Spahn v. Julian Messner, Inc.

43 Misc. 2d 219, 250 N.Y.S.2d 529, 1964 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1711
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 28, 1964
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 43 Misc. 2d 219 (Spahn v. Julian Messner, Inc.) 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
Spahn v. Julian Messner, Inc., 43 Misc. 2d 219, 250 N.Y.S.2d 529, 1964 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1711 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1964).

Opinion

Jacob Markowitz, J.

Plaintiff Warren Spahn, a baseball pitcher of wide renown and acclaim, seeks an injunction against the unauthorized publication of a book purporting to be his [220]*220biography, The Warren Spahn Story written by Milton J. Shapiro and published by Julian Messner, Inc., and damages for injuries sustained by reason of said publication and distribution.

Spahn alleges that the defendants are ‘1 taking pecuniary advantage of plaintiff’s name, photographs, and likeness and private life to create for profit a fictionalized and dramatic story, fanciful, and sensational in nature, designed primarily and exclusively for entertainment value, and to thrill, adventurize, amuse and inspire [defendants’] reading public.” The present lawsuit is thus predicated upon the contention that the fictionalization of his life story, the inclusion in the book of aspects of his private life and the concomitant commercial exploitation of his name and likeness constitute an infringement of plaintiff’s “ Right of Privacy”.

Defendants urge that The Warren Spahn Story is not and cannot, consistent with section 8 of article I of the Constitution of the State of New York and the First Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, be deemed to be, within the proscriptions of article 5 (§§ 50, 51) of the Civil Rights Law.1

[221]*221While the essence of the right of privacy eludes precise verbal definition, it comprehends, in its pure form, the individual’s absolute dominion and control over his 1inviolate personality” — the individual’s property right in his very being, whether manifested by his actions, his thoughts, his character, his appearance, his name. Dean Prosser, a leading authority in the law of torts, defines the law of privacy as comprising ‘ four distinct kinds of invasion of four different interests * * * 1. Intrusion upon the plaintiff’s seclusion or solitude, or into his private affairs. 2. Public disclosure of embarrassing private facts about the plaintiff. 3. Publicity which places the plaintiff in a false light in the public eye. 4. Appropriation, for the defendant’s advantage, of the plaintiff’s name or likeness.” (Prosser, Privacy, 48 Cal. L. Rev. 383, 389.)

New York law recognizes article 5 of the Civil Rights Law as the fountainhead of the right to legal redress for the invasion, appropriation and commercial exploitation of the individual’s personality (Gautier v. Pro-Football, 304 N. Y. 354, 358; Hill v. Hayes, 18 A D 2d 485, 488).

The New York statutory “ Right of Privacy ” represents the Legislature’s unequivocal response to the judicial pronouncement in the case of Roberson v. Rochester Folding Box Co. (171 N. Y. 538, 547) that “the right of privacy as a legal doctrine enforceable in equity has not, down to this time, been established by decisions.” An overwhelming majority of American jurisdictions has rejected the Roberson v. Rochester Folding Box Co. (supra) decision and reasoning and has recognized the right of privacy as a natural law, nonstatutory right. The juridical landmark of this corpus of the law is the justly venerated Pavesich v. New England Life Ins. Co. (122 Ga. 190). In that case, the court first enunciated the doctrine that the right of privacy was both a right derived from natural law ’ ’ (p. 194) and one “guaranteed to persons * * * by the constitution * * * of the United States ” (p. 197). “ If personal liberty embraces the right of publicity,” the court (p. 196) declared with reference to the First Amendment freedoms of expression, “it no less embraces the correlative right of privacy ”.

If in their views on the origin of the right of privacy, the New York statutory and the natural-right views represent differing protagonists, the case-law evolved by each jurisdiction closely parallels that of the other. The reason is clear. Article 5 of the Civil Rights Law couches the right of privacy and eon-,comitant proscription in the language of an all encompassing [222]*222imperative. Accordingly, the New York courts, mindful of the tenor of the times and the attendant needs of the individual, have moulded the corpus of the right of privacy doctrine. In so doing, the judiciary early adopted the guiding principle that “ £ [a] statute of this kind is not££ to be obeyed grudgingly, by construing it narrowly and treating it as though it did not exist for any purpose other than that embraced within the strict construction of its words. ” It is £ 1 not an alien intruder in the house of the common law, but a guest to be welcomed * * * as a new and powerful aid in the accomplishment of its appointed task of accommodating the law to social needs.” ’ ” (Lahiri v. Daily Mirror, 162 Misc. 776, 779, quoted with favor in Flores v. Mosler Safe Co., 7 N Y 2d 276, 281.)

During its early formative years, the right of privacy was shaped to meet the protection needed against the excesses of “yellow journalism” and the unauthorized practices of advertising, then in their embryonic stages. Today, the right must be construed in the context of a society that cannot cavalierly dismiss the pragmatic realities of our day. 'Scientific advances have multiplied the potential for infringement of the individual’s sanctity, and the demands of our highly complex industrialized society dangerously engulf and threaten the perimeter of man’s ever-shrinking sphere of personal liberty.

These constant and increasing pressures upon the individual’s right to inviolate personality and dignity have awakened in us an acute awareness that even as against the State, the right of privacy represents but another facet of the fundamental rights to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness — that the inalienable right of life must comprehend more than the antithesis of biological death; the right of liberty, more than the absence of physical restraint. If, in 1928, it required the prophetic perception of Mr. Justice Brandéis to discern that 1 £ The makers of our Constitution * * * conferred, as against the Government, the right to be let alone —the most comprehensive of rights and the right most valued by civilized men ” (dissenting in Olmstead v. United States, 277 U. S. 438, 478), the temper of our times has aroused a now receptive and understanding judiciary and public. Great rights, if not created, are perceived by man when he is threatened with their loss.

Present-day judicial cognizance that the essence of the Fourth Amendment is the individual’s right of privacy has spawned an incipient awareness that a general right to privacy is part of the 11 life ’ ’ and £ £ liberty ’ ’ protected by the due process clauses of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments.

[223]*223This notion of privacy ”, Mr. Justice Douglas has recently declared, “ is not drawn from the blue. It emanates from the totality of the constitutional scheme under which we live.” (Poe v. Ullmann, 367 U. S. 497, 521.) Indeed, within the very recent memory of man, recognition of the right of privacy has emerged as a distinguishing hallmark of our society.

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Bluebook (online)
43 Misc. 2d 219, 250 N.Y.S.2d 529, 1964 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1711, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spahn-v-julian-messner-inc-nysupct-1964.