219 F. 534 | 2d Cir. | 1914
The complaint alleges that the Carl Laemmle Music Company is the owner of the copyright of a song entitled “I’ll Change the Thorns to Roses.” That in March, 1911, the' defendants commenced an action in the Supreme Court of the State of New York against the Laemmle Company, alleging that they had acquired from the complainant Solman the right to all music which he should compose, including the music of the said song, and that these rights had been violated by the Laemmle Company. The complainant also alleges that the Laemmle Company answered in said action alleging that it had secured all the rights to said song and had copyrighted the same, to which answer the defendants herein interposed a demurrer. Whereupon the state court decided that the facts so pleaded constituted no defense against the claims of the plaintiffs in said action. Thereafter the Carl Laemmle Company pleaded over and the issue so joined was tried and resulted in favor of the plaintiffs in that action, the Carl Laemmle Company being enjoined from publishing the said song, “I’ll Change the Thorns to Roses.” The complaint herein “also alleges that, upon the trial of said action in the state court, the Carl Laemmle Company claimed and proved a copyright for said song but notwithstanding this proof the court entered a decree for an injunction and an accounting against the Carl Laemmle Company which judgment was subsequently sustained on appeal. That thereafter an ac
It seems entirely clear that this action is not one arising under the copyright law. It is alleged that the Carl Laemmle Company copyrighted the song in question, but this suit is not one based upon a copyright or arising under the copyright laws.' The defendants do not claim any rights under a copyright. The title under which the action in the state court is prosecuted is based upon a contract with Alfred Solman. The copyright to the Laemmle Company is not directly. in issue and the fact that it may be incidentally considered in the state court in no way deprives that court of jurisdiction. An action in which a law of the United States may be incidentally drawn in question does not arise under that law. That it was not the intent of Congress that the United States courts should interfere with the progress of litigation in the state courts, except in clearly defined cases, is made plain by an examination of section 720 of the Revised Statutes of the United States which provides that:
“The writ of injunction shall not tie granted by any court of the United States to stay proceedings in any court of a state, except in eases where such injunction may be authorized by any law relating to proceedings in bankruptcy.”
In Excelsior W. P. Co. v. Pacific Bridge Co., 185 U. S. 282, the court at page 285, 22 Sup. Ct. 681, at page 682 (46 L. Ed. 910), says:
“The most important question is whether this is a suit under the patent laws of the United States within the meaning of Rev. Stat. § 629, subd. 9,° which grants original jurisdiction to the Circuit Courts ‘of all suits at law or in equity arising under the patent or copyright laws of the United States.’ The rule is well settled that, if the suit be brought to enforce or set aside a contract, though such contract be connected with a patent, it is not a suit under the patent laws, and jurisdiction of the Circuit Court can only be maintained upon the ground of diversity of citizenship.”
The District Court is therefore directed to amend the decree so that the same may be without prejudice generally and, as so amended, it is affirmed with costs.