Alexandre v. Westchester Newspapers, Inc.

169 Misc. 398
CourtMount Vernon City Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 169 Misc. 398 (Alexandre v. Westchester Newspapers, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mount Vernon City Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alexandre v. Westchester Newspapers, Inc., 169 Misc. 398 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1938).

Opinion

McKennell, Acting J.

Upon this motion to set aside a verdict in plaintiff’s favor, defendant urges, first, that the verdict is against the weight of the evidence, and, second, that, as to all but a small part of the recovery, it is contrary to law, in that the transactions upon which it is based were illegal and void and the contract relating thereto is unenforcible.

As to the first ground: Mr. Kenney, formerly employed by defendant as city editor of the Mount Vernon Daily Argus, one of the newspapers published by defendant, testified that he made, with plaintiff’s husband and agent, the contract set forth in plaintiff’s first cause of action and that the making thereof was within the scope of his duties as city editor. His power to bind defendant by such a contract was not seriously questioned. The written instructions issued by defendant’s president to the editors of its various newspapers impliedly recognized the existence of such power and merely advised that it be cautiously exercised. Plaintiff’s husband also testified to the making of that agreement and that it was ratified and continued by Mr. Roth, who succeeded Mr. Kenney as city editor and who, according to his own testimony, was authorized, by virtue of his position, to contract in defendant’s behalf for the purchase of photographs if and when he deemed it necessary. Mr. Roth denied having had the conversations to which plaintiff’s husband testified and there were many facts adduced in evidence which tended to cast great doubt upon the making and continuation of the alleged contract, although they did not preclude the possibility thereof. The issue in that regard was clearly one for the jury to determine; and, under the well-settled, applicable rule, I am not at liberty to disturb the jury’s finding even though, if I had been the trier of the facts, [ might have arrived at a different conclusion.

[400]*400The second ground of the motion involves the question of the legality of the contract under section 50 of the Civil Rights Law, which reads: “A person, firm or corporation that uses for advertising purposes or for the purposes of trade, the name, portrait or picture of any living person without having first obtained the written consent of such person, or if a minor of his or her parent or guardian, is guilty of a misdemeanor.”

It was stipulated that none of the photographs for which plaintiff sought to recover was used for advertising purposes;” but the jury were instructed that the sale by plaintiff to defendant of such of those photographs which were portraits of living persons constituted a use thereof “ for the purposes of trade.” (See Holmes v. Underwood & Underwood, 225 App. Div. 360.) It was conceded that no written consent of any person whose portrait was so used had been obtained; but plaintiff’s husband testified that, in each instance, before any of such portraits (of which there were more than one hundred) was sold to defendant, he had procured, from the subject of the portrait, an oral consent to the sale. That testimony was uncontradicted except as it related to a few of the photographs, and as to most, if not all, of the latter plaintiff withdrew her claim. The question of the credibility of this testimony was submitted to the jury, who evidently believed it.

In charging the jury I stated, in substance, that the property right in the respective portraits remained in the individual whose picture was taken (Holmes case, supra; White Studio, Inc., v. Dreyfoos, 156 App. Div. 762); that the right to invoke the protection of section 50 was personal to that individual; that it was competent for him or her to waive the requirement that the consent specified in the statute should be in writing; and that, as to each portrait concerning which the jury found that an oral consent to the sale was given by the subject and which had been reproduced and published by defendant without an accompanying “ credit line,” they were at liberty to award a verdict in favor of plaintiff provided they found that defendant had expressly or impliedly agreed to pay for the picture.

The instant motion calls for a reconsideration of the charge.

No reported case has been cited by counsel or discovered by me in which the precise point here involved has ever been decided. A correct solution of the problem requires a consideration of the history of section 50 and its companion section 51 and the evils sought to be remedied by those enactments. Prior to 1903 the right of privacy ” was not cognizable in New York either at law or in equity. (Roberson v. Rochester Folding Box Co., 171 N. Y. 538.) In response to a suggestion contained in the opinion in the [401]*401case cited, the Legislature enacted chapter 132 of .the Laws of 1903, the first section of which is now embodied in section 50 of the Civil Rights Law and the second section of which is incorporated in the first sentence of section 51 of that law. In declaring the act of 1903 constitutional, the court, in Rhodes v. Sperry & Hutchinson Co. (193 N. Y. 223), said (pp. 227, 228): “ It is to be observed that the statute does not deny the right of any person to make such use of his own portrait as he may see fit. The Legislature has not undertaken to restrict his liberty in this respect to any extent whatever. It is only the use of his name or picture by others and by others for particular purposes that is affected by the statute. * * * The statute merely recognizes and enforces the right of a person to control the use of his name or portrait by others so far as advertising or trade purposes are concerned. This right of control in the person whose name or picture is sought to be used for such purposes is not limited by the statute.”

'It is true that the court commented on the fact that the statute requires that the transfer of the right to use the picture for advertising or trade purposes “ shall be evidenced by writing;” but that statement did not refer to the rights as between the photographer and the person whose portrait had been taken, because the court expressly refrained from passing thereon. (See p. 232.) It is true, also, that in actions between the subjects of portraits and parties who had used those portraits for advertising or trade purposes it has been held that no oral consent and no acquiescence in such use will prevent the recovery of at least nommal damages or the granting of an injunction against further use of the picture (Wyatt v. McCreery & Co., 126 App. Div. 650; Wyatt v. Wanamaker, 58 Misc. 429; affd., 126 App. Div. 656; Almind v. Sea Beach R. Co., 157 id. 230, revg. 78 Misc. 445; Harris v. Gossard Co., Inc., 194 App. Div. 688; Hammond v. Crowell Pub. Co., 253 id. 205); but none of the cases last cited was between the subject of the picture and the photographer nor did any of them hold that a photographer who sells and delivers to another a copy of a portrait, pursuant to the oral consent, authorization or direction of the subject of the portrait, is guilty of a misdemeanor. Indeed, in Wyatt v. McCreery & Co (supra) the court said (p. 655): “ No one would dispute the right of each individual to dispose of his own portraits or photographs as he pleases, and the validity of any restriction as to that right may well be doubted.”

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Bluebook (online)
169 Misc. 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alexandre-v-westchester-newspapers-inc-nymtverncityct-1938.