In construing a statute, while the court must gain the
legislative intent primarily from the language used, it must
remember the objects and purposes of the statute and the conditions
of its enactment, so as to effectuate, rather than destroy the
spirit of that intent.
The purpose of the copyright statute is not so much to protect
the physical thing created as to protect the right of publication
and reproduction, and the statute should be construed in view of
the character of the property intended to be protected.
In the case of a painting, map, drawing, etc., the copyright
notice required by § 4962 Rev.Stat. need not be inscribed upon the
original article itself; the statute is complied with if the notice
is inscribed upon the published copies thereof which it is desired
to protect.
In the United States, property in copyright is the creation of
federal statute passed in the exercise of the power vested in
Congress by Article I, § 8, of the federal Constitution, to promote
the progress of science and the useful
Page 207 U. S. 285
arts by securing for limited times to authors and inventors the
exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries, and
the statute should be given fair and reasonable construction to
effect such purpose.
The federal copyright statute recognizes the separate ownership
of the right of copying from that which inheres in the physical
control of the thing itself, and gives to the assigns of the
original owner of the right to copyright the right to take out
copyright independently of the ownership of the article itself.
The property of an author or painter in his intellectual
creation is absolute until he voluntarily parts therewith. While
the public exhibition of a painting or statue where all can see and
copy it might amount to a publication, where the exhibition is made
subject to reservation of copyright and to restrictions rigidly
enforced against copying, it does not amount to a publication.
In a suit brought in replevin under the New York Code to recover
infringing copies of the plaintiff's copyrighted article, it is too
late to object to the form of remedy on the motion for new
trial.
Adams v. New York, 192 U. S. 585, and
Hale v. Henkel, 201 U. S. 43,
followed to effect that defendant's rights under the Fourth and
Fifth Amendments were not violated by the seizure of infringing
copies of copyrighted articles or by the use thereof as
evidence.
146 F. 375 affirmed.
This is a writ of error to the Circuit Court of Appeals for the
Second Circuit seeking reversal of a judgment affirming the
judgment of the United States Circuit Court for the Southern
District of New York in favor of the defendant in error, adjudging
him to be entitled to the possession of 1196 sheets, each
containing a copy of a certain picture called "Chorus," the same
representing a company of gentlemen with filled glasses, singing in
chorus. The painting was the work of an English artist, W. Dendy
Sadler. The defendant in error claimed to be the owner of a
copyright taken out under the law of the United States.
The judgment was rendered under authority of § 4965, as amended
March 2, 1895. 28 Stat. 965.
In January, 1894, by agreement between the artist and
Werckmeister, the defendant in error, it was agreed that the
painting should be finished by March 1, and then sent to
Werckmeister to be photographed and returned to Sadler in time
to
Page 207 U. S. 286
exhibit at the Royal Academy in 1894. The painting was sent to
Werckmeister at Berlin, where it was received on March 8, 1894, and
was returned to Sadler in London on March 22, 1894. On April 2,
1894, the artist Sadler executed and delivered the following
instrument:
"I hereby transfer the copyright in my picture 'Chorus' to the
Photographische Gesellschaft, Berlin (The Berlin Photographic
Company), for the sum of �200. London, April 2, 1894."
"(Signed) W. Dendy Sadler"
Werckmeister was a citizen of the German Empire, doing business
in Berlin, Germany, under the trade name of "Photographische
Gesellechaft," and did business in New York City under the name of
the "Berlin Photographic Company."
The Photographische Gesellschaft of Berlin, by letter dater
March 31, 1894, received on April 16, 1894, deposited the title and
description of the painting and a photograph of the same in the
office of the Librarian of Congress, the intention being to obtain
a copyright under the act of Congress. 3 U.S.Comp.Stat. 1901, p.
3407. After the painting was returned to London, it was exhibited
by Sadler at the exhibition of the Royal Academy at London, and was
there on exhibition for about three months; the exhibition opening
the first Monday of May and closing the first Monday of August,
1894. The exhibition was opened to the public on weekdays, from 8
A.M. to 7 P.M. upon the payment of the admission fee of one
shilling, and during the last week was open evenings, the entrance
charge being six pence. There was a private view for the press on
May 2, and on May 3 up to one o'clock, and the remainder of the day
was for the Royal private view. There was also a general private
view on May 4. The members and the associate members of the Royal
Academy and the artists exhibiting at the exhibition and their
families were entitled at all times to free admission, and they, as
well as the public, visited the exhibition in large numbers.
