Jollie v. Jaques

13 F. Cas. 910, 1 Blatchf. 618
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedOctober 15, 1850
DocketCase No. 7,437
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 13 F. Cas. 910 (Jollie v. Jaques) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jollie v. Jaques, 13 F. Cas. 910, 1 Blatchf. 618 (circtsdny 1850).

Opinion

NELSON,. Circuit Justice.

This is a bill filed to restrain the defendants from an infringement of the plaintiff’s copy-right in a musical composition known as “The Serious Family Polka, &e., arranged by George Loder.” The author assigned his interest in the same to the plaintiff, who, on the 19th of February, 1850, deposited the title of the piece with the clerk of the district court for •the Southern district of New-York, and on the next day the musical composition itself, in pursuance of the act of congress of the 3d of February, 1S31 (4 Stat. 436), for the purpose of securing the copy-right.

1. The first section of that act provides, among other things, that any person, being a citizen of the L'nited States, or resident therein, who shall be the author of any book or books, map, chart, or musical composition. and the legal assigns of such person, shall have the sole right, and liberty of printing, publishing, and vending such book, &c., or musical composition, in whole or in part, for the term of twenty-eight years from the time of recording the title thereof. The fourth section prescribes, that no person shall be entitled to the benefit of the act, unless he shall, before publication, deposit a printed copy of the title of such book, &e., or musical composition, in the clerk’s office of the district court of the district wherein, the author or proprietor shall reside; and it is made the duty of the clerk to record the same in a book kept for that purpose; and the author or proprietor shall also, within three months from the publication, deliver or cause to be delivered a copy of said book, &c., or musical composition, to the clerk of said district; and it is also made the duty of the clerk, at least once in each year, to transmit a certified list of all such records, together with the several copies of books, musical compositions, &c., deposited, to the secretary of state, to be preserved in his office. The fifth section prescribes, that no person shall be entitled to the benefit of the act, unless he shall give information of the copy-right being secured, by causing to be inserted in each of the several copies published during the term secured, on the title page or the next page, if a book, or on the face, if a musical composition, the words: “Entered according to act of congress. &c., by A. B, in the clerk’s office of the district court, &e.”

It will be seen, therefore, by the provisions of this act, that there are three preliminary steps requisite to the securing of a valid copy-right: (1) The deposit of a printed copy of the title, before publication, with the clerk of the district court; (2; notice to the public, by printing, in the place designated, the fact of the entry, in the form prescribed by the statute; and (3) the deposit with the clerk of a copy of the book or musical composition within three months from the date of publication.

The tenth section of the act of congress passed August 10, 1846 (9 Stat. 106), establishing the Smithsonian Institution, provides that “the author or proprietor of any book. [912]*912map, chart, musical composition. &e.. for which a copy-riglit shall be secured under the existing acts of congress, or those which shall hereafter be enacted respecting copyrights, shall, within three months from the publication of said book, &c.. deliver, or cause to be delivered, one copy of the same to the librarian of the Smithsonian Institution, and one copy to the librarian of congress library, for the use of the said libraries.”

No penalty is declared in the act, as a consequence of the omission to comply with the provision; but it is insisted by the counsel for the defendants, that a construction should be given to the section, making the delivery of the copies a prerequisite to a title to the copy-right under the act of 1S31, as otherwise the provision would be practically ineffectual to accomplish the object intended.

The law may be defective in this respect, for want of a penalty to enforce it; but we are unable to perceive how the construction contended for can be supported, upon any sound view of the section. It is found in an act establishing the Smithsonian Institution, and does not purport to be an amendment of the act of 1S31 providing for the copy-right of authors. And besides, the duty is imposed upon the author or proprietor of any book or musical composition, “for which a copy-right shall be secured under the existing acts of congress, or those which shall hereafter be enacted;” thereby necessarily excluding any implication that it was intended to make the delivery to the respective libraries a condition to the vesting of the title to the copy-right. The duty is enjoined upon those who have already acquired the right, and upon those only, and no forfeiture is declared in case of a noncompliance. It would be a violent construction of the provision to annex this penalty by judicial interpretation. Every sound rule in the construction of statutes is against it. Courts lean against the enlargement of penal statutes beyond the fair and necessary import of their terms; much more will they lean against the creation of a forfeiture by implication, in the absence of any words indicating such intent.

In the ease of Wheaton v. Peters. 8 Pet. [33 U. S.] 591, 663. 665. which arose under the acts of congress passed May 31, 1790 (1 Stat. 124), and April 29. 1802 (2 Stat. 171), it was decided by a divided court, that the publication of a copy of the record, as entered in the clerk's office of the district court, in the newspaper, within the two months, and the delivery of a copy of the book to the secretary of state within the six months prescribed by the third and fourth sections of the former act. were prerequisites to the title to the copy-right. But these acts were parts of the system, and steps required to be taken by the author or proprietor, to entitle himself to the exclusive right granted under it. And besides, the language of the first section of the act of 1802, which was supplementary to that of 1790, was regarded by a majority of the court as having, in terms, made the publication in the newspaper and the deliveiT to the secretary essential to the vesting of a complete title. But, even in that case, two of the learned judges dissented, maintaining that the title to the copy-right vested immediately on the deposit in the clerk’s office of a copy of the title of the book, and the insertion upon the title page of the fact that an entry had been made according to the act of congress; that the subsequent steps prescribed by the statute were only declaratory; and that the omission of them did not work a forfeiture.

The question here is very different from the one decided in that case. The provision is found in a separate act — one relating to a different subject, and not referring to or purporting to be an amendment of the copyright act of 1831, nor embracing within it any language indicating an intent to make the steps prescribed a condition of the title. The delivery of the book or musical composition is simply a duty enjoined upon the author or composer who has secured and is already in the enjoyment of his copy-right under existing acts of congress. The obligation to deliver does not attach till the right is secured.

It is very probable that congress designedly omitted to annex any penalty in case of neglect to furnish the librarians with the copies, intending that the provision should be declaratory only, leaving it optional with authors to deliver them or not.

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Bluebook (online)
13 F. Cas. 910, 1 Blatchf. 618, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jollie-v-jaques-circtsdny-1850.