WHITE-SMITH MUSIC PUBLISHING COMPANY v. APOLLO COMPANY
Nos. 110, 111
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
209 U.S. 1; 28 S. Ct. 319; 52 L. Ed. 655; 1908 U.S. LEXIS 1766
Argued January 16, 17, 1908
February 24, 1908
PRIOR HISTORY:
APPEALS FROM AND CERTIORARI TO THE CIRCUIT COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
JUDGES: Fuller, Harlan, Brewer, White, Peckham, McKenna, Holmes, Day, Moody
OPINION: MR. JUSTICE DAY delivered the opinion of the court.
These cases may be considered together. They are appeals from the judgment of the Circuit
Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit (147 Fed. Rep. 226), affirming the decree of the
Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern District of New York, rendered
August 4, 1905 (139 Fed. Rep. 427), dismissing the bills of the complainant (now
appellant) for want of equity. Motions have been made to dismiss the appeals, and a
petition for writ of certiorari has been filed by appellant. In view of the nature of the
cases the writ of certiorari is granted, the record on the appeals to stand as a return to
the writ. Montana Mining Co. v. St. Louis Mining Co., 204 U.S. 204.
The actions were brought to restrain infringement of the copyrights of two certain musical
compositions, published in the form of sheet music, entitled, respectively, "Little
Cotton Dolly" and "Kentucky Babe." The appellee, defendant below, is
engaged in the sale of piano players and player pianos, known as the "Apollo,"
and of perforated rolls of music used in connection therewith. The appellant, as assignee
of Adam Geibel, the composer, alleged compliance with the copyright act, and that a
copyright was duly obtained by it on or about March 17, 1897. The answer was general in
its nature, and upon the testimony adduced a decree was rendered, as stated, in favor of
the Apollo Company, defendant below, appellee here.
The action was brought under the provisions of the copyright act, § 4952 (3 U.S.
Comp. Stat. Sup. 1907, p. 1021), giving to the author, inventor, designer or proprietor of
any book, map, chart, dramatic or musical composition the sole liberty of printing,
reprinting, publishing, completing, copying, executing, finishing and vending the same.
The Circuit Courts of the United States are given jurisdiction under § 4970 (3 U.S. Comp.
Stat. 3416) to grant injunctions according to the course and principles of courts of
equity in copyright cases. The appellee is the manufacturer of certain musical instruments
adapted to be used with perforated rolls. The testimony discloses that certain of these
rolls, used in connection with such instruments, and being connected with the mechanism to
which they apply, reproduce in sound the melody recorded in the two pieces of music
copyrighted by the appellant.
The manufacture of such instruments and the use of such musical rolls has developed
rapidly in recent years in this country and abroad. The record discloses that in the year
1902 from seventy to seventy-five thousand of such instruments were in use in the United
States, and that from one million to one million and a half of such perforated
musical rolls, to be more fully described hereafter, were made in this country in that
year.
It is evident that the question involved in the use of such rolls is one of very
considerable importance, involving large property interests, and closely touching the
rights of composers and music publishers. The case was argued with force and ability,
orally and upon elaborate briefs.
Without entering into a detailed discussion of the mechanical construction of such
instruments and rolls, it is enough to say that they are what has become familiar to the
public in the form of mechanical attachments to pianos, such as the pianola, and the
musical rolls consist of perforated sheets, which are passed over ducts connected with the
operating parts of the mechanism in such manner that the same are kept sealed until, by
means of perforations in the rolls, air pressure is admitted to the ducts which operate
the pneumatic devices to sound the notes. This is done with the aid of an operator, upon
whose skill and experience the success of the rendition largely depends. As the roll is
drawn over the tracker board the notes are sounded as the perforations admit the
atmospheric pressure, the perforations having been so arranged that the effect is to
produce the melody or tune for which the roll has been cut.
Speaking in a general way, it may be said that these rolls are made in three ways. First.