During the time that the painting was shown at the exhibition,
it was not inscribed as a copyright, nor were any words
Page 207 U. S. 287
thereon indicating a copyright, nor on the substance on which it
was mounted, nor on the frame, as required by the copyright act (3
U.S.Comp.Stat. 1901, p. 3411), if the original painting is within
the requirements of the law in this respect.
The painting, while on exhibition, was for sale at the Royal
Academy, but with the copyright reserved, which reservation was
entered in the gallery sale book. The bylaws of the Royal Academy
provided "that no permission to copy works on exhibition shall on
any account be granted." The reasons for the bylaw, as it appears
upon minutes of the Academy, are as follows:
"That so much property in copyright being entrusted to the
guardianship of the Royal Academy, the council feel themselves
compelled to disallow, in future, all copying within their walls
from pictures sent for exhibition."
The photogravures of the painting were placed on sale in June,
1894, or in the autumn of 1894; those photogravures were inscribed
with the notice of copyright.
Mr. Sadler, the artist, afterwards, in October, 1899, sold the
painting to a Mr. Cotterel, residing in London, England, since
which time, so far as has been shown, it has been hanging in the
dining room of the house of that gentleman.
On June 20, 1902, Werckmeister commenced an action, by the
service of a summons, against the American Tobacco Company,
plaintiff in error, and on the same day a writ of replevin was
issued out of the circuit court of the United States for the
Southern District of New York, directed to the marshal of the same
district, requiring him to replevin the chattels described in an
annexed affidavit. Under the writ, the marshal seized upon the
premises of the American Tobacco Company 203 pictures. On July 23,
1902, Werckmeister caused another writ of replevin to issue out of
the same court, directed to the marshal of the Western District of
New York, under which writ the marshal seized 993 pictures.
An amendment to the complaint set forth the seizure of the
pictures. The copies seized were adjudged to be forfeited to the
plaintiff, Werckmeister, and to be of the value of $1,010.
Page 207 U. S. 288
The judgment rendered in the circuit court was taken upon error
to the United States circuit court of appeals and there affirmed.
146 F. 375. The present writ of error is prosecuted to reverse the
judgment of the court of appeals.
Page 207 U. S. 290
MR. JUSTICE DAY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case involves important questions under the copyright laws
of the United States, upon which there has been diversity of view
in the federal courts.
Before taking up the errors assigned, it may aid in the
elucidation of the questions involved to briefly consider the
nature of the property in copyright which it is the object of the
statutes of the United States to secure and protect. A copyright,
as the term imports, involves the right of publication and
reproduction of works of art or literature. A copyright, as defined
by Bouvier's Law Dictionary, Rawles' edition, volume 1, p. 436,
is:
"The exclusive privilege, secured according to certain legal
Page 207 U. S. 291
forms, of printing, or otherwise multiplying, publishing, and
vending copies of certain literary or artistic productions."
And further, says the same author,
"the foundation of all rights of this description is the natural
dominion which everyone has over his own ideas, the enjoyment of
which, although they are embodied in visible forms or characters,
he may, if he chooses, confine to himself or impart to others."
That is, the law recognizes the artistic or literary productions
of intellect or genius, not only to the extent which is involved in
dominion over and ownership of the thing created, but also the
intangible estate in such property which arises from the privilege
of publishing and selling to others copies of the thing
produced.
There was much contention in England as to whether the common
law recognized this property in copyright before the statute of
Anne; the controversy resulting in the decision in the House of
Lords in the case of
Donaldson v. Becket, 4 Burr, 2408,
the result of the decision being that a majority of the judges,
while in favor of the common law right, held the same had been
taken away by the statute.
See Wheaton v.
Peters, 8 Pet. 591,
33 U. S. 656;
Holmes v. Hurst, 174 U. S. 82.
In this country it is well settled that property in copyright is
the creation of the federal statute passed in the exercise of the
power vested in Congress by the federal Constitution in Article 1,
§ 8,
"to promote the progress of science and useful arts by securing
for limited times to authors and inventors the exclusive right to
their respective writings and discoveries."
See 33 U. S. 8 Pet.
591,
supra; Banks v. Manchester, 128 U.
S. 244,
128 U. S. 252;
Thompson v. Hubbard, 131 U. S. 123,
131 U. S. 151.
Under this grant of authority a series of statutes have been
passed, having for their object the protection of the property
which the author has in the right to publish his production, the
purpose of the statute being to protect this right in such manner
that the author may have the benefit of this property for a limited
term of years. These statutes should be given a fair and reasonable
construction with a view to effecting such purpose.
