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Copyright: Its History and Its Law Part 16

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{Sidenote: Copyright notice}

The notice of copyright must be printed (sec. 18) on each copy, as in the case of a book in the form "Copyright" or the abbreviation "Copr.,"

"accompanied by the name of the copyright proprietor" and "the year in which the copyright was secured by publication." In the case of a published dramatic work the notice must be placed, as in the case of a book, upon the t.i.tle-page or the page immediately following, but in the case of a published musical work the law provides that the notice "shall be applied ... either upon its t.i.tle-page or the first page of music,"

and this specification makes the copyright notice of doubtful validity if applied in a musical work on the page following the t.i.tle-page, unless this is the first page of music.

{Sidenote: Dramatico-musical works protected from mechanical reproduction}



The cla.s.sification of dramatico-musical compositions under subsection (d) as dramatic works and not under subsection (e) as musical compositions, defines an opera and possibly an oratorio or cantata as a dramatic rather than a musical composition. As the dramatic author is given (sec. 1, d) the comprehensive rights over reproduction "in any manner or by any method whatsoever" while the musical author is limited (sec. 1, e) in respect to mechanical reproductions, it would seem to follow that the author of an opera may retain absolute control over mechanical reproduction, as the author of a non-musical drama retains absolute control over phonographic or other reproduction of his drama.

This would seem to confine the requirements that the author of a musical composition permitting mechanical reproduction should license any manufacturer, to musical compositions which are not dramatic, _i. e._, to instrumental compositions or to songs and other vocal music not a.s.sociated with drama. As an overture to an opera is an integral part of the dramatico-musical composition, it would even seem that an overture which is part of an opera, or possibly an orchestral introduction or interlude in an oratorio or cantata, would not be subject to the mandatory license provided as to musical compositions. But this question has not yet come before the courts.

{Sidenote: Dramatic and musical works excepted from manufacturing provisions}

Dramatic and musical works are not mentioned in the manufacturing and affidavit provisions (secs. 15, 16, 17) which are specifically confined to "the printed book or periodical specified in section 5, subsections (a) and (b)," while dramatic and musical compositions are cla.s.sified in subsections (d) and (e). It might be alleged that dramatic or musical compositions in book form or produced as books from type or by lithographic or photo-engraving process should be cla.s.sified as books and subjected to the manufacturing provisions; but this is distinctly not the letter of the law. This exception was specifically upheld for music in the case of Littleton _v._ Ditson in 1894, by Judge Colt in the U. S. Circuit Court in Ma.s.sachusetts, where the defense that there was no copyright in certain songs because the music sheets were not from type set or plates made within the United States, was overruled; and for drama in Hervieu _v._ Ogilvie in 1909, where in the U. S. Circuit Court in New York, Judge Martin cited with approval Judge Colt's decision.

This ruling was also embodied in Treasury decision No. 21012 of April 17, 1899, permitting the importation of musical compositions copyrighted in the United States and printed abroad.

{Sidenote: British colonial practice}

The Australian law, on the contrary, specifically includes under the definition of "book," a "dramatic work" and a "musical work," and thus subjects both to the manufacturing clause. Printing and publis.h.i.+ng are required in Canada ("within one month after publication or production elsewhere") and in Newfoundland to obtain copyright under the local acts; and as drama is not mentioned but included generically as a book or literary composition, and music is specifically included, both dramatic and musical compositions must be manufactured within each country to obtain local, as distinguished from British or Imperial, protection.

{Sidenote: Entry under proper cla.s.s}

{Sidenote: Applications and certificates}

The author of a dramatic, dramatico-musical, or musical composition should therefore be careful to make application in the United States under cla.s.s (d) or (e) and not as a book under cla.s.s (b). The fact that the law cla.s.sifies under subsection (d) dramatic or dramatico-musical compositions and under subsection (e) musical compositions, has caused the Copyright Office to prepare separate application forms and certificates for (D1) a dramatic composition, (D3) a dramatico-musical composition and (E1) a musical composition, "published"; as also for (D2) a dramatic composition (or a dramatico-musical composition) and (E2) a musical composition, "not reproduced for sale." It would seem advisable therefore that the author of an opera, oratorio or the like, to obtain the fullest protection under the law, should enter such work in cla.s.s (d) as a dramatico-musical composition rather than in cla.s.s (e) as a musical composition, and thus safeguard himself against the mechanical music proviso applied exclusively to cla.s.s (e).