With the score or staff notation before him the arranger, with the aid of a rule or guide
and a graduated schedule, marks the position and size of the perforations on a sheet of
paper to correspond to the order of notes in the composition. The marked sheet is then
passed into the hands of an operator who cuts the apertures, by hand, in the paper. This
perforated sheet is inspected and corrected, and when corrected is called "the
original." This original is used as a stencil and by passing ink rollers over it a
pattern is prepared. The stenciled perforations are then cut, producing the master or
templet. The master is placed in the perforating machine and reproductions thereof
obtained, which are the perforated rolls in question. Expression marks are separately
copied on the perforated music sheets by means of rubber stamps. Second. A perforated
music roll made by another manufacturer may be used from which to make a new record.
Third. By playing upon a piano to which is attached an automatic recording device
producing a perforated matrix from which a perforated music roll may be produced.
It is evident, therefore, that persons skilled in the art can take such pieces of sheet
music in staff notation, and by means of the proper instruments make drawings indicating
the perforations, which are afterwards outlined and cut upon the rolls in such wise as to
reproduce, with the aid of the other mechanism, the music which is recorded in the
copyrighted sheets.
The learned counsel for the parties to this action advance opposing theories as to the
nature and extent of the copyright given by statutory laws enacted by Congress for the
protection of copyright, and a determination of which is the true one will go far to
decide the rights of the parties in this case. On behalf of the appellant it is insisted
that it is the intention of the copyright act to protect the intellectual conception which
has resulted in the compilation of notes which, when properly played, produces the melody
which is the real invention of the composer. It is insisted that this is the thing which
Congress intended to protect, and that the protection covers all means of expression
of the order of notes which produce the air or melody which the composer has invented.
Music, it is argued, is intended for the ear as writing is for the eye, and that it is the
intention of the copyright act to prevent the multiplication of every means of reproducing
the music of the composer to the ear.
On the other hand, it is contended that while it is true that copyright statutes are
intended to reward mental creations or conceptions, that the extent of this protection is
a matter of statutory law, and that it has been extended only to the tangible results of
mental conception, and that only the tangible thing is dealt with by the law, and its
multiplication or reproduction is all that is protected by the statute.
Before considering the construction of the statute as an independent question the appellee
invokes the doctrine of stare decisis in its favor, and it is its contention that
in all the cases in which this question has been up for judicial consideration it has been
held that such mechanical producers of musical tones as are involved in this case have not
been considered to be within the protection of the copyright act; and that, if within
the power of Congress to extend protection to such subjects, the uniform holdings have
been that it is not intended to include them in the statutory protection given. While it
may be that the decisions have not been of that binding character that would enable the
appellee to claim the protection of the doctrine of stare decisis to the extent of
precluding further consideration of the question, it must be admitted that the decisions,
so far as brought to our attention in the full discussion had at the bar and upon the
briefs, have been uniformly to the effect that these perforated rolls operated in
connection with mechanical devices for the production of music are not within the
copyright act. It was so held in Kennedy v. McTammany, 33 Fed. Rep. 584. The
decision was written by Judge Colt in the First Circuit; the case was subsequently brought
to this court, where it was dismissed for failure to print the record. 145 U.S. 643. In
that case the learned judge said:
"I cannot convince myself that these perforated sheets of paper are copies of sheet
music within the meaning of the copyright law. They are not made to be addressed to
the eye as sheet music, but they form a part of a machine. They are not designed to be
used for such purposes as sheet music, nor do they in any sense occupy the same field as
sheet music. They are a mechanical invention made for the sole purpose of performing tunes
mechanically upon a musical instrument."
Again the matter was given careful consideration in the Court of Appeals of the District
of Columbia in an opinion by Justice Shepard ( Stearn v. Rosey, 17 App. D.C.
562), in which that learned justice, speaking for the court, said:
"We cannot regard the reproduction, through the agency of a phonograph, of the sounds
of musical instruments playing the music composed and published by the complainants, as
the copy or publication of the same within the meaning of the act. The ordinary
signification of the words 'copying,' 'publishing,' etc., cannot be stretched to include
it.