Page 207 U. S. 292
The first question presented in oral argument and upon the
briefs involves the construction of § 4962 as amended (18 Stat. 78;
3 U.S.Comp.Stat. 1901, p. 3411), which is as follows:
"That no person shall maintain an action for the infringement of
his copyright unless he shall give notice thereof by inserting in
the several copies of every edition published, on the title page or
the page immediately following, if it be a book; or if a map,
chart, musical composition, print, cut, engraving, photograph,
painting, drawing, chromo, statue, statuary, or model or design
intended to be perfected and completed as a work of the fine arts,
by inscribing upon some visible portion thereof, or of the
substance on which the same shall be mounted, the following words,
viz.: 'Entered according to act of Congress, in the year
_____, by A. B. in the office of the Librarian of Congress at
Washington;' or at his potion, the word 'copyright,' together with
the year the copyright was entered, and the name of the party by
whom it was taken out, thus: 'Copyright 18__, by A. B.'"
It is the contention of the plaintiff in error that the original
painting was not inscribed as required by the act, and therefore no
action can be maintained, and it is insisted that the inscription
upon the photogravures offered for sale is not sufficient.
It must be admitted that the language of the statute is not so
clear as it might be, nor have the decisions of the courts been
uniform upon the subject. In
Werckmeister v. Pierce &
Bushnell Mfg. Co., 63 F. 445, Judge Putnam held that the
failure to inscribe the copyright notice upon the original painting
did not affect the copyright. That judgment was reversed by the
Circuit Court of Appeals for the First Circuit by a divided court.
72 F. 54.
In the case of
Werckmeister v. American Lithographic
Co., 142 F. 827, Judge Holt reached the same conclusion as
Judge Putnam, and in the case at bar, the Circuit Court of Appeals
for the Second Circuit approved of the reasoning of Judges Putnam
and Holt and disagreed with the majority of
Page 207 U. S. 293
the judges of the Circuit Court of Appeals for the First
Circuit.
Looking to the statute, it is apparent that, if read literally,
the words "inscribed on some visible portion thereof," etc., apply
to the antecedent terms "maps, charts, musical composition, print,
cut, engraving, photograph, painting." etc., and the words of the
first part of the sentence, requiring notice to be inserted in the
several copies of every edition published, apply literally to the
title page or the page immediately following, if it be a book.
But, in construing a statute, we are not always confined to a
literal reading, and may consider its object and purpose, the
things with which it is dealing, and the condition of affairs which
led to its enactment, so as to effectuate, rather than destroy, the
spirit and force of the law which the legislature intended to
enact.
It is true, and the plaintiff in error cites authorities to the
proposition, that, where the words of an act are clear and
unambiguous, they will control. But, while seeking to gain the
legislative intent primarily from the language used, we must
remember the objects and purposes sought to be attained.
We think it was the object of the statute to require this
inscription, not upon the original painting, map, photograph,
drawing, etc., but upon those published copies concerning which it
is designed to convey information to the public which shall limit
the use and circumscribe the rights of the purchaser.
As we have seen, the purpose of the copyright law is not so much
the protection of the possession and control of the visible thing,
as to secure a monopoly having a limited time, of the right to
publish the production which is the result of the inventor's
thought.
We have been cited to no case, nor can we find any direct
authority in this Court upon the question. But the opinion of Mr.
Justice Miller in
Burrow-Giles Lithographic Co. v. Sarony,
111 U. S. 53, is
pertinent. The Court there considered whether Congress had the
constitutional right to protect photographs and negatives by
copyright, and the second assignment of
Page 207 U. S. 294
error relates to the sufficiency of the words "Copyrighted 1892
by N. Sarony," when the copyright was the property of Napoleon
Sarony. In treating this question, the learned judge used this very
suggestive language (p.
111 U. S.
55):
"With regard to this latter question, it is enough to say that
the object of the statute is to give notice of the copyright to the
public by placing upon each copy, in some visible shape, the name
of the author, the existence of the claim of exclusive right, and
the date at which this right was obtained."
If the contention of the plaintiff in error be sustained, the
statute is satisfied only when the original map, chart, etc., or
painting is inscribed with the notice, and this is requisite
whether the original painting is ever published or not. We think
this construction ignores the purpose and object of the act, which
Mr. Justice Miller has said, in the language just quoted, is to
give notice of the copyright to the public -- that is, to the
persons who buy or deal with the published thing.
