White v. Bender

185 F. 921, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 5119
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. New York
DecidedApril 12, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 185 F. 921 (White v. Bender) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White v. Bender, 185 F. 921, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 5119 (N.D.N.Y. 1911).

Opinion

RAY, District Judge.

In 1907 Frank White published the sixth edition of his work, “White on Corporations,” with statutes, decisions, annotations, and forms; Baker, Voorhis & Co., publishers. Same was duly copyrighted. In 1909 the defendant company published and put on the market “Frost on New York Corporations,” treatise, annotations, corporation acts, and forms, by Thomas Gold Frost. This purports to he “a treatise on the Business Corporation Iyaw of the state of New York, including therein,” etc. Both works contain the New York statutes relating to' corporations — that of Frost coming down to August, 1909; that of White to January 1, 1907. The al leged infringing matter consists mainly of (1) citations of cases; (2) indexes; (3) legal forms; and (4) some miscellaneous matter.

Citations.

In citing cases under the various sections, White gives the law student, lawyer, or judge using his book some idea of the point decided [922]*922and arising under the section to which the decision relates. Thus in White, page 115 (Stock Corporation Law as then in force), “Sec. 27, Officers,” he first gives the statute as amended in 1892, referring to the former section; then a note referring to other sections, etc., and then proceeds, “One person may be chosen to fill two different offices (Novelty Mfg. Co. v. Connell, 88 Hun, 254),” and then gives the point of other cases arising, or supposed to have arisen, under this section, with a reference to the case where the point is decided.

Frost, page 575, gives the section on “Officers” as “Sec. 30, Officers,” quotes the statute, says, “Formerly Sec. 27, S. C. L.,” and then cites a large number of cases, the same cases in the same order cited by White under the same section, before amendment, with three or four omissions. He in no way indicates the point or points of the cases cited, and the user of the book would probably lay it aside and turn to a digest for such information as he desires. There is nothing in the citations to indicate whether or not the cases apply to the section as amended. This runs all through Part II of the book complained of. In some cases the citation of another case has been added, and in most cases errors appearing in White appear in Frost. This is persuasive evidence that the citation of cases was copied from White, and that there was no examination and verification of the cases by Frost. Frost admits he had those cases copied for use in compiling his book, but says, in substance, he examined all carefully, and discovered some, and added hundreds of new cases, and that he directed his assistant to correct all of them in spelling, etc. He gives quite an extended explanation as to these citations. His assistant gives an affidavit in corroboration.

Index.

It is quite true that, where a work consists mostly of statutes and a mere recital of what has been decided by the courts under them, there is little room or opportunity for original thought or reasoning and little disposition to indulge therein. Most modern text-books are written in this way. We take up a new book just issued, and find a rehash of what has gone before, with references to the old cases and some of the new ones. The text usually reads, It has been or was decided in (giving case) that, etc., and in (giving case) that, etc., but in (giving case) it was held, and so on, page after page. There is nothing to indicate at what page the law on a given point can be found, unless we turn to the index. These are usually very meager, with little or no cross-indexing, but so far as they indicate anything they usually follow a beaten track.

There is considerable inherent evidence that Frost copied, with few additions, much' of the index of White. For instance, in General Index of White, under the head “Business,” he has “extension of,” “form for,” “location of, change of,” and “taxable, at principal place of.” In preparing his index, White evidently found the section of the statute (Laws 1896, c. 929, amended by Laws 1905, c. 489) headed “Change of Place of Business,” and the section headed “Alterations or Extension of Business” (Laws 1892, c. 688, amended by [923]*923Laws 1901, c. 334, and Laws 1905, c. 751). These headings, as well as the text, would suggest, under thé title “Business” in the index, “place of,” “change of place of,” “location of place of,” “alteration of,” “extension of,” “change of,” etc. In White’s index the words “location of, change of,” refer us to page 380. The section found there refers wholly to location and change of place of business, and not to alterations and extensions of business or changes or alterations in the character of the business. Now “location of business” and “change of business” are not the same as “location of place of business” or “change of place of business.” White’s index, “Business,” subhead “extension of,” refers us to page 131, where we find section 32, headed “Alterations or Extension of Business.” Here, of course, we cannot indulge in criticism.

It is not to be wondered at, of course, that White assumed the reader of his hook would understand that “location of, change of,” referred, not to the location of the business itself or an alteration of the business itself, but to the place of managing it, the principal office. Probably that ran in his mind in making up his index. But would another writer make the same assumption, or would he be likely to say, referring to the section that treats wholly and solely of the “place of business,” and its location and changes of the place of business from one locality to another, under the head “Business,” “place of,” or “location of place of,” and “change of place of” ?

Again, there is much to indicate that, while using and referring to White’s general index, Frost did not follow it, only as a guide, using generally the same expression for want of better. White has many tilings Frost does not have, and Frost has many things wanting in White.

Legal Forms.

P'rost has a considerable number of legal forms substantially identical with those found in White. Whether he took these from public records or forms used prior to White, or copied forms original with White, is in dispute. The truth of the dispute in this regard, as well as the matter of citations, can hardly be arrived at satisfactorily on mere affidavits, where there has been no cross-examination.

General Matter.

It cannot be doubted that Frost has either copied from White, or correctly quoted from him from memory, in several instances. The work of Mr. Frost is divided into three parts. Part I is in the nature of a general treatise on the Business Corporation Law of New York; Part II deals with General Corporation Law; and Part III with forms and precedents. In Part I, page 133, I find: v

•‘Wlion stock is declared forfeited, tlie liability of the holder thereof to the corporation for further payment thereon ceases.t”

The figure refers to a footnote, viz.:

“4 Mills v. Stewart, 41 N. Y. 389; Small v. Herkimer Mfg. Co., 2 N. Y. 330.”

[924]*924In White’s book, page 151, under “Sec. 43, Time payment of subscriptions to stock” (giving the section and referring to several cases), I find:

“When stock is declared forfeited, the liability of the holder thereof to the corporation for further payment thereon ceases. (Mills v. Stewart, 41 N. Y. 380; Small v. Herkimer Mfg. Co., 2 N. Y. 330.)”

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Bluebook (online)
185 F. 921, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 5119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-bender-nynd-1911.