaintiff’s copyright is valid. The act of congress provides that “any citizen of the United States * * * who shall be theauthor, inventor, designer, or proprietor of any book, map, chart, dramatic or musical composition, engraving, cut, print, photograph, drawing, ehromo, statue, or statuary, * * * shall, upon complying with the provisions of this chapter, have the solo liberty of printing, publishing, * * * and vending the same.” This act is founded on the constitutional provision which confers on congress the power to protect authors and inventors in their respective works. The object of the act and constitutional provision, as expressed, is “to promote the progress of science and useful arts by securing to authors and inventors the exclusive right to their respective writings and their discoveries.” The language of the act must be read in connection with the constitutional provision, and be so construed as to promote the object and conform to the' purpose expressed therein.
If the question before me were new, I might find some difficulty in sustaining the plaintiff’s claim. The statute, however, has been so liberally construed as to make it embrace within the term “book,” every character of publication; whether a volume, pamphlet, newspaper article, calendar, or catalogue. In this construction our courts have simply followed those of England in their interpretation of similar language contained in the English statute. The matter must be original and possess some possible utility. The originality, however, may be of the lowest order, and the utility barely perceptible; Drone, Copyr. 210. It has been repeatedly held that a book of forms is entitled to the protection of the statutes. The plaintiff’s forms, are original in the sense here involved. They are founded upon and are adapted to the requirements of the Pennsylvania statute of 1887, relating to the sale of liquors. While minor parts of each form are old, they are so combined with the parts drawn in pursuance of the statute as to make a complete form. To prepare such instruments requires some learning, and involves some literary labor; quite as much as the compilation of facts or figures, or extracts from books. Such compilations are entitled to a copyright, under the construction given to the statute; Drone, Copyr. 208-210. The plaintiff’s right, however, protects him only against transcribing and publishing his forms; in other words, against the appropriation of his work. It does not confer upon him a monopoly of the forms required by the statute of 1887. Any one is at liberty to prepare and publish such forms, and it is immaterial that they may resemble his, or be substantially identical with them, provided they are not copies. The requirements of the statute in this respect are simple, and all forms prepared in pursuance of them by different individuals must necessarily have close resemblance to each other.
Have the defendants infringed? They have printed and published forms identical in most respects with the plaintiff’s. The petitions,
To avoid the danger of misapprehension, it is proper to say something further, although what has been said is sufficient to dispose of the question before me. The plaintiff’s object in obtaining his copyright appears to have boon, not so much to secure the monopoly of selling his work as a hook of instructions to those who contemplated proceedings under the statute of 1887, as it was to secure a monopoly of the use of his forms in such proceedings as petitions, bonds, etc., thus entitling him to enjoin individuals who may buy his work, against employing and following it in the preparation of petitions, bonds, etc., for their own use in court. When the question arises whether his right secures such a monopoly, a different case will be presented from that now decided. Possibly the question may arise in the assessment of damages when the extent and value of the plaintiff’s right are under consideration. A decree may be prepared in accordance with the foregoing opinion.