delivered the opinion of the Court.
The petitioners brought a suit in equity against the respondents in the District Court for Massachusetts, *208 charging infringement of copyright, praying an injunction, ,an accounting and award of profits, and damages, or “in lieu of actual damages or profits such damages as to this court shall appear to be just and proper within the provisions of the Act of Congress in such cases made and provided.” The respondents answered and the cause came on for hearing. Admissions in the pleadings, concessions by the respondents, and evidence taken, disclose the relevant facts.
Douglas wrote an original story which was accepted, copyrighted and published by The American Mercury, Inc. The rights in the story under the copyright were assigned to- Douglas. Thereafter Cunningham wrote for the Post Publishing Company, and the latter published in some 384,000 copies of a Sunday edition of the. Boston Post, an article which was a clear appropriation of Douglas’s story. Testimony was presented with respect to the value of the story, but at the close of the trial the petitioners admitted inability to prove actual damages. The Publishing Company acted innocently in accepting the article from Cunningham, and the latter testified that he had procured the material for it from .an acquaintance, believed the facts related to him were actual happenings, and was ignorant of Douglas’s production. The trial judge ruled that no actual damage had been shown, but in lieu thereof granted the petitioners $5,000 and a counsel fee. Upon appeal the Circuit Court of Appeals sustained an assignment of error which asserted the judge had abused his discretion in making the .award, reversed the decree, and set the damages at $250.
The sole question presented by the petition for certiorari is whether consistently with § 25 (b) of the Act of 1909, 1 an appellate court may review the action of *209 a trial judge in assessing an amount in lieu of actual damages, where the amount awarded is within the limits imposed by the section. We granted the writ of certiorari 2 because the decision of the Circuit Court of Appeals was upon an important question of federal law and probably in conflict with our decisions. 3
The phraseology of the section was adopted to avoid the strictness of construction incident to a law imposing penalties, and to give the owner of a copyright some recompense for injury done him, in a case where the rules of law render difficult or impossible proof of damages or discovery of profits. In this respect the old law was unsatisfactory. In many cases plaintiffs, though proving infringement, were able to recover only nominal damages, in spite of the fact that preparation and trial of the case imposed substantial expense and inconvenience. The ineffectiveness of the remedy encouraged wilful and deliberate infringement.
*210
This court has twice construed § 25 (b) in the light of its history and purpose.
Westermann Co.
v.
Dispatch Printing Co.,
Reversed.
Notes
Act of March 4, 1909, c. 320, § 25, 35 Stat. 1081, as amended by Act of August 24, 1912, c. 356, 37 Stat. 489; U. S. C. Tit. 17, § 25. “ If any person shall infringe the copyright in any work protected *209 under the copyright laws of the United States such person shall be liable:
“(b) To pay to the copyright proprietor such damages as the copyright proprietor may have suffered due to the infringement, as well as all the profits which the infringer shall have made from such infringement, ... or in lieu of actual damages and profits such damages as to the court shall appear to be just, and in assessing such damages the court may, in its discretion, allow the amounts as hereinafter stated [here follow limitations with respect to the amount of damages to be awarded for certain infringements not material in the present case] and such damages shall in no other case exceed the sum of $5,000 nor be less than the sum of $250, and shall not be regarded as a penalty. . . .”
There follows a schedule of which item “ Second ” is: “ In the case of any work enumerated in section 5 of this title [§ 5 includes periodicals and newspapers] except a painting, statue or sculpture, $1 for every infringing copy made or sold by or found in the possession of the infringer or his agents or employees.”
See Rule 38, par. 5 (b) (c).
