Werckmeister v. American Tobacco Co.

207 U.S. 375, 28 S. Ct. 124, 52 L. Ed. 254, 1907 U.S. LEXIS 1232
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 16, 1907
Docket29
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 207 U.S. 375 (Werckmeister v. American Tobacco Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Werckmeister v. American Tobacco Co., 207 U.S. 375, 28 S. Ct. 124, 52 L. Ed. 254, 1907 U.S. LEXIS 1232 (1907).

Opinion

*379 Mr. Justice-Day

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case was argued and submitted with American Tobacco Company v. Werckmeister, decided December 2, 1907, ante, p. 284.

The present action was brought to recover, under § 4965, Revised Statutes, relating to copyright (3 U. S. Compiled Stat. 3414), the penalties of $10 each, for 1,196 sheets of the alleged infringing publications claimed to have beén found in the defendant’s possession and seized by the United States marshals, under the two writs of replevin described in that suit.

Plaintiff in error, Werckmeister, offered in evidence the judgment roll in the former suit, with the pleadings and judgment, and also offered in evidence the writs and returns of the marshals for the Southern. and Western Districts of New York, respectively, showing seizures of 203 copies- and 993 copies; the court excluded these writs as immaterial. No other evidence being offered, the court instructed the jury to render a verdict for the defendant, and judgment was afterwards rendered accordingly upon the verdict'. 138 Fed. Rep. 162. On writ of error to the Circuit Court of Appeals the judgment below was affirmed, 148 Fed. Rep. 1022, and this writ of error is prosecuted to reverse the judgment of the Circuit Court of Appeals.

This action requires the construction of § 4965, Rev. Stat., as amended March 2,1895,28 Stat. 965 (U. S. Compiled Stat., vol. 3, p. 3414), which is as follows:

“Sec. 4965. If any person, after the recording of the title'of any map, chart, dramatic or musical composition, print, cut, engraving, or photograph, or chromo, or of the description of any painting, drawing, statue, statuary, or model or design intended to' be perfected and executed as a work of the fine arts, as provided by this act, shall, within the term limited, contrary to the provisions of this act, and without the consent of the proprietor of the copyright first obtained in writing, siffned in nresence of two or more witnesses, engrave, etch, *380 work, copy, print, publish, dramatize, translate, or import, either in whole or in part, or by varying’the main design, with intent to evade the law, or, knowing the same to be so printed,, published, dramatized, translated, or imported, shall sell or expose to sale any copy of such map, or other article, as aforesaid, he shall forfeit to the proprietor all the plates on which the same shall be copied, and every sheet thereof, either copied or printed, and shall further forfeit one dollar for every sheet of the same found in his possession, either printing, printed, copied, published, imported, or exposed for sale; and in case of a painting, statue or statuary, he shall forfeit ten dollars for every copy of the same-in his possession, or by him soíd or exposed for sale: Provided, however, That in ease of any such infringement of the copyright of a photograph made from any object not a work of fine, arts, the (sum to be recovered in any action brought under the provisions of this section shall be not less than one hundred dollars, nojr more than five thousand dollars, And: Provided further, That in case of any such infringement of the copyright, of a 'painting, drawing, statue, engraving, etching, print or model or design for a work of the fine arts or of a.photograph of a work of the fine arts, the sum to be recovered' in any action brought through the provisions of this section shall be not less, than two hundred -and fifty dollars, and not more than ten thousand dollars. One-half of all - the foregoing penalties shall go to the proprietors of the copyright and the other half to the use of the United States.”

As with the sections of. the copyright act under consideration in Tobacco Company v. Werckmeister, ante, this section has been the subject of consideration in the Federal courts, with different conclusions as to its purport and meaning. While the statute provides for the forfeiture of the plates and sheets and for the sum. of $10 in case of a painting, for every copy found in the offending person’s possession or sold by him, it is silent as to the kind of action to be brought, and we are left to discover the meaning of the act in this respect from a consideration of the *381 language .used, read in the light of the objects and purposes to be effected.

Obviously the statute does not provide a proceeding in' rem, as is sometimes done in the revenue laws, for the act is levelled against any «person who shall, contrary to.its provisions, without consent, etc., engrave, work, copy, print, etc., forfeit to the proprietor the plates and sheets and a sum of money for each sheet, etc., found in his possession. This section of the statute is penal, and there should be especial care to- work no extension of its provisions by construction. Statutory provisions similar to those above cited have been the subject of consideration in a number of cases in this court. In Backus v. Gould, 7 How. 798, it was held that there-could be no recovery for publishing sheets, copyright matter, etc., unless the samé' were found in the possession of the defendant; In Stevens v. Cady, 2 Curtis, 200; S. C., Fed. .Cases No. 13,395, Mr. Justice Curtis, sitting at the circuit, held there could be no'accounting for the penalties in an action in equity, and that the proprietor of the copyright was left by the act to his remedy at.law by trover or replevin. In Thornton v. Schreiber, 124 U. S. 612, it was held that action would not lie against Thornton, who was the business manager of Sharpless & Son, of Philadelphia,' in whose store the prints in question in that case were found, and' in speaking for the court Mr. Justice Miller, who delivered the opinion in that case, said (p. 620):

“Counsel for defendants in error, Schreiber & Sons, insist that the words ‘found in his possession’ are to be construed as referring to the findipg of the jury; that the expression means simply that where the sheets are ascertained by the finding of the jury to have been at any time in the possession of the person who. committed the wrongful act, such person shall forfeit one dollar for each sheet so ascertained to have been ip his possession. We, however, think that the word ‘found’ means that there must be a time before the cause of actipn accrues at which they are found in the possession of the defendant.” -

This language was held in Falk v. Curtis Pub. Co., 403 Fed. *382 Rep. 967, 971, affirmed by the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit in Falk v. Curtis Pub. Co., 107 Fed. Rep. 126, to mean that before the action for the penalty wbuld lie there must be a finding of the articles in the possession of the defendant by means of a proceeding instituted for the express purpose of condemnation and forfeiture, and that an action of assumpsit brought at the same time with the action of replevin was'premature.

In the ease of Bolles v.

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Bluebook (online)
207 U.S. 375, 28 S. Ct. 124, 52 L. Ed. 254, 1907 U.S. LEXIS 1232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/werckmeister-v-american-tobacco-co-scotus-1907.