220 F. 977 | E.D. Pa. | 1915
The complainant is the owner of a duly registered copyright granted to him October 2, 1911, for a picture or drawing conceived and executed by him, which copyright entitled him to the sole right to print, reprint, publish, copy, reproduce, and vend the said picture or drawing. The complainant granted a license to Gimbel Bros., merchants of the city of New York and Philadelphia, to reproduce and publish copies of the picture, under its name “Da Promenade des Toilettes at Gimbel Bros.,” for the purpose of illustrating advertisements of their wares. In pursuance of that license, the picture, representing a woman in artistic pose and costume, was reproduced in the Press, a newspaper of Philadelphia, on October 4, 1911, as an advertisement of Gimbel Bros, in connection with *%a Promenade des Toilettes.”
The defendant, a corporation engaged in printing posters, copied the picture from a copy of the Press of October 4, 1911, caused a cut to be made therefrom much enlarged in size, and made therefrom 2,500 posters. It sold 2,250 copies, and at the time of the ,hearing had in its possession, unsold, 250 copies. There was offered in evidence by the complainant from the bound files of the Press a copy of the Press of October 4, 1911, containing the picture with Gimbel’s advertisement. There was also offered by the defendant a page of the Press of October 4, 1911, containing the picture and advertisemént, which, as appears from the testimony, was similar to the copy from which the cut was made .froni which the posters were manufactured.
The defendant admits that the posters manufactured by it, including ■those sold, are copies of the Press’ reproduction of the complainant’s "copyrighted work, but denies that upon every copy of the picture ■or drawing published or caused to be published by Gimbel Bros, there was inscribed or printed as prescribed by-law the letter “C” inclosed within a circle, with the complainant’s name thus, “ © Malcolm Strauss,” as claimed by the complainant. The defendant denies that there appeared on the copies whereof it has or had knowledge any notice of the copyright of the picture, and avers that there was an omission of the requisite notice, and that it was misled by the omission into
Copyright Act of March 4, 1909. In view of present knowledge that the complainant’s work was copyrighted, it is apparent that, through accident or mistake causing injury to the matrix or stereotyped plate, used in making the print, the blurred, irregular, and indistinct mark was caused to appear in place of the copyright notice for which it was intended. Under these circumstances, under section 20 of the act, the copyright is not invalidated, nor would the complainant’s recovery for infringement be prevented if the defendant, after actual notice of the copyright, had begun an undertaking to infringe. There is no evidence in the case that the defendant had actual notice of the copyright, but, on the other hand, it is sufficiently established that it is “an innocent infringer who has been misled by the omission of the notice,” as provided in section 20.
Counsel for the complainant contends that there is no “omission,” as the notice was present, although in distorted form. As the mark accompanying the picture in the Press does not resemble the letter “C” within a circle, it would not give notice to any one not having notice otherwise, and as the act is explicit as to the form of the notice prescribed, and there is no letter “C” and no circle present, it follows that there was an omission of the prescribed notice.
Inasmuch as section 20 provides that circumstances such as are found in this case “shall prevent the recovery of damages,” they preclude the recovery of “such damages as to the court shall appear to be just” under section 25, as there is no provision that such damages shall be assessed in lieu of profits alone. The distinction between “damages” and “profits” is pointed out in the opinion of Judge Gray in Sharpless v. Lawrence, 213 Fed. 423, 130 C. C. A. 59. Neither does the act provide any minimum or maximum limitation of amount of profits recoverable. They are to consist of “all the profits the infringer shall have made from such infringement.” It appears by the proofs that the gross amount realized by the defendant from its sales was $108, and the cost of the 2,500 copies was $67.15, leaving a profit of $40.85.
A decree may be entered in favor of the complainant, for an injunction restraining the infringement, for the payment to the complainant of the profits made by the defendant amounting to $40.85, and its full costs, and requiring the defendant to deliver up on oath for destruction all the infringing copies, as well as all plates, molds, matrices, or other means for making such infringing copies.
Under these circumstances, and taking into consideration, on the other hand, that the issues involved are clearly defined and simple, and raise no intricate questions of, law, an attorney’s fee of $75 is awarded as part of the costs.