Chromolithographs representing actual groups of persons and
things, which have been designed from hints or descriptions of the
scenes represented, and which are to be used as advertisements for
a circus are "pictorial illustrations" within the meaning of
Rev.Stat. § 4962, allowing a copyright to the "author,
designer, or proprietor . . . of any engraving, cut, print, . . .
or chromo" as affected by the act of 1874, c. 301, § 3, 18
Stat. 78, 79. And on complying with all the statutory requirements,
the proprietors are entitled to the protection of the copyright
laws.
The case is stated in the opinion of the Court.
Page 188 U. S. 248
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case comes here from the United States Circuit Court of
Appeals for the Sixth Circuit by writ of error. Act of March 3,
1891, 26 Stat. 828, s. 517, § 6. It is an action brought by
the plaintiffs in error to recover the penalties prescribed for
infringements of copyrights. Rev.Stat. §§ 4952, 4956,
4965, amended by Act of March 3, 1891, 26 Stat. 1109, c. 565, and
Act of March 2, 1895, 28 Stat. 965, c. 194. The alleged
infringements consisted in the copying in reduced form of three
chromolithographs prepared by employees of the plaintiffs for
advertisements of a circus owned by one Wallace. Each of the three
contained a portrait of Wallace in the corner, and lettering
bearing some slight relation to the scheme of decoration,
indicating the subject of the design and the fact that the reality
was to be seen at the circus. One of the designs was of an ordinary
ballet, one of a number of men and women, described as the Stirk
family, performing on bicycles, and one of groups of men and women
whitened to represent statues. The circuit court directed a verdict
for the defendant on the ground that the chromolithographs were not
within the protection of the copyright law, and this ruling was
sustained by the circuit court of appeals.
Courier
Lithographing Co. v. Donaldson Lithographing Co., 104 F.
993.
There was evidence warranting the inference that the designs
belonged to the plaintiffs, they having been produced by persons
employed and paid by the plaintiffs in their establishment to make
those very things.
Gill v. United States, 160 U.
S. 426,
Page 188 U. S. 249
160 U. S. 435;
Colliery Engineer Company v. United Correspondence Schools
Company, 94 F. 152;
Carte v. Evans, 27 F. 861. It
fairly might be found also that the copyrights were taken out in
the proper names. One of them was taken out in the name of the
Courier Company and the other two in the name of the Courier
Lithographing Company. The former was the name of an unincorporated
joint-stock association formed under the laws of New York, Laws of
1894, c. 235, and made up of the plaintiffs, the other a trade
variant on that name.
Scribner v. Clark, 50 F. 473, 474,
475,
S.C. sub nom. Belford v. Scribner, 144 U.
S. 488.
Finally, there was evidence that the pictures were copyrighted
before publication. There may be a question whether the use by the
defendant for Wallace was not lawful within the terms of the
contract with Wallace, or a more general one as to what rights the
plaintiff reserved. But we cannot pass upon these questions as
matter of law; they will be for the jury when the case is tried
again, and therefore we come at once to the ground of decision in
the courts below. That ground was not found in any variance between
pleading and proof, such as was put forward in argument, but in the
nature and purpose of the designs.
We shall do no more than mention the suggestion that painting
and engraving, unless for a mechanical end, are not among the
useful arts, the progress of which Congress is empowered by the
Constitution to promote. The Constitution does not limit the useful
to that which satisfies immediate bodily needs.
Burrow-Giles
Lithographic Co. v. Sarony, 111 U. S. 53. It is
obvious also that the plaintiff's case is not affected by the fact,
if it be one, that the pictures represent actual groups -- visible
things. They seem from the testimony to have been composed from
hints or description, not from sight of a performance. But even if
they had been drawn from the life, that fact would not deprive them
of protection. The opposite proposition would mean that a portrait
by Velasquez or Whistler was common property because others might
try their hand on the same face. Others are free to copy the
original. They are not free to copy the copy.
Blunt v.
Patten, 2 Paise 397, 400.
See Kelly v.
Page 188 U. S. 250
Morris, L.R. 1 Eq. 697;
Morris v. Wright, L.R.
5 Ch. 279. The copy is the personal reaction of an individual upon
nature. Personality always contains something unique. It expresses
its singularity even in handwriting, and a very modest grade of art
has in it something irreducible which is one man's alone. That
something he may copyright unless there is a restriction in the
words of the act.
If there is a restriction, it is not to be found in the limited
pretensions of these particular works. The least pretentious
picture has more originality in it than directories and the like,
which may be copyrighted. Drone, Copyright 153.
See Henderson
v. Tompkins, 60 F. 758, 765. The amount of training required
for humbler efforts than those before us is well indicated by
Ruskin.
"If any young person, after being taught what is, in polite
circles, called 'drawing,' will try to copy the commonest piece of
real work -- suppose a lithograph on the title page of a new opera
air, or a woodcut in the cheapest illustrated newspaper of the day
-- they will find themselves entirely beaten."
Elements of Drawing, first ed. 3. There is no reason to doubt
that these prints, in their
ensemble and in all their
details, in their design and particular combinations of figures,
lines, and colors, are the original work of the plaintiffs'
designer. If it be necessary, there is express testimony to that
effect. It would be pressing the defendant's right to the verge, if
not beyond, to leave the question of originality to the jury upon
the evidence in this case, as was done in
Hegeman v.
