64 F. 280 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts | 1894
The defendants move to dissolve the injunction heretofore granted in this ca'se. As the case was first presented, it. appeared that the print of George H. Corliss to be inserted in a biographical sketch about to be published by the defendants was taken from a photograph obtained from Mrs. Corliss by the defendants upon certain conditions, which they had failed to comply with, and the court granted an injunction upon the ground that the proposed use by the defendants would be a breach of contract and a violation of confidence. 57 Fed. 434. Upon a full presentation of the facts at the present hearing, it now appears that the defendants obtained two photographs of Mr. Corliss, and that the one received from Mrs. Corliss warn returned to her, while the other, from which the print was actually taken, was purchased for the defendants at a store in Providence several months before any contract was fentered into between the parties, or any correspondence had in relation to the subject. It must be confessed that the case now assumes a different aspect. If we eliminate the element of contract or trust, the question resolves itself into the broad proposition of how far an individual, in his lifetime, or his heirs at law after hie death, have the right to control the reproduction of his picture or photograph. The photograph obtained by the defendants was a copy of an original taken by Mr. Heald, of Providence, for Mr. Cor-liss, in September, 1885. Mr. Corliss engaged Mr. Heald, in the ordinary way, to take his photograph, and paid for the pictures which he ordered. The contention of the plaintiffs is that Mr. Heald had no right to make prints from the original negative, other than those which Mr. Corliss ordered, and that neither Mr. .Heald nor any one else had the right to reproduce copies from any of the photographs ordered by Mr. Corliss, and that to do so would be a breach of contract or a violation of confidence, for which relief can be had in a court of equity. In support of this position, the plaintiffs say t ha t Mr. Corliss never authorized Sir. Heald to make any prints from the negative, except those he ordered, and that after his death, in .February, 1888, Mrs. Corliss obtained the original negative, and forbade Mr. Heald from exhibiting in his studio any pictures of Mr. Corliss.
When a person engages a photographer to take his picture, agreeing to pay so much for the copies which he desires1, the transaction assumes the form of a contract; and it is a breach of contract, as well as a violation of confidence, for the photographer to make additional copies from the negative. The negative may belong to the photographer, but the right to print additional copies is the right of the customer. Pollard v. Photographic Co., 40 Ch. Div. 345; Tuck
The defendants, in the present instance, obtained a photograph of Mr, Corliss at a public shop in Providence. Whatever contract may have existed between the photographer and Mr. Corliss, they were not a party to it, and they had the same right to reprint copies from this photograph that they would have had from that of any other public man. Further, it does not seem that Mr. Corliss, personally, ever objected to the reproduction of his picture, but, on the contrary, that he permitted thousands of his pictures to be circulated. Ten thousand pictures of Mr. Corliss were sold or given away, without objection on his part, at the time of the Centennial Exhibition, in 1876. In 1886 there was published in Providence, by J. A. & E. A. Eeid, about 10,000 copies of a book called “Provi-
Upon the facts as now presented, and for the reasons given, I am of opinion that the defendants have a right to insert in the biographical sketch of Mr. Corliss published by them a print of his photograph, and the motion to dissolve the injunction is granted. Motion granted