Hoague-Sprague Corporation v. Frank C. Meyer Co.

31 F.2d 583, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1073
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedMarch 22, 1929
Docket3605
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 31 F.2d 583 (Hoague-Sprague Corporation v. Frank C. Meyer Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoague-Sprague Corporation v. Frank C. Meyer Co., 31 F.2d 583, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1073 (E.D.N.Y. 1929).

Opinion

*584 CAMPBELL, District Judge.

This is a suit for infringement of a copyright owned by the plaintiff. Plaintiff is a manufacturer of shoe boxes.

Formerly the bulk of shoe boxes were plain white boxes; others were covered with colored paper, with a label on one end. There came a demand for shoe boxes entirely covered with a wrap of special design covering the whole box. This is termed a whole wrap.

Plaintiff satisfied the demands by purchasing wrappers from other box makers or lithographers, but about 1927, when the demand for the decorative whole wraps began to increase, plaintiff commenced creating and producing whole wraps of a decorative character and a special design, and has continued to create and produce specially designed whole wraps for shoe boxes.

Plaintiff has created a large number of designs at a substantial cost to it. No purchaser contributes to the cost of the creation of the designs, but designs are made at plaintiff’s expense, to suit customers, often including a form of words or some specific trade insignia desired by the purchaser. The designs are the property of the plaintiff and are copyrighted by it.

This is a common practice in this trade. At the request of Mr. Rosenthal, of the Royal Shoe Stores, plaintiff had printed between December 13 and 20, 1927, approximately 25.000 specially designed royal de luxe wraps, the wraps in suit, the quantity which he indicated would answer its then present requirements, and which it desired plaintiff should stock. All of these wraps bear the copyright notice.

Promptly after the first printing in December, 1927, plaintiff, as proprietor, filed its application in the Patent Office for registration of its copyright for the label or wrap in suit. On February 14, 1928, the Patent Office issued to the plaintiff, on such application, a certificate of registration, No. 33,440.

Mr. Rosenthal, of the Royal Shoe Stores, promptly called on the plaintiff, after the 25.000 whole wraps were printed, and took a few boxes, bearing the wrap in suit, to leave with his shoe manufacturers as the box in which he wanted his shoes delivered. No order for boxes bearing the wrap in suit was received by the plaintiff until April, 1928, after this suit had been commenced, but at the request of the Royal Shoe Stores certain end labels were furnished to them by the plaintiff. Plaintiff learned in January, 1928, that the defendant was supplying the alleged infringing boxes.

No time need be spent in discussing the question of infringement, as the wrapping of the box stipulated to have been made and sold by the defendant in January, 1928, and the boxes bearing the same wrapper, whose manufacture and sale continued during February and March, 1928, were of precisely the same design as the wrap in suit, but the defendant’s wrap was inferior in quality of reproduction and workmanship.

The wrap or label in question is a genuine label, created and used for decorative purposes in connection with an article of manufacture. ' It is an original creation of a decorative character, the product of creative or intellectual labor. Defendant has shown its opinion of plaintiff’s said label by its desire to reproduce it, and that opinion must be persuasive with us.

Defendant contends that the "copyright in suit is invalid, because of repeal of the law under which registration is effected; but I cannot agree with that contention. Copyrights exist solely by reason of acts of Congress enaeted by virtue of the provisions of the Constitution.

This subject has been well covered in the opinion of Judge Inch on the motion for preliminary injunction in the instant suit [(D. C.) 27 F.(2d) 176], and I agree with his conclusions; but on the trial this question was fully argued, and I will briefly state my reasons for holding the copyright of the plaintiff valid.

Article 1, § 8, of the Constitution, provides as follows: “The Congress shall have power * * * to promote the progress of science and useful arts, by securing for limited times to authors and inventors the exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries.” While the Constitution uses the terms “authors” and “writings,” the words have received a broad interpretation by the courts.

The first Copyright Act, that of 1790, granted protection only to books, maps, and charts; but protection has been expanded until it extends to composers of music, artists, engravers, dramatists, photographers, lithographers, printers, and in general to all who exercise creative, intellectual, or aesthetic labor in the production of a concrete, tangible form. De Wolfe’s An Outline of Copyright Law, p. 16; Burrow-Giles Lithographic Co. v. Sarony, 111 U. S. 53, 4 S. Ct. 279, 28 L. Ed. 349.

The various copyright enactments by Congress subsequent to 1790 require no attention until we come to the Act of 1870. 16 Stat. 198. The latter act consolidated the *585 laws as to patents and copyrights, and made the first provision as to trade-mark registration; sections 1 to 76 relating exclusively to patents, sections 77 to 84 to trade-marks, and sections 85 to 110 to copyrights. Section 86 provided that: “Any citizen, * * * the author, inventor, designer, or proprietor of any book, map, chart, dramatic or musical composition, engraving, cut, print, or photograph * * * shall, upon complying with the provisions of this Act, have the sole liberty of printing, reprinting, publishing, * *' * the same.”

Section 90 provided for the registration of copyright by depositing copies with the Librarian of Congress, and section 97 provided that no action shall be maintained for infringement of copyright, unless the copyrighted article shall have borne the specified copyright notice.

The Act of June 18, 1874, 18 Stat. 78, amended the act of 1870. Sections 1 and 2 of the amending act require no consideration, but section 3 (17 USCA § 63) provides as follows:

“In the construction of this act, the words ‘engraving,’ ‘cut’ and ‘print’ shall be applied only to pictorial illustrations or works connected with the fine arts, and no prints or labels designed to be used for any other articles of manufacture shall be entered under the copyright law, but may be registered in the Patent Office. And the Commissioner of Patents is hereby charged with the supervision and control of the entry or registry of such prints or labels, in conformity with the regulations provided by law as to copyright of prints, except that there shall be paid for recording the title of any print or.label not a trade-mark, six dollars, which shall cover the expense of furnishing a copy of the record under the seal of the Commissioner of Patents, to the party entering the same.”

. This section simply changed the place of registration and the fee for labels designed to be used for articles of manufacture, so that, instead of their being entered with the Librarian of Congress, they might be registered in the Patent Office and protected in conformity to the Copyright Law.

Labels so registered were subject to the provisions of the prevailing Copyright Law and protected thereby. Higgins v. Keuffel, 140 U. S. 428, 11 S. Ct. 731, 35 L. Ed.

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Bluebook (online)
31 F.2d 583, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1073, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoague-sprague-corporation-v-frank-c-meyer-co-nyed-1929.