Pujals v. Columbia Graphophone Co.

12 P.R. Fed. 401
CourtDistrict Court, D. Puerto Rico
DecidedMarch 3, 1922
DocketNo. 1049
StatusPublished

This text of 12 P.R. Fed. 401 (Pujals v. Columbia Graphophone Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Puerto Rico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pujals v. Columbia Graphophone Co., 12 P.R. Fed. 401 (prd 1922).

Opinion

Odlin, Judge,

delivered the following opinion:

There, are two grounds set forth by counsel for defendant in his motion to dismiss the bill. First, it is claimed that this court has no jurisdiction over the person of the defendant, a nonresident corporation, because the latter has no office and has no agent in a legal sense in Porto Pico, upon whom service of process could be made. This point has already been decided by this court and I am still of opinion that the peculiar cireum-[402]*402stances of this case, keeping in view the letter written by the-defendant corporation, mentioning Gonzalez Padin Company,, as being authorized to act for it, estops the defendant from claiming that service of process on Gonzalez Padin Company did not operate to bring the defendant properly before this-court. The decisions which were relied upon by this court in reaching that ruling are set forth in the former opinion filec! in this case (page 340) and need not be repeated here.

The other ground upon which the motion to dismiss is based! raises a question of pleading. Counsel for defendant argues-with much force and plausibility that the bill is fatally defective-because of the allegation that the publication of the song composed by complainant was “made in due form,” and that this is a mere conclusion of law. And there are cited the cases of Falk v. Gast Lith. & Eng. Co. in 40 Fed. 168, and Ford v. Charles E. Blaney Amusement Co. 148 Fed. 642. Flow if the complaint stopped with the words quoted, the point made by counsel for the defendant would be well taken. But counsel for defendant overlooked some of the averments of the bill which followed the words quoted. The complainant, after alleging-that on December 27, 1918 he caused the first publication (of' his song) to be made, sets forth specifically that he deposited forthwith two copies of his song in the copyright office, etc.; also he avers that said song had not been previously published by the complainant, nor by any other person under his authority or with his consent. It is also to be observed that in ¶ 4, of the-bill there is a direct allegation that the defendant negotiated through Gonzalez Padin Company for the sale of the complainant’s copyright to the defendant, etc.

I find no decision which requires a complainant in a case of [403]*403this kind to attach to his hill or to incorporate in his hill a printed copy of the production claimed to he covered hy his copyright.

It is quite clear to me that neither of the two grounds of dismissal of this hill is sound. Therefore, the motion to dismiss must he denied; and the defendant is allowed until Monday March 27, 1922, in which to answer the hill.

To this ruling counsel for the defendant excepts.

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Related

Ford v. Charles E. Blaney Amusement Co.
148 F. 642 (S.D. New York, 1906)
Falk v. Gast Lith. & Eng. Co.
40 F. 168 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York, 1889)

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Bluebook (online)
12 P.R. Fed. 401, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pujals-v-columbia-graphophone-co-prd-1922.