The first question is, whether the plaintiffs, not having published a copy of the record of the title of the Pharmacopaeia, within the period, and for the length of time prescribed by the third section of the act of 1790, have entitled themselves to a copyright in that work? If they have not, it will be unnecessary to inquire whether “The American Dispensa-tory” is a copy or an illegal imitation of the former work, as I hold it to be beyond controversy, that, if the plaintiff has no copyright in the work of which he claims to be the owner, a court of equity will not grant him an injunction. This was formerly the doctrine of the English court of chancery, and still is as I conceive; notwithstanding lord Eldon has, in some instances, granted an injunction, and continued it to the hearing, under circumstances which rendered the title doubtful, if the plaintiff had possession under a colour of title. But surely if he has no title at all, or such a one as would enable him to recover at law, even that judge would, I presume, refuse an injunction. 1 Vern. 120; 6 Ves. 710, 707, 689, 699; 1 W. Bl. 105, 370; 2 Burrows, 661; 2 Eden, 327; Millar v. Taylor, 4 Burrows, 2303, and the cases there cited; Greirson v. Jackson, R. Term R. 304; 8 Ves. 505; 7 Ves. 1; 19 Ves. 447; Coop. Eq. Pl. 303.
In deciding this first question, it is material to settle, whether the requisitions of the third
It would seem from the phraseology of the first section of this act, as if the recording of the ütle a second time in the clerk’s office, and the publication of the same as directed in the third section were made essential to the vesting of the copyright for a second term of fourteen years in the author or proprietor; and it is perfectly clear from the language of the second section, that the proprietor can acquire no title to the copyright for the term of the first fourteen years, unless he shall deposit in the clerk’s office a printed copy of the title of the book; for the section declares that he shall not be entitled to the benefit of the act, unless he shall make such deposit. But the condition upon which the proprietor is to be entitled to the benefit of the act, cannot, upon, any grammatical construction, be extended to the requisition contained in the last sentence of this section, to publish a copy of the record of the title within the time and the period prescribed. It is entirely a new sentence, and is as much disconnected from the' condition expressed in the preceding part of the section, as if it had been contained in the fourth section, to which there is clearly no condition annexed. If, then, the title of an author to a copyright, depended altogether upon this act, I should be of opinion that it would be complete, provided he had deposited a printed copy of the title of the book in the clerk’s office, as directed by the second section, and that the publication of a copy of the same would only be necessary to enable him to sue for the forfeitures created by the second section. In this respect, the act corresponds, and was probably intended to correspond with St 8 Anne, c. 19; which, and the construction given to it in the cases of Blackwell v. Harper, 2, Atk. 93; Beckford v. Hood, 7 Term R. 620, and some others, were no doubt within the view of the legislature which ¡passed this act.
But a subsequent act was passed on the 29th of April 1802 (chapter 36), as a supplement to the before mentioned act which declares, that every person who shall, after a certain day, claim to be the author or proprietor of any book, and shall thereafter seek to obtain a copyright of the same, agreeably to the rules prescribed by law, before he shall be entitled to the benefit of the act to which this is a supplement, he shall, in addition to the requisites enjoined in the third and fourth sections of the said act, give information, by causing the copy of the record, which, by said act, he is required to publish in one or more newspapers, to be inserted at full length in the title page, or in the page immediately following the title. With respect to this new and additional requisite, it is most obvious that the proprietor can acquire no title to the copyright, unless it is complied with. He must cause the copy to be inserted as directed, before he can be entitled to the benefit of the act of 1790. What was the benefit conferred by that act? The answer is apparent, — a copyright for a certain number of years, with all the privileges, advantages and remedies which that act confers upon the proprietor of such copyright. If he has not that right, he can have no remedy of any kind.
But the supplemental act declares that the person seeking to obtain this right, shall perform this new requisition, in addition to those prescribed in the third and fourth sections of the act of 1793, and that he must perform the whole, before he shall be entitled to the benefit of that act. It seems to me that the act will admit of no other construction. The meaning could not, I think, have been more clear and intelligible if the act had de-
