193 F. 991 | 2d Cir. | 1912
The complainant, which was incorporated in 1900, carried forward the citations of the New York Court of Appeals, Supreme Court, and Miscellaneous Reports (being the courts of record other than the Court of Appeals and Appellate Division), which had been published by Eranlc Shepard, the first as early as
Zachary P. Taylor began to publish citations of the Supreme Court reports from 1890, of the Miscellaneous Reports from 1900, of the Court of Appeals reports from 1901, and of the New York Supplement from 1904. His business was taken over and his annotations carried on by the defendant, the Zachary P. Taylor Publishing Company, incorporated in 1906. The citations were published first in pasters, afterwards in books and then in cumulative parts (issued twice a year), just as the complainant’s were. At first each of these writers simply stated whether the cited case was affirmed, reversed, distinguished, or explained. , Afterwards each analyzed the cited cases to determine what part of the cited case was under consideration. Shepard indicated by a small Roman number which paragraph of the. syllabus of the cited case was discussed, while Taylor grouped the cases under catch words. In other words, Shepard used a key number and Taylor a key word.
The defendant argues that both parties may have copied these errors from an earlier publication, say the West Publishing Company’s Blue Book of Citations, or the tables of cited cases contained in the official reports. But it offers no proof of this.
The decree is affirmed, with costs.