Frank Shepard Co. v. Zachary P. Taylor Pub. Co.

185 F. 941, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 5121
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. New York
DecidedMarch 15, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 185 F. 941 (Frank Shepard Co. v. Zachary P. Taylor Pub. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frank Shepard Co. v. Zachary P. Taylor Pub. Co., 185 F. 941, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 5121 (W.D.N.Y. 1911).

Opinion

HAZED, District Judge.

The complainant, the Frank Shepard Company, and defendant, Zachary P. Taylor Publishing Company, corporations, are competitors in the business of compiling and publishing annotations or citations of judicial decisions appearing in the Court of Appeals Reports, the Supreme Court and Appellate Division Reports, and the Miscellaneous Reports of the State of New York. Such publications purport to give cross-references and to show whether the cases cited have been subsequently affirmed, reversed, or modified, and complainant in its book indicates by a numeral the particular subject discussed in the opinion which may be found in the syllabus of the case where it is reported. The general plan of the publications is to periodically reproduce a bound volume of the preceding annotations, [942]*942with additions of cases decided since the preceding issue. The complainant issues its books quarterly and delivers them to its subscribers in the months of March, June, September, and December. The record shows that prior to the year 1902 the citations or annotations were printed on slips or pages of gummed paper suitably perforated to enable tearing and pasting on the margin of the pages of the different cases to which the citations refer. At a later date the citations made their appearance in book form with blank spaces on pages for pasting in the subsequent decisions. In March, 1904, 'the present plan or arrangement was followed bj' complainant, and the annotations were printed in bound volumes and issued to the legal profession periodically as above indicated. Since the incorporation of the defendant in 1906, it has printed and issued its volumes semiannually in the months of February and July, in the cumulative plan, and usually delivered the same to the' legal profession after complainant’s book of the preceding quarter was published and circulated. In place of a numeral indicating the important point discussed in the cited decision a topical word' or phrase is printed’ and used in connection with the citation. This method was adopted by the defendant on its incorporation in 1906, when it succeeded to the business and prior publications compiled and published by Zachary P. Taylor, Esq., individually,

The particular acts of the defendant of which the complainant com-plains is that the. defendant, its servants, and employés took and used a'large number of complainant’s citations necessary to compile the first issue published and circulated subsequent to its incorporation; that such citations were used by the defendant, together with that which was already in its possession and which it had legitimately obtained. from, the individual publication of Zachary P. Taylor. It is also claimed that the defendant used complainant’s issue 'of 1902 and its successive issues down to June, 1906, as a basis for its issue of July, 1906, and continued to copy such citations in its subsequent publications.' .

The record contains a list of 138 errors or inaccuracies which are fáirly shown to have been first published in the copyrighted issue of complainant. The first of such errors appeared in 1902, and were reproduced in the subsequent volumes and continued down to the issue of March, 1904, at which time the paster plan was abandoned by complainant and the cumulative system of publishing the citations adopted. It is shown that in the cop3irighted issue of December, 1908, is contained a continuation of all the citations and information.of previous issues, and according tt> the evidence the errors and mistakes discovered at this time by complainant in its publications were traced and their origin ascertained. Upon investigating and examining the defendant’s publications, the precise errors and mistakes previously found in the complainant’s books, consisting of faulty pagination, incorrect numbering of volumes and improper omission of citations, etc., were also found in defendant’s volumes. Such errors relate indiscriminately to cases reported in the Court of Appeals Reports, Hun and Appellate Division Reports, and Miscellaneous Reports.- The defendant earnestly denied using complainant’s book of citations, and further [943]*943contends that it is not affirmatively shown that the errors or inaccuracies first made their appearance in the manner claimed, and it is intimated that because none of Mr. Taylor’s original books of citations printed prior to the year 190(5 were found in existence that such common errors might first have been printed in the issue of defendant’s predecessor.

By the evidence of the witness Geiger it is shown that all of complainant’s successive books from the year 1902 were carefully and diligently examined by him and the errors or mistakes discovered and listed; that he then searched the defendant’s publications, examining all the available volumes beginning in July, 1906, and ending in February, 1907, and he swears that in each instance the said errors and inaccuracies were first found to have been published in complainant’s books. While such testimony does not directly or conclusively trace all the errors beyond the year 1902, and in View of Taylor’s individual work prior to the year 1906, it is not altogether improbable that some of the common errors might first have appeared in Mr. Taylor’s earlier work, yet I think that the complainant as to the original appearance of the common errors has made out a prima facie case, and the defendant, who is charged with infringement of the copyrighted books, was bound to make satisfactory explanations and prove such errors or mistakes to have first appeared in its books or collection of printed citations or in the books of its predecessor. The law is well settled in List Pub. Co. v. Keller (C. C.) 30 Fed. 772, where it is said:

‘•In a case like this, when a close resemblance is the necessary consequence of the use of common materials, the instances of the same errors in the two publications affords one of the surest tests of copying. The improbability that both compilers would have made the same mistakes if both had derived their information from independent sources suggests such a cogent presumption of copying by the later compiler from the first that it can be overlooked only by clear evidence to the contrary. Mawman v. Tegg, 2 Russ. 383; Spiers v. Brown, 31 Law T. 16; Lawrence v. Dana, 2 Amer. Law T. Rep. [N. S.] 402, Fed. Cas. No. 8,136.”

, No satisfactory explanation to the contrary has been made by the defendant. Reliance is placed on the testimony of its editor and ernployés, though not all of them were sworn, that since 1906 they did not make any use whatever of the citations or work specified in the bill. Direct evidence of fraudulent acts is rare and is obtainable in comparatively few cases. The presumption from the similarity and peculiarity of the mistakes and errors found in both publications to my mind indicates tlxe existence of a continuous and systematic appropriation of the copyrighted books in evidence by defendant’s employés and for the purpose of saving themselves the trouble and labor attendant upon original investigation of the decisions. Certainly the assertion that the errors were accidental or typist’s errors would seem most incredulous. The court has examined the comparisons of citations submitted by both parties, together with the explanations pro and contra and testimony offered in opposition to the charge of infringement, but nevertheless it is thought dear from the peculiarity of the common errors in the different publications that unfair and improper use has been made by defendant of the copyrighted editions in ques[944]

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Bluebook (online)
185 F. 941, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 5121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frank-shepard-co-v-zachary-p-taylor-pub-co-nywd-1911.