Lewys v. O'NEILL

49 F.2d 603, 9 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 465, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1324
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedApril 22, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 49 F.2d 603 (Lewys v. O'NEILL) 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
Lewys v. O'NEILL, 49 F.2d 603, 9 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 465, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1324 (S.D.N.Y. 1931).

Opinion

WOOLSEY, District Judge.

The complaint herein is dismissed with costs, which will include an allowance for counsel fees to all the defendants, as hereinafter fixed and allocated among them.

I. This is a suit in equity based on alleged infringement of copyright, whence arises the jurisdiction of this court.

The plaintiff’s book is in the form of a novel called by her The Temple of Pallas-Athenra, with a subtitle Posterite, and will be hereinafter referred to as The Temple. The plaintiff claims and states underneath the notice of copyright that her book was written in 1917; the printing was begun in April, 1923, and was finished in April, 1924. It was not published but — as stated on the title page — was privately printed for subscribers only. It was copyrighted in May, 1924. There were not any copies sent to reviewers.

The defendant Eugene O’Neill’s alleged infringement is by a play called Strange Interlude, copyrighted in February, 1928, first produced on the stage by the defendant Theatre Guild, Inc., and published through ordinary trade channels, first by the defendant Boni & Liveright, Inc., and then by its successor, the defendant Horace Liveright, Inc.

II. A few days before the ease was tried, at the request of both parties, I read first the plaintiff’s book, The Temple, and then the defendant’s book, Strange Interlude.

At the opening of the trial a motion was made by the defendants jointly and severally for a dismissal of the complaint on the ground that, under the decision handed down November 10, 1930, by the Circuit Court of Appeals for this Circuit in Nichols v. Universal Pictures Corporation, 45 F.(2d) 119, (C. C. A. 2) all that was necessary in a case of this kind was to read the two' books and record the resultant impressions made on the court.

I denied the motion to dismiss at that stage of the proceeding, because it seemed to me that the plaintiff was entitled to have an opportunity of presenting her case outside the mere text of the two books as far as she properly could be allowed to do so in conformity with the suggestions to trial courts made by the Circuit Court of Appeals in the Nichols Case.

Neither the evidence of the plaintiff nor the argument and brief of her counsel, nor a careful analysis of the two books since the trial, has in any way tended to decrease my first impression that there is not any possible ,ground for the contention that Strange Interlude is an infringement of the plaintiff’s book The Temple.

On the contrary, my reflection in regard to the case and a reading of the relevant authorities and text-books has ripened my first impression into a conviction that the plaintiff has made herein a wholly preposterous claim.

A study of this case, however, is not without its usefulness, I think, because it *605 illustrates how claims of this kind arise and are fostered.

III. The plaintiff testified that she was horn in 1898 in Los Angeles, Cal., and that she wrote The Temple in 1917, when she was nineteen years old — seven years before it was printed and copyrighted. ■'

The Temple was heralded to the waiting world of subscribers for what are known in the booksellers’ catalogues as curiosa, in a circular sent out with the plaintiff’s approval from Los Angeles, Cal., in March, 1924, by those interested in its sale.

This circular is entitled:

“The Temple of Pallas-Athen® (Posterite) By Georges Lewys — -Edition Limited to 995 Copies, Signed By the Author, in De Luxe Art Format, Large Octavo Size, Privately Printed and Distributed to a Restricted Humber of Subscribers Only.”

It reads as follows:

“A house of ‘pleasure’ wherein women of easy virtue are kept — this subject (to quote Kuprin, who treats the problem exhaustively in his ‘Yama’) of ‘the moujik and the prostitute,’ is as old as the hills — as old as history, the world, Eden, the fall, chaos.
“But the subject of paternity, or the parturition of human beings as a scientific study — this has not been promulgated. * * * And the subject of a house of impregnation where males are incarcerated for the benefit — -not of female lust, but generation — is a new development in literature.
“The male house of assignation in ancient Greece was ‘The Temple of Pallas-Athen®,’ in the Acropolis. * “ * Transfer this to modern Paris and you have the motif of Georges Lewys’ powerful romance of the same name, now being privately circulated among subscribers and members of La So- , cíete des Arts et des Illuminati.
“In announcing publication of ‘The Temple of Pallas-Athen®,’ Georges Lewys offers a masterpiece of literature dealing with posterity or the mission of the unmarried father’ in social life. * * *
“A Princess of questionable antecedents, frightful exterior and fascinating mentality, attempts to prove the theory of eugenics by the employment of six chosen men as the nucleus for a Temple of Human Culture.
“Here are introduced the charming women from whom the generation is drawn — a rather happy exposition of the possibilities in rational breeding ■ * * * likewise is The Temple a chant of the pagan beauty of Man, stressing the male ideal, which signalizes in older countries an advance in culture beyond any worship or exaltation of the ■female form.
“The author’s rhythm of language, intense caustieism of theme and amiable sophistication supplant much of the salacity of the usual book of this kind; Lewys offers an arraignment of the abuses of the married state, coloured with satirical dialogue on that ‘most indulged in and least discussed practice of the human race (from the scientific standpoint) — namely, offspring.’
“ ‘The Temple of Pallas-Athen® provided the female Greeks with specimen reproduction of the highest perfection. * * * Under this term were developed such as later became subjects for the art of Phidias and his followers. * * *’
“Based upon such' an -ancient research and Greek custom, the work is perfectly scientific, lending itself to a new treatment'under the form of fiction.
“The subtlety of its humor and freshness of its theme will appeal to cognoscenti wearied with the eternal intrigues of passion as the motif in literature, and craving original text swathed in the orthodoxy of pure English.
■ “This is a work of art and a strictly limited edition, each volume being numbered and registered. After these are sold, no further copy can be obtained.
“The book eaters to the Illuminati. * <f * If you belong to this discerning-class of readers whose standing is assured among exclusive gatherings where highelass literature is freely and boldly discussed, we know we may entrust to you a book of the type of ‘The Temple of' Pallas-Athen®’ with full confidence in the chaste motive, if voluptuous treatment, of the author, and Lewys’ power to intrigue you.”

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Bluebook (online)
49 F.2d 603, 9 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 465, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewys-v-oneill-nysd-1931.