"It is not pretended that the marking upon waxed cylinders can be made out by the eye
or that they can be utilized in any other way than as parts of the mechanism of the
phonograph.
"Conveying no meaning, then, to the eye of even an expert musician and wholly
incapable of use save in and as a part of a machine specially adapted to make them
give up the records which they contain, these prepared waxed cylinders can neither
substitute the copyrighted sheets of music nor serve any purpose which is within their
scope. In these respects there would seem to be no substantial difference between them and
the metal cylinder of the old and familiar music box, and this, though in use at and
before the passage of the copyright act, has not been regarded as infringing upon the
copyrights of authors and publishers."
The question came before the English courts in Boosey v. Whight (1899, 1 Ch.
836; 80 L. T. R. 561), and it was there held that these perforated rolls did not infringe
the English copyright act protecting sheets of music. Upon appeal Lindley, Master of the
Rolls, used this pertinent language (1900, 1 Ch. 122; 81 L. T. R. 265):
"The plaintiffs are entitled to copyright in three sheets of music. What does this
mean? It means that they have the exclusive right of printing or otherwise multiplying
copies of those sheets of music, i.e., of the bars, notes, and other printed words
and signs on these sheets. But the plaintiffs have no exclusive right to the
production of the sounds indicated by or on those sheets of music; nor to the performance
in private of the music indicated by such sheets; nor to any mechanism for the production
of such sounds or music.
"The plaintiff's rights are not infringed except by an unauthorized copy of their
sheets of music. We need not trouble ourselves about authority; no question turning on the
meaning of that expression has to be considered in this case. The only question we have to
consider is whether the defendants have copied the plaintiff's sheets of music.
"The defendants have taken those sheets of music and have prepared from them sheets
of paper with perforations in them, and these perforated sheets, when put into and used
with properly constructed machines or instruments, will produce or enable the
machines or instruments to produce the music indicated on the plaintiff's sheets. In this
sense the defendant's perforated rolls have been copies from the plaintiff's sheets.
"But is this the kind of copying which is prohibited by the copyright act; or rather
is the perforated sheet made as above mentioned a copy of the sheet of music from which it
is made? Is it a copy at all? Is it a copy within the meaning of the copyright act? A
sheet of music is treated in the copyright act as if it were a book or sheet of letter
press. Any mode of copying such a thing, whether by printing, writing, photography, or by
some other method not yet invented, would no doubt be copying. So, perhaps, might a
perforated sheet of paper to be sung or played from in the same way as sheets of music are
sung or played from. But to play an instrument from a sheet of music which appears to the
eye is one thing; to play an instrument with a perforated sheet which itself forms part of
the mechanism which produces the music is quite another thing."
Since these cases were decided Congress has repeatedly had occasion to amend the copyright
law. The English cases, the decision of the District Court of Appeals, and Judge Colt's
decision must have been well known to the members of Congress; and although the
manufacture of mechanical musical instruments had not grown to the proportions which they
have since attained they were well known, and the omission of Congress to specifically
legislate concerning them might well be taken to be an acquiescence in the judicial
construction given to the copyright laws.
This country was not a party to the Berne convention of 1886, concerning international
copyright, in which it was specifically provided:
"It is understood that the manufacture and sale of instruments serving to reproduce
mechanically the airs of music borrowed from the private domain are not considered as
constituting musical infringement."
But the proceedings of this convention were doubtless well known to Congress. After the
Berne convention the act of March 3, 1891, was passed. Section 13 of that act provides (3
U.S. Comp. Stat. 3417):
"SEC. 13. That this act shall only apply to a citizen or subject of a foreign state
or nation when such foreign state or nation permits to citizens of the United States of
America the benefits of copyright on substantially the same basis as to its own citizens;
and when such foreign state or nation is a party to an international agreement which
provides for reciprocity in the granting of copyright, by the terms of which agreement the
United States of America may, at its pleasure, become a party to such agreement. The
existence of either of the conditions aforesaid shall be determined by the
President of the United States by proclamation made from time to time as the purposes
of this act may require."
