An exhibition of a series of photograph of persons and things,
arranged on film as moving picture and so depicting the principal
scenes of an author's work as to tell the story, is a dramatization
of such work, and the person producing the film and offering them
for sale for exhibition, even if not himself exhibiting them,
infringes the copyright of the author under Rev.Stat., § 4952, as
amended by the Act of March 3, 1891, c. 565, 26 Stat. 1106.
Quaere whether there would be infringement if the
illusion of motion were produced from paintings, instead of
photographs of real persons, and also
quaere whether such
photographs can be copyrighted.
Rev.Stat., § 4952, as amended by the Act of March 3, 1891, c.
565, 26 Stat. 1106, confines itself to a well known form of
reproduction, and does not exceed the power given to Congress under
Art. I, § 8, cl. 8 of the Constitution to secure to authors the
exclusive right to their writings for a limited period.
169 F. 61 affirmed.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 222 U. S. 60
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal from a decree restraining an alleged
infringement of the copyright upon the late General Lew Wallace's
book "Ben Hur." 169 F. 61. The case was heard on the pleadings and
an agreed statement of facts, and the only issue is whether those
facts constitute an infringement of the copyright upon the book. So
far as they need to be stated here, they are as follows: the
appellant and defendant, the Kalem company, is engaged in the
production of moving-picture films, the operation and effect of
which are too well known to require description. By means of them,
anything of general interest, from a coronation to a prize fight,
is presented to the public with almost the illusion of reality --
latterly even color being more or less reproduced. The defendant
employed a man to read Ben Hur and to write out such a description
or scenario of certain portions that it could be followed in
action, these portions giving enough of the story to be identified
with ease. It then caused the described action to be performed, and
took negatives for moving pictures of the scenes, from which it
produced films suitable for exhibition. These films it expected and
intended to sell for
Page 222 U. S. 61
use as moving pictures in the way in which such pictures
commonly are used. It advertised them under the title
"Ben Hur. Scenery and Supers by Pain's Fireworks Company,
Costumes from Metropolitan Opera House. Chariot Race by 3d Battery,
Brooklyn. Positively the Most Superb Moving Picture Spectacle Ever
Produced in America, in Sixteen Magnificent Scenes,"
etc., with taking titles, culminating in "Ben Hur Victor." It
sold the films, and public exhibitions from them took place.
The subdivision of the question that has the most general
importance is whether the public exhibition of these moving
pictures infringed any rights under the copyright law. By Rev.Stat.
§ 4952, as amended by the Act of March 3, 1891, c. 565, 26 Stat.
1106, p. 3406, authors have the exclusive right to dramatize any of
their works. So, if the exhibition was or was founded on a
dramatizing of Ben Hur, this copyright was infringed. We are of
opinion that Ben Hur was dramatized by what was done. Whether we
consider the purpose of this clause of the statute, or the
etymological history and present usages of language, drama may be
achieved by action as well as by speech. Action can tell a story,
display all the most vivid relations between men, and depict every
kind of human emotion without the aid of a word. It would be
impossible to deny the title of drama to pantomime as played by
masters of the art.
Daly v. Palmer, 6 Blatchf. 256, 264.
But if a pantomime of Ben Hur would be a dramatizing of Ben Hur, it
would be nonetheless so that it was exhibited to the audience by
reflection from a glass, and not by direct vision of the figures --
as sometimes has been done in order to produce ghostly or
inexplicable effects. The essence of the matter in the case last
supposed is not the mechanism employed, but that we see the event
or story lived. The moving pictures are only less vivid than
reflections from a mirror. With the former as with the latter, our
visual impression -- what we see -- is caused by the real
pantomime
Page 222 U. S. 62
of real men through the medium of natural forces, although the
machinery is different and more complex. How it would be if the
illusion of motion were produced from paintings instead of from
photographs of the real thing may be left open until the question
shall arise.
It is said that pictures of scenes in a novel may be made and
exhibited without infringing the copyright, and that they may be
copyrighted themselves. Indeed, it was conceded by the circuit
court of appeals that these films could be copyrighted, and, we may
assume, could be exhibited as photographs. Whether this concession
is correct or not, in view of the fact that they are photographs of
an unlawful dramatization of the novel, we need not decide. We will
assume that it is. But it does not follow that the use of them in
motion does not infringe the author's rights. The most innocent
objects, such as the mirror in the other case that we have
supposed, may be used for unlawful purposes. And if, as we have
tried to show, moving pictures may be used for dramatizing a novel,
when the photographs are used in that way, they are used to
infringe a right which the statute reserves.
But again, it is said that the defendant did not produce the
representations, but merely sold the films to jobbers, and on that
ground ought not to be held. In some cases where an ordinary
article of commerce is sold, nice questions may arise as to the
point at which the seller becomes an accomplice in a subsequent
illegal use by the buyer. It has been held that mere indifferent
supposition or knowledge on the part of the seller that the buyer
of spirituous liquor is contemplating such unlawful use is not
enough to connect him with the possible unlawful consequences,
Graves v. Johnson, 179 Mass. 53, but that, if the sale was
made with a view to the illegal resale, the price could not be
recovered.
Graves v. Johnson, 156 Mass. 211. But no such
niceties are involved here. The defendant not only expected but
invoked by advertisement
Page 222 U. S. 63
the use of its films for dramatic reproduction of the story.
That was the most conspicuous purpose for which they could be used,
and the one for which especially they were made. If the defendant
did not contribute to the infringement, it is impossible to do so
except by taking part in the final act. It is liable on principles
recognized in every part of the law.
Rupp & Wittgenfeld Co.
v. Elliott, 131 F. 730, 732;
Harper v. Shoppell, 28
F. 613.
Morgan Envelope Co. v. Albany Paper Co.,
152 U. S. 425,
152 U. S.
433.
It is argued that the law, construed as we have construed it,
goes beyond the power conferred upon Congress by the Constitution
to secure to authors for a limited time the exclusive right to
their writings. Art. I, § 8, cl. 8. It is suggested that to extend
the copyright to a case like this is to extend it to the ideas, as
distinguished from the words in which those ideas are clothed. But
there is no attempt to make a monopoly of the ideas expressed. The
law confines itself to a particular, cognate, and well known form
of reproduction. If to that extent a grant of monopoly is thought a
proper way to secure the right to the writings, this Court cannot
say that Congress was wrong.
Decree affirmed.