Although complainant may assert his own common law copyright to
his play if he alleges that defendant has obtained a copyright for
the play sought to be enjoined, and the defendant stands upon the
copyright and is enjoined, a federal right is set up and denied,
and this Court has jurisdiction to review the judgment under §
709, Rev.Stat.
Under the law as it existed in 1894, after a play had been
performed in England, the rights of the owner to protection against
the unauthorized production in England is only that given by the
statutes; but the deprivation of common law rights by force of the
statutes was limited by territorial bounds within which the statute
was operative.
Public representation in this or in another country of a
dramatic composition not printed and published does not deprive the
owner of his common law right save by operation of statute.
Page 223 U. S. 425
At common law, the public performance of a play is not an
abandonment to public use.
The purpose and effect of the copyright law is not to render
fruits of piracy secure, and a copyright does not protect one
producing a play which is substantially a copy of an unprinted and
unpublished play the common law property right whereof is in
another.
238 Ill. 430 affirmed.
The facts, which involve the right of authors to unpublished
dramatic compositions and productions on the stage, are stated in
the opinion.
Page 223 U. S. 429
MR. JUSTICE HUGHES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a writ of error to the Supreme Court of Illinois.
The suit was brought by Charles Frohman, Charles Haddon
Chambers, and Stephano Gatti (defendants in error), to restrain the
production of what was alleged to be a piratical copy of a play
known as "The Fatal Card." Its authors were Charles Haddon Chambers
and B.C. Stephenson, British subjects, resident in London, who
composed
Page 223 U. S. 430
it there in 1894. The firm of A. & S. Gatti, theatrical
managers of London, of which the complainant Gatti is the surviving
partner, became interested with the authors, and on September 6,
1894, the play was first performed in London. It was registered
under the British statutes on October 31, 1894, and again on
November 8, 1894. Charles Frohman of New York, by agreement of June
13, 1894, obtained the right of production in this country for five
years. On March 25, 1895, Frohman acquired all the interest of
Stephenson in the play in and for the United States, and it was
extensively represented under his supervision. It was not
copyrighted here.
George E. McFarlane made an adaptation of this play, called it
by the same name, and transferred it to the plaintiff in error,
Richard Ferris, of Illinois, who copyrighted it in August, 1900,
under the laws of the United States, and later caused it to be
performed in various places in this country. The adapted play
differed from the original in various details, but not in its
essential features.
The Superior Court of Cook County found that the complainants
were the sole owners of the original play; that it had never been
published or otherwise dedicated to the public in the United States
or elsewhere, and that the Ferris play was substantially identical
with it. Ferris was directed to account, and was perpetually
restrained from producing the adaptation which he had copyrighted.
The Appellate Court for the First District reversed the decree (131
Ill.App. 307), but on appeal to the Supreme Court of Illinois this
decision was reversed and the decree of the superior court was
affirmed. 238 Ill. 430.
The defendants in error contest the jurisdiction of this Court
upon the ground that the bill was based entirely upon a common law
right of property, and insist that the upholding of this right by
the state court raises no federal question. But the complainants
sued not simply to maintain their common law right in the original
play,
Page 223 U. S. 431
but, by virtue of it, to prevent the defendant from producing
the adapted play which he had copyrighted under the laws of the
United States. They challenged a right which the copyright, if
sustainable, secured. Rev.Stat. § 4592. It was necessary for
them to make the challenge, for they could not succeed unless this
right were denied. Ferris stood upon the copyright. That it had
been obtained was alleged in the bill, was averred in the answer,
and was found by the court. The fact that the court reached its
conclusion in favor of the complainants by a consideration, on
common law principles, of their property in the original play does
not alter the effect of the decision. By the decree, Ferris was
permanently enjoined "from in any manner using, . . . selling,
producing, or performing . . . the said defendant's copyrighted
play hereinbefore referred to for any purpose." The decision thus
denied to him a federal right specially set up and claimed, within
the meaning of § 709 of the Revised Statutes of the United
States. This Court therefore has jurisdiction.
C., B. & Q.
Ry. Co. v. Illinois, 200 U. S. 561,
200 U. S.
580-581;
McGuire v.
Massachusetts, 3 Wall. 382,
70 U. S. 385;
Anderson v. Carkins, 135 U. S. 483,
135 U. S. 486;
Shively v. Bowlby, 152 U. S. 1,
152 U. S. 9;
Northern Pacific R. Co. v. Colburn, 164 U.
S. 383,
164 U. S.
385-386;
Green Bay &c. Canal Co. v. Patten Paper
Co., 172 U. S. 58,
172 U. S.
67-68.
The substantial identity of the two plays was not disputed in
the appellate courts of Illinois, and must be deemed to be
established. The contention was, and is, that after the public
performance of the original play in London in 1894, the owners had
no common law right, but only the rights conferred by the British
statutes, and that Frohman's interest (save the license which
expired in 1899) was subsequently acquired. Hence, it is said the
play, not being copyrighted in the United States, was
publici
juris here, and the adapter was entitled to use it as common
material.
