244 A.D. 697 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1935
This action is brought by plaintiff as the author and owner of five musical compositions which plaintiff alleges the defendant, without authority or consent of the plaintiff, printed and published and over which it otherwise exercised rights of ownership. Plaintiff sues on quantum meruit for the unauthorized use by defendant of said musical compositions. The defendant moved under rule 107 of the Rules of Civil Practice upon the com
In Bobbs-Merrill Co. v. Straus (supra) the Federal court wrote (at pp. 18 and 19) as follows: “ The argument of complainant rests
“ The right to copyright, which exists at common law, has been superseded by statute, Holmes v. Hurst, 174 U. S. 82; 19 Sup. Ct. 606; 43 L. Ed. 004, Where the owner of the common-law copyright elects to substitute the protection of the statute for that of the common-law, he, upon publication, abandons or surrenders his common-law rights, including said right of limited publication, in exchange for the statutory right, the exclusive right to multiply copies, E[e ( cannot have at the same time the benefit of the copyright statute and also retain [his] common-law right. No proposition is better settled than that a statutory copyright operates to divest a party qf the common-law right.’ Jewelers' Mercantile Agency v. Jewelers' Publishing Co., 155 N. Y. 241, 247; 49 N. E. 872; 41 L. R. A. 846; 63 Am. St. Rep. 666.”
In DeWitt v. Elmira Nobles Mfg. Co. (66 N. Y. 459) Judge Almbn, writing for the Court of Appeals (at p, 461), said: H In substance, the allegations of the complaint are of a use of the patented invention by the defendant without the consent of, or any license or permission by, the plaintiff. The arrangement and agreement between Watrous, the owner of the patent in common with the plaintiff, and the defendant, is not set out in the complaint, or its terms disclosed. It does not appear from any allegation, and was not claimed by the counsel for the appellant, that the latter is entitled to compensation from the defendant by the terms of that arrangement and agreement. No claim is asserted under it. The plaintiffs claim rests wholly upon the rights conferred by law upon him as an owner of an undivided interest in the patent, to recover compensation for its use to the extent of his interest, from one using it without his permission,
(C The action thus stated is simply an action for an infringement of the patent and for damages, the plaintiff waiving the tort and seeking for an accounting and to recover as upon, a quantum meruit. Whatever may be his legal rights, they are not varied by a change, in the form of action, and do not depend upon contract, but arise under the patent-, right laws of the. United iStqtes, of which the United States courts have exclusive jurisdiction. (R. S. U. S. § 711; Hovey v. Rubber Tip Pencil Co., 57 N. Y. 119; Dudley v. Mayhew, 3 id. 9.) The first 'cause of demurrer, to wit, that the court has no jurisdiction of the subject of the action, is well assigned, and entitles the defendant to an affirmance of the judgment.” (Italics are the writer’s.)
The order appealed from should be reversed, with twenty dollars costs and disbursements, and the defendant’s motion for dismissal of the complaint granted, with ten dollars costs.
Martin, P. J., Townley, Glennon and Untermyer, JJ., concur.
Order reversed, with twenty dollars costs and disbursements, and motion granted, with ten dollars costs.