Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp. v. Dieckhaus

153 F.2d 893, 68 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 355, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 3936
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 25, 1946
Docket13121
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 153 F.2d 893 (Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp. v. Dieckhaus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp. v. Dieckhaus, 153 F.2d 893, 68 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 355, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 3936 (8th Cir. 1946).

Opinions

WOODROUGH, Circuit Judge.

In her complaint in this action the plaintiff accused the defendant film corporation of copying her unpublished and uncopy-righted book “Love Girl” without her consent in the production and presentation by defendant of its sound motion picture “Alexander’s Ragtime Band.” There was jurisdiction by reason of diversity of citizenship and amount involved, and on the trial of the issue joined the court entered interlocutory decree in favor of the plaintiff awarding an accounting for damages and profits and injunction against further exhibition of the picture. Dieckhaus v. Twentieth Century Fox, D.C., 54 F.Supp. 425. There was no extraneous evidence that defendant had ever had access to the plaintiff’s book prior to the exhibition of its picture on August 19, 1938, and there was direct evidence that it had had no access thereto, but the court found from comparison of the book with the picture that there were similarities which could not be the result of [894]*894coincidence and which, therefore, were the result of access to the book by defendant and of “conscious or unconscious” copying thereof.

It recognized as the parties here agree, that in law the unauthorized copying of the whole or substantial part of the literary property of another is a tort and that in an action such as this the burden of proof to establish the commission of the tort was upon plaintiff. Also that the law of literary property and copyright, differing from patent law, protects the property right of the originator of a composition, even though the composition he has originated is the same as that which another has originated. Each originator has property right in his own and the action does not lie unless the defendant had access to the plaintiff’s work and copied therefrom. But as summarized in its written opinion, included in the record, the court inferred from the existence of similarities which it found “that this is a -case where plaintiff’s treatment has been consciously or unconsciously purloined.”

The defendant prosecutes this appeal to reverse the decree and contends, among other things, (1) that the court erroneously applied the doctrine of unconscious plagiarism and that upon proper application of the law relating to access and copying to the evidence before the court, the defendant was entitled to a finding that it hád not had access to the plaintiff’s book and to dismissal of the action. It also contends (2) that the plaintiff in the prosecution of her action practiced fraud upon the court in connection with documentary evidence introduced by her to sustain her claims and therefore is not entitled to relief in equity. These contentions present the only substantial questions for decision here.

(1) The trial court recognized in its findings that the defendant had adduced the testimony of witnesses and documentary evidence tending to show that its named servants acting in its behalf originally composed and produced Alexander’s Ragtime Band, and that “each of them denies having ever seen or heard of plaintiff’s story or knowing plaintiff or any of the literary agents mentioned above (referring to a Mrs. Malone and a Mr. Laurence R. D’Orsay, to whom plaintiff had entrusted her book for brief periods for criticism)”, but immediately following, in the findings, the court said: “Nevertheless access may be inferred from similarity between the two works as stated above and we will therefore, proceed to an examination of the alleged similarities between the novel and the movie.”

The court did not find any of the particulars testified to by any of defendant’s witnesses or reflected in its documents, to be false, but concluded that the similarities revealed by the comparison of the book with the picture established defendant’s “conscious or unconscious” plagiarism of specified parts of the book.

The evidence as to the production of defendant’s picture shows that Mr. Zaryl Zanuck, production vice president of defendant, originated the idea of making a picture to be called “Alexander’s Ragtime Band” (that being the title of Irving Berlin’s earliest great song hit success) reflecting the life of Berlin which would present the playing and singing of, and dancing and acting to his famous songs. He broached the matter to Mr. Berlin in 1936 while Mr. Berlin was in Hollywood working under contract with defendant on another picture. Berlin “had done a cavalcade of his songs on the radio” and at or about the time of Zanuck’s suggestion a “cavalcade” of Berlin’s songs was being presented to the public over the radio to which “the reaction was a very enthusiastic one.” Berlin accordingly responded favorably to Zanuck’s suggestion to put the music on a screen production under the title Alexander’s Ragtime Band, with the qualification that he (Berlin) should not be pictured as the hero, but that the hero should be a fictional character, a composite of several men identified with the rise of Jazz music, and he applied himself for a month or more to composing an outline for the picture which would tell with the music the story of what he and those in this field of music regard as American music during the period of his conspicuous activity in that field. He completed the outline and had it typed by his secretary in October, 1936. The outline as he wrote it, is entitled Alexander’s Ragtime Band, and is a story of a fictitious “Alexander” and of his jazz band and of the steps through which the band and the kind of music it played advanced from gaining the attention and approval of small and lowly audiences until, as the climax of the story, it was acclaimed by most critical and conservative authorities in music at an historical performance in New York at Carnegie Hall. Study of the outline and the testimony concerning its composition and [895]*895the use made of it after it was submitted to Zanuck in December, 1936, convinces that it included the substance of the musical plotting of the final production and was closely adhered to throughout the period devoted to the work of producing the picture. It had its historical basis in the lives of Berlin and his intimates, White-man, Gershwin and others. Berlin appended a note to his outline stating that it was merely his attempt to put down on paper an idea of a story around “Alexander’s Rag-time Band” title and character; that the love story had not been developed and that he had made no effort to “cue any musical spots other than the old songs that are tied up to the story.”1

After Zanuck received the outline from Berlin and approved it, they proceeded with the project and Berlin testified as to his [896]*896part in the production that he “was on it continually with the exception of an Alaskan trip and a couple of trips I might have made to New York. I was on it continually'. I did nothing but that.” The period referred to being twenty months.

Mr. Zanuck assigned Richard Sherman, an experienced scenarist, to write in association with Berlin, an arrangement or treatment of the scenario for the projected Alexander’s Ragtime Band picture and they worked together on it for some three months. By March 3, 1937, they had finished and their draft had been mimeographed and submitted. It contains 121 typewritten pages and seeks to present the kind of love story contemplated in Berlin’s outline.

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Bluebook (online)
153 F.2d 893, 68 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 355, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 3936, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/twentieth-century-fox-film-corp-v-dieckhaus-ca8-1946.