Blumcraft of Pittsburgh v. Newman Bros., Inc.

337 F. Supp. 859, 170 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 577, 1971 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14566
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedFebruary 18, 1971
DocketCiv. A. 5103
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 337 F. Supp. 859 (Blumcraft of Pittsburgh v. Newman Bros., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blumcraft of Pittsburgh v. Newman Bros., Inc., 337 F. Supp. 859, 170 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 577, 1971 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14566 (S.D. Ohio 1971).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

HOGAN, District Judge.

This copyright infringement case was commenced in July of 1962. A summary judgment was obtained by the defendant in its favor in this Court, which was appealed to the Circuit, resulting in a reversal and a remand for trial — this in 1967. (6 Cir., 373 F.2d 905.) A trial on the infringement issue, i. e., whether the expression of the ideas of the plaintiff contained on page 12 of its copyrighted 1960 Catalog was infringed by the expression of the ideas of the defendant contained on the cover and page 2 of the defendant’s Catalog prepared in 1961. The plaintiff prevailed at that trial in 1968. Following discovery, the damage issue was tried in 1971.

*861 The plaintiff and the defendant are competitors in the ornamental metal railing field. Both have been in business for a long time. Beginning in the early 50’s the plaintiffs expression involved in this case began to take shape and has steadily been incorporated in its catalogs ever since. The plaintiff has no salesmen as such. The defendant does. The plaintiff rests its “selling” on the distribution of its annual catalog in various methods to architects and others interested in the field and, of course, in its product. The initiation and development by plaintiff of its “expression” was accompanied, at least as a concomitant, by a steadily marked and great increase in its sales over the 1953-61 period and that has continued. The plaintiff is concededly the “Tiffany” in the field. Its products demand the highest price. The defendant is a competitor and the defendant’s pricings are generally substantially lower than the plaintiff’s.

As a matter of fact, in the period of interest in this case at least, the defendant did not have available for sale the product with which we deal. The vice in the copying amounts to the representation, via the expression, that the defendant has available at a lesser price what the plaintiff is selling. All of this takes place in the construction field in which architectural specifications constantly include the specification of a given item, such as Blumcraft ornamental railing No. so and so “or equal.” The indication of equivalence could be expected to incite some effort to displace the plaintiff’s product with the defendant’s product.

The defendant, during the period in question, did have salesmen in the sense that it had manufacturers representatives through the country.

There is no question that in this particular area in which architectural specification is of paramount importance, cataloging is a very significant matter vis-a-vis sale. As pointed out earlier by this Court, manufacturers or producers in this field make an annual distribution of their catalogs to something in excess of 20,000 architects via the Sweets distribution described in this Court’s Memorandum Opinion of June 25, 1968. In addition, as we learn from the 1971 trial, sellers in this field make a direct distribution to architects and on top of that, make a distribution through American Architectural Institute. Architects as a matter of course keep at ready hand the Sweets collation in the field and also keep at ready hand the collation received through the Institute. The catalogs in the Sweets collation are, by and large, thrown away when the new annual catalog is received in that collation. The catalogs in the A.A.I. collation are generally kept for a couple of years. The significance of that in this case is that while the Newman Catalog held to be infringing was only the 1961 (in the sense of preparation) or 1962 (in the sense of distribution) catalog- — -its effect was likely to linger for a couple of years.

Something in the neighborhood of 40,-000 catalogs were printed up by the defendant in 1961. In late 1961 approximately one-half of these catalogs were distributed by the defendant through Sweets as a part of the 1962 Sweets Architectural Catalog applicable file. Each catalog contained in two different places representations which have been held by this Court as infringing. In addition, and by the arrangement of the defendant, advertisements of the defendant, including the representation held to be infringing, were contained in an aggregate of seven issues of three different trade magazines. One of these magazines is known as “Building Products” and in each of its issues of November, 1961, January, 1962, and March, 1962 (each issue exceeding 40,000 copies) the infringing expression appeared. The same is true of two issues of a magazine called “Architectural Metals” — one in December of 1961 and one in February of 1962 (each issue exceeding 15,000 copies). The same is. true of a trade magazine known as “Ohio Architect” for its issues of January and March, 1962 (each issue exceeding 6,000 copies).

On January 31, 1962, the plaintiff notified the defendant in writing that the *862 illustrations in the Sweets Catalog File constituted an infringement of the plaintiff’s copyright. Cessation and affirmative action was demanded in the letter. In late February of 1962, the defendant, while denying any infringement, indicated that it would be willing to revise its catalog in the future so that there would be no question about it. In March the plaintiff indicated a dissatisfaction unless affirmative action was taken and threatened litigation. The parties continued in correspondence until June, with the plaintiff steadily maintaining infringement and demanding some affirmative action and with the defendant steadily denying infringement and declining affirmative action, which lead to the filing of this case, as we have said, in July of 1962.

Two occurrences of import took place during this correspondence period and, of course, after the defendant was on notice of claimed infringement. In the late spring of 1962, the defendant distributed the other and upwards of twenty some thousand catalogs which it had on hand, i. e., the catalogs containing the material which has been found to be infringing. One of these distributions of upwards of ten thousand was a general mailing by the defendant to architects. The other distribution, also exceeding ten thousand, was to its own representatives, etc.

With respect to the magazine advertisements above described — three of these distributions took place after the defendant was on notice. However, the distributions of the various magazines had, per magazine, been arranged for at one time. Each of the three antedated the notice.

Secondly, while at least one issue of each of the three trade magazines was “on the street” before the January 31, 1962, notice, a careful reading of the notice will show that the notice carefully and “by the fraction” described the catalog claimed to infringe but said nothing about the trade magazine distributions.

Also, as a practical matter, there was nothing much the defendant could do subsequent to receipt of the notice to stop the future distribution of the trade magazines. Its ad was only a small ad, relatively, contained in each magazine and it would appear that any effort that defendant might have made to alter matters in the then future would have been highly unsuccessful. Finally, the effect of trade advertising of this sort in this field is quite minimal — certainly so when compared to the expected effect of catalog distribution.

The statutes applicable to this damage issue are 17 U.S.C.

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Bluebook (online)
337 F. Supp. 859, 170 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 577, 1971 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14566, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blumcraft-of-pittsburgh-v-newman-bros-inc-ohsd-1971.