21 A.D.2d 896 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1964
In an action to permanently restrain defendants from manufacturing and selling post cards, albums and allied items containing photographs and other reproductions of the buildings, exhibits, and any other activity of the New York World’s Fair 1964-1965 Corporation, the defendants appeal from an order of the Supreme Court, Queens County, entered June 11, 1964 upon the decision of the court, which granted in part plaintiff’s motion for an injunction pendente lite on the condition that plaintiff file an undertaking for $50,000, with corporate surety, to pay all damages and costs which may be awarded in the action. Order affirmed, without costs. We take judicial notice that the New York World’s Fair is universally acclaimed as one of the world’s greatest shows in 1964^-1965. In our opinion, a photograph of a unique building, structure or object situated within .the World’s Fair grounds, to which an admission fee is charged, is a photograph of a show in which plaintiff has a property right. Therefore, defendants may not photograph that building, structure, or object without the plaintiff’s permission. (Metropolitan Opera Assn. v. Wagner-Nichols Recorder Corp., 199 Misc. 786, affd. 279 App. Div. 632; see, also, 279 App. Div. 646, mot. for lv. to app. den. 279 App. Div. 790.) Between March, 1961 and February, 1962 one of the defendants had submitted a bid for the exclusive right to sell picture post cards of the World’s Fair and its buildings, structures, and objects,