{Sidenote: Right of dramatization}

In regard to dramatization, the new American code is specific (sec. 1, b) in giving to the author of an original work the exclusive right "to dramatize it if it be a non-dramatic work" or "to convert it into a novel or other non-dramatic work if it be a drama." The relations of a maker of a dramatic version of a literary work or of a literary version of a dramatic work, would follow the same rule as in the case of a translator. An author has the exclusive right to dramatize or permit the dramatization of his work, and the dramatization may be copyrighted in the name of the original author or of the dramatizer, but the dramatizer cannot prevent another dramatization of the same work unless by transfer of exclusive right from the original author.

{Sidenote: Dramatization term}

The specific copyright on a published dramatization dates from the publication of the dramatization, which may extend the protection of the dramatization beyond the copyright term of the original work. But on the expiration of the copyright in the original work rival dramatizations can no longer be prevented. All this holds true as to the novelization of a drama.

{Sidenote: Musical arrangements}

In respect to music, the language of the law (sec. 1, e) is thoroughly comprehensive in covering the arrangement or setting of a musical composition or of a melody in any notation or in any form whatever. This gives to the musical author entire control over the use of any part of his work, as for instance the transcription from an orchestral work for piano use, the instrumentation of a vocal work or the use for a song of any melody in an orchestral work. On the other hand, variations, transcriptions and so forth of a copyrighted work, made under authorization from the copyright proprietor, may be separately copyrighted as to that extent original works.

{Sidenote: Copyright Office definitions}

The Copyright Office Rules and Regulations say specifically: "(10) 'Adaptations' and 'arrangements' may be registered as 'new works' under the provisions of section 6. Mere transpositions into different keys are not expressly provided for in the copyright act; but if published with copyright notice and copies are deposited with application, registration will be made."

{Sidenote: Transposition}

In Hein _v._ Harris in 1910, the U. S. Circuit Court awarded damages where the chorus of a song proved on transposition into the key of the copyright song to be practically a copy of the melody.

{Sidenote: Works in the public domain}

It is specifically provided (sec. 6) that "adaptations, arrangements, dramatizations ... or other versions of works in the public domain, ...

shall be regarded as new works subject to copyright," and in the case of such versions copyright inheres in the dramatizer, adaptor or maker of a version, as in the case of a translator of a book, in the public domain.

Thus a dramatic or musical work in the public domain may be dramatized or adapted freely and any individual dramatization or adaptation may be copyrighted by the dramatizer or adaptor, but he cannot prevent other dramatization or adaptation of the same work.

{Sidenote: Dramatization right protected by courts}

The American courts have fully upheld the control over dramatization under the right "to dramatize" specifically given in the law of 1891 and preserved under the new code. In 1895 in Harper _v._ Ranous, Judge Lacombe, in the U. S. Circuit Court in New York, enjoined a play, "Trilby," on the ground that the drama "presents characters, plot, incidents, dramatic situations and dialogue appropriated from Du Maurier's copyrighted novel," while denying protection against the mere use of the t.i.tle. In the same year and in respect to the same novel, in Harper _v._ Ganthony, the Harpers, as owners of the copyright of "Trilby," also obtained from Judge Lacombe an injunction against Miss Ganthony, who had presented at the Eden Musee a series of monologues in costume following the plot of the story, which the judge held to const.i.tute a dramatic version and therefore an infringement. A story, "The transmogrification of Dan," purchased by the _Smart Set_ for $85, copyrighted as part of that periodical and a.s.signed back to the author, was dramatized by Paul Armstrong and produced by the defendants under the name of "The heir to the Hoorah," retaining the central incident of the story, though with modification and extension of the characters, situation and dialogue. In 1908 Judge Hazel, in Dam _v._ Kerke La Sh.e.l.le Co., in the U. S. Circuit Court in New York, awarded the full profits from the dramatic representation as damages to the executor of Dam, the author of the story; which decision was fully upheld in 1910 by the Circuit Court of Appeals through Judge Noyes. Thus the new American code specifically enacts into statute law previous decisions of the American courts.

{Sidenote: English law and practice}

Under English law, on the contrary, the right of dramatization has not been included under copyright; the mere copyrighting of a book could not prevent its dramatization, but the copyrighting of a work in dramatized form before its publication as a novel practically prevented other dramatization of the literary work in so far as the one drama was a reproduction of the features of the other. As stated by Colles and Hardy in their recent work (1906) on "Playright and copyright in all countries," "a novel is not a dramatic piece, ready and fit for representation on the stage. Consequently, the author of a novel has the copyright in his book, but he has no playright according to English law." The general principles were best stated in 1874 by Chief Justice c.o.c.kburn in Toole _v._ Young, where Grattan's drama "Glory" was declared not to be an infringement either of Hollingshead's novel "Not above his business," on which it was confessedly founded, nor of the dramatic version made under the t.i.tle of "Shop" by Hollingshead himself, but never printed or performed and therefore unpublished: "Two persons may dramatize the same novel, for that is common property. It is true that a writer cannot produce and represent a drama, which he has borrowed from a drama written previously by another person; he would then be representing the production of the first dramatist.... I wish to guard myself against being supposed to lay down that, if a writer, while dramatizing a novel, takes the incidents, characters, and dialogue of a previous drama founded upon that novel, and reproduces what is in substance identical with the previous drama, there might not be an infringement of the right of the earlier dramatist if the later drama be represented on the stage."

