142 F. 827 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1905
This suit is brought to restrain the infringement of a copyright. Emil Werckmeister, the complainant, is an art dealer, doing business in Berlin, Germany, under the style of “Photographische Gesellschaft,” and in New York under the style of the “Berlin Photographic Company.” W. Dendy Sadler, a British subject, is an artist, who, prior to April 2, 1894, painted a picture named “Chorus,” representing a convivial group of gentlemen gathered about a punch bowl, holding pipes and filled glasses in their hands, and singing in chorus. In January, 1894, Mr. Werckmeister called upon Mr. Sadler at his studio in London. The picture was then nearly, but not entirely, finished. It was thereupon agreed between them that Mr. Sadler would sell to Mr. Werckmeister the copyright of the painting for ¿200; that the painting should be sent to Mr. Werckmeister at Berlin to be photographed, and returned to Mr. Sadler in time for him to exhibit it at the annual exhibition of the Royal Academy in 1894. This agreement was thereafter confirmed by the execution and delivery of the following instrument:
“I hereby transfer the copyright in my picture ‘Chorus’ to the. Photographische Gesellschaft, Berlin [the Berlin Photographic Company] for the sum of £200.
“London, April 2, 1894.
“[Signed] W. Dendy Sadler.”
The painting was sent to the Photographische Gesellschaft, at Berlin, where it was received March 8, 1894. Photographic reproductions of it were made at Berlin, and the painting was returned to Mr. Sadler in London on March 22, 1894. Mr. Sadler exhibited the picture at the exhibition of the Royal Academy in 1894, and it remained on exhibition from the first Monday of May until the first Monday of October. While the painting was on exhibition at the Royal Academy an entry was made by Mr. Sadler, in a book kept at the Academy for the purpose, stating that the picture was for sale, but with the copyright reserved. Mr. Sadler continued to be the owner of the picture until 1899, when he sold it, reserving the copyright, to Mr. Cotterell, residing in London, who still owns it. A by-law of the Royal Academy provides that no permission to copy the works, during the terms of exhibition, shall on any account be granted. There has never been inscribed upon the painting, or upon the substance upon which it is mounted, any statement showing that thé painting was copyrighted. On March 31, 1894, the complainant sent to his New York house, to be transmitted to the Librarian of Congress, an application for copyright of the painting, in due form, accompanied by a description and photograph of it. This application was received at the copyright office, at the Congressional Library in Washington, on April 16, 1894. Subsequently the complainant published and sold copies of the painting made by the photogravure process, each of which was marked, “Copyright, 1894, by Photographische Gesellschaft.” It is stipulated that the defendant the American Lithographic Company has printed for the defendant the American Tobacco Company a large number of chromo-lithographs, which are substantial copies of Mr. Sadler’s picture, upon the background of which, how
An application was made in this case for a preliminary injunction, which was denied by Judge Thomas ([C. C.] 117 Fed. 360), on the ground that the public exhibition of the picture at the Royal Academy between May and October, 1894, without any notice of copyright being placed on or about the painting, was a publication. A plea was after-wards filed to the bill, alleging the said exhibition as a bar to the suit. It was so held by Judge Wheeler ([C. C.] 126 Fed. 244) ; but upon appeal the Circuit Court of Appeals reversed this decision, on the ground, in substance, that the by-law of the Royal Academy, prohibiting any copying of the pictures there exhibited, prevented the exhibition of the picture from being such a general publication has harred the right to copyright. 134 Fed. 321, 68 L. R. A. 591. The defendants subsequently interposed an answer, proofs have been taken, and the case now comes before the court for final hearing upon the answer. No claim is made by the defendants’ counsel that, if Mr. Werckmeister had the right to take out the copyright, any formal proceedings necessary for that purpose have been omitted, or that, if he had a copyright, the defendants have not infringed. The defense relied on is that Mr. Werckmeister could not take out a copyright under the United States statute, because he did not own the painting, and that the copyright is invalid, because the painting never had affixed to it any notice that it was copyrighted.
