15 N.Y.S. 887 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1891
The plaintiffs in No. 1 are the publishers and proprietors of the Buffalo Express, a daily newspaper published in the city of Buffalo. The plaintiff in No. 2 is president of the Courier Company, a joint-stork associat.on, which is the publisher and proprietor of the Buffalo Courier, also a daily newspaper published in the same city. The plaintiffs in both cases are members of the defendant, the Associated Press of the State of New York, a corporation organized under a special act of the legislature of this state, being chapter 754 of the Laws of 1867, among the objects of which, as declared by the act, are “the mutual protection of members of the press, ” and “procuring and supplying its members with telegraphic news.” The other defendants are the persons composing the executive committee of the defendant association. The action, in each case, is to restrain the defendants from proceeding to enforce against the plaintiffs One of the by-laws of the defendant association, which is in the following terms: “(25) No member of this association shall receive or publish the regular news dispatches of any other news association, covering a like territory and organized for a like purpose with this association. Any member violating this by-law shall be suspended by the executive committee from all the rights and privileges of the association, as provided in section 24, subject, however, to reinstatement by a two-thirds vote of the association, upon written agreement to conform to all the by-laws and contracts of the association.” By-law 24, referred to in the above, prescribes the mode of its enforcement, viz., by suspension by the executive committee, “after an examination of the offense charged,” on notice to the offending member; the decision of the committee being, however, subject to the approval or disapproval of the association at its next meeting. On the 23d of April, 1890, the plaintiffs in each case were served by the defendants with a notice, of which the following is a copy: “You are charged by the Associated Dress of the State of New York with the violation of the by-laws of said association, and particularly of section 25 thereof, in both receiving and publishing the regular news dispatches of the United Press Association, which is another news association covering alike territory and organized for a like purpose with this association. It is charged by this association that you are violating, and nave, since the first day of January,
The two cases, as presented by the moving and opposing papers, are in all respects the same, except that the plaintiff in No. 2, representing the Buffalo Courier, voted in favor of the by-laws 24 and 25, the enforcement of which is sought to be restrained; but it is not seriously contended by either party that the presence of this circumstance in the one case, or its absence in the other, creates ány real distinction between the cases. The plaintiffs in the two cases are equally members of the defendant association, and are equally amenable to its by-laws, whether adopted with or without their individual concurrence. We shall therefore, in our discussion of the two cases, treat them as if they were one.
There is no controversy about the facts of this case. The plaintiffs had, as charged, both received and published the regular news dispatches of the United Press Association, and had thus become liable to suspension from the rights and privileges of members of the defendant association, unless it appears either that the act complained of was not within the terms of the bylaw which prescribes that penalty, or that the by-law itself was inoperative, because contrary to law. That the act was within the prohibition of the bylaw we think sufficiently appears. The United Press Association covers the same territory as that covered by the defendant, viz., the state of New York; and the fact that it also covers other territory does not, we think, take it out of the purview and intention of the by-law in question. It is, as to the state of New York, and in respect to hews collected within this state, a competitor of the defendant, and is thus within the plain intent and purpose of the bylaw, which was to prevent the encouragement of such competition by members of the defendant. The question whether such purpose is an unlawful one, and one against which a court of equity will interfere, is a somewhat more serious question, and, as we think, the only substantial question in this case. Tlie business of collecting the news of the day, and furnishing reports of it to the press for a compensation, lias become a very well known and important industry. It can scarcely be called a branch of trade. There is no right of property in the news itself. That is neither bought nor sold. Any man who hears it may make such use of it as he can, for his own advantage, or may communicate it to other's. So be may make a business of collecting news and furnishing reports of it to the newspapers, or to such of them as will compensate him for his trouble. The work is commonly clone in the locality of each newspaper by its own reporters employed and paid for that purpose. In remote localities the same system might be, and no doubt was, formerly, much employed, viz., of special reporter or correspondent engaged to supply, to the particular newspapers,. reports, by post or by telegraph, of occurrences in bis locality. But, of late, publishers have availed themselves of the obvious advantages of combination for the procurement of news, and so have oiganized themselves by voluntary association, or by incorporation, and by this means have shared, at once, the news collected, and the expense of "its collection. But whichever the system made use of,—whether of separate reporters and correspondents, or of reporter's and correspondents employed by syndicate or corporation,—it is plain that the employment is that of agents, to do the work of collecting news in their several localities for one or more newspapers. In this case the agents are employed by the defendant the Associated Press of the State of Mew York, acting for all the publishers who are comprised in its membership. As to all these, the charter and bylaws of the corporation constitute the contract between themselves, and between them, and the association. Among, the provisions of that contract is
The objection that the contract is in violation of that provision of the constitution of the slate
Article 1, § 8.