38 A.D. 426 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1899
This action was brought by the plaintiffs, who constitute the firm ■of John Murphy & Co., to restrain the defendant from selling a prayer book published by it, and known as “A Manual of Prayers for the Use of the Catholic Laity,” at lower prices than those prescribed in an agreement between the plaintiffs and the Catholic-Publication Society Company. In 1889. that company owned the. copyright of the book. This is charged in the complaint and admitted in the answer, and we can take-no notice of the communication of counsel for the appellant, in which he asserts that the company did not acquire the copyright until a subsequent time. Eor the publication of the work the company had procured four
We think this action can be maintained against the appellant, and that it is bound by the agreement of the Catholic Publication
The most serious question arises on the construction of the written agreement. The agreement refers in terms solely to the prices at which “ plainly-bound copies ” may be sold. The appellant contends that its publications are not plainly-bound copies, and do not fall within the terms of the agreement. The agreement, however, must be construed reasonably, and some effect given to it. Certainly it never contemplated that while the parties were restrained from selling plainly-bound copies at less than a prescribed price, they should be at liberty to sell handsomer editions of the publication for a less price than that stipulated for the plainly-bound copies. The evidence, shows that “ plainly-bound copies ” is not a technical term of the trade. We think that in this agreement the word's must be
The appellant urges that 'the agreement is void as being in restraint of trade. The principle that contracts in restraint of trade are against public policy, and, therefore, illegal, has no application to the publication of a copyrighted book or a patented invention. The very object of copyrights and of letters patent is to gi\ e. monopolies. This constitutes their value. Thé case of National Harrow Co. v. Bement & Sons (21 App. Div. 290) is not in point. • In that case an agreement was entered into by substantially all the . makers in the country of the different kinds of harrows, to transfer their various patents to a single corporation, to receive in return licenses from that corporation for the particular styles of harrows-which they had been manufacturing, and to sell their product only at prices fixed by the corporation. It was held that such an agreement was in restraint of trade, and that the .fact that the articles-were manufactured under patents granted by the United States did not relieve a contract in relation to such articles from the rules of public policy that .control agreements concerning other property. But the case of the publication .of a single copyrighted book, or the manufacture of a single patented article, differs entirely from .the combination that was condemned by the court in the case cited. We suppose that the author of a new geometry may fix the price at' which he will sell his work at any Sum, or arrange with others for its publication and sale at the stipulated price. But if all the publishers of books on geometry were to combine and agree not to sell any publication on that subject except for a stipulated price, the contract would be in restraint of trade and void. The difference of principle between the two cases is just this: Monopolies are not favored,- and agreements to create the same, except where authorized bylaw, are void. No law authorizes a monopoly of all publications on the subject of geometry; the law does, however, author- ’ ize and grant to the author a monopoly in any particular work which he may publish on that subject.
The judgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
All concurred. ,
Judgment affirmed, with costs.