Press Pub. Co. v. Atlantic County Advertiser
This text of 260 A.2d 6 (Press Pub. Co. v. Atlantic County Advertiser) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
PRESS PUBLISHING COMPANY, A DIVISION OF ABARTA CORP., A PENNSYLVANIA CORPORATION, t/a ATLANTIC CITY PRESS, PLAINTIFF,
v.
ATLANTIC COUNTY ADVERTISER, INC., A NEW JERSEY CORPORATION, t/a ATLANTIC COUNTY ADVERTISER; MAX RAUCHWARG; HELEN RAUCHWARG; AND DAVE FALCIANO, JOINTLY, SEVERALLY AND IN THE ALTERNATIVE, DEFENDANTS.
Superior Court of New Jersey, Chancery Division.
*76 Mr. Chaim H. Sandler attorney for plaintiff.
Mr. David Jerchower for defendants.
HORN, J.S.C.
Plaintiff is a corporation which publishes and distributes the Atlantic City Press, a daily newspaper which circulates in Atlantic County and neighboring counties. Defendant corporation publishes and distributes the Atlantic County Advertiser, a weekly paper, in portions of Atlantic County.
This action was brought primarily to enjoin defendants, corporate publisher and its staff, from copying or reproducing in its papers advertisements which plaintiff prepares for its advertising customers and which have first appeared in plaintiff's newspaper.
The thesis upon which plaintiff seeks relief is that the conduct of defendants constitutes "unfair competition" by reason of defendants' "pirating" the advertising copy and art work prepared by and printed in the Atlantic City Press.
*77 By stipulation it was agreed that the case should be first tried on the issue of liability with respect to six contracts for advertisements, presumably typical of those claimed by plaintiff as having been reproduced; that following the initial hearing, if it were determined that plaintiff was entitled to relief, a further hearing would be afforded whereat plaintiff might establish defendants' similar conduct with respect to other advertisements, and might prove specific damages for which defendants might be liable.
The facts are not in great dispute. Plaintiff, as part of its advertising department, maintains or employs specialists who suggest and make up advertising designs and layouts which are shown to prospective advertisers. The advertising matter is prepared upon the request and suggestions of advertisers or on plaintiff's own initiative, in order to induce them to enter their orders for the advertising. In certain cases plaintiff engages an outside agency to aid in preparing special advertising matter.
Shortly after certain advertisements had appeared in plaintiff's newspaper, similar advertisements and, in some cases, identical advertisements appeared in defendants' newspaper. These advertisements in defendants' newspaper result from either defendants' solicitation of plaintiff's advertisers, or at the request of some of the advertisers without any solicitation.
Defendants also maintain an advertising department, and there are many advertisements in its paper besides those reproduced from plaintiff's newspaper. Defendants' paper is published by use of photo-offset, a comparatively inexpensive process.
Each advertiser signs an agreement with plaintiff which partly provides as follows:
"7. ASSIGNMENT For value received, advertiser hereby assigns to the ABC Newspaper, Inc., all right, title and interest to all layouts of advertisements placed with the ABC Newspaper which represent the creative efforts of the newspaper and/or utilization of its own illustrations, labor, composition or material. Advertiser understands that because of said assignment, he cannot authorize photographic *78 or other reproduction of any such advertising layout appearing in the ABC Newspaper in any other publication without the express written consent of the ABC Newspaper, Inc. It is further understood that this assignment does not preclude advertiser from supplying to other publications similar or identical material or information for production of advertisements by such publication or from suggesting the content or form of such advertisement."
The advertising which appears in plaintiff's newspaper is not protected by federal copyright statutes. 17 U.S.C.A. § 1.
Plaintiff relies upon the following cases for support of its contention that defendants' conduct in copying the advertisements merits the relief sought: International News Service v. Associated Press, 248 U.S. 215, 39 S.Ct. 68, 63 L.Ed. 211 (1918); Metropolitan Opera Association v. Wagner-Nichols R. Corp., 199 Misc. 786, 101 N.Y.S.2d 483 (Sup. Ct. 1950), aff'd 279 App. Div. 632, 107 N.Y.S.2d 795 (App. Div. 1951); Pottstown Daily News Publishing Co. v. Pottstown Broadcasting Co., 411 Pa. 383, 192 A.2d 657 (1963); Pottstown Daily News Publishing Co. v. Pottstown Broadcasting Co., 247 F. Supp. 578 (E.D. Pa. 1965), and Grove Press, Inc. v. Collectors Publication, Inc., 264 F. Supp. 603 (C.D. Cal. 1967).
In International News Service defendant, a competing news service, was restrained by the court from transmitting news for commercial use in competition with complainant. In that case defendant copied news from bulletin boards and early editions of complainant's newspapers and then sold same, either bodily or after rewriting it, to defendant's customers, in direct competition to plaintiff. This conduct, the court held, constituted unfair competition under the circumstances.
In Metropolitan Opera Association defendant was restrained from making and selling phonograph recordings of the "live" broadcasts of the performances of the plaintiff opera company. It was held that this practice constituted unfair competition as to both plaintiff and intervenor, Columbia Records, which had the contract to produce recordings of the opera. Defendant's conduct deprived plaintiff of any *79 benefit for its performances and enabled it to compete unfairly and advantageously in the market for the sale of the Columbia records. Additionally, the court held that defendant's action also constituted an interference with contractual relations between plaintiff and Columbia Records.
In the Pottstown Daily News Publishing Co. cases plaintiff, the publisher of a newspaper, was granted an injunction against defendant radio broadcasting company, restraining it from appropriating the plaintiff's local news reports without its permission or consent and using it to its own advantage. The news broadcast by defendant, it was found, was appropriated in broadcasts completed before all the papers from which the news was taken was distributed, and while the news was still "hot."
Underlying the decisions in the Pottstown Daily News Publishing Co. cases is the proposition that the protection which the law affords to competition does not and should not countenance the usurpation of a competitor's investment and toil. Substantially this was the basis of International News and Metropolitan Opera cases.
In Grove Press, Inc. plaintiff had expended substantial moneys in the preparation of an edition of an original work entitled "My Secret Life," an autobiography which was in the public domain. Plaintiff's edition, after it was released for sale, was reproduced by defendant through an offset lithography process and then was sold in competition with plaintiff's edition. The court granted the relief sought by plaintiff on the ground that defendant's conduct constituted unfair competition.
These cases, standing alone, ordinarily would be persuasive.
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260 A.2d 6, 108 N.J. Super. 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/press-pub-co-v-atlantic-county-advertiser-njsuperctappdiv-1969.