Society of Survivors of Riga Ghetto, Inc. v. Huttenbach

141 Misc. 2d 921, 535 N.Y.S.2d 670, 1988 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 718
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 27, 1988
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 141 Misc. 2d 921 (Society of Survivors of Riga Ghetto, Inc. v. Huttenbach) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Society of Survivors of Riga Ghetto, Inc. v. Huttenbach, 141 Misc. 2d 921, 535 N.Y.S.2d 670, 1988 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 718 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1988).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Helen E. Freedman, J.

This case addresses the issue of the rights of an author and a publisher where the author has granted full property rights [922]*922in a work to the publisher, but where the manuscript remains unpublished as a result of a disagreement between the parties. The issue arises in the context of a dispute over publication of a historical work produced to memorialize the experiences of those holocaust victims who suffered the horrors of the Riga Ghetto and the surrounding Nazi concentration camps in Latvia.

Plaintiff (Society) is a society composed of the survivors of a ghetto set up by the Nazis in the City of Riga, Latvia, during the period 1941-1943. Defendant Henry R. Huttenbach (Professor Huttenbach) is a history professor at City College of the City University in New York and a recognized specialist in holocaust studies. Plaintiff hired defendant to write a book relating the experiences of survivors of the ghetto as a memorial to those who had died. The decision to hire defendant came after extensive discussions and a written proposal by Professor Huttenbach concerning the proposed methodology of obtaining oral history and recollection and after another author, also a professor at City College, was considered and rejected.

Professor Huttenbach commenced the project by interviewing well over 100 persons, many of whom were members or referred by members of the Society and some of whom he located on his own. He received $25 per interview regardless of the amount of time it took and reimbursement for many of his interview-related expenses. These included taxi fares but not transportation to other cities or countries where some of the interviews were conducted.

On June 14, 1982 the parties entered into their first agreement for a book. It was to be entitled "The Holocaust in Riga: A History of the Riga Ghetto.” This first contract specifically provided that a first draft would be prepared by June 30, 1984 and no later than September 1, 1984. Professor Huttenbach would be paid $9,000 to cover expenses and costs of research and writing including interviews and the Society would assume "full ownership and all copyrights of the * * * manuscript.” Other expenses including interviews, typing and "Xeroxing” would be assumed by the Society. Huttenbach would have exclusive access as researcher to all materials in the Riga Ghetto Archive until completion of the manuscript, and thereafter the materials would be subject to limitations contained in an agreement between the Society and Yad Vashem (the Holocaust Museum in Jerusalem). Finally, the manuscript would be published under the authorship of Henry R. [923]*923Huttenbach, with the Society mentioned as sponsor or publisher. Herman Ziering, vice-president, together with Lore Oppenheimer, president, handled the negotiations on behalf of the Society and signed the agreement, which had been drafted by Huttenbach.

Huttenbach assembled the various material he compiled and the tapes made into an Archive. He prepared a catalogue of the Archive which was published by the Society but for which he received no separate compensation. According to his testimony, a full set of tapes is in the possession of the Society. Other materials constituting the "Riga Ghetto Archive” include copies or reproductions of materials given to Professor Huttenbach and returned to the individuals who submitted them or copies of library research material.

A first draft of the manuscript, a portion of it handwritten, was submitted to the Society in September 1984. Shortly thereafter a typist was hired, and the typed version was submitted to a Mr. Sheinbaum of Shengold Publishers, the publisher selected by the Society, in December of 1984. The first galley was provided both to Professor Huttenbach and to the Society in January of 1985. Mrs. Goldie Waxman was selected by the publisher to work with Professor Huttenbach as his editor. Professor Huttenbach met with a committee of 4 to 6 members of the Society on a number of occasions during February and March of 1985, making those corrections and revisions which he deemed legitimate. When the recollections of various survivors differed he attempted to reconcile versions wherever possible. Where there were outright conflicts, he exercised judgment in determining which views should be presented.

Although the Society indicated to Huttenbach in 1984 that it had a target date of May 1985 for publication, no agreement to finish the work by that date was ever concluded. In March of 1985, the parties entered into another agreement at the instigation of the Society. That agreement, dated March 7, 1985, reiterated the fact that all materials and tapes in the Riga Ghetto Archive belonged to the Society and that any future publication based on the Archive material belonged to the Society. The agreement also stated that "The Society will grant Prof. Huttenbach exclusive use of the Archives for research purposes for a period of 5 years until January 1, 1991.” Revision of the galley was again halted because of a review written by Professor Huttenbach in The Voice of Auschwitz which the Society claimed as an unauthorized [924]*924publication of its work, but which Professor Huttenbach asserted was merely an advance notice relating to the forthcoming book. In fact, it was a summary of a chapter and was so identified. The review described the systematic mass extermination of Jews in Salaspils, one of the concentration camps surrounding Riga to which ghetto inhabitants were sent. The Society wrote Professor Huttenbach threatening to take his work away and find another author to finish it unless he entered into a third agreement.

Just prior to the signing of the third agreement in May 1985, a fortieth anniversary dinner was held by the Society and a mock-up of the cover of the book was displayed which did not properly credit Professor Huttenbach as the sole author.

That third agreement, signed on June 21, 1985, restated some of the existing arrangements including the compensation plan and the copyright understanding. It added that the finished product would be a "work for hire” but that the professor was an independent writer. It also stated that Professor Huttenbach would not prepare or participate in the preparation of any book or article dealing with the Riga Ghetto and the surrounding camps, including Salaspils, Kaiserwald and Jungfernhof, until January 1, 1991. A handwritten addendum states that failure to deliver the first galley by November 30, 1985 would subject Professor Huttenbach to a fine of $100 per week.

Professor Huttenbach completed his revisions of the first galley in the beginning of November and delivered a copy to Herman Ziering in late November. He then met with Ziering and Lore Oppenheimer in December 1985 and agreed to make six additional copies of the revised galley. These were left with the publisher with a note to forward them to the Society, but Ziering was not notified that they were there until January 1986. The six copies were distributed to board members but not read by Ziering himself.

At about that time or shortly thereafter communications between the parties broke down. Mr. Ziering testified that all of the members of the Society were discouraged by what they perceived to be substantial inaccuracies. He discussed a few of these flaws, relying primarily upon what he had been told by others. Professor Huttenbach expressed total willingness to correct any mistakes as long as he agreed that they were in fact errors.

[925]

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Bluebook (online)
141 Misc. 2d 921, 535 N.Y.S.2d 670, 1988 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 718, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/society-of-survivors-of-riga-ghetto-inc-v-huttenbach-nysupct-1988.