Page 223 U. S. 432
Performing right was not within the provisions of 8 Anne, c. 19,
which gave to authors the sole liberty of printing their books.
Coleman v. Wathen, 5 T.R. 245. The Act of 1833, known as
"Bulwer-Lytton's act," conferred statutory playright in perpetuity
throughout the British dominions, in the case of dramatic pieces
not printed and published, and for a stated term, if printed and
published. 3 & 4 Wm. IV, c. 15. By § 20 of the copyright
Act of 1842, 5 & 6 Vict. c. 45, it was provided that the sole
liberty of representing any dramatic piece should be the property
of the author and his assigns for the term therein specified for
the duration of copyright in books. The section continued:
"And the provisions hereinbefore enacted in respect of the
property of such copyright, and of registering the same, shall
apply to the liberty of representing or performing any dramatic
piece or musical composition, as if the same were herein expressly
reenacted and applied thereto, save and except that the first
public representation or performance of any dramatic piece or
musical composition shall be deemed equivalent, in the construction
of this act, to the first publication of any book."
Mr. Scrutton, in his work on Copyright, 4th ed., p. 77, states
that it is
"probable, though there is no express decision to that effect,
that the court, following
Donaldson v. Beckett (2 Bro.
Cases in Parl. 129), would hold the common law right destroyed by
the statutory provisions after first performance in public."
Compare MacGillivray on Copyright, pp. 122, 127-128.
And it may be assumed in this case that, after the play had been
performed, the right of the owners to protection against its
unauthorized production in England was only that given by the
statutes.
Further, in the absence of a copyright convention, there is no
playright in England in the case of a play not printed and
published where the first public performance has taken place
outside the British dominions. This
Page 223 U. S. 433
results from § 19 of the Act of 7 & 8 Vict. c. 12,
known as the international copyright act, which provides:
"Neither the author of any book, nor the author or composer of
any dramatic piece or musical composition, . . . which shall, after
the passing of this act, be first published out of her Majesty's
dominions, shall have any copyright therein respectively, or any
exclusive right to the public representation or performance
thereof, otherwise than such (if any) as he may become entitled to
under this Act."
The provision applies to British subjects as well as to
foreigners, and the words "first published" include the first
performance of a play. In
Boucicault v. Delafield (1 H.
& M. 597), the author of the play known as "The Collegen Bawn"
filed a bill to restrain a piratical production. It appeared that
the play had first been represented in New York, and by reason of
that fact, there being no copyright convention with the United
States, it was held that, under the statute above quoted, there was
no playright in England. To the same effect is
Boucicault v.
Chatterton (5 Ch.Div. 267), where the author unsuccessfully
sought to restrain an unauthorized performance of "The Shaughraun,"
an unprinted play which had first been represented here.
The British Parliament, in thus fixing the limits and conditions
of performing rights, was dealing with rights to be exercised
within British territory. It is argued that the English authors in
this case, by the law of their domicil, were without common law
right, and in its stead secured the protection of the British
statutes, which cannot avail them here. But the British statutes
did not purport to curtail any right of such authors with respect
to the representation of plays outside the British dominions. They
disclose no intention to destroy rights for which they provided no
substitute. There is no indication of a purpose to incapacitate
British citizens from holding their intellectual productions secure
from interference in other
Page 223 U. S. 434
jurisdictions according to the principles of the common law.
Their right was not gone
simpliciter, but only in a
qualified sense for the purposes of the statutes, and there was no
convention under which the authors' work became public property in
the United States.
See Saxlehner v. Eisner, 179 U. S.
19;
Saxlehner v. Wagner, 216 U.
S. 375,
216 U. S. 381.
When § 20 of the Act of 5 & 6 Vict. c. 45, provided that
the first public performance of a play should be deemed equivalent,
in the construction of that act, to the first publication of a
book, it simply defined its meaning with respect to the rights
which the statutes conferred. The deprivation of the common law
right, by force of the statute, was plainly limited to the
territorial bounds within which the operation of the statute was
confined.
The present case is not one in which the owner of a play has
printed and published it, and thus, having lost his rights at
common law, must depend upon statutory copyright in this country.
The play in question has not been printed and published. It is not
open to dispute that the authors of "The Fatal Card" had a common
law right of property in the play until it was publicly performed.
Donaldson v. Beckett, 2 Bro. Cases in Parl. 129;
Prince Albert v. Strange, 1 MacN. & G. 25;
Jefferys v. Boosey, 4 H.L.C. 815, 962, 978. And they were
entitled to protection against its unauthorized use here as well as
in England.
Wheaton v.
Peters, 8 Pet. 591,
33 U. S. 657;
Paige v.