The opinions of Judge Thomas, Judge Wheeler, and Judge Townsend which have been delivered in this case contain so full a discussion of the principles and authorities applicable to the law of copyright that any further general discussion of them here is unnecessary. The question whether the exhibition of this painting in the Royal Academy was a publication which invalidated the copyright was concluded in this case by the decision of the Circuit Court of Appeals. The only questions now open in this case are whether a person not the owner of a painting can obtain a copyright on it, and whether the omission to affix to the painting a notice of the copyright invalidated it.
The question whether the United States statutes permit a statutory copyright upon a painting to be obtained in this country by a person who does not own the painting is one upon which there is little direct authority. It is certainly a question of importance. I concur with the defendants’ counsel that it is to be determined by the language of the statute. The thing transferred by Mr. Sadler to Mr. Werckmeister was the copyright, by which he meant whatever common-law copyright Mr. Sadler had and whatever statutory copyright Mr. Werckmeister might be enabled to obtain in any of the countries in the world. It might well be that the laws of some countries would enable him to obtain a copyright, and of others not. The simple question in this case is whether the laws of the United States permitted him to do so. The statute upon which the question depends is as follows:
*830 “The author, Inventor, designer, or proprietor of any book, map, chart, dramatic or musical composition, engraving, cut, print, or photograph or negative thereof, or of a painting, drawing, chromo, statue, statuary, and of models or designs intended to be perfected as works of the fine arts, and the executors, administrators, or assigns of any such person, shall, upon complying with the provisions of this chapter, have the sole liberty of printing, reprinting, publishing, completing, copying, executing, finishing, and vending the same; and, in the case of a dramatic composition, of publicly performing or representing it, or causing it to be performed or represented by others; and authors or their assigns shall have exclusive right to dramatize or translate any of their works, for which copyright shall have been obtained under the laws of the United States.” U. S. Rev. St. § 4952, as amended by Act March 3,1891, c. 565, 26 Stat. 1106 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3406].
The substantial question, in construing this statute, is whether Mr. Werckmeister is included in the term “assigns.” The author of a painting, when it is finished, before publication, owns a material piece of personal property, consisting of the canvas and the paint upon it. He also owns an incorporeal right connected with it; that is,.the right to make a copy of it. These two kinds of property, although growing out of the same intellectual production, are in their nature essentially and inherently distinct. The law has always recognized that they are distinct. The defendants’ counsel admitted on the argu-“ ment that, after a copyright has been once taken out, the two kinds of property are distinct, and that the owner of a painting may then sell the painting to one person, and the copyright to another. The claim is that that cannot be done before the statutory copyright is taken out. But the law has always recognized that a common-law copyright, before a general publication, is a distinct property from the thing to which the copyright applies. One man may be the owner of the thing, and another of the copyright in the thing. For instance, a person who has received a letter, voluntarily sent him by the writer, owns the piece of paper upon which the letter is written; but the writer of the letter continues to be the owner of the copyright, and can, by injunction, prevent the person who has received the letter from publishing it. Pope v. Curl, 2 Atk. 342; Thompson v. Stanhope, Ambl. 737; Folsom v. Marsh, 2 Story, 113, Fed. Cas. No. 4,901; Woolsey v. Judd, 4 Duer, 379; Drone on Copyright, p. 133. A teacher delivering lectures orally to students remains the owner of the copyright, although he has permitted the particular persons hearing the lectures for their own instruction to take copies of them. Abernethy v. Hutchinson, 1 Hall & Tw. 40; Caird v. Sime, 12 App. Cases, 326; Bartlett v. Crittenden, 5 McLean, 32 Fed. Cas. No. 1,076. A person who has transferred the ownership of a copy of a book to -another, under an agreement that it shall be transferred only for a particular and restricted purpose,, does not thereby part with the copyright. Duke of Queensbury v. Shebbeare, 2 Eden, 329; Thompson v. Stanhope, Ambl. 737; Bartlett v. Crittenden, 5 McLean, 32, Fed. Cas. No. 1,076; Southey v. Sherwood, 2 Meriv. 436; Drone on Copyright, p. 103. A public representation of a play does not authorize a person who hears it to make a copy of it. Macklin v. Richardson, Ambl. 694; Palmer v. De Witt, 47 N. Y. 532, 7 Am. Rep. 480; Crows v. Aiken, 2 Biss. 208, Fed. Cas. No. 3,441. It therefore does not necesssarily follow that the word
