Carte v. Duff

25 F. 183, 23 Blatchf. 347, 1885 U.S. App. LEXIS 1766
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedSeptember 16, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 25 F. 183 (Carte v. Duff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carte v. Duff, 25 F. 183, 23 Blatchf. 347, 1885 U.S. App. LEXIS 1766 (circtsdny 1885).

Opinion

Wallace, J.

The complainant, as a purchaser from William S. Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan, British subjects, residing in London, has acquired their right of public representation in the United States of the comic opera “The Mikado, or the Town of Titipu.” Tiie opera was the joint composition of Gilbert and Sullivan, Gilbert being the author of the literary parts and Sullivan of the musical parts. In order, if possible, to protect their property in the opera in the United States they employed George L. Tracey, a citizen of the United States, to come to London and prepare a piano-forte arrangement of the opera from the original orchestral score, with a view to copying the same in the United States. After Tracey made the piano-forte arrangement, proceedings were taken to copyright it in this country as a new and original composition of Tracey. The complainant has acquired the title of Gilbert, Sullivan, and Tracey to the copyright. After the title of the piano-forte arrangement had been entered in the [184]*184office of the librarian of congress, the libretto and vocal score of the op&ra and the piano-forte arrangement of Tracey were published and sold to the public in England with the ponsent of Gilbert and Sullivan. The orchestral score was not published, but has always been kept by Gilbert and Sullivan in manuscript for their own use and that of their licensees to perform the opera. The defendant purchased in England a copy of the libretto, vocal score, and pianoforte arrangement and procured a skilled musician to make an independent orchestration from the vocal score and piano score. He was about to produce the opera at the Standard Theater in the city of New York, with words and voice parts substantially the same as those of the original, and with scenery, costumes, and stage business in imitation of the original, and with the orchestration which he had procured to be made, when the complainant filed his bill in equity to restrain the defendant from the public representation of the opera. A motion has'been made for a preliminary injunction.

As the complainant is an alien and the defendant is a resident citizen, the requisite diversity of citizenship exists between the parties to enable this court to take jurisdiction and protect the equities of the complainant, whether they are founded upon the common-law right of public representation of the opera which he has acquired from the authors, or whether they are founded upon his statutory rights created by the laws of the United States, and vested in him by the acquisition of the copyright of the piano-forte arrangement. A resort to statutory copyright in the United States was indispensable if the authors desired to make publication of their work in print in England, and yet retain the right to control its dramatic representation in this country. They were well advised that, until publication of their manuscript, their exclusive right to multiply copies of their work and control its production upon the stage would be intact, but that after publication this right would become public property unless saved by statutory protection. Common-law rights of authors run only to the time of the publication of their manuscripts with their consent. After that the right of multiplying copies, and, in the ease of a dramatic work, of representation on the stage, by the rule of the common law is abandoned to the public. It is immaterial whether the publication be made in one country or another. Such rights of authors as are saved by statute are not recognized extraterritorially: They can only be enforced in the sovereignty of their origin. No one questions the. justice of the claim of the author of any intellectual production to reap the fruits of his labor in every field where he has contributed to the enlightenment or the rational enjoyment of mankind. It was, therefore, entirely legitimate for the authors of this opera to avail themselves of any provision they could find in the laws of the United States which might protect them in the right to control its dramatic representation in this country. The production of the opera upon the stage would have been practically impossible.if. they could have [185]*185retained for themselves the exclusive right to use the musical parts. They sought to do this by retaining the orchestral parts in manuscript, and copyrighting the .essential elements in their most simple form under our laws, through tho intervention of an arranger, who, as a citizen of the United States, was capable by our statutes of securing a copyright which could be transferred to them. Unless, however, the piano-forte arrangement would be a new and original production of the arranger, it could not be tho subject of a copyright. If it would be a new and original production, it could not he reconverted into an operatic score by a third person, within the authority of Boosey v. Fairlie, 7 Ch. Div. 307, S. C. 4 App. Cas. 711, without infringing the copyright.

The plan adopted was an ingenious one. It encounters several obstacles. First, it is urged that the piano-forte arrangement of Tracey is not a new and original work, because the arranger merely takes from the orchestral score the notes of the instruments used for playing the melody, and selects the notes of the chord in its simple form and transfers them to this score in the sequence in which' they appear in the orchestral score; that he originates nothing, composes no new notes or melodies, and simply culls the notes representing the melodies and their accompaniments expressed by the naked chord. Also, it is insisted that the attempt by the authors of the opera to secure to themselves the sole right of representation here must fail, because it is condemned by the policy of our copyright laws, which are enacted for the protection of our own citizens only in tlioir rights of literary property. It is also insisted that if these objections should bo held untenable, the copyright here is invalid for non-observance of several statutory conditions.

It will be unnecessary to consider some of the interesting questions which wore discussed at the hearing, because, as will be seen, the whole controversy turns upon a single and narrow point. In any aspect of the case, tho complainant is not entitled to the relief sought if the publication of the libretto and vocal score of the opera in London with ilio consent of the authors was a dedication of their play-right or dramatic property in tho opera to the public. So far as he relies upon his title to the copyright of Tracey’s piano-forte arrangement, it is not apparent, assuming his title to be valid, how he can rest his claim to the relief sought upon this ground. Strictly, the only invasion of a copyright consists in the multiplication of copies of tho author’s production without liis consent. Any other use of it, such as Cor the purpose of public reading or recitation, is not piracy. Reade v. Conquest, 9 C. B. (N. S.) 755; Tinsley v. Lacy, 1 Hem. & M. 747. But the copyright laws of congress recognize the playriglit of tho author or proprietor of a dramatic composition, and secure to him the exclusive privilege of its public representation upon the stage. The defendant has not used the piano-forte arrangement except to avail himself of it in making an orchestral score. He does not em[186]*186ploy it or intend to use it in his public representation of the opera.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 F. 183, 23 Blatchf. 347, 1885 U.S. App. LEXIS 1766, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carte-v-duff-circtsdny-1885.