It is insisted that there is reason for the distinction in the
statute between books, and maps, charts, paintings, etc., in that a
book can only be published in print and becomes known by reading,
while paintings, drawings, etc., are published by inspection and
observation.
It may be true that paintings are published in this way, but
they are often sold to private individuals and go into private
collections, whilst the copies, photographs, or photogravures may
have a wide and extended sale.
It would seem clear that the real object of the statute is not
to give notice to the artist or proprietor of the painting or the
person to whose collection it may go, who need no information, but
to notify the public who purchase the circulated copies of the
existing copyright, in order that their ownership may be
restricted.
There does not seem to be any purpose in requiring that an
original map, chart, or painting shall be thus inscribed, while
there is every reason for requiring the copies of editions
published
Page 207 U. S. 295
to bear upon their face the notice of the limited property which
a purchaser may acquire therein.
This construction of the statute which requires the inscription
upon the published copies is much strengthened by the review of the
history of copyright legislation which is contained in Judge
Putnam's opinion in
Werckmeister v. Pierce & Bushnell Mfg.
Co., 63 F. 445; that legislation, before the statute of 1874,
in which paintings were for the first time introduced, shows the
uniform requirement of notice upon copies. The apparent
incongruities in the statute, in the light of its history, have
grown up from enlarging the scope of the law from time to time by
the introduction of new subjects of copyright and engrafting them
on the previous statutes. The same argument which requires original
paintings to be inscribed would apply to all other articles in the
same class in the present law, as maps, charts, etc., which were
formerly classed with books, so far as requiring notice upon copies
is concerned.
Such original maps and charts, etc., may and usually do remain
in the possession of the original makers, and there is no necessity
of any notice upon them, but the copyright is invalid, as the
plaintiff in error insists, unless the original is itself inscribed
with the notice of copyright.
For the learned counsel for plaintiff in error says:
"If the painting or like article is ripe for copyright, it is
ripe for the inscription of the notice. The statute requires the
inserting of notice in published things only in respect to
published editions of books. The term 'published' is not used in
connection with paintings, statutes, and the like."
And it is urged there can be no such thing as an "edition" of a
painting, and copies of published editions are the only copies
mentioned in the statute. But this phrase survives from former
statutes, which dealt only with books, maps, charts, etc. When
paintings and other things not capable of publication in "editions"
were introduced into the statute, the language was not changed so
as to be technically accurate in reference to the new subjects of
copyright.
Page 207 U. S. 296
But the sense and purpose of the law was not changed by this
lack of verbal accuracy, and we think, while the construction
contended for may adhere with literal accuracy and grammatical
exactness to the language used, it does violence to the intent of
Congress in passing the law, and that the requirement of
"inscription upon some visible portion thereof" should be read in
connection with the first part of the sentence, which requires
notice to be inserted in the several copies of every edition
published, on the title page if it be a book, upon some visible
portion of the copy if it be a map, chart, painting, etc.
As we have said in the beginning, the statute is not clear. But
read in the light of the purpose intended to be effected by the
legislation, we think its ambiguities are best solved by the
constructions here given, and that the circuit court of appeals
made no error in this respect.
Again, it is contended that, under the facts stated,
Werckmeister was but the licensee of Sadler, and, as such, not
within the terms of the statute (§ 4952, as amended 1891, 26 Stat.
1106, 3 U.S.Comp.Stat. 1901, p. 3406), which is as follows:
"The author, inventor, designer, or proprietor of any book, map,
chart, dramatic or musical composition, engraving, cut, print, or
photograph or negative thereof, or of a painting, drawing, chromo,
statue, statuary, and of models or designs intended to be perfected
as works of the fine arts, and the executors, administrators, or
assigns of any such person, shall, upon complying with the
provisions of this chapter, have the sole liberty of printing,
reprinting, publishing, completing, copying, executing, finishing,
and vending the same, and, in the case of dramatic composition, of
publicly performing or representing it or causing it to be
performed or represented by others, and authors or their assigns
shall have the exclusive right to dramatize and translate any of
their works for which copyright shall have been obtained under the
laws of the United States."
But we think the transfer in this case accomplished what it
Page 207 U. S. 297
was evidently intended to do -- a complete transfer of the
property right of copyright existing in the picture. There is no
evidence of any intention on the part of Sadler to retain any
interest in this copyright after the sale to Werckmeister, and when
the painting was offered for sale at the Royal Academy, it was with
a reservation of the copyright.