By proclamation of the President July 1, 1891, the benefit of the act was given to the
citizens of Belgium, France, British possessions and Sweden, which countries permitted the
citizens of the United States to have the benefit of copyright on the same basis as the
citizens of those countries. On April 30, 1892, the German Empire was included. On October
31, 1892, a similar proclamation was made as to Italy. These countries were all parties to
the Berne convention.
It could not have been the intention of Congress to give to foreign citizens and composers
advantages in our country which according to that convention were to be denied to our
citizens abroad.
In the last analysis this case turns upon the construction of a statute, for it is
perfectly well settled that the protection given to copyrights in this country is wholly
statutory. Wheaton v. Peters, 8 Pet. 590; Banks v. Manchester,
128 U.S. 244, 253; Thompson v. Hubbard, 131 U.S. 123, 151; American
Tobacco Company v. Werckmeister, 207 U.S. 284.
Musical compositions have been the subject of copyright protection since the statute
of February 3, 1831, c. , 4 Stat. 436, and laws have been passed
including them since that time. When we turn to the consideration of the act it seems
evident that Congress has dealt with the tangible thing, a copy of which is required to be
filed with the Librarian of Congress, and wherever the words are used (copy or copies)
they seem to refer to the term in its ordinary sense of indicating reproduction or
duplication of the original. Section 4956 (3 U.S. Comp. Stat. 3407) provides that two
copies of a book, map, chart or musical composition, etc., shall be delivered at the
office of the Librarian of Congress. Notice of copyright must be inserted in the several
copies of every edition published, if a book, or if a musical composition, etc., upon some
visible portion thereof. Section 4962, Copyright Act, 3 U.S. Comp. Stat. 3411. Section
4965 (3 U.S. Comp. Stat. 3414) provides in part that the infringer "shall forfeit
every sheet thereof, and one dollar for every sheet of the same found in his
possession," etc., evidently referring to musical compositions in sheets. Throughout
the act it is apparent that Congress has dealt with the concrete and not with an
abstract right of property in ideas or mental conceptions.
We cannot perceive that the amendment of § 4966 by the act of January 6, 1897, c. 4, 29
Stat. 481 (3 U.S. Comp. Stat. 3415), providing a penalty for any person publicly
performing or representing any dramatic or musical composition for which a copyright has
been obtained, can have the effect of enlarging the meaning of the previous sections of
the act which were not changed by the amendment. The purpose of the amendment evidently
was to put musical compositions on the footing of dramatic compositions so as to prohibit
their public performance. There is no complaint in this case of the public performance of
copyrighted music; nor is the question involved whether the manufacturers of such
perforated music rolls when sold for use in public performance might be held as
contributing infringers. This amendment was evidently passed for the specific purpose
referred to, and is entitled to little consideration in construing the meaning of the
terms of the act theretofore in force.
What is meant by a copy? We have already referred to the common understanding of it as
a reproduction or duplication of a thing. A definition was given by Bailey, J., in West
v. Francis, 5 B. & A. 743, quoted with approval in Boosey v. Whight,
supra. He said: "A copy is that which comes so near to the original as to give to
every person seeing it the idea created by the original."
Various definitions have been given by the experts called in the case. The one which most
commends itself to our judgment is perhaps as clear as can be made, and defines a copy of
a musical composition to be "a written or printed record of it in intelligible
notation." It may be true that in a broad sense a mechanical instrument which
reproduces a tune copies it; but this is a strained and artificial meaning. When the
combination of musical sounds is reproduced to the ear it is the original tune as
conceived by the author which is heard. These musical tones are not a copy which appeals
to the eye. In no sense can musical sounds which reach us through the sense of hearing be
said to be copies as that term is generally understood, and as we believe it was intended
to be understood in the statutes under consideration. A musical composition is an
intellectual creation which first exists in the mind of the composer; he may play it
for the first time upon an instrument. It is not susceptible of being copied until it has
been put in a form which others can see and read. The statute has not provided for the
protection of the intellectual conception apart from the thing produced, however
meritorious such conception may be, but has provided for the making and filing of a
tangible thing, against the publication and duplication of which it is the purpose of the
statute to protect the composer.