{Sidenote: The new British code}

The new British measure remedies this defect by specifically including the sole rights to convert a novel or other non-dramatic work, or an artistic work, into a dramatic work, by way of performance in public or otherwise, and to convert a dramatic work into a novel or other non-dramatic work.

{Sidenote: Infringement cases}

A curious early case was that of Reade _v._ Conquest in 1862, in which the son of Charles Reade had made and sold to the defendant, who produced it at his theatre, a dramatic version of "It is never too late to mend" in ignorance of the fact that his father had first written a play called "Gold" and had then transformed that into the novel; in this the defendant was enjoined because the version which he produced infringed the earlier play. In Beere _v._ Ellis in 1889, Baron Pollock enjoined a rival dramatic version of "As in a looking gla.s.s" on the ground that while bits of dialogue, presumably copied into the defendant's version, were scarcely substantial, yet a special situation founded on a new incident not in the novel and certain stage business connected with the death of the heroine const.i.tuted an infringement. In 1890, in Schlesinger _v._ Turner, the executors of Wilkie Collins obtained an injunction against a rival dramatic version of "The new Magdalen," the judge holding that although the defendant's version had not been copied from the author's own play, it was substantially similar and therefore an infringement. That an independent and different dramatic version can, however, be made, was specifically held in the case of Schlesinger _v._ Bedford in the same year, when Collins's executors failed to obtain an injunction against the defendant's rival dramatic version of "The woman in white," although the novelist himself had previously dramatized his work, the judge holding that the two plays were "essentially different."

{Sidenote: Use of substantial quotations}

But the use in a play of considerable portions of a copyrighted novel would be an infringement. That a dramatization using substantial parts of a novel infringes the novel, was definitely established in 1863 in Tinsley _v._ Lacy, where the proprietor of Miss Braddon's "Lady Audley's secret" and "Aurora Floyd" obtained an injunction against a bookseller who sold dramatizations under the same t.i.tles of which a quarter or more of the text was taken bodily from the novels. So in 1888 an injunction was obtained from Judge Stirling, in Warne _v._ Seebohm, in the Court of Chancery, against a dramatization of "Little Lord Fauntleroy" which copied from the novel beyond the limits of fair use and was therefore considered a "copy" from the work.

{Sidenote: Specific scenes or situations}

Where in dramatizing a novel, the dramatic author invents and introduces new scenes, situations or other features, the copying of such added features into another dramatic version of the novel, otherwise independent, const.i.tutes an infringement of the original play. In the case of Nethersole _v._ Bell in 1903, with respect to rival English dramatic versions of Daudet's "Sapho," it was held that while there might lawfully be independent dramatizations of the novel, the circ.u.mstances indicated that the Espina.s.se version of the defendant, said to have been written in Australia, had been so modified consequent to representation of Clyde Fitch's version, as to const.i.tute an infringement of the plaintiff's rights. In Tree _v._ Bowkett in 1896, plaintiff obtained an injunction against the use by the defendant in a rival dramatic version of "Trilby" because of two scenes introduced by the plaintiff into his drama which were not in the novel or in the American dramatization. On the other hand, in Chatterton _v._ Cave in 1876, where the plaintiff had dramatized Eugene Sue's "The wandering Jew" and added two scenes not in the novel, an injunction was denied by Lord Chief Justice Coleridge against an independent dramatization, though it had included similar scenes, on the ground that these were not sufficiently substantial and material in the play to const.i.tute an infringement. And this application of the principle of _de minimis non curat lex_ was affirmed by the House of Lords in 1878.

{Sidenote: What is a dramatic composition}

{Sidenote: Judge Blatchford's opinion}

As to what is a dramatic composition or representation, no definition is given in the American law, and the English laws of 1833 and 1842, quoted beyond, are not explicit. Both English and American courts have therefore been obliged to make or to extend definitions, but the decisions have been somewhat confusing. The most explicit general statement is that made by Judge Blatchford in discussing Daly _v._ Palmer in 1868: "A composition, in the sense in which that word is used in the act of 1856, is a written or literary work invented or set in order. A dramatic composition is such a work in which the narrative is not related, but is represented by dialogue and action. When a dramatic composition is represented in dialogue and action by persons who represent it as real by performing or going through with the various parts or characters a.s.signed to them severally, the composition is acted, performed, or represented; and if the representation is in public, it is a public representation. To act in the sense of the statute is to represent as real by countenance, voice, or gesture that which is not real. A character in a play who goes through with a series of events on the stage without speaking, if such be his part in the play, is none the less an actor in it than one who, in addition to motions and gestures, uses his voice. A pantomime is a species of theatrical entertainment, in which the whole action is represented by gesticulation without the use of words. A written work consisting wholly of directions, set in order for conveying the ideas of the author on a stage or public place by means of characters who represent the narrative wholly by action, is as much a dramatic composition designed or suited for public representation as if language or dialogue were used in it to convey some of the ideas."

