Myers v. Callaghan

24 F. 636, 1885 U.S. App. LEXIS 2137
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedJuly 6, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 24 F. 636 (Myers v. Callaghan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Myers v. Callaghan, 24 F. 636, 1885 U.S. App. LEXIS 2137 (uscirct 1885).

Opinion

Blodgett, J.

The original bill in this case charged that complainant was owner of the copyright of volumes 32 to 88, inclusive, of the reports of the decisions of the supreme court of Illinois, and that defendants had infringed the same. By the supplemental bill complainant charged that he was the owner of the copyright of volumes 39 [637]*637to 46, inclusive, of the same series of reports, and that defendants had infringed upon his right as such owner, and an accounting was decreed as to both bills, after hearing on the pleadings and proof, and reference was made to masters to ascertain and report the amount of defendants’ profit in the publication and sale of the infringing volumes; the case made under the original bill having been referred to Bishop, master, and the case made under the supplemental bill having been referred to Bennett, master. These masters have respectively made their reports; Mr. Bishop, by his report, finding that defendants should be charged with $13,451.19 as the proceeds of the sale of volumes 32 to 38, and that they were entitled to be credited with $6,465.14 as the proper cost of producing said volumes, thus leaving profit of $6,986.05, for which he recommended a decree be made. This report was on the basis that the average sale of these volumes by defendants was at the rate of $4.62J per volume, which the master concluded was a fair average price, as shown by the proofs. Mr. Bennett, by his report, found that the defendants should be charged with $10,231.48 as the proceeds of sales of volumes 39 to 46, inclusive, and that they were entitled to be credited with $5,798.44 as the proper cost of producing said volumes, thus leaving a profit to the defendants of $4,433.44, for which he recommended a decree.

Both complainant and defendants have filed exceptions to these reports, and these exceptions have been argued orally, and by briefs supplementing the oral arguments.

The objections urged on behalf of complainant are mainly to the report of Mr. Bennett. The first objection is that the master refused to allow, as part of complainant’s damages, the profits of the defendants on about 156 of the infringing volumes which had been sold by defendants and purchased in again as second-hand books, and resold; the master holding that, having charged the defendants with the profits on the first sale of these volumes, they had a right to buy them in at second hand, and could then sell them again without accounting for the second profit. I think this exception well taken. The law intends to secure the owner of a copyright of any book or literary composition the monopoly of the market for such book, — that is, the right to supply all who wish to purchase, — and if the infringing publisher can buy at second hand the infringing publication, and again place it on the market, to that extent he supplants the owner of the copyright, who has the right to supply the demand. It is well known that many books are purchased only to serve a temporary purpose by the purchaser, and when that purpose has been served, the purchaser puts the book again upon the market. 'When he does so, and finds a purchaser, ho, to that extent, interferes with the owner of the copyright. While it may be true, if an infringing publisher has sold a volume and accounted to the owner of the copyright, the purchaser of that volume holds it free of any claim by the owner of the copyright, yet I do not understand that such purchaser can put [638]*638the work again upon the market without accounting to the owner of the copyright; and the case seems much stronger, from an equitable point of view, when the infringing publisher buys the book or volume hé has thus sold, and again puts it upon the market and supplies the customer who, otherwise, would have been compelled to buy from the owner of the copyright. I therefore conclude that the master should have charged the defendants with the profit on these resales.

The next exception of complainant to Mr. Bennett’s report goes to the mode by which the master arrived at the average price at which defendants sold the infringing volumes 39 to 46. The defendants are publishers of and dealers in law books in the city of Chicago. They own the copyright or control the sale of volumes of the Illinois Reports from 1 to 31, inclusive. Mr. Freeman, the present reporter of the supreme court, owned the copyright of all the volumes above 46, and the most of these sales were made in sets, the infringing volumes being used to fill out the sets. Defendants purchased the volumes above 46 of Mr. Freeman at his regular rate; and, for the purpose of-determining the selling price of the infringing volumes, the master deducted from the amount received for a full set of reports the amouut paid Mr. Freeman, and then divided the balance by 46 to obtain the price at which defendants sold the infringing volumes, thus making the selling price of the infringing volumes and those owned or sold by defendants the same, and by this rule the average selling price of the infringing volumes is $4.34, while the complainant insists, from the proof before the master of separate sales by defendants of nearly 400 copies of .the infringing volumes, an average price of $4.58 8-10 is shown; but the master, in consideration of the impossibility oí ascertaining from the proof the exact price which defendants had received for the infringing volumes, split the difference between the price arrived at by the defendants’ rule and that contended for by the complainant, and fixed the selling price at $4.46 4-10 per volume. In this, I think, the master approximated as nearly to the true amount as could be done, and I am not disposed to disturb his action in that regard. It Is conceded that the exact selling price cannot be arrived at from the proof. It also appears that about 400 copies were sold at higher rates than results from the price by sets, and I think the master was justified in taking the mean result of the two methods.

The next objection involves the conclusion by both masters as to the percentage of the general average expenses of defendants’ business, which should be deducted from the proceeds of the sales of the infringing volumes; the objection being mainly urged on the ground that defendants had not clearly and actually shown from their books and other sources of proof the percentage of their expenses to. their receipts in the transaction of their business during the time the infringement was going on. Inasmuch as the object of an inquiry like this is to ascertain the profits which defendants have made, or ought to have made, from their infringement of the copyright, and award those prof[639]*639its by way of damages to the complainant, so that the defendants shall' make no gain by their piracy, it is clear that, in order to'arrive at these profits, we must, as nearly as practicable, ascertain the proper cost to defendants oí manufacturing the infringing volumes, and the cost of selling the same; or, in other words, if the cost of selling these particular books was only a part of defendants’ business, how much of the general expenses of the defendants in conducting their business should be deducted from the proceeds of these sales. The defendants contended that the proof shows that it cost thorn 17 per cent, of the gross proceeds of sales to sell tlieir books, and that, therefore, they were entitled to a credit of that amount from the proceeds of the sales, in addition to the cost of production. Mr. Bennett concluded from the proof before him that 12 per cent, was a fair allowance to the defendants for their general expense credit, and Mr. Bishop, from the proof before him, allowed 12 7-8 per cent, for these average expenses.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 F. 636, 1885 U.S. App. LEXIS 2137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/myers-v-callaghan-uscirct-1885.