128 Misc. 284 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1926
The amended complaint contains two counts. In the first it is alleged, in substance, that defendant publishes a newspaper known as the Daily News on week days and the Sunday News on Sundays; that in.December, 1925, defendant requested plaintiff “ to write, for a compensation to be agreed upon, one or more articles for the defendant for publication in its said newspaper with reference to the social entertainments given or conducted in what is commonly known as ‘ New York Society/ and more particularly those entertainments known as ‘ debutante parties; ’ ” that a representative of defendant had a conference with plaintiff with reference to plaintiff’s plans for the form and substance of said articles, including various ideas, opinions and conclusions of plaintiff in respect of the topic or topics proposed by defendant to comprise the main subject-matter of said article or articles; that such oral statement was made , and such synopsis given by plaintiff to defendant’s representative solely for the purposes of such negotiations; that while the negotiations were still pending plaintiff notified defendant she would not write such proposed articles and
Assuming as we must that the allegations set forth in plaintiff’s complaint are true, I am of the opinion that plaintiff has a right to obtain money damages from defendant. It should be borne in mind that defendant sought to buy the literary property from plaintiff. It would be improper to classify the matter published as “ news.” It was not a report of recent occurrences, as is generally understood by the term “ news.” We find literary, dramatic and musical creations among those which are recognized as property , by the common law.
In Palmer v. DeWitt (47 N. Y. 532) Judge Allen said, in part (p. 536): “ The author of a literary work or composition has, by law, a right to the first publication of it. He has a right to determine whether it shall be published at all, and if published, when, where, by whom, and in what form. This exclusive right is confined to the first publication. * * * It is said by Yates, J., in Millar v. Taylor (4 Burr, 2303, 2379), that ‘ it is certain every man has a right to keep his own sentiments, if he pleases: he has certainly a right to judge whether he will make them public, or commit them only to the sight of his friends. In that state, the manuscript is, in every sense, his peculiar property; and no man can take it from him, or make any use of it which he has not authorized, without being guilty of a violation of his property.
I cannot see any distinction between this case and one where a lecturer is afforded protection against publication of his thoughts, ideas and conclusions. In Abernethy v. Hutchinson (3 L. J. Ch. 209) plaintiff, a distinguished surgeon, sought to restrain the publication in The Lancet of unpublished lectures which he had delivered in St. Bartholomew’s Hospital in London. Lord Eldon granted the injunction on the ground of breach of confidence. He said, in part, that “ When persons were admitted, as pupils or otherwise, ,to hear these lectures, although they were orally delivered, and although the parties might go to the extent, if they were able to do so, of putting down the whole by means of shorthand, yet they could do that only for the purposes of their own information, and could not publish for profit that which they had not obtained the right of selling.”
It is to be noted that the effect of the complaint is to allege that, by offering to purchase the articles, the defendant induced plaintiff to disclose what she could sell, and although failing to agree on her terms defendant used her product, it being set forth that the newspaper published what was “ in substance her own composition.” This, according to the complaint, was not mere “ news,” nor the substance of an ordinary “ interview,” but “ her article,” appropriated by one who ascertained its contents under circumstances which implied that it would not be used without compensation. In this article, which the pleading shows to have been substantially copaplete when it was revealed to defendant’s representative, plaintiff had a common-law property.
I do not think that there is much "force to the argument made by defendant that the ideas expressed by plaintiff were not original. Very few literary, musical or artistic ideas are really novel.
In his discussion of the right to privacy, which appeared in 4 Harvard Law Review, page 193, Mr. Louis D. Brandéis, now a justice of the United States Supreme Court, in collaboration with Mr. Samuel D. Warren, gave careful consideration to similar questions.
The case of Bristol v. Equitable Life Assurance Society (132 N. Y. 264), relied upon by defendant, is not in point. There the plaintiff asserted that he had unfolded a certain plan of advertising to the defendant insurance society while seeking employment with iti His theory was that he was entitled to an accounting because the company had adopted the plan and by the use of it had increased
For the foregoing reasons the motion will, therefore, be denied. Settle order.