The only case that has been brought to my attention in which the question is directly considered is the case of Werckmeister v. Pierce & Bushnell Mfg. Co. (C. C.) 63 Fed. 445. In that case a German artist, Naujolc, painted a picture, and subsequently, by written instrument, transferred to Mr. Werckmeister “the right of publication, by which I wish to have understood, the exclusive right of reproduction.” Mr. Werckmeister never owned the painting. The artist subsequently sold it to another person. There was no evidence that it ever had upon it any notice of copyright. Werckmeister, the complainant, took
The other defense in this case is based upon the fact that no notice of copyright was attached to the painting. The determination of this question, also, depends simply upon the construction of the United States statute. The language of the statute upon this subject is as follows:
“Sec. 4962. That no person shall maintain an action for the infringement of his copyright unless he shall give notice thereof by inserting in the several copies of every edition published, on the title page or the page immediately following, if it be a book, or if a map, chart, musical composition, print, cut, engraving, photograph, painting, drawing, chromo, statue, statuary, or model or design intended to be perfected and completed as a work of the fine arts, by inscribing upon some visible portion thereof, or of the substance on which the same shall be mounted, the following words, viz.: ‘Entered according to act of Congress, in the year-, by A. B., in the office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington’; or, at his option, the word ‘Copyright,’ together with the year the copyright was entered, and the name of the party by whom it was taken out; thus ‘Copyright, 18 — , by A. B.’ ” [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3411].
This statute is not clearly expressed. It has been, in some cases, construed as meaning that, in the case of a painting, the notice must be inscribed upon some visible portion of the painting, or of the substance upon which the same shall be mounted. But, in my opinion, this is not the true construction of the language. I think that, in the provision of this section prescribing that notice of the copyright shall be inscribed “upon some visible portion thereof, or of the substance on which the same shall be mounted,” the word “thereof” and the words “the same” do not refer to the words “map, chart,” etc., imme
This question was directly involved in the case of Werckmeister v. Pierce & Bushnell Mfg. Co. (C. C.) 63 Fed. 445, previously referred to. In that case, Judge Putnam held that the omission to put the copyright notice on the painting did not invalidate the copyright. The judgment was reversed by the Circuit Court of Appeals for the First Circuit, on the ground that the court below erred in so holding. Pierce & Bushnell Mfg. Co. v. Werckmeister, 72 Fed. 54, 18 C. C. A. 431. In that decision Judges Colt and Nelson concurred, and Judge Webb dissented. With the highest respect for the distinguished judges who concurred in the reversal of the judgment, I am not able to agree with their conclusions, but do concur with the view of Judge Putnam and Judge Webb, as stated in Judge Putnam’s opinion. The basis of the decision of the majority in the Circuit Court of Appeals is substantially stated in the following extract from the opinion:
“Section 4962 does not deal with ‘copies’ as distinct from ‘originals,’ or with ‘originals’ as distinct from ‘copies,’ as those terms are commonly understood; but it deals with published copyrighted things, and it declares that no action for infringement will lie unless each copyrighted thing which is published or made public, be it a ‘copy,’ so called, or an ‘original,’ so called, or another edition or reproduction of such copy or original, has inscribed upon it the notice of copyright.”
In other words, as I understand this opinion, the view on which it is based is that every form in which any production of the intellect is delineated, so that it can be observed by another, is a copy, and
My conclusion is that there should be a decree for the complainant for the relief demanded in the bill, with costs.