D'Ole v. Kansas City Star Co.

94 F. 840, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 3104
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Missouri
DecidedJune 12, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 94 F. 840 (D'Ole v. Kansas City Star Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
D'Ole v. Kansas City Star Co., 94 F. 840, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 3104 (circtwdmo 1899).

Opinion

PHILIPS, District Judge.

This is an action for damages for the invasion of a copyright, and grows out of substantially the following state of facts: The plaintiff is a photographer at Kansas City, and in 1896 he got up a pamphlet under thb title of “The Answer,” followed by the words, “How to Sit — When to Sit— What to Wear — When Having a Photo Taken.” This pamphlet is about 4 by 6 inches in size, and contains about 10 or 12 pages of printed matter, including pictures of various persons. As the preface shows, its principal purpose seemed to be to advertise and exploit the plaintiff’s profession, and his attainment in the art of photography. The rest of the matter contains simply directions about how to dress and pose, and the like, in having a photograph taken, with additional precautionary suggestions along this line. On the 15th day of March, 1897, the plaintiff obtained a certificate from the librarian of congress of the pamphlet being copyrighted. In November, 1897, the defendant published in its newspaper, the Kansas City Star, an article taken from the Philadelphia Ledger, a newspaper published in Philadelphia, Pa., which contained several of the paragraphs found in said pamphlet. It is sufficient to say that this article contained enough of the printed matter of the pamphlet to constitute an infringement of plaintiff’s- work. At the time of this publication by defendant, it was not aware of the existence of plaintiff’s pamphlet, and of course was not aware that it had been copyrighted. For this publication plaintiff has brought suit for $5,000 damages. The cause has been submitted to the court without the intervention of a jury.

On the evidence in this case, if the court were to meet the question oi the ascertainment of damages, it would be exceedingly difficult to find any substantial predicate for the assessment. The evidence shows that the plaintiff in the spring of 1897, and perhaps earlier, in part, had freely distributed and scattered about [841]*841!0,000 or more copies of this pamplilet over the city, on the streets, and in business houses and private residences, showing that he regarded it in the nature of an advertising “dodger.” He never sold a single copy of the pamphlet, nor even offered it for sale. He had never, prior to this publication in the Star, had any estimation made by any publishing house or merchant, or other person, as to any terms upon which they would undertake its sale. And the only evidence offered at this trial in respect of its commercial value is his statement and that of one other witness to the effect that they thought it could be sold by some business house to persons who might desire to have their photographs taken, or lo other photographers, while other witnesses in the case — • experienced photographers — testified that they had seen other pamphlets of a not very dissimilar character, and that the information contained therein was quite common to the profession, and that they did not. regard the pamphlet as possessing any commercial value. From which it is quite apparent that any estimation the court could place upon its value would be highly speculative. .Furthermore, how could the court, with any degree of required certainty, justifying the assessment'of damages against the defendant. determine what damage resulted to the plaintiff from such publication in this newspaper? The plaintiff did not distribute, or attempt to distribute, or sell, a single copy of this pamphlet after the publication in the newspaper, to enable the court by comparison to determine in the remotest degree how the commercial value of his pamphlet was affected by such publication. He could not. without such test or effort, content himself by simply saying that he assumed that his exclusive property in the pamphlet was injured by the newspaper publication, and that if would be useless for him to make the effort to dispose of his pamphlet. Such a method of constituting a basis for the assessment of damages would be too easy for the plaintiff, and would certainly be a very unsafe criterion for the court to recognize in assessing such damages.

In the view, however, taken by the court of another branch of this case, it is not necessary that the court should further discuss the question of damages. It is conceded that if the fact should be found, on the weight of evidence, that prior to securing the copyright the plaintiff published his pamphlet, he is not entitled to the protection of the statute giving him the exclusive right to publish its contents, and this action would fail. The certificate of the librarian of congress shows, as already stated, that the copyright was granted on the 15th day of March, 1897. Beyond cavil the evidence shows that an edition of this book was printed in Kansas City, paid for by and delivered to the plaintiff, about the middle of December, 1896. This edition amounted to 5,000 copies. Although not authorized by law to do so, this edition^ on the reverse side of the title page, contained the following, “Copyrighted 1896 by W. T. D’OJe, Kansas City, Mo.” The evidence further shows that the plaintiff then stated that he wished to get out riiese pamphlets for distribution for the holidays, — evidently re[842]*842ferring to the approaching Christmas, 1896, — and that he then knew the print showed that the book purported to have been copyrighted in 1896; and he stated that this made no difference, as nobody would know or pay any attention to it. The inference is therefore persuasive that he obtained these pamphlets for circulation before or during said holidays; and it is an afterthought when he states that he would not .distribute the books prior to obtaining the copyright, as he stated that the absence of such certificate of copyright made no difference with him. This evidence is'supplemented by the further testimony of a credible witness, sustained by the circumstance of a contemporaneous event well calculated to fix the date in his mind, that he saw copies of this book at a hotel in this city on or before the 20th day of February, 1897. This is followed up by the testimony of one of the ladies whose picture appears in this pamphlet, that her father on or about the 1st day of March, 1897, brought her one or more copies of this pamphlet. In its ordinary acceptation, the word “publication” means “the act of publishing a thing or making it public; offering to public notice; or rendering it accessible to public scrutiny.” In copyright law, it is “the act of making public a book; that is, offering or communicating it to the public by sale or distribution of copies.” Without undertaking to state the qualifications of this definition, as applied to certain incidents, by which the book might be exhibited by the author, prior to copyrighting it, without amounting to a publication, within the spirit of the statute, it is safe to say that the appearance of a pamphlet, after its delivery to plaintiff by the publisher, in a public hotel, subject to be seen and read by any person about so public a place, certainly was a “rendering it accessible to public scrutiny,” and was likewise a “communicating it to the public by distribution of copies.” When copies of it were furnished to the father of said witness, and put in her hands for her scrutiny, or any person to whom she might show it, it was a sending out of the- book. More than this, the evidence of the plaintiff shows that in,March, 1897, just after he obtained his certificate from Washington, he ordered and had published 5,000 more copies of this pamphlet, a copy of w,hich last edition is in evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
94 F. 840, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 3104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dole-v-kansas-city-star-co-circtwdmo-1899.