Khan v. Leo Feist, Inc.

70 F. Supp. 450, 73 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 104, 1947 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2818
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedFebruary 24, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 70 F. Supp. 450 (Khan v. Leo Feist, 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
Khan v. Leo Feist, Inc., 70 F. Supp. 450, 73 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 104, 1947 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2818 (S.D.N.Y. 1947).

Opinion

BYERS, District Judge.

The plaintiff alleges infringement by the defendants of the former’s copyright of the words and lyrics of the song “Rum and Coca-Cola” contained in a booklet called “Victory Calypsoes, 1943 Souvenir Collection” published and copyrighted in Trinidad, B.W.I., on March 1, 1943.

The plaintiff obtained a United States copyright for the booklet on June 29, 1945, following an ad interim copyright of May 1, 1945, granted pursuant to Presidential proclamation of March 14, 1944, No. 2608, extending the time of a national of Great Britain to comply with the provisions of the applicable portion of the United States Copyright Statute 17 U.S.C.A. § 8, the required reciprocal recognition benefits of copyright between the United States and Great Britain being present

The booklet is a modest paper-bound 28-page affair containing the lyrics of this and other songs which were rendered by Calypso singers in tent shows on the Island of Trinidad during 1942 and 1943.

The defendants obtained a United States copyright for their song “Rum and Coca-Cola” in December of 1944, first in the name of defendant Amsterdam, and later in the joint names of himself and the other individual defendants, the copyright notice reading: “Copyright 1944 Leo Feist, Inc., 1619 Broadway, New York, N. Y.”

The infringement here charged has to do with the chorus of these two songs, which may be compared for convenience as follows :

Also the first verses as respectively printed may be compared as throwing light upon defendant Amsterdam’s assertion of original composition:

*452 The complaint was filed August 10, 1945, forty-two days after the plaintiff obtained his United States copyright.

In addition to denials, the answers of the ' defendants, which are uniform, assert the following defenses:

First: Failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.

Second: “Plaintiff’s work is inherently salacious, immoral and lewd”, and is not subject to copyright protection.

At the trial the following defenses were added without objection:

Third (as a partial defense) : In effect, that plaintiff’s copyright being for a book, the only protection afforded was against printing, reprinting, etc., after March 13, 1945.

Fourth: Laches creating estoppel.

Fifth: “Plaintiff does not have title to the alleged copyright or the rights thereunder which said defendant is alleged to infringe.”

Whether plaintiff has indeed deraigned title to the copyright upon which he relies, requires consideration at the threshold of his case.

The United States copyright depends for its legal efficacy upon that which was granted in Trinidad, and since the plaintiff was not the author of the literary achievement in question, it becomes necessary to inquire whether he was the “copyright owner or proprietor” of the work first produced or published in Trinidad, according to the statutory requirement, in order that the Presidential proclamation might operate in his favor. Attention is thus drawn to the copyright law of England- as it applied to the English possession known as Trinidad, when the plaintiff’s rights are said to have arisen.

The British Copyright Act of 1911 has been offered in evidence, and according to its terms, copyright subsists throughout His Majesty’s Dominions to which the Act extends, in literary work, if so published.

“* * * ‘copyright’ means the sole right to produce or reproduce the work or any substantial part thereof in any material form whatsoever, * *

Certain other material provisions will be quoted:

"5. — (1) Subject to the provisions of this Act, the author of a work shall be the first owner of the copyright therein:

“Provided that—

<‘(a) * * *

“(b) where the author was in the employment of some other person under a contract of service or apprenticeship and the work was made in the course of his employment by that person, the person by whom the author was employed shall, in the absence of any agreement to the contrary, be the first owner of the copyright, but where the work is an article or other contribution to a newspaper, * * * (not material here).”

“(2) The owner of the copyright in any work may assign the right, either wholly or partially, and either generally or subject to limitations to the United Kingdom or any self-governing dominion or other part of His Majesty’s dominions to which this Act extends, and either for the whole term of the copyright or for any part thereof, and may grant any interest in the right by licence, but • no such assignment. or grant shall be valid unless it is in writing signed by the owner of the right in respect of which the assignment or grant is made, or by his duly authorised agent;”

“27. The Legislature of any British possession to which this Act extends may'modify or add to any. of the provisions of this Act in its application to the possession, but, except so far as such modifications and additions relate to procedure and remedies, they shall apply only to works the authors whereof were, at the time of the making of the work, resident in the possession, and to works first published in the possession.” The provision just quoted would seem to mean that, if Trinidad, being a British possession, chose to, it could modify or add to the provisions of the Act in respect of matters other than of procedure and remedies, i.e., matters of substance, such perhaps as the requirement that an assignment of copyright be in writing, according to section 5 above; the plaintiff relies upon Barnett v. Glossop, 1 Bingham’s New Cases 633, to sustain its- contention that the requirement is merely procedural.

*453 It is not disputed that the Copyright Act of Great Britain was adopted in Trinidad and a Copyright Ordinance was duly enacted (Chapter 31, Number 16 — Revised Ordinances of 1940, Trinidad and Tobago) as follows:

“1. This ordinance may be cited as the copyright ordinance.

“2. In this ordinance, infringement, when applied to a copy of a work in which copyright subsists, means any copy including any colorable imitation made or imported in contravention of the provisions of this ordinance.

“3. Three printed or lithographed copies of the whole of every book, * * *, which shall be printed or lithographed in the Colony, * * *, shall, within one month after the date on which any such book shall first be delivered out of the press, and notwithstanding any agreement (if the book be published) between the printer and the publisher thereof, be delivered free of any charge, claim, or demand whatsoever by the printer, bound, sewed, or stitched together and upon the best paper on which the same shall be printed or lithographed, to the Colonial Secretary. * * * The Colonial Secretary shall thereupon give a receipt in writing for the copies so received.”

It is not argued for plaintiff that the lawmaking body of Trinidad exercised the power conferred by Section 27 of the British Act to modify the requirement of Section 5 thereof, that a valid assignment of copyright was required to be in writing.

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Bluebook (online)
70 F. Supp. 450, 73 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 104, 1947 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2818, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/khan-v-leo-feist-inc-nysd-1947.