{Sidenote: Judicial definitions}

In a recent case of Barnes _v._ Miner in 1903, where an injunction was asked against a vaudeville change artist who had combined songs in costume with a cinematograph representation of scenes in the dressing room during the changes, Judge Ray, in the U. S. Circuit Court in New York, declined to grant relief, adding that as a mere spectacular composition such "sketch" was not properly a dramatic composition. The English law was construed in 1848 in Russell _v_. Smith, when a song "The s.h.i.+p on fire," in which dramatic action was exhibited by the singer alone without costume or scenery, while seated at the piano, was construed to be a "dramatic piece"--the action being "not related but represented." In 1872, in Clark _v._ Bishop, a music hall song "Come to Peckham Rye" was similarly protected as a "dramatic piece." But in 1895, in Fuller _v._ Blackpool Winter Gardens Co., it was held that the song "Daisy Bell," though sung in character costume, was not a "dramatic piece" because its representation did not require acting or dramatic effect. Later decision construed the act of 1833 to cover only spoken words, the English Court of Appeal holding in Scholz _v_. Amasis in 1909, through Lord Chief Justice Farwell, that only substantial copying of written dialogue, and not of a plot or situation, const.i.tutes infringement, and in Tate _v._ Fullbrook in 1908, that the writer of the dialogue is the sole author of the musical sketch though devised and staged by another. But in two cases, one by Moore in 1903 and one by Fraser in 1905, against George Edwardes, English juries gave heavy damages where the scenarios for musical comedies submitted to that theatrical manager had been made the basis for musical comedies by other writers afterward produced at Daly's Theatre, London.

{Sidenote: Moving pictures may be infringements}

The opinion of Judge Blatchford was quoted and followed by the U. S.

Circuit Court of Appeals in New York, in 1909, in Harper _v._ Kalem Co., which said through Judge Ward: "The artist's idea of describing by action the story the author has written in words is a dramatization. It is not necessary that there should be both speech and action in dramatic performances although dialogue and action usually characterize them." In this case the defendants had caused persons to represent the action in certain scenes of "Ben Hur" and photographed this representation on a moving picture film, which they reproduced for sale to theatoriums, where public exhibitions were given for profit. The court held under the old law that "moving pictures would be a form of expression infringing the author's exclusive right to dramatize his writings and publicly to perform such dramatization." The contrary view was held in the English case of Karno _v._ Pathe Freres in 1908, where also the Court of Appeal held, in 1909, that not the manufacturer but the exhibitor of such a film would be the responsible party if there were infringement.

{Sidenote: Literary merit not requisite}

The doctrine that copyright does not depend on literary merit, was strengthened in a dramatic case in Henderson _v._ Tompkins in 1894, in the U. S. Circuit Court in Ma.s.sachusetts by Judge Putnam, who held that a paraphrase of "I wonder if dreams come true," from "Ali Baba,"

const.i.tuted an infringement, though the offending piece had slight literary merit.

{Sidenote: What is a dramatico-musical composition}

As to what is a musical composition, the term defines itself. But the phrase "dramatico-musical compositions," as used in the American code, bristles with perplexities, not altogether solved by the definitions of the Copyright Office Rules, above cited. It means, of course, music and drama in a.s.sociation, but in this combination the definition of the dramatic side is peculiarly difficult. Whether a dance, ballet or other ch.o.r.egraphic work, with or without music, is included, is a mooted question. In 1892, in Fuller _v._ Bemis, where the plaintiff sought to protect a skirt dance of which she had filed a description for copyright as a dramatic composition, Judge Lacombe, in the U. S. Circuit Court in New York, held that: "It is essential for a dramatic composition to tell some story. The plot may be simple, it may be but the representation of a single transaction; but it must repeat or mimic some action, speech, emotion, pa.s.sion, or character, real or imaginary. A series of graceful movements, combined with an attractive arrangement of drapery, lights, and shadows, telling no story, portraying no character, depicting no emotion, is not a dramatic composition." This view is adopted in the Copyright Office Rules and defines accepted American practice, but is not consonant with English and international views.

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