Kramer v. Newman

749 F. Supp. 542, 17 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1427, 1990 WL 166291, 1990 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14564
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedOctober 29, 1990
Docket89 CIV 6114 (KC)
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 749 F. Supp. 542 (Kramer v. Newman) 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
Kramer v. Newman, 749 F. Supp. 542, 17 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1427, 1990 WL 166291, 1990 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14564 (S.D.N.Y. 1990).

Opinion

ORDER

CONBOY, District Judge:

This action involves copyright claims to several assertedly unpublished works of James Agee, the celebrated twentieth century American author. Plaintiff, an author who seeks to use the works in a book on James Agee, requests a declaration that the manuscripts are in the public domain and that therefore, the defendant, the present Trustee of the James Agee Trust, cannot prevent him from using them. The issue is joined in this motion of the plaintiff for partial summary judgment.

Plaintiff’s book, presently entitled The Development of Agee’s Career as a Writer: Literary Documents of Twenty Years (hereinafter “Documents”) contains, substantially in their entirety, seventeen pieces authored by James Agee in which the Trust claims copyright, as well as an essay or article entitled “Scientists and Tramps”, which includes extensive excerpts from a draft screenplay or treatment by the same name in which the Trust claims copyright. The Agee pieces in question are the following, in the order in which they appear in the Documents Table of Contents, along with the numbers of the pages in Documents on which they appear, and the registration number of those that have been copyrighted by the Trust.

Title of Piece and Document pages Copyright Registration number and year

“Pygmalion” (poem) (123-27) TXu 268-408 (1987) H

“Reflections on Permit Me Voyage” (193-99) TXu 270-573 (1987) to

“Before God and this Company” (201-06) TXu 270-572 (1987) CO

“James Agee by Himself” (208-10) B 77285 (1963) ^

“Whenever a critic ...” (212-16) TXu 270-595 (1987) üt

The Complete “Work” Chapter for Famous Men (276-94) Q

7. Notebook entries written in conjunction with Famous

Men (296-98) TXu 270-598 (1987)

8. A letter to an unidentified recipient (“Notes and suggestions ...”) (300-09)

9. A letter to Archibald MacLeish (“This seems a very good selection ...”) (311-18) TXu 268-409 (1987)

“Poor child, forgive us ...” (poem) (334-35) O rH

“In the White House ...” (poem) (336-37) H i — I

“If gasping but victorious ...” (poem) (338) (M rH

“The noise we make ...” (poem) (337-38) CO rH

*544 15. “Marx, I agree ...” (poem) (339-40)

Title of Piece and Document pages Copyright Registration number and year

14. “We soldiers of all nations ...” (poem) (338-39) BB 35102 (1968)

16. “All through the night ...” (343-56) TXu 270-596 (1987)

17. “Scientists and Tramps (357-69) TXu 270-597 (1987)

18. “1928 Story” (371-389) BB 35102 (1968)

All of the registrations with numbers beginning “TXu” were obtained by the Trust in 1987. Item 4 was published in Esquire magazine in 1963. Esquire, Inc., obtained the copyright and assigned it to the Trust in 1968, which recorded the assignment on August 7, 1968. Items 15 and 18 were published in the Texas Quarterly, Spring, 1968 issue with separate copyright notice in the name of the Trust. Affidavit of Mary Newman, Trustee of the James Agee Trust, dated March 13, 1990, 1-2.

Prior to his death in 1955, Agee transferred “all right, title and interest in his unpublished works of every kind together with such right, title and interest as he still had to those various works which were already marketed and published” to his wife, Mia Agee. Affidavit of Martha M. Pearson, dated February 19, 1990, Ex. 4 ("Pearson Aff.”). In 1956, Mia Agee transferred these rights to Reverend James Harold Flye (“Father Flye”), a family friend. Pearson Aff. Ex. 5. In 1956, another family friend, David McDowell, formally executed an instrument creating the James Agee Trust, in which the purposes of the Trust are set forth, including the following:

to collect, preserve, organize, edit, hold, manage and control the various writings published and unpublished of the late James Agee; to publish or cause to be published or reprinted any and all writings of the late James Agee; and to hold, transfer, assign, encumber or otherwise receive, own and dispose of in every way all copyrights, reproduction rights, publication rights and other literary rights to these said writings.

Pearson Aff., Ex. 6, 1-2.

In January of 1957, Father Flye transferred all of his right, title and interest in the manuscripts he obtained from Mia Agee to the Trust. Pearson Aff., Ex. 8.

Victor A. Kramer, the plaintiff, is a Professor of English at Georgia State University who has devoted his entire professional life, since 1962, to “scholarly projects pertaining to the writings of James Agee.” Affidavit of Victor A. Kramer, dated February 19, 1990, ¶ 2 (“Kramer Aff.”). He is an accomplished and recognized scholar, particularly with respect to the life and works of James Agee, Thomas Merton and Frederick Law Olmstead. Id,., Ex. 9. As a graduate student at the University of Texas in the early 1960’s, he urged the Director of the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center at the University of Texas (hereinafter “HRC”), F. Warren Roberts, to purchase certain Agee materials and manuscripts then on the market, for HRC’s Library.

Sometime in 1963 or 1964, Hamill and Barker, Antiquarian Booksellers in Chicago, offered for sale a collection of manuscripts and documents written by Agee. This collection was offered for sale “without restriction as to persons who could be granted access to read these materials and without restrictions as to their use.” Affidavit of F. Warren Roberts, dated February 17, 1990, 116 (“Roberts Aff.”). On March 30, 1964 Hamill and Barker wrote to Mr. Roberts at the HRC and stated:

Here at last, is a factual description of the James Agee papers. We are pleased to offer the material, as listed, for a net of $15,000. This includes manuscripts, notes, letters, typescripts, proofs, sketches and miscellaneous papers; together there are approximately 1785 quarto pages in Agee’s small hand, plus some 1700 typed pages many with ms. corrections. Mrs. Agee has assured us that we will have first refusal of additional material, as she is able to give the time to hunt it out.

*545 Roberts Aff., Ex. 1. The accompanying “factual description”, from the same exhibit, is here set forth in its entirety:

JAMES RUFUS AGEE (1909-1955)
Collection of original manuscripts, notes and letters; corrected typescripts, proofs and a few drawings. The manuscript material, both published and unpublished, is heavily corrected and revised throughout; often whole passages are deleted. There is a great deal of careful rewriting, sometimes ten or more trials of one paragraph before the author is satisfied. Agee wrote mostly in pencil on quarto second sheets — yellow or white.
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749 F. Supp. 542, 17 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1427, 1990 WL 166291, 1990 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14564, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kramer-v-newman-nysd-1990.