Webb v. Powers

29 F. Cas. 511, 10 Law Rep. 152

This text of 29 F. Cas. 511 (Webb v. Powers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Webb v. Powers, 29 F. Cas. 511, 10 Law Rep. 152 (circtdma 1847).

Opinion

WOODBURY, Circuit Justice.

Several objections are urged in this case against a recovery by the plaintiffs, which are formal rather than substantial. One is, that the assignments, under which they claim, do not appear to have been recorded. But they are still valid as between the parties, and as to all persons like the defendants, not claiming under the assignors. See cases in Leland v. The Medora [Case No. 8,237], Mass. Dist., Oct. 1846. Another is, that the plaintiffs are not proved to be citizens of the United States. But that being averred in the bill, and not denied by the answer, must be considered as admitted. There are some other objections, which have either been removed by evidence, or probably may be; and hence, if the ease can be decided on the merits, without delay and expense as to any formal objection, it will be better for both parties that this should be done. Passing by, then, the other preliminary exceptions, how does this case stand on the merits? The report of the master is in favor of the defendants. Prom the care evinced in the examination, and the high character of the gentleman who made it, much weight must be given to its conclusions. But the parties are entitled to a revision of it here, and, though the presumptions are in its favor, at the outset of the examination, yet if it cannot stand the scrutiny, to which it has been subjected in argument, and which the court is bound to bestow on it, the plaintiffs ought to succeed.

It may conduce to a more lucid exposition of the merits between these parties, as to the originality of their respective books, to ascertain, first, what, each claims as novel or peculiar. Neither of the parties makes any pretence to be inventors of dictionaries of flowers. Whether arranging them alphabetically or scientifically, and whether describing and defining them in prose or poetry, according to their classes and orders, or their medical virtues, or the sentiments they are accustomed to inspire, and whether illustrated by engravings of them, or the opinions of those most experienced in the beautiful hues and figurative language of flowers,— all this had been done before the first of these publications. It had been done, too, not only abroad, but in this country, and more especially in the “Flora's Dictionary,” published in Baltimore, in 1S30, and republished in 1S31, with the reputation of having been compiled by Mrs. Wirt. In the preface to the plaintiffs’ book, Mrs. Hale acknowledges her obligations to other writers on this subject, and more especially to the author of Flora's Dictionary, just described. And in the preface to the book of the defendants, Miss Edgarton also expresses her indebtedness to others, who had labored in this garden before her, and especially to the “Flora's Interpreter” of the plaintiffs. Again, there is much discrimination to be used in inquiries of this character, between different kinds of books, some of which, from their nature, cannot lie expected to be entirely new. Thus, dictionaries of all descriptions, when on like subjects, philological, lexicographical, professional, or scientific, must contain many definitions and descriptions, almost identical; as must gazetteers, grammars, maps, arithmetics, almanacs, concordances, cyclopae-[517]*517aias, itineraries, guide books, and similar publications. In these, if great errors have not previously existed, or unusual ignorance to be corrected, no great novelty is practicable or useful; unless it be to add new discoveries or inventions. new names, or words, or decisions, — so as to post up the subject to more recent periods, — or unless it be to abridge and omit details, and condense a more voluminous work into a smaller and cheaper form, so as to bring its purchase and use within the reach of new and less wealthy classes in society. Some similarities, and some use of prior works, even to copying of small parts, are in such cases tolerated, if the main design and execution are in reality novel or improved, and not a mere cover for important piracies from others. Trusler v. Murray, 1 East, 363, note; Gray v. Russell [Case No. 5,728]; 12 Ves. 270; 16 Ves. 269; 17 Ves. 422. What was there novel, then, in the combination and materials of the plaintiffs' book which the defendants have copied? Nothing in the arrangement, except that the “class and order and description of the flower-’ are placed on the same page, with its name and interpretation, instead of being in notes at the end, as in the second edition of Flora’s Dictionary. In the materials there is, also, a novelty in' the special designation of the sentiment in the plaintiffs’ book, which is not in Flora’s Dictionary. But the defendants have not imitated that, and hence it becomes unimportant. All, then, which the defendants have copied in the arrangement, which did not exist in other books than the plaintiffs’, and to which the plaintiffs of coursé have no exclusive claim, is the mere transfer of the notes to the same page with the flower to which they relate, — a closer juxtaposition; and all in the materials of the plaintiffs, which are original, and have been copied verbatim, are a few “poetic significations.” or definitions, being about twenty in one hundred and forty-eight, and consisting of only one hundred and fifty-six words out of the whole volume. In three or four other instances, some of the significations are varied in form slightly, but not in substance; and in nineteen cases, parts of the descriptions of flowers, and their localities, in prose, are used by the defendants, which were employed by the plaintiffs. The defendants offered to prove, in explanation of this, that the plaintiffs had copied in this way still more extensively from others; and it is difficult to conceive of different works, describing the appearance and locality of the same plants, not using like language, and often in some particulars the same, if the plant or flower has been long known, and the notices of them are, as in these cases, very brief, being embodied frequently in a single line. In compiling dictionaries of all kinds, gazetteers, and similar works, the materials of all must, to a considerable extent, be the same, and to such an extent are allowable; and the novelty or improvement, as before remarked, can be substantial in scarcely any case, unless the matter is usefully abridged in bulk and price, or a material change is made in arrangement, or more modern information is added in valuable quantities, or important errors are corrected, or important omissions are supplied. While, on the one hand, a prior compiler is not permitted to monopolize what was not original in himself, and what must be nearly identical in all such works on a like subject; yet he, who uses it subsequently to another, must not employ so much of the prior arrangement and materials as to show that the last work is a substantial invasion on the other, and is not characterized by enough new or improved, to indicate new toil and talent, and new property and rights in the last compiler. That is the cardinal distinction. Thus a material addition is made to a common dictionary, which shall, like Webster’s, add definitions of a large number of words before omitted; or quotations from the authors, who have employed the words in the sense adopted, like Johnson’s; or rules for the proper pronunciation of each word, like Walker’s; or the roots from which the word has been derived, like several others. And no one would complain of a new dictionary as an infringement on former ones, if it contained any of these important additions, and had not in other respects servilely copied but a few definitions of old words from any one former author.

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Related

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46 U.S. 233 (Supreme Court, 1847)

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Bluebook (online)
29 F. Cas. 511, 10 Law Rep. 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webb-v-powers-circtdma-1847.