33 N.W.2d 911 | Mich. | 1948
"Does the unauthorized publication of another's photograph for the purpose of advertising or commercial gain give rise to an action for damages by the person whose photograph is thus published?"
Plaintiff filed a declaration which under the circumstances must be considered as setting up true facts, alleging as follows:
On or about April 23, 1946, plaintiff was in the employ of one Earl Carroll, a theatrical producer. The defendant was then and is now operating a retail department store in the city of Detroit. On or about said date, the said Earl Carroll employed Preston Sweet, an independent photographer, to make and produce a photograph of plaintiff; and, accordingly, said photograph was made and produced. Thereafter, the defendant, without plaintiff's knowledge or consent, procured from said Preston Sweet a copy of said photograph, or the negative thereof, and caused said photograph to be published in a daily newspaper circulating in and about Detroit, in connection with and as part of an advertisement of certain of defendant's wares, namely, cosmetics. Said advertisement was 8 by 10 inches and featured said photograph of plaintiff surrounded by printed matter describing certain brands of rouge, lipstick and make-up, by three drawings of what purported to be a bottle of make-up, a lipstick container and a rouge container, and by announcing that said articles were on sale at defendant's store.
Plaintiff, in her declaration, claimed that such publication was wholly without her knowledge or consent and without any right or authority on defendant's part, and that it constituted an invasion of plaintiff's right to be free from unauthorized and offensive publicity and portraiture of her person; that as the proximate result of such unauthorized publication plaintiff suffered loss of earnings and grievous mental and physical injury, in that she lost *414 her employment, was exposed to the contempt and ridicule of her friends and acquaintances, and was rendered physically ill to the extent that she required prolonged medical treatment to restore her health.
The defendant moved to dismiss the declaration on the ground that it did not state any cause of action. The circuit judge granted the motion, and from the order entered accordingly the plaintiff appeals.
The weight of authority recognized in other jurisdictions is that under many circumstances the law will consider the unauthorized publication of a photograph of a person as an invasion of such person's right of privacy and as a tort. Undoubtedly, circumstances control each decision. The following cases support the plaintiff's claim:
Reed v. Real Detective Publishing Co., Inc. (1945),
Melvin v. Reid (1931),
Cason v. Baskin (1944),
Pavesich v. New England Life Ins. Co. (1905),
State, ex rel. Mavity, v. Tyndall (1946),
Foster-Milburn Co. v. Chinn (1909),
Itzkovitch v. Whitaker (1905),
Munden v. Harris (1911),
"One may have peculiarity of appearance, and if it is to be made a matter of merchandise, why should it not be for his benefit? It is a right which he may wish to exercise for hisown profit and why may he not restrain another who is using it for gain? If there is value in it, sufficient to excite the cupidity of another, why is it not the property of him who gives it the value and from whom the value springs?"
Barber v. Time, Inc. (1942),
Edison v. Edison Polyform Manfg. Co. (1907),
73 N.J. Eq. 136 (67 A. 392 ) (use of plaintiff's photograph for advertisement). The court said:
"If a man's name be his own property, as no less an authority than the United States supreme court says, it is [sic] (BrownChemical Co. v. Meyer,
Friedman v. Cincinnati Local Joint Executive Board of Hotel Restaurant Employees, International Alliance Bartenders'International League of America (1941, common pleas court, Hamilton county), 20 Ohio Ops. 473 (6 Ohio Supp. 276) (use of movies of customers, taken by picketers);
Harlow v. Buno Co., Inc. (1939, Philadelphia county), 36 Pa. D. C. 101 (use of photo for advertisement. Right of privacy recognized but no damages awarded where use was unintentional);Clayman v. Bernstein (1940, Philadelphia county), 38 Pa. D. C. 543 (injunction against use of photograph by physician);
Hinish v. Meier Frank Co., Inc. (1941),
The general rule (to which, of course, there are exceptions) is stated thus in the American Law Institute's 4 Restatement, Torts, p. 398, § 867:
"A person who unreasonably and seriously interferes with another's interest in not having his affairs known to others orhis likeness exhibited to the public is liable to the other."
Doubtless the question whether the unauthorized publication of a person's photographic likeness "unreasonably and seriously" interferes with such person's right of privacy involves an issue of fact which cannot be determined on hearing a motion to dismiss, as was done in the case at bar. We conclude that there are circumstances under which one may have a right of privacy in a photographic likeness, which may give rise to an action for damages for the unauthorized publication thereof. In so holding, we do not overlook Atkinson v. John E. Doherty *417 Co.,
We recognize a fundamental difference between the use of a person's photographic likeness in connection with or as a part of a legitimate news item in a newspaper, and its commercial use in an advertisement for the pecuniary gain of the user. In the case at bar there is no involvement of freedom of speech or freedom of the press. This is an action to recover damages from a retail merchandise seller for the unauthorized use of the plaintiff's photographic likeness in a commercial advertisement.
We conclude that under the circumstances the plaintiff may base a claim for damages on the defendant's unauthorized use of her photograph to advertise certain brands of rouge, lipstick and makeup. Whether plaintiff has been damaged by the publication of her photograph, or whether it carries an inference that she uses, or approves of the use of, these brands of cosmetics, are questions which cannot be decided on the hearing and determination of a motion to dismiss. *418
The defendant, in filing an answer to plaintiff's declaration in addition to its motion to dismiss, claims that the plaintiff had the photograph taken by the photographer, Preston Sweet, for publicity purposes, that she had previously signed a release of such photographs for publicity purposes through Earl Carroll. Issues of fact cannot be determined on hearing a motion to dismiss.
The order dismissing the declaration is set aside and the case remanded for further proceedings, with costs of this appeal to appellant.
BUSHNELL, C.J., and SHARPE, REID, NORTH, DETHMERS, BUTZEL, and CARR, JJ., concurred.