Springer, 110 F. 374.
We assume that the construction of Rev.Stat. § 4952,
allowing a copyright to the "author, designer, or proprietor . . .
of any engraving, cut, print . . . [or] chromo," is affected by the
act of 1874, 18 Stat. 78, 79, c. 301, § 3. That section
provides that,
"in the construction of this act, the words 'engraving,' 'cut,'
and 'print' shall be applied only to pictorial illustrations or
works connected with the fine arts."
We see no reason for taking the words "connected with the fine
arts" as qualifying anything except the word "works," but it would
not change our decision if we should assume further that they also
qualified "pictorial illustrations," as the defendant contends.
Page 188 U. S. 251
These chromolithographs are "pictorial illustrations." The word
"illustrations" does not mean that they must illustrate the text of
a book, and that the etchings of Rembrandt or Muller's engraving of
the Madonna di San Sisto could not be protected today if any man
were able to produce them. Again, the act, however construed, does
not mean that ordinary posters are not good enough to be considered
within its scope. The antithesis to "illustrations or works
connected with the fine arts" is not works of little merit or of
humble degree, or illustrations addressed to the less educated
classes; it is "prints or labels designed to be used for any other
articles of manufacture." Certainly works are not the less
connected with the fine arts because their pictorial quality
attracts the crowd, and therefore gives them a real use -- if use
means to increase trade and to help to make money. A picture is
nonetheless a picture, and nonetheless a subject of copyright, that
it is used for an advertisement. And if pictures may be used to
advertise soap, or the theater, or monthly magazines, as they are,
they may be used to advertise a circus. Of course, the ballet is as
legitimate a subject for illustration as any other. A rule cannot
be laid down that would excommunicate the paintings of Degas.
Finally, the special adaptation of these pictures to the
advertisement of the Wallace shows does not prevent a copyright.
That may be a circumstance for the jury to consider in determining
the extent of Mr. Wallace's rights, but it is not a bar. Moreover,
on the evidence, such prints are used by less pretentious
exhibitions when those for whom they were prepared have given them
up.
It would be a dangerous undertaking for persons trained only to
the law to constitute themselves final judges of the worth of
pictorial illustrations, outside of the narrowest and most obvious
limits. At the one extreme, some works of genius would be sure to
miss appreciation. Their very novelty would make them repulsive
until the public had learned the new language in which their author
spoke. It may be more than doubted, for instance, whether the
etchings of Goya or the paintings of Manet would have been sure of
protection when seen for the first time. At the other end,
copyright would be denied to
Page 188 U. S. 252
pictures which appealed to a public less educated than the
judge. Yet if they command the interest of any public, they have a
commercial value -- it would be bold to say that they have not an
aesthetic and educational value -- and the taste of any public is
not to be treated with contempt. It is an ultimate fact for the
moment, whatever may be our hopes for a change. That these pictures
had their worth and their success is sufficiently shown by the
desire to reproduce them without regard to the plaintiffs' rights.
See Henderson v. Tompkins, 60 F. 758, 765. We are of
opinion that there was evidence that the plaintiffs have rights
entitled to the protection of the law.
The judgment of the circuit court of appeals is reversed;
the judgment of the circuit court is also reversed, and the cause
remanded to that court with directions to set aside the verdict and
grant a new trial.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, dissenting:
Judges Lurton, Day, and Severens, of the circuit court of
appeals, concurred in affirming the judgment of the district court.
Their views were thus expressed in an opinion delivered by Judge
Lurton:
"What we hold is this: that if a chromo, lithograph, or other
print, engraving, or picture has no other use than that of a mere
advertisement, and no value aside from this function, it would not
be promotive of the useful arts within the meaning of the
constitutional provision, to protect the 'author' in the exclusive
use thereof, and the copyright statute should not be construed as
including such a publication if any other construction is
admissible. If a mere label simply designating or describing an
article to which it is attached, and which has no value separated
from the article, does not come within the constitutional clause
upon the subject of copyright, it must follow that a pictorial
illustration designed and useful only as an advertisement, and
having no intrinsic value other than its function as an
advertisement, must be equally without the obvious meaning of the
Constitution.
Page 188 U. S. 253
It must have some connection with the fine arts to give it
intrinsic value, and that it shall have is the meaning which we
attach to the Act of June 18, 1874, amending the provisions of the
copyright law. We are unable to discover anything useful or
meritorious in the design copyrighted by the plaintiffs in error
other than as an advertisement of acts to be done or exhibited to
the public in Wallace's show. No evidence, aside from the
deductions which are to be drawn from the prints themselves, was
offered to show that these designs had any original artistic
qualities. The jury could not reasonably have found merit or value
aside from the purely business object of advertising a show, and
the instruction to find for the defendant was not error. Many other
points have been urged as justifying the result reached in the
court below. We find it unnecessary to express any opinion upon
them in view of the conclusion already announced. The judgment must
be affirmed."
Courier Lithographing Co. v. Donaldson Lithographing
Co., 104 F. 993, 996.
I entirely concur in these views, and therefore dissent from the
opinion and judgment of this Court. The clause of the Constitution
giving Congress power to promote the progress of science and useful
arts, by securing for limited terms to authors and inventors the
exclusive right to their respective works and discoveries, does
not, as I think, embrace a mere advertisement of a circus.
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA authorizes me to say that he also
dissents.