Appellants commenced this action in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York on June 10, 1964, alleging that the manufacture and sale of certain phonograph records by two corporations, which appellee controlled, 1 infringed copyrights owned by appellants, in violation of federal copyright law. 17 U.S.C. § 1 et seq. 2 The complaint sought a temporary and a permanent injunction pursuant to Sections 101(a) and 112 of the Copyright Act, a royalty computed as provided in Sections 101(e) and 1(e), an order directing the appellee to deliver up for destruction all infringing phonograph records and all means for producing them as authorized by Section 101(d), and for *199 other relief. In his answer, appellee alleged as his defense that the corporations he controlled had been licensed to manufacture and sell the phonograph records containing the compositions subject to appellants’ copyrights which are alleged to have been infringed. 3 Appellants took the position that it was incontrovertible that the defendant’s corporations had not been so licensed. Therefore, prior to trial, pursuant to federal rule 56, Fed.R.Civ.P. 56, appellants moved on affidavits and counter affidavits for “an interlocutory summary judgment * * on the issue of liability,” and for the appointment of a special master to compute the royalties and damages due them, “ * * * reserving for the Court upon the conclusion of such hearings the question of such other relief to which each of plaintiffs shall be entitled * * The court below denied the motion for summary judgment on the ground that there was a genuine issue whether the appellee had been issued licenses for the musical compositions in question or whether, in any event, the appellants were at least estopped to deny appellee’s right to sell and distribute phonograph records containing musical compositions copyrighted by appellants.
An appeal from the denial of this motion was heard by a panel consisting of Judges Waterman, Moore and Feinberg, who were unanimously of the belief that the order below was not a final appealable order, and that this court had no appellate jurisdiction to entertain the appeal. It had been stated in Peter Pan Fabrics, Inc. v. Dixon Textile Corp.,
At the outset it is completely clear that an order refusing to grant a motion for summary judgment is not a “final decision” within Section 1291 of the Judicial Code, 28 U.S.C. § 1291, and we thus have no appellate jurisdiction to review the lower court’s order under that section. Doehler Metal Furniture Co. v. United States,
The rule in this circuit has been that we have jurisdiction in a case like the present under Section 1292(a) (1), on the theory that a trial court’s order denying a plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment and for permanent injunctive relief was an order “refusing” an injunction.
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Peter Pan Fabrics, Inc. v. Dixon Textile Corp.,
We recognize that though we are privileged in accord with the genius of the common law to decide cases on a case-by-case basis it “does not relieve us of the judicial obligation to pay proper heed to precedent: the question still is ‘not what we would hold if we now took a fresh look but whether we should take that fresh look,’ Mississippi River
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Fuel Corp. v. United States,
Persuaded by these developments and by further reasons to be considered hereafter we are of the belief that our court should align itself with the majority view, first expressed by the Third Cir-' cuit in Morgenstern Chem. Co. v. Schering Corp.,
The issue is whether Section 1292 (a) (1) which, so far as here material, gives the courts of appeals jurisdiction over appeals from “Interlocutory orders of the district courts * * * refusing * * * injunctions * * should be interpreted as a grant of jurisdiction to the courts of appeals to review a district court’s interlocutory order denying a plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment and permanent injunctive relief. No panel of this court that has considered this issue has ever resolved it by relying upon the language of Section 1292(a)
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(1) alone.
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In light of past differences of opinion on this issue in this circuit, and the disturbing fact that most other federal courts have reached a result precisely opposite to the result we reached in our earlier decisions, it would be truly extraordinary if it were argued today that the result reached in those decisions was compelled by reliance on the literal language of Section 1292(a) (1) standing alone. This court is not sympathetic to arguments that seek to have statutes interpreted on the basis of literalness, irrespective of purpose. As was said by Judge L. Hand in Cawley v. United States,
As a general rule, ever since the Judiciary Act of 1789, appeals within the federal court system have been allowed from final judgments only. See, generally Note, Appealability in the Federal Courts, supra. Since 1891, however, Congress has excepted from this general rule a group of interlocutory orders, and the most significant of these is the exception now embodied in Section 1292(a) (1) of the Judicial Code. In a considered elaboration of the purpose underlying Section 1292 the Supreme Court held that the genesis of that section was “ * * * a developing need to permit litigants to effectually challenge interlocutory orders of serious, perhaps irreparable consequence.” Baltimore Contractors v. Bodinger,
A motion for a preliminary injunction invariably raises an issue as to “ * * * how best to create or preserve a state of affairs such that [the court] will be able, upon conclusion of the full trial, to render a meaningful decision for either party.” Developments in the Law —Injunctions, 78 Harv.L.Rev. 994, 1056 (1965). Its grant or denial depends on the trial court’s equitable balancing of several factors: the severity of plaintiff’s injury if preliminary relief is denied, the severity of defendant’s injury if preliminary relief is granted, and the likelihood that one party or the other will prevail at trial. See Life Music, Inc. v. Wonderland Music Co.,
At the same time, the Court’s explication in Baltimore Contractors v.
