64 Me. 458 | Me. | 1874
This case comes before tis on demurrer to the bill.
The plaintiff alleges substantially that he and the defendants are tenants in common in the proportions stated of the copyrights of certain school books described by their respective titles; that since August, 1865, the defendants, without his consent, have printed, published and sold large specified numbers of the books, at a certain net profit; that he is equitably entitled to a share of the profits proportioned to the extent of his undivided interest; and he prays that the defendants be decreed to account to Mm for the same with equitable interest.
We are not aware that this precise question has ever been decided.
The doctrine that an author has a right of property in his ideas and is entitled to demand for them the same perpetual protection which the law accords to the proprietor of personal property gen erally, finds no recognition either in the common law or in the statutes of any civilized country. When he has embodied his thoughts in manuscript, the latter is his exclusive property having the characteristics of transfer and succession common to personal property. Being his property, the author may exercise full dominion over it. He may publish it to the world or not, at his option. Bartlett v. Crittenden, 5 McLean, 36; Little v. Hall, 16 How., 170; Palmer v. De Witt, 47 N. Y., 532. If he publishes his book he ceases to have any exclusive claim to the ideas or sentiments thereon expressed, considered apart from the language or the outward semblance in which they are conveyed; for he can no longer exclusively appropriate the thoughts which have entered into the understandings of other persons through publication, or prevent the unlimited use of every advantage which the purchaser can reap from the doctrine or sentiments which the work contains. Miller v. Taylor, 4 Burr., 2362; Stowe v. Thomas, 5 Wall., Jr., 564; Greene v. Bishop, 1 Cliff., 198.
The public are interested in the development and promulgation of all new, wholesome ideas, and in new combinations and illustrations of old ones; and the most efficient mode of promulgating them is that afforded by the press. Without publication and some exclusive right thereto, the products of authors would prove comparatively profitless. The public, then, for the addition to its general stock of knowledge, and the author, in consideration of the pecuniary profit derivable therefrom, are jointly interested in the publication of new works. The framers of the U. S. Consti
The right created and granted to authors by the federal statutes “respecting copyrights,” is sui generis ; consisting as its name indicates, in the “sole right” of the “author or authors,” “their executors, administrators or legal assigns” resident in the United States, to print, reprint, publish and vend their productions, for the term specified. 4 U. S. Stats., 436, c. 16, § 1, in force when the copyrights in question were secured. It is an incorporeal right, resting entirely in the reasonable interpretation of the terms of the grant; and so disconnected from, and independent of any material substance such as manuscript or plate, that a sale of either or both of these will not necessarily carry with it any right on the part of the purchaser thereof to make copies of the original work — the right to copy or the “copyright” still remaining in the author, his legal representative or assignee, a distinct, well defined, though intangible legal estate. Stevenson v. Cady, 14 How., 530; Stevens v. Gladding, 17 How., 447.
The statute evidently contemplates that the copyright may be secured in the name of the author ; or, if he have legally assigned his right, the assignee may avail himself of the provisions of the
So whenever the legal estate has once vested through a compliance with the statute, it is assignable. The assignment is not limited to one, but may be to more than one — nor to the whole interest, but any owner may sell and assign any aliquot part of his undivided interest. When the assignment is made to more than one, the ownership is not that of partners; although they may enter into any contract of partnership inter sese, or between themselves and publishers of their works. Gould v. Banks, 8 Wend., 568; Pulte v. Derby, 5 McLean, 328; Stevens v. Rumney, 6 De G. M. & G., 223. In the absence of any contract modifying their relations, they are simply owners in common, as the plaintiff has alleged, each owning a distinct but undivided part which or any part of which alone he can sell, as in the case of personal chattels.
The statute confers upon all the owners full power, without exacting any obligation in return to print, publish and sell. It gives no superior right to either — the only restriction being as to time. All others within that period, having no license from them or some one of them, are excluded. Each can exercise his own right alone without using, or receiving any aid or benefit whatever from the title or property of the others. But if none be allowed to enjoy his legal interest without the consent of all, then one, by withholding his consent, might practically destroy the value of the whole use. And a use only upon condition of accounting for profits, would compel a disuse, or a risk of skill, capital and time with no right to call for a sharing of possible losses. When one owner by exercising a right expressly conferred upon him, in nowise uses or molests the right, title, possession or estate of his co-owners, or hinders them from a full enjoyment, or sale and transfer
The. plaintiff also claims to recover the value of-one undivided half of the stereotype plates owned in common by these parties; one allegation being that Sanborn “fraudulently sold, transferred and delivered to the defendants the entire property of all said stereotype plates for a valuable consideration.” The sale of personal property by one owner in common does not as against his co-owner, vest the entire common property in the vendee; but the 'co-owner may assert his title to his own share; or he may have trover for its value against him who converted it by assuming to own and sell the whole; (Wheeler v. Wheeler, 33 Maine, 347;) but not against the vendee so long as he continues in possession and uses it in a manner not inconsistent with the co-owner’s rights. Dain v. Cowing, 22 Maine, 347; Kilgore v. Wood, 56 Maine, 150. Or he may waive the the tort and recover in assumpsit for his share of the money received by the vendor. Moses v. Ross, 41 Maine, 360; White v. Brooks, 43 N. H., 402. And the remedy in trover is ample for the injury set forth in the further allegation that “said defendants used up and destroyed all of said stereotype plates.” Herrin v. Eaton, 13 Maine, 193; Strickland v. Parker, 54 Maine, 263.
The foregoing remedies, however, do not enable the plaintiff to recover for “the use, rents, profits or income” of the plates, sought.
At common law each tenant in common of the realty may, at all times, reasonably enjoy every part of the common property, reasonable enjoyment being such as will not interfere with the like
This court as a court of equity has jurisdiction of matters of account between owners in common of personal property; and when such a case is presented, wherein is involved a variety of adjustments, limitations, cross-claims or other complications, it
Bill dismissed with costs.