56 F. 299 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern New York | 1893
The plaintiff has a copyright of a photograph of Lillian Bussell. The defendants printed 2,4-00 lithographic copies of it, 21 or 22 on each of 118 or ll.B sheets. This suit is brought to recover “one dollar for every sheet of the same found in his possession, either printing, printed, copied, published, imported. or exposed for sale.'"’ Rev. Bf. II. R. § 4965. The evidence showed that the'defendants sent these copies on an order for that number, but not whether they were in whole sheets, or cut up, when sent. The number of sheets was loft to the jury, and was found at 115, with a verdict for the plaintiff for $115. He has moved for a new trial, because the jury were not charged to had ¡)f for each copy, without regard to the number of sheets on which they wen; printed.
The original act of May 31, 1790, provided for copyrights of maps, charts, and books; prohibited printing, publishing, or importing copies; forfeited “all ¡mcl «'very copy or copies of such map, chart, book, or hooks, and all and every sheet and sheets being part of the same, or either of them, to the author or proprietor;” and further provided that every offender and offenders should “forfeit and pay the sum of fifty cents for every sheet” which should “be found tn his or their possession, either print<;d or printing, published, imported, or exposed to sale.” 1 Stat. 124. tinder this statute the unit of forfeiture as to either a hook, map, or chart would be a sheet; one ordinary definition of which is “a broad |>iece of paper.” Tn the printer’s art it is what is used for one impression, and is distinguished by a signature for the binder. In a suit for this money forfeiture the question would always bo, whether with reference to a book, map. or chart, what number of these sheets was found in the possession of Hu; defendant who had printed, published, or imported them. The statute was penal, and could not he extended by cons!ruction beyond its plain terms, which gave the penalty only once for each such sheet, whatever might; be printed upon it. Backus v. Gold, 7 How. 798. If more than one copy of a page
Motion overruled. Judgment on verdict.