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Bodinger, supra, of the purpose of Section 1292 casts considerable doubt on the proposition that Section 1292(a) (1) similarly was intended to empower the courts of appeals to review as a class orders denying plaintiffs’ motions for summary judgment and permanent injunctive relief. A permanent injunction
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is ordinarily issued only “after a full trial on the merits.” Developments in the Law — Injunctions, supra, at 1055. To be sure, the summary judgment procedure makes it possible for a party to argue, prior to final judgment, that, as a matter of law, upon admitted or established facts he is entitled to relief— here a permanent injunction. Wright, Federal Courts § 99 (1963). But summary judgment motions will be denied whenever there is a genuine issue as to a material fact or it is unclear that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56. And in most cases the denial of a summary judgment motion to which a request for a permanent injunction has been attached will not be of “serious, perhaps irreparable consequence.” Baltimore Contractors v. Bodinger, supra. A denial of a plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment does not finally deny the relief sought but only indicates that the district court has been uncertain enough of the complaint’s merits to grant it at that time: the relief frequently will be granted at a later date when “final judgment” is entered. If in a particular case a motion for summary judgment is, on the facts, denied, but there remains a need for relief during the pendency of the litigation, a preliminary injunction may nevertheless be obtained. See Holt Howard Associates, Inc. v. Goldman,
It has been argued, nevertheless, that to permit interlocutory appeals from orders denying plaintiffs’ motions for preliminary injunctions but to forbid interlocutory appeals from orders denying plaintiffs’ motions for summary judgment conjoined with requests for permanent injunctive relief, would be “sheer ritualism.” Federal Glass Co. v. Loshin, supra,
It has also and more persuasively been argued in favor of our prior rulings that an order denying a plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment and permanent injunctive relief is an important order, and that, especially when the denial is based on the trial court’s decision that a plaintiff is not entitled to a judgment as a matter of law, it frequently will “finally settle a great deal.” Federal Glass Co. v. Loshin, supra,
For all the above reasons we hold that here the district court’s denial of plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment and for permanent injunctive relief is not appealable under Section 1292(a) (1) as an order refusing an injunction.
Appeal dismissed for want of appellate jurisdiction.
Notes
. Both of the corporations controlled by appellee have been in bankruptcy proceedings since late 1962 and are no longer producing phonograph records.
. When we refer to sections of the Copyright Act we refer to the sections as they appear in Title 17.
. Appellant Chappell & Co. owns the copyright on the composition “Have You Met Miss Jones?” Appellant T. B. Harms Co. owns the copyright on “Why Was I Born?” Appellant Williamson Music, Inc. owns the copyright on “I’ll Be Seeing You.” Appellant Frank Loesser and Frank Music Corp. own the copyright on “If I Were a Bell.”
. It is doubtful whether the denial of summary judgment when the applicable law is clear but there is a genuine issue as to a material fact can properly be certified under Section 1292(b), for that section is limited only to certifying an order involving a “controlling question of law.”
. There are other specific provisions permitting interlocutory appeals from the district courts to the courts of appeals in certain civil actions that are also clearly not applicable here. E. g., 28 U.S.O. § 1292(a) (2-4) (receivership, admiralty, and patent cases); 11 U.S.O. § 47 (bankruptcy proceedings).
. Although appellants here sought a permanant injunction in their complaint they inexplicably failed to request permanent injunctive relief when they moved for summary judgment. Therefore, were we to adhere to our former rule in this case, we might still deny review on the narrow ground that appellants’ motion for summary judgment did not specifically ask for injunctive relief and thus its denial cannot be viewed as the denial of an injunction. However, it would be an unwarranted return to formalism to make review in this case turn on the absence of a formal request for a permanent injunction in the motion for summary judgment because the entry of a final judgment ordinarily disposes of everything asked for in the complaint. Thus for purposes- of this appeal we treat appellants’ motion for summary judgment as if it had specifically requested permanent injunctive relief.
. The rule in the First Circuit is squarely to the contrary. Switzerland Cheese Assoc. Inc. v. E. Horne’s Mkt., Inc.,
. See, e. g., 6 Moore, Federal Practice 156.21[2] (1965 ed.) ; Wright, Federal Courts § 102 (1963); Note, 75 Harv.L. Rev. 351, 369-70 (1961); 103 U.Pa.L. Rev. 816 (1955).
. Chief Judge Lumbard has recently delivered an apt reminder that we must seek to develop rules conducive to the most efficient use of judicial resources. Arnold v. Troccoli,
. See second paragraph following.
. Judge Learned Hand in Federal Glass Co. v. Loshin, supra,
. Also sometimes termed a perpetual or final injunction. The duration of a permanent injunction in theory is unlimited. See generally, Note, Are All Permanent Injunctions Temporary?, 23 Mich.L. Rev. 382 (1924).
. Both motions can be made simultaneously, but in the alternative. See Holt Howard Associates, Inc. v. Goldman, supra. It is hard to agree with Judge Frank’s view, expressed in Federal Glass Co. v. Loshin, supra,
. The present case well illustrates this point. Were we to reaffirm our earlier decisions and permit appeal, our only course, once we reached the merits of the district court’s order, would be to affirm on the ground it did not err in finding genuine issues as to material fact.
