Daly v. Palmer

36 How. Pr. 206
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 36 How. Pr. 206 (Daly v. Palmer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daly v. Palmer, 36 How. Pr. 206 (uscirct 1868).

Opinion

Blatchford, J.

This is an application for a provisional injunction to restrain the defendants from the public performance and representation, and from the sale for dramatic representation of a scene called the “ railroad scene” in a play called “ After Dark.” The plaintiff is by profession a dramatic author, his business being to compose, write and produce on the theatrical stage dramatic compositions, commonly called plays. The defendants are the managers of a public place of theatrical amusement, in the city of New York, called Niblo’s garden. Before the 1st of August, 1867, the plaintiff composed and wrote a dramatic composition called “Under the Gaslight,” and on that day he took the proper steps to secure to himself a copyright for the composition, under the provisions of the act of February 3d, 1831, (4 U. S. Stat. at Large, 436), by depositing before publication a printed copy of the title of the composition, as author and proprietor, in the clerk’s office of the district court of the southern district of New York, where he resided at the time. The composition was afterwards printed and published, and within three months from its publication he caused a copy of it, as printed and published, to be delivered to said clerk. [208]*208He also gave information of copyright being secured by causing to be printed and inserted in the several copies published the words prescribed by the fifth section of the act.

The act of 1831 confers upon the author and proprietor of a dramatic composition, .duly copyrighted, the -sole right and liberty of printing, re-printing, publishing and vending such composition, in whole or in part, for the term of twenty-eight years from the time of recording the title of such composition, in the manner directed by the act. The act of August 18th, 1856 (11 U. S. Stat. at Large, 138), provides, that any copyright thereafter granted under the laws of the United States .“to the author or proprietor of any dramatic composition, designed or suited for public representation, shall be deemed and taken to confer upon the said author or proprietor, his heirs and assigns, along with the sole right to print and publish the said composition, the sole right also to act, perform or represent the same, or cause it to be acted, performed or represented, on any stage or public place during the whole period for which the copyright is obtained. The bill alleges that the plaintiff's play was designed and suited for public representation; that it was represented for the first time on the 12th of August, 1867, under his direction, and for his benefit, at the New York theatre, a public place of theatrical amusement in New York, and was thenceforward represented there for eight consecutive weeks; that it met with great success, attracted crowds of persons, and was pecuniarily profitable to the plaintiff to a large amount; that the particular cause of such success was what was commonly called, after such public performance, the “ railroad scene” at the end of the third scene of the fourth act, in which one of the characters is represented as secured by another, and laid helpless upon the rails of a railroad track in such manner, and with the presumed intent, that the railroad train, momentarily expected, shall run him down and kill him, and just at the moment when such a fate seems inevitable, another of the characters contrives to reach [209]*209the intended victim, and to drag him from the track as the train rushes in and passes over the spot.

That this incident and scene was entirely novel and unlike any dramatic incident known to have been heretofore represented on any stage, or invented by any author, before the plaintiff so composed, produced and represented the same. That the playing of said composition and scene caused the same to become famous in all parts of the United States and Canada and in England. That the chief value of the composition and its popularity; depend upon said “railroad scene;” that it was repeatedly produced and represented by and for the advantage of the plaintiff in many cities and towns of the United States and Canada, to the profit of the plaintiff.

That before learning of the alleged wrongs mentioned ilithe bill attempted by the defendants, the plaintiff had made-arrangements for representing the play dramatically at New York and in various places in the United States during the present winter and the approaching spring; that he accordingly commenced to represent the play at the New York, theatre, in the city of New York, on the 4th of November,. 1868; that soon after the production, representation and. printing of the play in the United States, one Dion Boucicault, a dramatic author and actor and theatrical manager, a subject of Great Britain, residing in England, procured a copy of said play by some means, and without the knowledge or consent of the plaintiff, prepared therefrom a play,, which he called “ After Dark,” in which play he introduced, several of the scenes and incidents of the plaintiff’s play,, varying them slightly, but following in them the invention and plan of the plaintiff’s play, in a manner which ■ was, intended to differ from it only slightly, so as colorably to be a different work, while substantially retaining the attractive features of the plaintiff’s play, and which contained, with only colorable variations, the said “railroad scene” of the plaintiffs play, substituting for the surface railroad an. under[210]*210ground railroad, for the rescuer óf the victim to be killed on the railroad a man for a woman, for the railroad station in which the rescuer was confined a cellar, and for the breaking down a door to escape and rescue the victim the breaking down a wall orthedoorinawa.il; that the work of Boucicault is a palpable imitation of the plaintiff’s said “railroad scene,” and is plagiarized therefrom and put into the play called “After Dark,” by Boucicault, for the purpose of obtaining the pecuniary benefit which might otherwise result- to the plaintiff from the representation of his play; that the play of “ After Dark” was performed in England without the plaintiff’s consent, to the great profit of Boucicault, and was indebted for ist success and profit to such imitation of said “railroad scene;” that Boucicault has sent copies of his play containing such plagiarism of said “railroad scene” to the defendants in the United States, for sale and performance for his own profit, and several copies of it are in the defendants’ possession; that the defendants are intending, and have announced their purpose to perform such play called “After Dark” publicly on the stage, at Niblo’s garden, in New York, on the 16th of November, 1868, and every night thereafter till further notice, without the consent of the plaintiff; that such play and the plagiarism of said “railroad scene” are being rehearsed at Niblo’s garden, under the direction of the defendants, with a view to such public performance thereof, and that the defendant Palmer, acting for Boucicault, is about to sell copies of the play called “After Dark,” with said plagiarized scene, to other persons in the United States, to be publicly represented.

[211]*211There is no answer to the bill, nor is there any denial of the allegations that Boucicault procured a copy of the plaintiff’s play, and prepared therefrom the “ railroad scene” in the play of “After Dark,” and intended that the latter should only be colorably different from the “railroad scene” in the plaintiff’s play, by making the substitutions before mentioned, and that the “railroad scene” in the play of “After Dark” was plagiarized by Boucicault from the “railroad scene” in the plaintiff’s play.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 How. Pr. 206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daly-v-palmer-uscirct-1868.