Wrench v. Universal Pictures Co.

104 F. Supp. 374, 92 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 350, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4318
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJanuary 18, 1952
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 104 F. Supp. 374 (Wrench v. Universal Pictures Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wrench v. Universal Pictures Co., 104 F. Supp. 374, 92 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 350, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4318 (S.D.N.Y. 1952).

Opinion

RYAN, Judge.

Plaintiff and both defendants have moved separately for summary judgment contending that as to their respective right to such relief there are no factual issues requiring trial. Rule 56, Fed.R.Civ.P., 28 U.S.C.

The claims asserted by plaintiff are for moneys she alleges are due her from defendant, Universal, under a written contract made on April 22, 1948.

By this contract plaintiff sold to Universal all motion picture rights for the entire world to three stories written by her (two of which had been published), and contracted to sell the rights to such additional story or stories and all adaptations and revisions which she might write and publish "based upon the theme and idea of plaintiff’s experiences as a lecturer. All of these stories were to be known and entitled collectively as It, Gives Me Great Pleasure; and all were referred to in the contract as the “property.” Universal was also given the right to use the title of the property or of any story as the title of any motion picture production based on the same theme. In the contract plaintiff agreed that she would protect and preserve the copyright on the property sold and to be sold from coming into the public domain so far as might be legally possible, by affixing to each “copy or arrangement of said .work or any 'part thereof published or offered for sale any notice necessary for copyright protection in the United States or necessary for like protection under the laws of other countries’.” Plaintiff undertook that as eách story was published with proper copyright notice she would duly register the same “wheresoever its protection so requires.” She also agreed to procure the execution and delivery of an instrument by any publisher to Universal assigning all rights sold to Universal, and contracted to specifically reserve Universal’s rights in the conveyance and transfer' or any rights in the property to another.

*376 Upon execution of the contract it was further provided that plaintiff was to receive from Universal a down payment of $10,000., a further payment of $25,000. upon commencement of principal photography of the first photoplay, if any, based on the property sold or within one year from the contract date. Universal also agreed to pay plaintiff $.25 for each copy of the regular trade edition of a full-length compilation of the stories published in book form and sold in the United States and Canada within 18 months of the first publication, these payments, however, not to exceed the sum of $25,000.

The complaint admits receipt by plaintiff of the first payment of $10,000. and alleges as a breach of the contract Universal’s failure to pay the balance allegedly due amounting to $50,000; Plaintiff asks-judgment in that amount against Universal.

Universal by answer admits the making of the contract in suit, but denies any breach on its’ part. It affirmatively alleges that plaintiff did not duly perform in that she neglected and omitted, (1) to preserve the copyright on the property in the United States and throughout the world, (2) to specifically preserve and protect the rights of Universal when assigning rights in the property to others, (3) to .procure the execution and delivery of assignments ¡by publishers to Universal, and (4) to give Universal the legal and exclusive right to use the title to said property. Universal alleges that by -reason of this failure of plaintiff to duly perform, the property became “unmarketable” and that title thereto was rendered “unmarketable, defective, clouded and doubtful.”

As separate defenses Universal pleads its election to rescind the contract and alleges readiness to restore to plaintiff everything it received under the contract. As a further defense it alleges the failure of plaintiff to furnish statements of sales of the book, a “condition precedent” to Universal’s obligation to pay the additional $25,000. which was to -be calculated on the number of books sold. By counterclaim it seeks to recover the $10,000. it paid plaintiff on the signing of the contract.

Plaintiff has asserted,an alternative claim against Dodd, Mead, the publisher of her book It Gives Me Great Pleasure. Dodd,, Mead, on May 17, 1948, undertook by contract with plaintiff to copyright the prop-erty and “to take all the usual precautions, to protect said copyright.” Plaintiff’s position is that if Universal’s counterclaim is sustained, she is entitled to judgment against Dodd, Mead for the damage toller resulting from any of the alleged imperfections in the copyright on the property arising from the' publication of the book. Plaintiff, however, “does not concede that any such imperfections exist.”

Defendant Dodd, Mead’s answer denies any breach of its Contract with p-laintiff, and •asserts affirmatively failure on the part of plaintiff to furnish complete or necessary information and assignments on prior copyrights and publications.’ Dodd, Mead also alleges that any injury plaintiff has sustained arises solely from her own failure to duly perform her contract with Universal, and that in this Dodd, Mead did not participate.

From the pleadings, affidavits and documents submitted the following facts appear undisputed:

Plaintiff is well-known as a lecturer and author of several books and short stories. Many of her works have appeared in leading magazines and some have been made into successful motion pictures. Based on the theme of her experiences as a lecturer plaintiff wrote several short stories recounting numerous amusing anecdotes. The first, entitled “My Heart’s In My Mouth”, was published and copyrighted by the Atlantic Monthly in June, 1944; the second, a story entitled “Luggage For the South,” was published and copyrighted in May, 1945 by the New Yorker magazine;, the third story, entitled “Cincinnati and I,” was not published until October, 1948. It was the picture rights to these three stories which were specifically sold to Universal by contract of April 22, 1948.

Following the making of the contract, plaintiff wrote' nine additional stories. These plaintiff had contracted to sell Universal before they were written. Six of *377 them were published and copyrighted in the New Yorker, prior to November; four were written but were not published in any magazine. In November, 1948, the book It Gives Me Great Pleasure was published by Dodd, Mead.

Deriving its title from the first story it contained the book collected as chapters under their original titles but with revisions, the eight stories .previously published and copyrighted by the Atlantic Monthly and the New Yorker magazines, and the four unpublished stories. The book was based entirely on the theme and idea of plaintiff’s experiences as a lecturer, each chapter relating a separate incident. The book as published represented the “property”, the rights to which plaintiff had agreed to and did sell to Universal.

The copyright notice affixed to the reverse of the front or fly leaf of the book reads: “Copyright, 1945, 1948 by Emily Kimbrough.” There appears beneath this a further notation that several of the chapters (named) “originally appeared in somewhat different form as stories in the New Yorker.” Neither “1944,” the year of the Atlantic Monthly copyright of the chapter entitled “My Heart’s In My Mouth,” nor the fact that it 'had once appeared in that magazine as a story is mentioned.

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Bluebook (online)
104 F. Supp. 374, 92 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 350, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wrench-v-universal-pictures-co-nysd-1952.