Gropper v. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.

38 F. Supp. 329, 49 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 17, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3456
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJanuary 27, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 38 F. Supp. 329 (Gropper v. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gropper v. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., 38 F. Supp. 329, 49 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 17, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3456 (S.D.N.Y. 1941).

Opinion

SYMES, District Judge.

This is an action under the copyright law. The plaintiff claims that he wrote an original dramatic composition entitled “Ex-Racketeer,” a new play, containing a large amount of material wholly original with the complainant, which he copyrighted October 24, 1934, thereby securing the exclusive rights and privileges to the said composition.

He then alleges the respondent infringed said copyright by producing and placing upon the market a talking motion picture entitled “Alcatraz Prison,” copied, according to the plaintiff, largely from the complainant’s copyrighted dramatic composition aforesaid entitled “Ex-Racketeer.”

The usual relief is prayed for.

The Court, in the presence of counsel for both sides, viewed the defendant’s motion picture “Alcatraz Prison” at the defendant’s studio. I have heard the evidence ; observed the witnesses on the stand; read the depositions and the plaintiff’s play; and having heard the arguments of counsel feel fully advised.

The defendant’s proof establishes that Crane Wilbur, a writer, discussed with Brian Foy, a director and producer of motion pictures employed by the defendant Warner Brothers, the idea' of writing a motion picture featuring, as a background, the well known Federal penal institution, Alcatraz Island; preliminary thereto Mr. Wilbur and an associate made a trip to San Francisco and interviewed Mr. Johnson, the Warden of the prison at Alcatraz Island. There is also testimony that they made a research of all literature concerning Alcatraz Island, reading many articles, one in the “Saturday Evening Post,” accounts of the A1 Capone trial, and actually visited the Island, although they were unable to get inside the walls of the prison proper.

The Court takes judicial notice of the fact that in 1934, the time this motion picture was written, Alcatraz Prison and its reputation as a place of incarceration of so-called public enemies and other desperate characters convicted in the Federal courts, was uppermost in the public mind; it is easy to see the public appeal it had for a motion picture or play.

The main theme underlying both stories is old and one any habitue of the theatre or moving pictures is familiar with. It has been portrayed many times on the stage and screen: It is the story of a parent successfully engaged in a questionable business, the successful pursuit of which gives him an assured income;' such a person is called a “racketeer” and is always portrayed as a “straight” criminal, so-called, of clean personal habits and morals, compelled by his very business to associate with underworld characters of the so-called gangster type with a different code that are given so much publicity in the public press, including the accounts of the many sensational investigations and trials in the courts of the land. The character always has a child or relative he loves and keeps separate and apart from his life, in many cases, as in the two stories here, it is a daughter kept in fashionable boarding schools in order to avoid having any contact with the parent, his associates, or opportunity to learn about the parent’s business source of income or associates. There is engendered in the parent in the case at bar, as well as in plaintiff’s play the laudable motive and desire, having made a fortune, to get out of the underworld business, become acquainted with his child, and going to Europe or a new environment to live down his past and devote his time and fortune to the child.

This idea or theme is in the public domain not copyrightable under the authorities as I read them. The question is whether the expression or treatment of the idea in the defendant’s motion picture, the characters and the dialogue, infringes plaintiff’s treatment in his play “Ex-Racketeer” which, according to the testimony, was never produced.

*331 I am convinced on this record that both authors made use of a common fundamental plot, but that the stories are different in their main features: In the plaintiff’s story no attempt is made to capitalize upon “Alcatraz Prison,” or the treatment or life of the prisoners incarcerated therein, or in any other penal institution for that matter. The defendant’s motion picture depicts the life and treatment of prisoners in that institution, and is designed to attract and cater to the public curiosity concerning that well known institution so well advertised in the public press.

Gat Brady, the defendant’s, chief character, desires to give up his life as a successful industrial racketeer. He maintains his daughter separate and apart from himself in a fashionable boarding school. The headmistress of the school, informs him by phone that his name is so well known that it not only reflects upon his daughter, but upon- the school as well, and therefore she requests his daughter’s removal. He plans to join his daughter and take her to Europe. On the eve of their sailing he is arrested by the Federal authorities on a charge of income tax evasion, thus bringing into the picture or plot the story of A1 Capone, the well known criminal character who served time at Alcatraz for a similar offense. After negotiating with the Federal authorities who, Gat’s lawyer informs him, can’t be fixed, he makes an agreement with the District Attorney to take a short sentence, pay a big fine, and thus clear his record. This agreement, however, as in the Capone case is not recognized by the Court, and he is sentenced to five years in the penitentiary, and is incarcerated at Leavenworth. There he meets one of his own' mobsters with whom he had had an altercation; the result of an old feud. A physical conflict ensues between the two, and Gat is transferred to Alcatraz. Red, the Mobster contrives by violating prison rules at Leavenworth, to get transferred to Alcatraz. At Alcatraz an old enemy of Red’s meets up with him, and expresses to other prisoners his hatred of Red. A convenient opportunity occurs for this prisoner to stab Red, who dies claiming that Gat is his murderer, Gat’s knife having been used to commit the murder. As a result of a confession of Red’s murderer made to a Federal stool pigeon passing off as a prisoner in the penitentiary, Gat, who was about to be convicted of the murder, is found not guilty. His daughter stands by him most loyally, shows no revulsion when she meets her father, knowing his unsavory record and does all she can to help him in his subsequent troubles. In this she is greatly aided by the young assistant district attorney responsible for Gat’s conviction, and who, through his love for the daughter, does all he can to have Gat’s good time lost as a result of his altercation in Leavenworth Penitentiary restored.. The motion picture ends with Gat returning to Leavenworth to finish out the short time remaining to be served, following the restoration of his good time off, and with the distinct impression left that in a short time he will be out reunited with his daughter who will marry her boy friend, the assistant district attorney.

The plaintiff’s treatment is entirely different: “Straight” Davis, “the hero” so-called, has a daughter sheltered in a boarding school in California. The entire story is one scene laid in the back room of a notorious night club that he is the proprietor of. When the daughter appears she has full knowledge of her father’s occupation and source of.

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Related

Columbia Pictures Corp. v. National Broadcasting Co.
137 F. Supp. 348 (S.D. California, 1955)
Golding v. R.K.O. Pictures, Inc.
221 P.2d 95 (California Supreme Court, 1950)
Becker v. Loew's, Inc.
133 F.2d 889 (Seventh Circuit, 1943)

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Bluebook (online)
38 F. Supp. 329, 49 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 17, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3456, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gropper-v-warner-bros-pictures-inc-nysd-1941.