Also it may be noted in this connection that if the broad construction of publishing and
copying contended for by the appellants is to be given to this statute it would seem
equally applicable to the cylinder of a music box, with its mechanical arrangement for the
reproduction of melodious sounds, or the record of the graphophone, or to the pipe organ
operated by devices similar to those in use in the pianola. All these instruments
were well known when these various copyright acts were passed. Can it be that it was the
intention of Congress to permit them to be held as infringements and suppressed by
injunctions?
After all, what is the perforated roll? The fact is clearly established in the testimony
in this case that even those skilled in the making of these rolls are unable to read them
as musical compositions, as those in staff notation are read by the performer. It is true
that there is some testimony to the effect that great skill and patience might enable the
operator to read his record as he could a piece of music written in staff notation. But
the weight of the testimony is emphatically the other way, and they are not intended to be
read as an ordinary piece of sheet music, which to those skilled in the art conveys, by
reading, in playing or singing, definite impressions of the melody.
These perforated rolls are parts of a machine which, when duly applied and properly
operated in connection with the mechanism to which they are adapted, produce musical tones
in harmonious combination. But we cannot think that they are copies within the meaning of
the copyright act.
It may be true that the use of these perforated rolls, in the absence of statutory
protection, enables the manufacturers thereof to enjoy the use of musical compositions for
which they pay no value. But such considerations properly address themselves to the
legislative and not to the judicial branch of the Government. As the act of Congress now
stands we believe it does not include these records as copies or publications of the
copyrighted music involved in these cases.
The decrees of the Circuit Court of Appeals are
Affirmed.
CONCUR: MR. JUSTICE HOLMES, concurring specially.
In view of the facts and opinions in this country and abroad to which my brother Day has
called attention I do not feel justified in dissenting from the judgment of the
court, but the result is to give to copyright less scope than its rational significance
and the ground on which it is granted seem to me to demand. Therefore I desire to add a
few words to what he has said.
The notion of property starts, I suppose, from confirmed possession of a tangible object
and consists in the right to exclude others from interference with the more or less free
doing with it as one wills. But in copyright property has reached a more abstract
expression. The right to exclude is not directed to an object in possession or owned, but
is in vacuo, so to speak. It restrains the spontaneity of men where but for it
there would be nothing of any kind to hinder their doing as they saw fit. It is a
prohibition of conduct remote from the persons or tangibles of the party having the right.
It may be infringed a thousand miles from the owner and without his ever becoming aware of
the wrong. It is a right which could not be recognized or endured for more than a limited
time, and therefore, I may remark in passing, it is one which hardly can be conceived
except as a product of statute, as the authorities now agree.
The ground of this extraordinary right is that the person to whom it is given has invented
some new collocation of visible or audible points, -- of lines, colors, sounds, or words.
The restraint is directed against reproducing this collocation, although but for the
invention and the statute any one would be free to combine the contents of the dictionary,
the elements of the spectrum, or the notes of the gamut in any way that he had the wit to
devise. The restriction is confined to the specific form, to the collocation devised, of
course, but one would expect that, if it was to be protected at all, that collocation
would be protected according to what was its essence. One would expect the
protection to be coextensive not only with the invention, which, though free to all,
only one had the ability to achieve, but with the possibility of reproducing the result
which gives to the invention its meaning and worth. A musical composition is a rational
collocation of sounds apart from concepts, reduced to a tangible expression from which the
collocation can be reproduced either with or without continuous human intervention. On
principle anything that mechanically reproduces that collocation of sounds ought to be
held a copy, or if the statute is too narrow ought to be made so by a further act, except
so far as some extraneous consideration of policy may oppose. What license may be implied
from a sale of the copyrighted article is a different and harder question, but I leave it
untouched, as license is not relied upon as a ground for the judgment of the court.