Kennerley v. Simonds

247 F. 822, 1917 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 882
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedDecember 28, 1917
DocketNo. 177
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 247 F. 822 (Kennerley v. Simonds) 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
Kennerley v. Simonds, 247 F. 822, 1917 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 882 (S.D.N.Y. 1917).

Opinion

MANTON, District Judge.

Complainant moves for a preliminary injunction, seeking to enjoin an alleged infringement of copyright. The prayer asks for equitable relief, based upon contracts made between the complainant and the defendant Simonds.

Simonds is a writer, and has made considerable reputation, first [824]*824writing for daily newspapers, the Sun and the Tribune, of the city of New York, and later composing a book entitled “The Great War” in two volumes—“The First Phase” and “The Second Phase.” He contracted for the publication of these books with the complainant, a publisher, under date of September 21, 1914, and December 16. 1914. He later wrote, for the defendant Doubleday, Page & Co., in a book series to be published in four volumes, called “History of the World War.” It is this latter effort that the complainant complains of, claiming it violates the plaintiff’s copyright and contract qbligations of Simonds. A provision of the contract of September 21st provides:

“The author hereby grants and assigns to the publisher the work or book the subject or title of which is ‘The European War,’ including all serial rights,” etc.

And the further provision:

“The publisher shall have the first refusal of any continuation of this history of ‘The European War.’ ”

The contract of December 16, 1914, provides:

“The author hereby grants and assigns to the publisher a work or book, the subject or title of which is ‘The Great War—Volume 2.’”

And it is further provided that:

“From time to time the publisher shall have the first refusal of any continuation of this history óf ‘The Great War’ on the same terms.”

It is said that the publication of books by Simonds’ codefendants is a violation, not only of complainant’s copyright, but of the terms of the contract above referred to, and therefore complainant presents three questions:

(1) Does defendants’ publication invade complainant’s copyrights?

(2) Are the clauses in the contract giving the complainant the first refusal on any continuation of Mr. Simonds’ history of “The Great War” negative covenants, with the consequent right to complainant to an injunction against Mr. Simonds writing for others any continuation of “The Great War,” and an injunction against any others from publishing any such continuation?

(3) Is the advertising by the defendants of their publication, in which they say that theirs is the only “History of the Great War” written by Mr. Simonds, such evidence of unfair competition as to entitle complainant to an injunction against further acts along these lines by the defendants ?

[1] Complainant copyrighted the first book published, “The Great War—The First Phase,” and later copyrighted the book, “The Great War—The Second Phase.” The book has been placed upon the market at considerable expense for advertising. The defendants have advertised their book, “History of the World War,” placing in conspicuous type the name of Frank Simonds as its author, and stating that:

“He is the man who prophesied this war,” etc. “He is the newspaper man who studied military strategy for eighteen years. * * * He has a style that made him famous. He is the man who spoke to America, but whom Europe heard. He is the editor of the New York Tribune, who is read by [825]*825European general staffs. * * * He is tlie one great historian whom this war has produced.”

It is this advertisement, and the language employed, that constitutes the claim of unfair competition, as well as the violation of copyright. The ninth paragraph of the bill of complaint alleges that some portions of the book have been published in the New York Evening Sun; that the Sun’s copyright in and to such portions was duly acquired by and is owned by the complainant.

The defendants raise the objection that nothing is said in the moving papers to show how the publishers of tlie Evening Sun took the necessary steps to secure statutory copyright, but there is a letter, addressed to the complainant from the editor’s office of the Sun, stating ;

“The Sun will at any time execute formal assignment in the matter of copyright on Mr. Si monels’ editorials. If you will have the article prepared, I will attend to it at once.”

However, passing the question of the complainant’s title, I will consider the claim of violation of the copyright.

The complainant alleged, in his moving papers, that the defendants’ book “is closely similar in substance, content, plan of arrangement, and method of treating this subject, and it is another version or revision of complainant’s volumes, and is a rewriting thereof, which deals with the subject-matter, uses the same general arrangement, and contains the same points of review,” etc., and as illustrative of this attention is called to volume 1, pages 9 to 15, chapter 1, of complainant’s book, entitled “Assassination of the Archduke,” beginning chapter 2 of tlie European Crisis, which described the immediate causes which led to the war, the theory of causes being the cumulative force of conflicting interests as typified in the European crisis preceding the war, to wit, the annexation of Bosnia and Agadir and the conference that followed the defeat of Turkey and Tripoli by Italy, the two Balkan wars resulting in the thwarting of Servian aspiration for a window on the sea, and the creation of irredemption in Servia.

The author nowhere takes the common stand that Germany willed the war and that it was her desire for alliance and expansion. In defendants’ book, the same theory of cause is written in chapter 2, entitled “From Tangier to Armageddon.” The consequences and causes in complainant’s book are Bosnia, Agadir, the conference following Agadir, Tripoli, and the first and second Balkan wars. This is written of in the defendants’ book under the title “Bosnia: The Second Gesture,” and in somewhat similar phrase. The occupation of Bosnia by Austria, as thus described, is given as one of the leading causes for the present war, and it is clear in each book that at the critical moment Germany made a military threat, that this threat was directed at Russia, rather than the other Allies, and that this had the direct result of promoting Russian intrigue in the Balkans. There is similarity of reason and writing in the description of the Agadir incident, following the Bosnia affair. The reference to the German disaster, and Germany’s turn to yield, and Germany’s prestige being terribly shaken, is similar in reason, although couched in different language, and there is a paral[826]*826lelism in dealing with the first Balkan war and the second Balkan war, all of which is in analyzation of the events which led to the present war, stretching over a period of years preceding the war. The 27 pages in defendants’ book which are devoted to an analysis and explanation of the earliest movements in European history are more than an amplification of the subject as given in the complainant’s book. I consider it new matter.

The author, in each case, makes a statement of historical facts as to the objection made by France, Great Britain, and Russia to the annexation of Bosnia by Austria, and reference to- the interposition of Germany at the critical moment on the side of Austria.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
247 F. 822, 1917 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 882, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kennerley-v-simonds-nysd-1917.