The plaintiff, a corporation, is a manufacturer of silks, which puts out each season many new patterns, designed to attract purchasers by their novelty and beauty. Most of these fail in that purpose, so that not much more than a fifth catch the public fancy. Moreover, they have only a short life, for the most part no more than a single season of eight or nine months. It is in practice impossible, and it would be very onerous if it were not, to secure design patents upon all of these; it would also be impossible to know in advance which would sell well, and patent only those. Besides, it is probable thаt for the most part they have no such originality as would support a désign patent. Again, it is impossible to copyright them under the Copyright Act (17 USCA § 1 et seq.), or at least so the authorities of the Copyright Office hold. So it is easy for any one to copy such as prove successful, and the plaintiff, which is put to much ingenuity and expense in fabricating them, finds itself without protection of any sort for its pains.
Taking advantage of this situation, the defendant copied one of thе popular designs in the season beginning in October, 1928, and undercut the plaintiff’s price. This is the injury of which it complains. The defendant, though it duplicated the design in question, denies that it knew it to be the plaintiff’s, and there thus arises an issue which might be an answer to the motion. However, the parties wish a decision upon the equity of the bill, and, since it is within our power to dismiss it, we shall accept its allegation, and charge the defendant with knowledge.
The plaintiff asks for protection only during the season, and needs no more, for the designs are all ephemeral. It seeks in this way to disguise the extent of the pro
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posed innovatiоn, and to persuade us that, if we interfere only a little, the solecism, if there be one, may be pardonable. But the reasoning which would justify any interpositiоn at all demands that it cover the whole extent of the injury. A man whose designs come to harvest* in two years, or in five, has prima facie as good right to рrotection as one who deals only in annuals.
Nor
could we consistently stop at designs; processes, machines, and secrets have an equal сlaim. The upshot must be that, whenever any one has contrived any of these, others may be forbidden to copy it. That is not the law. In the absence of some recognized right at common law, or under the statutes — and the plaintiff claims neither — a man’s property is limited to the chattels which embody his invention. Othеrs may imitate these at their pleasure. Flagg Mfg. Co. v. Holway,
This is confirmed by the doctrine of "nonfunctional” features, under which it is held that to imitate these is to impute to the copy the same authorship as the original. Enterprise Co. v. Landers,
Of the cases on which the plaintiff relies, the chief is International News Service v. Associated Press,
Qua patent, we should' at least have to decide, as tabula rasa, whether the design or machine was new and required invention; further, we must ignore the Patent Office whose action has always been a condition upon the creation of this kind of property. Qua copyright, although it would be simpler to decide upon the merits, we should equally be obliged to dispense with the conditions imposed upon the creation of the right. Nor, if we went so far, should we know whether the property so recognized should be limited to the periods prescribed in the statutes, or should extend as long as the author’s grievance. It appears to us incredible that the Suprеme Court should have had in mind any such consequences. To exclude others from the enjoyment of a chattel is one thing; to prevent any imitation of it, to set up a monopoly in the plan of its structure, gives the author a power over Ms fellows vastly greater, a power wMch the Constitution allows only Cоngress to create.
The other cases are easily distinguishable. Board of Trade v. Christie,
True, it would seem as though the plaintiff had suffered a grievance for which there should be a remedy, perhaps by an amendment of the Copyright Law, assuming thаt this does not already cover the case, which is not urged here. It seems a lame answer in such a ease to turn the injured party out of court, but therе are larger issues at stake than his redress. Judges have only a limited power to amend the law; when the subject has been eonñded to a Legislature, thеy must stand aside, even though there be an hiatus in completed justice. An omission in such cases, must be taken to have been as deliberate as though it were express, certainly after long-standing action on the subject-matter. Indeed, we are not in any position to pass upon the questions involved, as Brаndéis, J., observed in International News Service v. Associated Press. We must judge upon records prepared by litigants, which do not contain all that may be relevant to the issues, for they cannot disclose the conditions of this industry, or of the others which may he involved. Congress might see its way to create some sort of temporary right, or it might not. Its 'decision would certainly be preceded by some examination of the result upon the other interests affected. Whethеr these would prove paramount we have no means of saying; it is not for us to decide. Our" vision is inevitably contracted, and the whole horizon may contain much which will compose a very different picture.
The order is affirmed, and, as the bill cannot in any event succeed, it may be dismissed, if -the defendant so desires.
