Callaghan v. Myers

128 U.S. 617, 9 S. Ct. 177, 32 L. Ed. 547, 1888 U.S. LEXIS 2260
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 17, 1888
Docket71
StatusPublished
Cited by212 cases

This text of 128 U.S. 617 (Callaghan v. Myers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Callaghan v. Myers, 128 U.S. 617, 9 S. Ct. 177, 32 L. Ed. 547, 1888 U.S. LEXIS 2260 (1888).

Opinion

Mb. Justice Blatchford,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

The volumes- of law reports of which the plaintiff claims a' copyright are in the usual form of such works. Each volume consists of a title-page, of a statement of the entry of copyright, of a list of the judges composing the court, of a table of the cases reported in the volume, in alphabetical order, of a head-note or syllabus to each opinion, with the names of the' respective counsel, and their arguments in some cases, and a statement of facts, sometimes embodied in the opinion and sometimes preceding it, and of an index, arranged alphabetically, and consisting substantially of a reproduction of the head-notes. Of this matter, all but the opinions of the court and what is contained in those opinions is the work of the reporter and the result of intellectual labor on his part.

The broad proposition is contended for by the defendants, that these law reports are public property, and are not susceptible of private ownership, and cannot be the subject of copyright under the legislation of Congress. It is urged that Mr. Freeman, the reporter, was a public officer, whose office was created by chapter 29 of the Bevised Statutes of Illinois of 1845, which enacted as follows, in regard to the Supreme Court and the reporter:

*646 “ Sec. 20. The court shall appoint some person learned in the law to minute down and make report of all the principal matters, drawn out at length, with the opinion of the court, ,in all such cases as may be tried before the said court; and the said reporter shall have a right to use the original written opinion after it shall have been recorded by the clerk.
“Seo. 21. The reporter, before entering upon his duties, shall be sworn by some one of the justices of the Supreme Court faithfully to perform the duties of his said office. He may, for misconduct in office, neglect of duty, incompetency, or other cause shown, to be entered of record, be removed from office.
“Sec. 22. It shall be the duty of the reporter to deliver to the Secretary of State, as soon as convenient after- publication, such number of copies of the respective volumes of the reports of said court as may be necessary to enable the said secretary to distribute the same in the manner provided in the- following section, together with one hundred copies in addition, to be deposited in the secretary’s office for the use of the State.”

Section 23 provided for the distribution of the volumes by the Secretary of State, and § 24 provided, that, upon the delivery of the requisite number of any volume, the Secretary of State should deliver to the reporter a certificate specifying the number of copies which had been so delivered, and that such certificate should entitle the reporter to a warrant drawn by the auditor of public accounts upon the treasury for an amount, for those volumes, at the price for which the books should be sold to individuals, provided the price should not exceed the ordinary price of law books of the same description, to be determined by the auditor, treasurer and Secretary of State. These statutory provisions were amended in 1863, by making the term of office of the reporter six' years, and in 1865 it was enacted that the price of the volumes to be delivered' to the Secretary of State should be $6 each. The reporter was given a salary, by law, in 1877, of $6000 a year.

. It is further contended, that Mr. Freeman, in preparing the official edition of the reports, was not an author, within *647 the meaning of the act of Congress, and that, it was not intended by that act that he should assert a monopoly in the result of his official labors.

But, although there can be no copyright in the opinions of the judges, or in the work done by them in their official capacity as judges, Banks v. Manchester, ante, 244, yet there is no ground of public policy on which a reporter who prepares a volume of law reports, of the character of those in this case, can, in the absence of a prohibitory statute, be debarred from obtaining a copyright for the volume, which will covqp the matter which is the result of his intellectual labor.

In the present case there was no legislation of the State of Illinois which forbade the obtaining of such a copyright by Mr. Fréeinan, or which directed that the proprietary right which would exist in him should pass to the State of Illinois, or that the copyright should be taken out for or in the name of the State, as the assignee of’ such proprietary right. Even though a reporter may be a sworn public officer, appointed by the authority of the government which creates the court of which he is made the reporter, and even though he may be paid a fixed salary for his labors, yet, in the absence of any inhibition forbidding him to take a copyright for that which is the lawful subject of copyright in him, or reserving a copyright to the government as the assignee of his work, he is not deprived of the privilege of taking out a copyright, which would otherwise exist. There is, in such case, a tacit assent by the government to Iris exercising such privilege. The universal practical construction has been that such right exists, unless it is affirmatively forbidden or taken away ; and the right has been exercised by numerous reporters, officially appointed, made sworn public officers, and paid a salary under the governments both of States and of the United States.

This question was, it is true, not directly adjudged in Wheaton v. Peters, 8 Pet. 591. In that case the owners of the copyrights' of Wheaton’s Reports of the Supreme Court of the United States brought a suit in equity against Mr. *648 Peters for publishing and selling a volume of his Condensed Reports of the Supreme Court. The bill was dismissed by thé Circuit Court. On an appeal by the plaintiffs to this court one of the points urged by the defendants was,- that reports of the decisions of this court, published by a reporter .appointed under the authority of an act of Congress, were not within the provisions of the law for the protection of copyrights. This court held (i) that the plaintiffs could assert no'common law right to the exclusive privilege of publishing, but must sustain such right, if at all, under the legislation of Congress; (2) that under such legislation there must have been, in order to secure the copyright, a compliance with the provisions of the statute in regard to the publication in a newspaper of a copy of the record of the title of the book, and. in regard to the délivery of a copy of it, after publication, to the Secretary of State. The court remanded th¿ casé to the Circuit Court for a trial by a jury, as to whether there had. been a compliance with the above-named requisites of the act of Congress.-' In a note by Mr. Peters, at page 618 off the report of the case, he statés that he has been informed that the court did not consider the point whether reports of the decisions of the court, published by a reporter appointed under the authority of an act of Congress, were within the provisions of the law for the protection of copyrights.

When the suit was brought, Mr. Wheaton had published thp twelve volumes of his copyrighted reports.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
128 U.S. 617, 9 S. Ct. 177, 32 L. Ed. 547, 1888 U.S. LEXIS 2260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/callaghan-v-myers-scotus-1888.