It would be giving an entirely too narrow construction to this
instrument to construe it to be a mere license or personal
privilege, leaving all other rights in the assignor. That it was
the purpose of the parties to make a complete transfer is shown by
the instrument executed, when read in the light of the attendant
circumstances.
In this connection, it is argued that, under the statute above
quoted (§ 4952, as amended March 3, 1891) an author cannot, before
publication, assign the right or privilege of taking a copyright
independent of the "transfer of the copyrightable thing itself,"
and it is contended that the terms "author," "inventor,"
"designer," refer to the originator of the book, map, chart,
painting, etc., and that the term "proprietor" refers to the person
who has a copyrightable thing made for him under such circumstances
as to become the proprietor -- as, for instance, one who causes a
digest to be compiled or a picture to be painted.
But we think this statute must be construed in view of the
character of the property intended to be protected. That it was
intended to give the right of copyright to others than the author,
inventor, or designer is conclusively shown in the use of the terms
"proprietor" and "assigns" in the statute.
It seems clear that the word "assigns" in this section is not
used as descriptive of the character of the estate which the
"author, inventor, designer, or proprietor" may acquire under the
statute, for the "assigns" of any such person, as well as the
persons themselves, may, "upon complying with the provisions of
this chapter," have the sole liberty of printing, publishing, and
vending the same. This would seem to demonstrate the intention of
Congress to vest in "assigns," before copyright, the same privilege
of subsequently acquiring complete
Page 207 U. S. 298
statutory copyright as the original author, inventor, designer,
or proprietor has. Nor do we think this result is qualified because
the statute gives to assigns, together with the right of
publishing, vending, etc., the right of "completing, executing, and
finishing" the subject matter of copyright.
And a strong consideration in construing this statute has
reference to the character of the property sought to be protected.
It is not the physical thing created, but the right of printing,
publishing, copying, etc., which is within the statutory
protection. While not in all respects analogous, this proposition
finds illustration in
Stephens v.
Cady, 14 How. 528, in which it was held, where the
copyright for a map had been taken out under the act of Congress, a
sale upon execution of the copperplate engraving from which it was
made did not pass the right to print and sell copies of the map.
Mr. Justice Nelson, delivering the opinion of the Court, said:
"But, from the consideration we have given to the case, we are
satisfied that the property acquired by the sale in the engraved
plate, and the copyright of the map secured to the author under the
act of Congress are altogether different and independent of each
other, and have no necessary connection. The copyright is an
exclusive right to the multiplication of the copies, for the
benefit of the author or his assigns, disconnected from the plate
or any other physical existence. It is an incorporeal right to
print and publish the map; or, as said by Lord Mansfield in
Millar v. Taylor, 4 Burr. 2396, 'a property in notion, and
has no corporeal tangible substance.'"
And the same doctrine was thus stated by Mr. Justice Curtis in
Stevens v.
Gladding, 17 How. 447:
"And, upon this question of the annexation of the copyright to
the plate, it is to be observed first, that there is no necessary
connection between them. They are distinct subjects of property,
each capable of existing, and being owned and transferred,
independent of the other."
While it is true that the property in copyright in this country
is the creation of statute, the nature and character of the
Page 207 U. S. 299
property grows out of the recognition of the separate ownership
of the right of copying from that which inheres in the mere
physical control of the thing itself, and the statute must be read
in the light of the intention of Congress to protect this
intangible right as a reward of the inventive genius that has
produced the work. We think every consideration of the nature of
the property and the things to be accomplished supports the
conclusion that the statute means to give to the assigns of the
original owner of the right to copyright an article the right to
take out the copyright secured by the statute, independently of the
ownership of the article itself.
It is further contended that the exhibition in the Royal Gallery
was such a publication of the painting as prevents the defendant in
error from having the benefit of the copyright act. This question
has been dealt with in a number of cases, and the result of the
authorities establishes, we think, that it is only in cases where
what is known as a general publication is shown, as distinguished
from a limited publication under conditions which exclude the
presumption that it was intended to be dedicated to the public,
that the owner of the right of copyright is deprived of the benefit
of the statutory provision.
Considering this feature of the case, it is well to remember
that the property of the author or painter in his intellectual
creation is absolute until he voluntarily parts with the same. One
or many persons may be permitted to an examination under
circumstances which show no intention to part with the property
right, and it will remain unimpaired.
The subject was considered and the cases reviewed in the
analogous case of
Werckmeister v. American Lithographic
Co., 134 F. 321, in a full and comprehensive opinion by the
late Circuit Judge Townsend, which leaves little to be added to the
discussion.
