Kraft v. Cohen

32 F. Supp. 821, 44 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 678, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3206
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 6, 1940
Docket494
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 32 F. Supp. 821 (Kraft v. Cohen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kraft v. Cohen, 32 F. Supp. 821, 44 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 678, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3206 (E.D. Pa. 1940).

Opinion

KALODNER, District Judge.

This is a copyright infringement suit, tried before me without a jury. Plaintiff seeks an injunction, statutory damages and damages under the Common Law.

Plaintiff is engaged in the business of printing and distributing bound books containing illustrations depicting clothing in various styles and of various sorts, including clerical vestures. The plaintiff does not sell clothing. He derives his income by selling his books to firms which do sell clothing. The books are used by the clothing firms to show to prospective customers, and, therefore, constitute media whereby the clothing firms can. show styles of garments to such prospective customers without displaying the garments themselves.

The defendants are outfitters specializing in clerical vestments. As an adjunct to their business, they issue catalogues illustrating their merchandise, including the vestments.

In March, 1938, one Brady, an employee of the plaintiff, called on Cohen, one of the defendant firm. Brady had with him five photographs, picturing men wearing clerical vestments. These photographs had been made from original drawings composed by the plaintiff. The drawings were left with Cohen. The purpose for which they were left is disputed between the parties, as I shall presently explain.

On or about the 6th day of September, 1938, the defendants issued a printed catalogue called “National Vestments for Clergy and Choir”. The book contained pictures of men dressed in various styles of the clothing, and among the illustrations were the five represented by the photographs left by Brady with Cohen.

On April 15, 1938, the plaintiff published a book which it entitled “Newest Style Portfolio, Autumn 1938-1939, Winter”. On this book a copyright application was filed on May 17, 1938, and the copyright registration was issued thereon on May 17,1938.

On May 10, 1938, plaintiff published a book entitled “Special Clerical Brochure Featuring Authentic Apparel for Clergymen.” A copyright application was filed thereon on January 25, 1939, and a copyright registration issued thereon January 26, 1939.

The Portfolio contained two, and the Brochure the other three, of the pictures represented by the figures left with Cohen by Brady, 'all of which pictures also appeared in the defendants’ catalogue above mentioned. This appearance of these pictures in the defendants’ catalogue constitutes the defendants’ alleged copyright infringement.

There is a sharp and outright contradiction between the plaintiff’s testimony and the defendant’s as to the circumstances under and the purposes for which Brady, left the photographs with Cohen. Brady, as a witness for the plaintiff, testified that he went to Cohen to get an order for the plain *823 tiff’s prospective publications: that he went to Cohen just as he went to any other prospective customer: that there was some conversation concerning some changes in the faces or facial expressions in the figures in the photographs, and that the photographs were left with Cohen so that the latter might indicate such changes as he desired. Brady further stated that it was quite usual to accept recommendatipns for changes from prospective customers since if a customer was dissatisfied with the illustrations in the plaintiff’s publications, there would naturally be no sale.

Cohen’s story for the defendants is quite different. He stated that he was an authority on clerical vestments, and that he often received and answered inquiries concerning them; that Brady’s visit to him was for the purpose of making such inquiry, and not at all for the purpose of seeking an order from a customer; that he, Cohen, kept the photographs until he had time to make some changes on them; and that upon a subsequent visit, Brady specifically gave him, Cohen, license, authority and permission to use the photographs in the defendants’ catalogue without remuneration, and as a return courtesy for the suggested changes indicated by Cohen.

These conflicting statements cannot be reconciled, and it is necessary to accept one or the other. I accept the plaintiff’s version and reject the defendants’. The probabilities are with the plaintiff. Cohen testified that he made no changes in the picturization of the clerical clothing, but only in the facial expressions; hence, his authoritative knowledge of vestments loses its significance. Kraft, one of the plaintiffs, is an artist, and could have altered facial expressions himself. It appears from Kraft’s testimony that he did not know the defendant firm or its reputation as a source of information when Brady went to visit Cohen. Moreover, that the plaintiff would permit, without compensation, the use of the drawings, when its entire income is derived from such use, seems to me improbable.

The next defense presented by the defendants is the invalidity of the plaintiff’s copyrights on the Portfolio and Brochure.

As to the Portfolio, the defense must be sustained. The Copyright Act, 35 St. 1079, 17 U.S.C.A. § 19, provides that the copyright notice must appear upon the title page or the page immediately following. The title page of the Portfolio is the outside of its cover, whereon printed matter appears such as ordinarily constitutes a title page; and no other printed leaf which could constitute a title page appears in the Portfolio.

The requisite copyright notice appears upon the first leaf in the book immediately following the cover. It does not appear on the inside of the cover, which would correspond to the reverse side of the ordinary title page. “Page — one side of a leaf of a book, manuscript, ledger, etc.”; 46 C.J. 1168; Webster’s New International Dictionary. Books consist, generally speaking, of leaves bound within covers, and each side of a leaf constitutes a page. In order, therefore, that there be compliance with Section 19 of the Act, the copyright notice must appear on the left hand side of a leaf if the matter comprised in the title page is on the right hand side; if the title page material be printed on the left hand side of the leaf, then the copyright notice must be on the right hand side of the leaf immediately following. This is not the case in the Portfolio under discussion. The copyright notice appears on the first leaf following the cover; but this does not meet the requirements of the statute, since a page intervenes between the title page and the page bearing the copyright notice.

Notice on any other page than that indicated by the statute is ineffective, no matter how prominent; and courts may not dispense with this requirement: Richards v. New York Post, D.C., 23 F.Supp. 619. The charge of infringement, therefore, so far as the Portfolio is concerned, must be dismissed.

It is otherwise, however, with regard to the Brochure. The copyright notice appeared on the title page and therefore meets the requirements of Section 19.

It is true that some copies of the Brochure were first printed off with the copyright notice on the back cover and none elsewhere. Such notice is insufficient: Bessett v. Germain, D.C., 18 F.Supp. 249. Kraft testified, however, that this mistake was discovered and rectified, and offered in evidence a copy of the Brochure with the correct copyright notice appearing on the front page. ’ He also testified that to his knowledge none of the incorrectly printed copies had been distributed by the plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
32 F. Supp. 821, 44 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 678, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kraft-v-cohen-paed-1940.