Cravens v. Retail Credit Men's Ass'n

26 F.2d 833, 1924 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1385
CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Tennessee
DecidedOctober 29, 1924
Docket43
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 26 F.2d 833 (Cravens v. Retail Credit Men's Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cravens v. Retail Credit Men's Ass'n, 26 F.2d 833, 1924 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1385 (M.D. Tenn. 1924).

Opinion

HICKS, District Judge.

The plaintiff Blue Book Credit Company is a corporation, and the plaintiff Cravens owns its stock. The defendant Retail Credit Men’s Association is also a corporation. Both plaintiffs and defendant are engaged in disseminating information to merchants regarding credit' standing of their customers and prospective customers.

Cravens has been engaged in this business in Chattanooga for many years. His method is to procure subscribers and to distribute among them blank forms, upon which are certain symbols, and upon which forms the subscriber makes a reeord indicated by these symbols as to the credit standing of all Ms customers on which the subscriber reports to the plaintiff. The plaintiffs compile and publish this information annually in what is called the Blue Book. A copy of this Blue Book is delivered to each subscriber, not as a purchaser, but for Ms confidential use as a subscriber, and the subscriber agrees to hold the information contained therein in absolute confidence. In addition to the compiled information above set forth, this Blue Book has carried since 1898 a list of the bankrupts taken from the records of the United States District Court at Chattanooga.

In 1919 the Retail Credit Men’s Association, the defendant in this case, was organized as a corporation, having in the main the same object and purposes as the plaintiffs’ *834 concern, and in 1921 it also began the distribution" of credit reports. This association consisted of merchants and some professional men of Chattanooga, and at the beginning the reports issued by it to its members consisted of mimeograph sheets containing in the main the same character of information as distributed by the plaintiffs. These sheets were finally changed to printed sheets and inserted in loose-leaf binders, and one loose-leaf binder contained all the sheets delivered to each member. This loose-leaf book was renewed once a year, by taking out of the book about monthly all names beginning with say two letters, and replacing in the book revised sheets touching all names beginning with the same letters. • The defendant’s book also carried a list of bankrupts from December, 1921, which its employees compiled from the court record; 'but in 1923 defendant’s manager, obtained a copy of the Blue Book and copied literally therefrom its list of bankrupts from 1898, and had the same printed and inserted in each of the loose-leaf books in the possession of its members. The plaintiffs also insist that the defendant has taken a large number of names from their bankrupt list and copied the same into its (the defendant’s), rating lists, and further that the defendant has copied from plaintiffs’ rating lists a large number of names with identical information into its (the defendant’s) rating list.

The defendant admits plaintiffs’ copyright, and that it did, through Whitaker, copy plaintiffs’ list of bankrupts from plaintiffs’ Blue Book, and republish the same in its book; in other words, it admits a violation of the copyright law in this particular, but it denies it in all other particulars. The evidence leaves the' question in so much doubt as to whether there was any copying, other than as admitted by the defendant, that the court is not satisfied to say that such copying is established by the weight of the evidence, except in the particular matters hereinafter mentioned.

It is true that plaintiffs present a list of some 80 names appearing in their bankrupt list, and which likewise appear in defendant’s rating list with a star, and plaintiffs surmise that these 80 names were copied from their bankrupt list into defendant’s rating list, and that the star indicates bankruptcy. Mr. Hansberger, manager of defendant, and Whitaker, who succeeded him as manager, both deny that any such thing was done. Whitaker says that the star does not necessarily mean bankruptcy, but that it indicates “special information.” There are about 2,750 names in plaintiffs’ 1922 bankruptcy list, and about 3,000 in their 1923 list, and it is hardly more probable that the defendant copied these 80 names out of either the 1922 or 1923 book of bankrupts than that it acquired them from an independent investigation; at least, one can hardly say that the weight of the evidence shows that these names were copied, and, even if they were, under the authority of Dun v. Lumbermen’s Credit Association, 209 U. S. 20, 28 S. Ct. 335, 52 L. Ed. 663, 14 Ann. Cas. 501, the value of such copied matter is so relatively small as compared with the defendant’s work acquired by original investigation as not to warrant an injunction. It is quite as probable that the names in defendant’s rating list, and in connection with which the star is attached to the rating letter or letters, were acquired from independent investigation made by the defendant of the bankrupts from the District Court records from 1921, as otherwise. It is not seriously insisted, as I understand it, that the rating letters to which the star is attached were plagiarized. It is only insisted that the names themselves were copied, and that the star itself is a character of copying, in that' it represents the same thing as found in plaintiffs’ bankrupt list.

In support of plaintiffs’ claim that a large number of names, with the accompanying information touching credits, was copied from its rating lists into defendant’s rating lists, the plaintiffs file two lists of names, one containing 72 names and the other 26. The plaintiffs point out that the list containing 72 names, which is filed as Plaintiffs’ Exhibit B, is identical in names and ratings with the same names and’ratings found in defendant’s book. This may be true as to some earlier edition or revision of defendant’s book, but is not in fact true as to the defendant’s book, which plaintiffs have filed as Exhibit I to the original bill. In fact, Mr. Cravens does not insist that it is true as to this book styled Exhibit I, which is the only defendant’s book in evidence. Assuming that this list of 72 names is identical in names and ratings in plaintiffs’ book and some earlier edition or revision of defendant’s book, the situation presents some evidence of copying. Assuming that each has an unusually high standing with reference to prompt payment, it is nothing unusual that each should be reported with an “A” only. I use these names simply as an illustration, but it must be conceded as singular that, unless copying was done, there should be in each book exactly 12 A’s as to Mr. -, 15 A’s as to Mr. -, and 21 A’s as to -. Further, it is not particularly suspicious that, out of 17 *835 names in each list, each name should have the identical rating “E.”

It must be kept in mind that both plaintiffs and defendant are engaged in the same character of work, upon the same general plan, and that if each concern, acting independently of each other, honestly and faithfully sought the exact facts as to each name reported on, the more faithfully and particularly each reflected the truth in its publication, the more nearly alike must be the reported result.

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Bluebook (online)
26 F.2d 833, 1924 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cravens-v-retail-credit-mens-assn-tnmd-1924.