Banks, 13 Wall. 608,
80 U. S. 614;
Bartlett v. Crittenden, 5 McLean 32;
Crowe v.
Aiken, 2 Biss. 208;
Palmer v. DeWitt, 2 Sweeny 530;
47 N.Y. 532.
What effect, then, had the performance of the play in England
upon the rights of the owners with respect to its use in the United
States? There was no statute here by virtue of which the common law
right was lost through the performance of the unpublished play. The
Act of August 18, 1856 (11 Stat. 138, c. 169), related only to
dramatic compositions for which copyright had been
Page 223 U. S. 435
obtained in this country; its object was to secure to the author
of a copyrighted play the sole right to its performance after it
had been printed.
Boucicault v. Fox, 5 Blatchf. 87, 97-98.
The same is true of the provisions of the copyright act of July 8,
1870 (16 Stat.198, 212, 214, Rev.Stat. §§ 4952, 4966),
and of those of the Act of March 3, 1891 (26 Stat. 1106, 1107),
which were in force when the transactions in question occurred and
this suit was brought. The fact that the Act of March 3, 1891, was
applicable to citizens of foreign countries, permitting to our
citizens the benefit of copyright on substantially the same basis
as its own citizens (§ 13), and that proclamation to this
effect was made by the President with respect to Great Britain (27
Stat. 981), did not make the British statutes operative within the
United States. Nor did that fact add to the provisions of the Act
of Congress so as to make the latter destructive of the common law
rights of English subjects in relation to the representation of
plays in this country, which were not copyrighted under that act
and which remained unpublished. These rights, like those of our own
citizens in similar case, the Act of 1891 did not disturb.
The public representation of a dramatic composition, not printed
and published, does not deprive the owner of his common law right,
save by operation of statute. At common law, the public performance
of the play is not an abandonment of it to the public use.
Macklin v. Richardson, Ambler. 694;
Morris v.
Kelly, 1 Jac. & W. 481;
Boucicault v. Fox, 5
Blatchf. 87, 97;
Crowe v. Aiken, 2 Biss. 208;
Palmer
v. DeWitt, 2 Sweeny 530, 47 N.Y. 532;
Tompkins v.
Halleck, 133 Mass. 32. Story states the rule as follows:
"So, where a dramatic performance has been allowed by the author
to be acted at a theater, no person has a right to pirate such
performance, and to publish copies of it surreptitiously, or to act
it at another theater without the consent of the author
Page 223 U. S. 436
or proprietor, for his permission to act it at a public theater
does not amount to an abandonment of his title to it, or to a
dedication of it to the public at large."
2 Story, Eq.Jur. § 950. It has been said that the owner of
a play cannot complain if the piece is reproduced from memory.
Keene v. Wheatley, 9 Am.Law Reg. 33;
Keene v.
Kimball, 16 Gray 545. But the distinction is without sound
basis, and has been repudiated.
Tompkins v. Halleck, 133
Mass. 32.
And, as the British statutes did not affect the common law right
of representation in this country, it is not material that the
first performance of the play in question took place in England. In
Crowe v. Aiken (1870), 2 Biss. 208, the play "Mary Warner"
had been composed by a British subject. It was transferred to the
plaintiff with the exclusive right to its representation on the
stage in the United States for five years from June 1, 1869. It had
not been printed with the consent either of the author or of the
plaintiff. It was first publicly performed in London in June, 1869,
and afterwards was represented here. The court (Drummond, J.) held
that the plaintiff, by virtue of his common law right, was entitled
to an injunction restraining an unauthorized production. In
Palmer v. De Witt (1872),
supra, the suit was
brought to restrain the defendant from printing an unpublished
drama called "Play," composed by a British citizen resident in
London. The plaintiff on February 1, 1868, had purchased the
exclusive right of printing and performing the play in the United
States. On February 15, 1868, it was first performed in London. It
was held that the common law right had not been destroyed by the
public representation, and the plaintiff had judgment. In the case
last cited, and apparently in that of
Crowe v. Aiken, the
transfer to the plaintiff antedated the public performance, but
neither decision was rested on that distinction. In
Tompkins v.
Halleck (1882)
supra, an unpublished play called
Page 223 U. S. 437
"The World" had been written in England, where, after being
presented, it was assigned by the author to a purchaser in New
York. It was acted in that city, and then transferred to the
plaintiffs with the exclusive right of representation in the New
England states. The plaintiffs' common law right was sustained, and
an unauthorized performance was enjoined.
Our conclusion is that the complainants were the owners of the
original play, and exclusively entitled to produce it. Their common
law right with respect to its representation in this country had
not been lost. This being so, the play of the plaintiff in error,
which was substantially identical with that of the complainants,
was simply a piratical composition. It was not the purpose or
effect of the copyright law to render secure the fruits of piracy,
and the plaintiff in error is not entitled to the protection of the
statute. In other words, the claim of federal right upon which he
relies is without merit.
Judgment affirmed.