Nearly fifty years ago Overstreet composed the music, Henderson made an arrangement, and Higgins wrote the words for a song which was published and duly copyrighted in 1923. Higgins married Ida Stern on November 24,1924, and died on April 19, 1937. In the late 1940’s Mrs. Higgins, Henderson and Overstreet’s next of kin assigned their interests in the renewal rights to the defendant, which received a renewal certificate on October 12, 1950.
The problem arises from the fact that on December 6, 1931, Higgins had an illegitimate daughter, Mary Ann Booker, who survived him. The defendant did not know of her existence until 1960, when plaintiff served notice of an assignment of the copyright renewal rights it had obtained from her in 1958 for $500.
Section 24 of the Copyright Act, so far as here material, vests renewal rights in “the author of such work, if still living, or the widow, widower, or children of the author, if the author be not living * * Construing this characteristically obscure language, the Supreme Court held in DeSylva v. Ballentine,
The title of the song — “There’ll Be Some Changes Made” — proved prophetic when, on May 20, 1968, the Supreme Court held that a state statute construed to prevent illegitimate children from suing for the wrongful death of their mother was a denial of the equal protection of the laws. Levy v. Louisiana,
Plaintiff pretermits what an enthusiast over
Levy
characterizes as “the interesting question * * * whether it will be extended to the father-child relationship,” with what is considered the pleasant result of invalidating “hundreds of state statutes and several federal laws”
3
—not to speak of the common law rule in force when the Fourteenth Amendment was adopted. The highest courts of Ohio and Missouri have reached differing results concerning the illegitimate child’s right to paternal support, Baston v. Sears,
We find it unnecessary to attempt to forecast whether the Supreme Court will differentiate between the situations of the father and of the mother.
4
In
Levy
and
Glona
the Court had no problem of defeating reasonable expectations that any party had entertained in the past. It held merely that the illegitimacy of the plaintiff or the decedent was not a constitutionally adequate defense to a wrongful death action. Obviously the defendants in those cases had not killed Mrs. Levy or Mr. Glona in reliance on their relatives being illegitimate. We deal here with a transaction carried out between the defendant and Mrs. Higgins twenty years ago when no one would have supposed Mary Ann Booker had any expectancy in the renewal of her father’s copyright. We do not undertake to say precisely what degree of retroactive application, if any,
Levy
and
Glona,
may ultimately be given. We do say that, in light of the practical approach the Supreme Court has recently been taking with respect to the effect of novel constitutional doctrine, in the civil as well as in the criminal field, see Cipriano v. City of Houma,
Affirmed.
Notes
. In 1965 the law was changed to provide that an illegitimate child “is the legitimate child of his mother so that he and his issue inherit from his motlier and from his maternal kindred,” and also “is the legitimate child of his father so that he and his issue inherit from his father if a court of competent jurisdiction has, during the lifetime of the father, made an order of filiation declaring paternity in a proceeding instituted during the pregnancy of the mother or within two years from the birth of the child.” This provision applies only to estates of persons who die after March 1, 1966. Laws 1965, c. 958, now N.Y. Estates, Powers and Trusts Law § 4-1.2(a) (1) and (2).
. The general revision of the Copyright Act passed by the House of Representatives on April 11, 1967, and still under consideration by the Senate, defined a person’s children as “his immediate offspring, whether legitimate or not, and any children legally adopted by him.”
. Krause, Legitimate and Illegitimate Offspring of Levy v. Louisiana — First Decisions on Equal Protection and Paternity, 36 U.Chic.L.Rev. 338, 339 (1969).
. We do suggest, however, that the differences in the problem of proof are not to be minimized. As any lawyer with experience in defending against claims of relationship advanced long after the critical date would vividly realize, it is altogether too simplistic to say “Recovery should be denied in the absence of proof, but granted in the presence of proof,” see Krause, supra. 36 U.Chic.L.Rev. at 344.
