McLoughlin v. Raphael Tuck Co.

191 U.S. 267, 24 S. Ct. 105, 48 L. Ed. 178, 1903 U.S. LEXIS 1449
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 30, 1903
Docket73
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 191 U.S. 267 (McLoughlin v. Raphael Tuck Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McLoughlin v. Raphael Tuck Co., 191 U.S. 267, 24 S. Ct. 105, 48 L. Ed. 178, 1903 U.S. LEXIS 1449 (1903).

Opinion

Mr. Justice White

delivered the opinion of the court.

Section 4963 of the Revised Statutes, as amended by the act of March 3, 1891, relating to the potice of copyright to be affixed to copyrighted articles, provided as follows: '

“Every person who shall insert or impress such notice, or words of the same purport, in or upon any book, map, chart, dramatic, or musical composition, print, cut, engraving, or photograph, or other article, for which he has not obtained a copyright, shall be liable to a penalty of one hundred dollars, recoverable one-half for the person who shall sue for such penalty, and one-half to the use of the United States.”

*268 On March 3, 1897, the foregoing provisions were amended, 29 Stat: 694, c. 392, by the following!

“Every person who shall insert or impress such notice, or words of the same purport, in or upon any book, map, chart, dramatic or musical composition, print, cut, engraving or photograph or other article, whether such article be subject to copyright or otherwise, for which he has not obtained a copyright, or shall knowingly issue or sell any article bearing a notice of United States copyright which has not been copyrighted in this country; or shall import any book, photograph, chromo, or lithograph or other article bearing such notice of copyright or words of the same purport, which is not copyrighted in this country, shall be liable to a penalty of one hundred dollars, recoverable one-half for the person who shall sue for such penalty and one-half to the use of the United States ; and the importation into the United States of any book, chromo, lithograph, or photograph, or other article bearing such notice' of copyright, when there is no existing copyright thereon in the United States, is prohibited; and the Circuit Courts of the United States sitting in equity are hereby authorized to enjoin the issuing, publishing, or selling of any article marked of imported in violation of the United States copyright laws, at the suit' of any person complaining of such violation: Provided, That this act shall not apply to any importation of or sale of such goods or articles brought into the United States prior to the passage hereof.”

The state of the law prior to 1897; pertinent to this case, was therefore this: A penalty was imposed of $100 for untruthfully impressing upon an article which was subject to be copyrighted in the United States the fact that the same had been copyrighted, but there was no provision or penalty concerning the importation from a foreign country of an article which was untruthfully stamped in such country as having been copyrighted in the United States, and no express provision or penalty concerning the sale of an article in the United States which was untruthfully stamped as copyrighted., The amendment *269 of 1897 caused the previous provision as to untruthfully stamping a notice of copyright to apply, although the article was not subject to copyright under the law of the United States, and prohibited the importation of an article untruthfully stamped frorh a foreign country, and also prohibited the sale of an article in the United States which was falsely stamped, the penalty previously provided being made applicable to the added prohibitions.

The plaintiff in error in 1898 commenced this action in the Circuit Court of the United States against the defendant in error, to recover the $100 penalty, provided in the statute, for each of eighty-three alleged distinct violations of the statute. The basis of the first to the seventieth cause of action was asserted to be that on or about the first day of August, 1896, the defendant, “at the city of New York, in the State of New York, did publish and issue a certain picture booh or booklet” (a distinct article being named in the statement of each of the seventy distinct causes of action) “and in and upon said book did knowingly insert and impress a false and fictitious notice that the same was copyrighted. . . . ” The seventy-first and seventy-second causes of action charged that the defendant on the eleventh day of June, 1897, in the city'of New York, “ did knowingly issue and sell a certain picture book,” described therein, with a false notice' of copyright stamped on it. The seventy-third to the eighty-third and last cause of action charged the commission as to -different publications, pf like acts, in the city of New York on or about April 26, 1897.

On the trial to a jury the defendant admitted that all the publications referred to had on them an untruthful statement that they had been copyrighted under the laws of the United States, which statement had been affixed in-a foreign country at their request and for their account. It was also proved by the defendant, without conflict in the testimony, that all the publications having on them the untruthful statement of copyright were imported into the United States prior to the enactment of the amendment of 1897. Under this state of *270 the proof the trial court instructed a verdict for the defendant. Error was prosecuted by the plaintiff to the Circuit Court of Appeals and that court affirmed the judgment. 115 Fed. Rep. 85. .The court held that the penal provisions of the law had no extraterritorial operation, and therefore did not embrace the act of affixing in a foreign country to a publication a false statement that it was copyrighted under the laws of the United States. Concerning the sales made after the passage of the amendment of 1897, the court held that the trial court had correctly instructed the jury that as the books so sold after the amendment of 1897 were imported into the United States prior thereto, the right to sell them in the United' States was saved by the proviso of that amendment.

The court below was clearly right in its conclusions as to the non-extraterritorial operation of the law as it stood prior to the amendment of Í897. Flash v. Conn, 109 U. S. 371, 376. In saying this we do not wish to be considered as holding that where an act done in a foreign country against a penal provision of the law of the United States is but the initial step in accomplishing a subsequent violation in the United States of other penal provisions, that the act done in the foreign country might not, under some circumstances, be treated as having been performed in the United States. On this question we * intimate no opinion whatever, as the circumstances of the case do not require us to do so. Under the law as it stood prior to . 1897 there was no provision forbidding the importation of an article falsely stamped in a foreign country, or prohibiting the sale in the United States of an article falsely stamped. There could, therefore, be no possible relation between subsequent lawful acts performed in the United States concerning the article falsely stamped in a foreign country.

The court was also manifestly right concerning the articles falsely stamped which were imported into the United States prior to the amendment of 1897, but sold in the United States subsequent to that amendment. The proviso expressly excluded from the operation of that amendment “any importa *271

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Bluebook (online)
191 U.S. 267, 24 S. Ct. 105, 48 L. Ed. 178, 1903 U.S. LEXIS 1449, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcloughlin-v-raphael-tuck-co-scotus-1903.