GOLDSMITH et al. v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE.
No. 88.
Circuit Court of Appeals, Second Circuit.
June 14, 1944.
143 F.2d 466
Samuel O. Clark, Jr., Asst. Atty. Gen., Sewall Key, Robert N. Anderson, and Harry Baum, Sp. Assts. to Atty. Gen., for respondent.
Sidney R. Fleisher, of New York City, for Authors’ League of America, Inc., amicus curiae.
Weinberger & Wayne, of New York City (Harry Weinberger and Nathan L. Schоichet, both of New York City, of counsel), for Eugene O‘Neill, amicus curiae.
Before L. HAND, SWAN, and CHASE, Circuit Judges.
CHASE, Circuit Judge.
The petitioners are a husband and wife who filed joint income tax returns for 1938 and 1939. In each year payments made to the husband by Paramount Pictures, Inc., for an assignment of the exclusive motion picture rights in a play which the husband had written and on which he had been granted a statutory copyright were reported as capital gains resulting from a sale of capital assets. The Commissioner treated such payments as ordinary income and determinеd a deficiency for each year accordingly. The Tax Court sustained that determination on two grounds, viz., that the amounts received were royalties and in the alternative that if they were receipts from a sale of property they were not from the sale of a capital asset as that term is defined in
The play which Mr. Goldsmith had written was called “Enter to Learn” and the copyright on it was granted to him on July 7, 1936. He later revised that play in collaboration with one Taylor without, how-
More than two yеars after the copyright was granted, Mr. Goldsmith disposed of what are called the exclusive motion picture rights by assigning them to Paramount Pictures, Inc. He also granted to the аssignee the right to assign them to others and agreed to permit it to sue in his name, but for its own benefit and at its own risk and expense, to enjoin infringement of any of the rights granted and to recover damages for infringement.
There can be no doubt that a copyright owner can assign separately to whomsoever he may desire one or more of the sum of the separable rights which together make up the copyright property. Photo-Drama Motion Picture Co., Inc., v. Social Uplift Film Corp., 2 Cir., 220 F. 448; Westway Theatre, Inc., v. Twentieth Century Film Corp., D.C., 30 F.Supp. 830, 835, affirmed 4 Cir., 113 F.2d 932. But when he does split off such rights by assignment the assignee does not become the owner of the copyright itself and acquires only what lesser rights are granted by the terms оf the assignment. Goldwyn Pictures Corp. v. Howells Sales Co., 2 Cir., 282 F. 9
When by those terms the assignee acquires less than the sum of all the rights which together make up the copyright which as a whole is property and may be conveyed as such, it does not matter whether he is called an assignee in the instrument or whether that is called an assignment or something else. If he gets оnly the rights of a licensee, the so-called assignment amounts only to a license. M. Witmark & Sons v. Pastime Amusement Co., D.C., 298 F. 470, affirmed 4 Cir., 2 F.2d 1020. And when that is so the amount which the assignee pays for what he gets is for tax purposes to be treated as ordinary income to the recipient because it is in fact royalty income. Unless the assignment conveys to the assignee the title to the copyright, no sale of property is made. Sabatini v. Commissioner, 2 Cir., 98 F.2d 753.
In this instance there was no sale of the copyright since title remained in the assignor and therefore no asset, capital or otherwisе, was sold. The assignee obtained only the rights of an exclusive licensee by virtue of the assignment, and the amounts it paid for those rights which were reported for taxation as сapital gains were royalties and were properly taxed as ordinary income when the Commissioner audited the returns.
My brothers, however, concur in the result for other reasons which are stated in the concurring opinion of Judge L. Hand.
Affirmed.
L. HAND, Circuit Judge (concurring).
I do not think that the copyright or the literary property in the case before us was “property, used in the trаde or business, of a character which is subject to the allowance for depreciation,” within
Copyright and literary property are monopolies; they entitle the owner to prohibit various kinds of reproduction, and to relieve individuals of these prohibitions by licenses. The licenses may do no more than excuse what would otherwise be infringements; or they may be exclusive, as in the case аt bar. An exclusive license requires the author to protect the licensee against other infringement, and is for most purposes treated as “property“. I think that it is “proрerty” within
These two classes will exhaust the property “held” in many businesses; but there may also be goods which are neither “stock in trade,” nor of a kind which would ordinarily be inventoried. Nevertheless, the business may consist of selling these goods in “ordinary course“, to those whose сustom the taxpayer seeks; and these are his “customers.” That the purpose of Congress was also not to treat such transactions as “capital gains or losses” is patent. Although each transaction is the sale of “property held by the taxpayer,” it is not considered as separate, but the transactions are all massed togеther for tax purposes as a single source of ordinary income, quite as though the taxpayer were giving his services for hire upon separate occasions. Hоw numerous such transactions must be the statute answers only by the test that collectively they must constitute a “trade or business.” This being in my judgment what the section was aiming at, I see no reason to balk at the words used. It does not unduly strain the meaning of “sale” to make it include an exclusive license; in the case at bar the parties themselves used the words, “grant and assign“; and it would be a barren distinction—meaningless for fiscal purposes,—to say that the royalties for a stage production (which these taxpayers included in their gross incomе) were income, but that the lump sums, paid instead of royalties by the Paramount Company, were capital transactions, because they were not “sales“.
I can find nothing in the history of the legislation which intimates the contrary of this construction, and it seems to me that the Board in Avery v. Commissioner, 47 B.T.A. 538, chose the better ground than did the Tax Court here.
There is no reason to ask for any further findings of fact; I rely only upon those which the Tax Court has found. My only difference with it is that I find that the facts bring the case within the next to last, and not within the last, clause of
I am authorized to say that Judge SWAN concurs in this opinion.
