West Pub. Co. v. Lawyers' Co-Operative Pub. Co.

79 F. 756, 35 L.R.A. 400, 1897 U.S. App. LEXIS 2361
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedApril 8, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 79 F. 756 (West Pub. Co. v. Lawyers' Co-Operative Pub. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
West Pub. Co. v. Lawyers' Co-Operative Pub. Co., 79 F. 756, 35 L.R.A. 400, 1897 U.S. App. LEXIS 2361 (2d Cir. 1897).

Opinion

LACOMBE, Circuit Judge.

Before considering the merits, a question of evidence presented by the appellee may be disposed Having properly reserved an exception to its admission, defendant moved to strike out certain testimony as incompetent. The circuit court denied the motion; stating, however, that the testimony would be ignored, since it was obnoxious to the objection. The testimony complained of is this; Complainant had prepared exhibits displaying, in parallel columns, certain paragraphs of complainant’s copyrighted books, which it was asserted were infringed, and corresponding paragraphs from defendant’s publication, which were asserted to be such infringements. Witnesses were then called who testified that they had compared these parallel columns with the original court opinions, of which such paragraphs were claimed to be syllabi, and thereupon gave the results of such comparison; in some instances pointing out similarity of language, and other indicia tending to show infringement, and in other cases testifying generally to the opinions they had formed from their examination. This testimony was not, in any true sense, proof of infringement. Whether an examination and comparison of any particular group of contrasted paragraphs with the original sources from which, as it is contended, such paragraphs are derived, does or does not afford internal evidence of literary piracy, is a matter which must be determined by the court or the master. Unfortunately for the court, there is no easy substitute for the laborious work of such comparison. It is the court’s judgment, and not that of the witness, which must ultimately determine the question. It does not follow, however, in a case like this, that such evidence should have been rejected altogether. So far as it refers to specific instances, and points out comparisons on which reliance is placed by either side, it is of incalculable value to the court in facilitating such examination. Without the elaborate exhibits in this case, and the comments thereon which point out the specific points contended for, it would have required months of time for the court to have reached any reasonably adequate conception of the merits of the [759]*759litigation. Referring to similar testimony in Lawrence v. Dana, 4 Cliff. 1, Fed. Cas. No. 8,136, the court says:

“Thongli admissible in all such cases, the opinions of exports are nevertheless, in their nature, secondary evidence; but the comparisons made by them * * * have very much facilitated the investigations made by die court. Considerable aid has been derived from that source * * *; but the court has found it necessary to re-examine the comparisons made by the witnesses, and to make others lor themselves, in order to come to a satisfactory conclusion. Regarded as a basis to enable the court to compare one book with the other, the results given by the experts * * * have proved of great service to the court in estimating the weight to be given to their rosfiective opinions.”

The fads of the case at bar are as follows: Complainant is the publisher of a system of reports, appearing weekly, and containing all the opinions of various courts, with syllabi, statements, of facts, etc., prepared by complainant’s editors. These are the well-known “Reporters,” such as Atlantic Reporter, Southeastern Reporter, Federal Reporter, etc. In connection with this series of reports, complainant published in monthly parts a digest of the cases, prepared from the syllabi, and consolidated at the end of each current year (about September 1st) into an annual volume, known as the “American Digest.” Both the reports and the digests ■were copyrighted. Defendant, was. the publisher of a rival series of reports, appearing weekly, and containing selected opinions, edited, with syllabi, statements of facts, etc. In connection with this series of reports (known as “Lawyers’ Reports Annotated”) defendant also published, in semimonthly parts, a digest of: all the opinions of various courts, consolidated at the end of the year into an annual, known as the “General Digest.” The two systems were in active competition, and the two digests, both as periodical issues and in completed form, were rival publications, each purporting to cover practically the whole field of case law enunciated by all courts of'last resort in the United States for the-year. Du fendant’s digest year ended about the same time as complainant’s, and this suit is concerned with the publication of the respective ■parties for the year ending September, 1892; it being contended by complainant that, in preparing the paragraphs which stated the law or facts in cases digested in defendant’s publication, its editors had substantially appropriated the labors of complainant’s editors (as found in the syllabi of the Reporters, and in the paragraphs of complainant’s digest) to’ such an extent as to infringe complainant’s copyrights. The answer denied such use.

Defendant’s digest was prepared in part from publications not protected by complainant’s copyrights. These publications include the opinions of the United States supreme court, as published in advance sheets by that court, certain English and Canadian reports, reports of certain intermediate appellate courts of Missouri and Illinois, reports of lower courts in Ohio and Pennsylvania, the District of Columbia cases, the court of claims reports, and the interstate commerce commission reports. Inasmuch as none of the syllabi of these reports are covered by complainant’s copyrights, this suit is in no way concerned with them.. The evidence is not specific as to the number of such cases included in defendant’s di[760]*760gest, although it would seem to be an easy matter to count them, but it does appear affirmatively that they aggregate a comparalively small fraction of the whole. The complainant contends that such fraction is about one-tenth. The circuit court finds it to be about 30 per cent. We do not find sufficient evidence to sustain such finding, but it is not now necessary to determine the precise amount. It is easily ascertainable, and for the purposes of this appeal it is sufficiently proved that the great majority of the paragraphs in defendant’s digest were prepared by editors who had before them in each case only the opinion of the court as printed in complainant’s reports, with complainant’s copyrighted syllabi and notes. The total number of cases digested in defendant’s publication is about 19,000, distributed into some 38,000 paragraphs.

Upon a motion for a preliminary injunction complainant, as evidence of the unfair use of its work, presented an exhibit of 55 paragraphs taken from different parts of defendant’s digest, which ir was contended showed on their face that they were taken from plaintiff’s syllabi. Subsequently complainant presented an exhibit of 108 additional paragraphs of a similar character. The court referred the matter to a master to report what, if any, portions or paragraphs of defendant’s digest infringed plaintiff’s copyrights. Before the master, and within a limited time fixed by him, plaintiff presented an exhibit of 548 paragraphs (including the 163 originally produced) which it contended showed upon their face conclusive evidence of piracy, and much oral testimony was taken.

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Bluebook (online)
79 F. 756, 35 L.R.A. 400, 1897 U.S. App. LEXIS 2361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-pub-co-v-lawyers-co-operative-pub-co-ca2-1897.