Court Opinion

ID: 5201651
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-06 15:53:38.989984+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:27:12.083953
License: Public Domain

Scott, J.:
.The plaintiff seeks an injunction to restrain defendants from publishing, selling or offering for sale certain books, designated the “Eureka Series.” Both plaintiff and defendants are booksellers and publishers, and plaintiff bases its demand for an injunction upon the claim that the defendants have been guilty of unfair competition or unfair trade in putting upon the market a series of books so similar in appearance and make-up to a set of books which plaintiff, has published and sold for a number, of years as to indicate a conscious and probably successful effort to deceive the public into buying defendants’ publications, believing them to be those published by plaintiff, and thereby the plaintiff will be injured in its business, and purchasers will be also injured, because defendants’ books, although *174an obvious copy of plaintiff’s, are concededly of less artistic and substantial value. The plaintiff has no copyright and claims nothing on that score. The affidavits read on both sides are voluminous, but the most convincing proofs are the books themselves of which copies were produced on the argument and are 'now before us.
In ordinary cases, where a preliminary injunction has been denied in the court below we are slow to interfere with the action of that court, preferring to leave the question for the trial of the cause. In the present case, however, it is quite, apparent that no substantially different state of facts will be developed upon the trial from that which is presented on this appeal, for it may safely be said that there is little or no dispute as to any material fact, the difference between the parties resulting from the different deductions and conclusions which they respectively draw from the facts, and as has already been said, the crucial, decisive evidence consists of the books themselves. Under such circumstances it has been the practice of his court to determine, upon appeal from the order, the propriety of issuing or refusing to issue a preliminary injunction. (McLoughlin v. Singer, 33 App. Div. 185, 189.)
About the year 1900 the plaintiff formed the project of publishing a set of books especially adapted for sale during the Christmas holiday season, and in the year 1901 did publish and place, upon the market a number of such books. . The books were small and in each was printed a single (or in some cases more than one) short poem or hymn which had attained general fame and popularity in the public estimation. The books were profusely illustrated with illuminated capitals, and type adapted from tliat used in ancient missals; as w.ell as by pictures in colors, some being originally prepared by plaintiff’s artists and some, being copies of well-known paintings^ Each copy was bound in an attractive and highly decorated leatherette cover, one-half white and one-half in color with illustrated sides, and with a large, picture in color, appropriate to the sentiment conveyed by the particular hymn or poem contained in the book. The books were possessed, of .considerable artistic merit, and the workmanship as to .type, coloring,, illustrating. and binding was of a high order. Much success attended the publication of these-books, so’that plaintiff, iff succeeding, years not only reprinted the books first published, but added’ many books, in the *175same general style to the series, and had large sales and reaped substantial profit. In the year 1906 the defendants published and placed upon the market the series of books the publication and sale of which "is now sought to be restrained. It appears from the affidavit of an expert, and, indeed, is quite apparent to the lay eye, that the defendants have by some photographic or photo-lithographic process copied the printing, illuminations, borders and pictures contained in plaintiff’s books, have encased them in a similarly colored binding upon which has been copied the illustrations and letterings found upon plaintiff’s books. In short, they have reproduced plaintiff’s books as faithfully and exactly as could be done by photography. The work has been much less artistically and expensively done, although, so far as possible, without too great expense, the colors used by plaintiff have been reproduced or imitated. ,The result has been that defendants have published cheap and inartistic copies of plaintiff’s books, which have been offered for sale at a mpcli smaller price.
Placed side by side, no one could fail to appreciate the difference between the publications, and yet could not fail to be struck by the careful attempt to produce an imitation. Seen apart from each other, so that they could not be compared, nothing would be easier than for an incautious buyer to be deceived by the resemblance and to purchase one of defendants’ books, believing that he was purchasing plaintiff’s.
The injury likely to be done plaintiff is twofold. First, it is threatened with a loss of sales and consequent profit; and, secondly, it is threatened with a loss of reputation as a producer of fine and artistic books. . '
As has been said, the plaintiff claims no protection from the copyright laws, and, indeed, few, if any, of the poems and hymns printed in the series could have been copyrighted. It does not claim that the idea of publishing a single hymn or poem in a separate volume, with illustrations, is original with it, nor does it claim originality for the idea of a decorated border for each page, the half-white binding with decorations and pictures, or the combination in one book of a number of short songs or poems relating to one general subject. It does claim, however, and its contention is not disputed, that the particular designs of the covers of its books, the *176particular borders to the pages and the particular illustrations were original with it. It, therefore, insists that each book, considered as a whole, distinct from its various parts, to wit, a combination of binding, of type, of illuminated capitals, of illustrations, of borders, is something which belongs solely and exclusively to plaintiff, and that it has a distinct property right therein. The plaintiff cannot, and does not, question defendants’ right to publish any one, or all, of the same hymns and poems; to publish them in, half-white binding with decorated and pictured binding; to adopt any form of type it pleases; to illustrate the books and to decorate the borders of its pages, but it is contended, and as we think with reason, that it is violative of the rule of fail: trading and fair competition, as established and enforced by law, to exhibit and offer for sale such identical copies (save in artistic merit and workmanship) of the books which plaintiff had published, and for which it had created a profitable demand. The obvious purpose of publishing such copies was to trade upon the favorable reputation which plaintiff had established for its books; to deceive many purchasers into the belief that they were purchasing plaintiff’s books, and to damage plaintiff by the unfair use of its ingenuity in devising the general make-up of its books and of its success in placing the books upon the market.
In such a case it was unnecessary for plaintiff to prove, dehors the books themselves, that defendants were inspired by a fraudulent intent. (Day v. Webster, 23 App. Div. 601; Dunn Co. v. Trix Mfg. Co., 50 id. 75.) Eor, in so flagrant a case as the present, is it necessary to prove that any person was actually'deceived by the imitation. It is apparent that there was every probability of such deception, and that is precisely what the law seeks to prevent. Vulcan v. Myers, 139 N. Y. 364.) Upon the general right of the plaintiff to protective relief we cannot see any reason why the same rule should not be applied to a book that has been applied to a game, or to cigars, or to anything else which is distinguished by a label, or by the distinctive form or style of the package. The decisive fact is that the defendants are unfairly and fraudulently attempting to trade upon the reputation which plaintiff has built up for its books. The right to injunctive relief in such a case is too firmly established to require the citation of authorities.
The order appealed from should be reversed, with ten dollars *177costs and disbursements, and the motion granted, with ten dollars costs, upon plaintiff giving the usual undertaking in the sum of $1,000.
Patterson, P. J., Ingraham, Laughlin and Clarke, JJ., concurred.