The rule is thus stated in Slater on the Law of Copyright and
Trademark (p. 92):
"It is a fundamental rule that, to constitute publication, there
must be such a dissemination of the work of art itself
Page 207 U. S. 300
among the public as to justify the belief that it took place
with the intention of rendering such work common property."
And that author instances as one of the occasions that does not
amount to a general publication the exhibition of a work of art at
a public exhibition where there are bylaws against copies, or where
it is tacitly understood that no copying shall take place, and the
public are admitted to view the painting on the implied
understanding that no improper advantage will be taken of the
privilege.
We think this doctrine is sound, and the result of the best
considered cases. In this case, it appears that paintings are
expressly entered at the gallery with copyrights reserved. There is
no permission to copy; on the other hand, officers are present who
rigidly enforce the requirements of the society that no copying
shall take place.
Starting with the presumption that it is the author's right to
withhold his property, or only to yield to a qualified and special
inspection which shall not permit the public to acquire rights in
it, we think the circumstances of this exhibition conclusively show
that it was the purpose of the owner, entirely consistent with the
acts done, not to permit such an inspection of his picture as would
throw its use open to the public. We do not mean to say that the
public exhibition of a painting or statue, where all might see and
freely copy it, might not amount to publication within the statute,
regardless of the artist's purpose or notice of reservation of
rights which he takes no measure to protect. But such is not the
present case, where the greatest care was taken to prevent
copying.
It is next objected that the form of action in this case was the
ordinary action for replevin under the New York Code, and as the
plaintiff did not have the right of property or possession before
the beginning of this action, no such action would lie. Whether
this action was the one in the nature of replevin for the seizures
of the plates and copies indicated in the case of
Bolles v.
Outing Company, 175 U. S. 262,
175 U. S. 266,
we do not find it necessary to determine. After verdict, and upon
motion for
Page 207 U. S. 301
a new trial, plaintiff in error, defendant below, moved to set
aside the verdict
"on the ground that replevin, under the statutes of the State of
New York, is not an appropriate remedy or a lawful and legal remedy
for taking possession of the alleged incriminating sheets or
pictures, and that the proceedings taken in that behalf by the
plaintiff were illegal and invalid, and that the plaintiff cannot
avail of any benefit of that proceeding, and the introduction in
evidence of the replevin proceedings was an error."
The motion was denied and exception duly taken.
The learned counsel for the plaintiff in error admits that this
question was not formally raised until the defendant's motion for a
new trial, but maintains that the same question was raised by the
objection to admission in evidence of the replevin proceedings by
the marshal for western and southern districts of New York,
respectively.
Examining this record, it is perfectly apparent that no
objection was made to the form of the action until it was embodied
after verdict, in the motion for a new trial. Upon the admission of
the writ of replevin, addressed to the marshal of the Western
District of New York, and affidavit, the objection stated was
"on the ground that the process of replevin that was executed by
the marshal in Buffalo was an invasion of defendant's
constitutional right, was an unwarrantable search, an illegal act,
and nothing done under it, or information obtained by virtue of it,
can be used in evidence against defendant under the Fourth and
Fifth Amendments of the United States Constitution."
The same objection was made when the writs of replevin,
affidavit, and return were offered in evidence concerning the
Southern District of New York, and it was said:
"Defendant's counsel objects on the same grounds as stated to
the introduction of the stipulation -- namely, that the papers
constitute an illegal proceeding, an invasion of the defendant's
constitutional right, as provided by the Fourth and Fifth
Amendments, and plaintiff cannot avail of them as evidence in this
case, on account of their illegality. "
Page 207 U. S. 302
The argument which followed, could it be assumed to broaden the
objection, was far from complaining of the form of action as such,
but rested upon the Constitution and the character of the seizure
of the goods, of which it was maintained the plaintiff was not
entitled to possession until after a judgment of forfeiture.
The record shows that the objection to the form of the remedy
was first taken in any adequate way upon the motion for a new
trial, when it was too late.
In conclusion, it was suggested, rather than argued that the
constitutional rights of the plaintiff in error were violated by
the seizure of the goods, and reference was made to the Fourth and
Fifth Amendments. We think we need only refer in this connection to
Adams v. New York, 192 U. S. 585,
192 U. S. 597,
and
Hale v. Henkel, 201 U. S. 43.
Finding no error in the judgment of the circuit court of
appeals, the same is
Affirmed.