after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of-febe court.
That the copyright taken out by .the author after the serial publication of his work in- the Atlantic Monthly did not prevent the republication of so much of such serial ás had appeared in the magazine prior to December, 1859, and before any steps taken to obtain a copyright, was settled by this court in
Holmes
v. Hurst,
The question presented by this case is whether entering for copyright the last two parts of the “ Professor at the Breakfast Table” in the December number of 1859 of the Atlantic Monthly by Ticknor & Fields, proprietors of the magazine, was sufficient to save the rights of the author, the plaintiff *262 having purchased such rights from the ■ executor of the late Dr. Holmes.
By section one of the act of February, 1831, “ the author or authors of any book or books . . . not printed and published, . . . and the executors, administrators, or legal assigns of such person or persons, shall have the sole right and liberty of printing,” etc. By section four, “no person shall be entitled to the benefit of this act, unless he shall, beforepublication, deposit a printed copy of the title of such book . . . in the clerk’s office of the District Court of the district wherein the author or proprietor shall reside,” when the clerk is directed to make a record of the same, in a form prescribed, wherein is stated the date, the name of the author or proprietor, etc.; and by section five, the person entitled to the benefit of the act shall give information of his copyright, by giving notice on the title page, or page immediately following, in a prescribed form. Construing these statutes together, it would seem that the word “ proprietor,” in the fourth section, must practically have the same meaning as “legal assigns ” in the first section, and was designed to give to the legal assignee of any author or authors the right to take out the copyright in his own name.
There is no evidence in this case, however, that Dr. Holmes, the author of the “ Professor at the Breakfast Table,” ever assigned to either of the proprietors of the magazine the authority to copyright his work. While there is an allegation in the bill, upon information and belief, that the work — the first ten parts -of which were published by Phillips, Sampson & Co.—was printed, published and sold by said Phillips, Sampson
&
Co. “ by and with the consent and authority of the said Oliver Wendell Holmes, and in accordance with an agreement” made with him by the said firm, whereby he granted to them the right to print, publish and sell his work in the said magazine, there is no allegation that either Phillips, Sampson & Co. or their successors, Ticknor
&
Fields, were authorized to enter “ The Professor at the Breakfast Table ” for copyright, either in their own names, or in the name of the author; nor does there appear to be any connection whatever between the copyright taken out by Tick-nor
&
Fields and that subsequently taken out by Dr. Holmes.
*263
The entry of the Atlantic Monthly by Ticknor & Fields was evidéntly not intended for the protection of the author of each article therein appearing, but for their own protection, and to prevent the republication of the December number of the Atlantic Monthly. While, without further explanation, it might, perhaps, be inferred that the author of a book who places it in the hands of publishers for publication, might be presumed to intend to authorize them to obtain a copyright in their own names,
Pulte
v. Derby,
But, even assuming that it was done by «his authority, there is an additional question whether the entry of • a book called the “ Atlantic Monthly Magazine,” in the name of Ticknor & Fields, is equivalent to entering a book called “ The Professor at the Breakfast Table,” by Oliver Wendell Holmes. The two entries were in the following form:
1. Entry of “ the Atlantic' Monthly ” for the month of December, 1859. “ Entered according to act of Congress in the year 1859, by Ticknor' & Fields, in the clerk’s office of the District Court of the Districit of Massachusetts.”
2. Entry, of “The Professor .at the Breakfast Table.” “Entered according to act of Congress in the year 1859, by Oliver *264 Wendell Holmes, in the clerk’s office of the District Court of the District of Massachusetts.”
The object of the notice being to warn the public against the republication of a certain book by a certain author or proprietor, it is difficult to see how a person reading these notices would understand that they were intended for the protection of the same work. On their face they would seem to be designed for entirely different purposes. While owing to the great reputation of the work and the fame of its author, we might infer in this particular case that no publisher was actually led to believe that the book copyrighted by Dr. Holmes was not the same work which had appeared in the Atlantic Monthly, that would be an unsafe criterion to apply to a work of less celebrity. It might well be that a book not copyrighted or insufficiently copyrighted by the author might be republished by another in total ignorance of the fact that .it had previously appeared serially in a copyrighted magazine. It is incorrect to say that any form of notice is good which calls attention to the person of whom inquiry can be made and information obtained, since the right being purely statutory, the public may justly demand that the person claiming a monopoly of publication shall pursue, in substance at least, the statutory method of securing it.
Thompson
v. Hubbard,
With the utmost desire to give a construction to the statute , most liberal to the author, we find it impossible to say that the entry of a book under one title by the publishers can validate the-entry of another book of a different title.by another person.
The decree of the Court of. Appeals was correct, and it is therefore
Affirmed.
