Simonton v. Gordon

12 F.2d 116, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1479
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedFebruary 17, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 12 F.2d 116 (Simonton v. Gordon) 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
Simonton v. Gordon, 12 F.2d 116, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1479 (S.D.N.Y. 1925).

Opinion

KNOX, District Judge.

In this suit, claim is made that the play White Cargo, of which the defendant Gordon is the author, infringes upon the copyright covering plaintiff’s novel, entitled Hell’s Playground. The matter was previously before the court upon plaintiff’s motion for a preliminary injunction, which came on to be heard before Judge Winslow. 297 F. 625.

After reading the hook and the play, together with voluminous affidavits, which were submitted by both parties, and after viewing the production of White Cargo, which was then and is now being played in this city, Judge Winslow came to the conclusion that the issuance of a preliminary injunction was unwarranted. In the opinion then filed in the case, the court said:

“While there are scattered and incidental resemblances between the two works, the court is of the opinion that the complainant has not made that clear and convincing showing which, in this circuit, has been required in order to justify the granting of a preliminary injunction.”

The case came on for final hearing before me, and much testimony has been taken upon behalf of both parties. It is upon this record that a decision must now be made.

According to the foreword of the authoress of Hell’s Playground, the purpose in writing the novel was to show the primal conditions existing upon the- west coast of Africa, and particularly in the Ereneh Congo. Life, in this part of the world, as it is portrayed by the book, “lacks the niceties and embroideries and perfumes of civilization. The story,” plaintiff says, “is crude and shocking, essentially so. It is of the debauching life of the African tropics, the method of government, the duties and opportunities of the white trader, the nature of the negro savages, and the almost hopeless problem of colonization and Christianization and demoralization which follows the unnatural imposition of the rule of one race over another.”

The foreword goes on to say that the climate is so unhealthy “that life is one continuous battle for existence. The best class of white men are not attracted to it. The average white trader and government official, freed from all restraint, deprived of the society of white- women and the commonest things to which civilization has accustomed them, breathing the atmosphere of sameness, stagnation and sensuality, early shed the veneer of civilization.”

In an author’s note, appearing upon the programs and cards distributed to persons attending performances of the alleged infringing drama, White Cargo is described as a vivid play of the primitive. The author then says: “In writing this play, no conscious effort has been made to create or eliminate sensationalism. It is an attempt to portray the struggle for development in a country which steadily defies the encroaching civilization. It is the reaction of an ever-shining sun which breeds inevitable rot— a rot which penetrates, not only the vegetation and inanimate objects, but the minds and hearts of the white men who attempt to conquer it.”

The following is a rough outline of Hell’s Playground:

Cecil Huntingdon, a member of the English nobility, who is in need of money, and who is in love with a young woman described as Lady Marjorie, decides to go to Africa to make his fortune. To serve this end, he obtains, through the influence of his father, a position with the trading firm of John Hope & Co., which maintains a station. at Cape Lopez, in the Ereneh Congo. After a perilous trip, Huntingdon reached his destination, where he is greeted by three men, to wit, Smithson, the local agent, whom he was to replace, Moore, the agent of a rival firm, and Sadler, captain of a river steamer belonging to John Holt & Co.

Smithson is a young, slight, nervous, rather refined man, who has been broken by African climatic conditions. Moore, who is likewise young, “is tall and rawboned, and walks with a swagger as confidential as John Bull’s own.” Both are startlingly pale. Sadler is round, rosy, and jolly. Hunting-don is escorted to the bungalow occupied by Smithson. On being made acquainted with the native servants, he is facetiously described by Sadler as their “Great White King.” This remark brings a contemptuous sneer from Moore, who has taken a dislike to *118 the newcomer. He does, however, drink a toast to him.

Thereupon a meal is served, of which Moore, Sadler, Smithson, and Huntingdon partake. The latter is told of the persons with whom he will come into contact, and the talk then turns to the tendency of white men, when subjected to African conditions, to acquire native mistresses. The charms of a particular native woman, named Ndio, who was then living with the French commandant, are related. Moore suggests that it would be an easy task for Huntingdon to displace the commandant in her affection. The thought is disgusting to Huntingdon, but he passes it off. By the time dinner is over, the men have become somewhat under the influence of liquor, and the party finally breaks up in song, Sadler singing a cockney ballad.

The next day Huntingdon, who feels enthusiasm at his prospects in Africa, is taken to visit the local postmaster and the French commandant. He is accompanied by Smithson, who, in the course of the walk, asked him if he ever in all his life saw any place “so dreary, so God-forsaken so end-of-the-earthy as Cape Lopez.” In his enthusiasm, Huntingdon declares that he does not believe that he will corrode there; that the country is too new and interesting, and so entirely different from what he has previously known. Smithson then replies: “Enthuse while ycfu can, old man; * * * it’ll soon wear off.” He continues to dilate upon the adverse conditions of African life, saying that, were it not for the monthly call of the steamers, no man could stand the sameness. Hunting-don, although vividly impressed with Smithson’s misery, felt that the same could never come to him. “He was young, strong and healthy; he would put up a stiff fight; he would not go under.” Again Huntingdon is told of the attractions of Ndio.

At great length, the novel goes on to tell of French colonial problems, the character of the life among the natives, and the manner of trade, and to detail Huntingdon’s success in what he undertakes. While he severely feels the conditions under which he lives, and while it is prophesied again and again that he will take up with a native woman, he fails to do so, sustained by his love for Marjorie, and his determination to lead" a clean life. Finally, however, he receives' word from Marjorie-that she has heard that he has taken a native woman for a mistress, and is told that he cannot expect to marry her. Greatly disheartened at this news, and being deeply depressed by the climate and loneliness of Africa, Huntingdon becomes entirely discouraged. Instead of going back to England to tell Marjorie that her information is incorrect, or otherwise repudiating the slander reported against him, he goes into the interior, and, becoming infected with fever, is taken seriously ill, becoming unconscious. When he recovers his senses, he is in his quarters, where he then learns that his business has been carried on by Ndio, and that she is nursing him back to health. At first, her presence is distasteful, but eventually she makes appeal to him, and he takes her as his mistress. This state of affairs continues for a considerable period of time, throughout which Huntingdon prospers and is satisfied with his life.

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Bluebook (online)
12 F.2d 116, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simonton-v-gordon-nysd-1925.