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Baker v. Selden, 101
U.S. 99 (Mem), 11 Otto 99, 25 L.Ed. 841
Supreme Court of the United States.
BAKER
v.
SELDEN.
October Term, 1879
APPEAL from the Circuit Court of the United States for the
Southern District of Ohio.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the court.
Mr. Alphonso Taft and Mr. H. P. Lloyd for the appellant.
Mr. C. W. Moulton and Mr. M. I. Southard for the appellee.
MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY delivered the opinion of the court.
Charles Selden, the testator of the complainant in this case, in
the year 1859 took the requisite steps for obtaining the copyright of a book,
entitled 'Selden's Condensed Ledger, or Book‑keeping Simplified,' the
object of which was to exhibit and explain a peculiar system of book‑keeping.
In 1860 and 1861, he took the copyright of several other books, containing
additions to and improvements upon the said system. The bill of complaint was
filed against the defendant, Baker, for an alleged infringement of these
copyrights. The latter, in his answer, denied that Selden was the author or
designer of the books, and denied the infringement charged, and contends on the
argument that the matter alleged to be infringed is not a lawful subject of
copyright.
The parties went into proofs, and the various books of the
complainant, as well as those sold and used by the defendant, were exhibited
before the examiner, and witnesses were examined to both sides. A decree was
rendered for the complainant, and the defendant appealed.
The book or series of books of which the complainant claims the
copyright consists of an introductory essay explaining the system of book‑keeping
referred to, to which are annexed certain forms or banks, consisting of ruled
lines, and headings, illustrating the system and showing how it is to be used
and carried out in practice. This system effects the same results as book‑
keeping by double entry; but, by a peculiar arrangement of columns and
headings, presents the entire operation, of a day, a week, or a month, on a
single page, or on two pages facing each other, in an account‑book. The
defendant uses a similar plan so far as results are concerned; but makes a
different arrangement of the columns, and uses different headings. If the
complainant's testator had the exclusive right to the use of the system explained
in his book, it would be difficult to contend that the defendant does not
infringe it, notwithstanding the difference in his form of arrangement; but if
it be assumed that the system is open to public use, it seems to be equally
difficult to contend that the books made and sold by the defendant are a
violation of the copyright of the complainant's book considered merely as a
book explanatory of the system. Where the truths of a science or the methods of
an art are the common property of the whole world, any author has the right to
express the one, or explain and use the other, in his own way. As an author,
Selden explained the system in a particular way. It may be conceded that Baker
makes and uses account‑books arranged on substantially the same system;
but the proof fails to show that he has violated the copyright of Selden's
book, regarding the latter merely as an explanatory work; or that he has
infringed Selden's right in any way, unless the latter became entitled to an
exclusive right in the system.
The evidence of the complainant is principally directed to the
object of showing that Baker uses the same system as that which is explained
and illustrated in Selden's books. It becomes important, therefore, to
determine whether, in obtaining the copyright of his books, he secured the
exclusive right to the use of the system or method of book‑keeping which
the said books are intended to illustrate and explain. It is contended that he
has secured such exclusive right, because no one can use the system without
using substantially the same ruled lines and headings which he was appended to
his books in illustration of it. In other words, it is contended that the ruled
lines and headings, given to illustrate the system, are a part of the book,
and, as such, are secured by the copyright; and that no one can make or use
similar ruled lines and headings, or ruled lines and headings made and arranged
on substantially the same system, without violating the copyright. And this is
really the question to be decided in this case. Stated in another form, the
question is, whether the exclusive property in a system of book‑keeping
can be claimed, under the law or copyright, by means of a book in which that
system is explained? The complainant's bill, and the case made under it, are
based on the hypothesis that it can be.
It cannot be pretended, and indeed it is not seriously urged, that
the ruled lines of the complainant's account‑book can be claimed under
any special class of objects, other than books, named in the law of copyright
existing in 1859. The law then in force was that of 1831, and specified only
books, maps, charts, musical compositions, prints, and engravings. An account‑book,
consisting of ruled lines and blank columns, cannot be called by any of these
names unless by that of a book.
There is no doubt that a work on the subject of book‑keeping,
though only explanatory of well‑known systems, may be the subject of a
copyright; but, then, it is claimed only as a book. Such a book may be
explanatory either of old systems, or of an entirely new system; and,
considered as a book, as the work of an author, conveying information on the
subject of book‑keeping, and containing detailed explanations of the art,
it may be a very valuable acquisition to the practical knowledge of the
community. But there is a clear distinction between the book, as such, and the
art which it is intended to illustrate. The mere statement of the proposition
is so evident, that it requires hardly any argument to support it. The same
distinction may be predicated of every other art as well as that of book‑keeping.
A treatise on the composition and use of medicines, be they old or new; on the
construction and use of ploughs, or watches, or churns; or on the mixture and
application of colors for painting or dyeing; or on the mode of drawing lines
to produce the effect of perspective,‑‑would be the subject of
copyright; but no one would contend that the copyright of the treatise would
give the exclusive right to the art or manufacture described therein. The
copyright of the book, if not pirated from other works, would be valid without
regard to the novelty, or want of novelty, of its subject‑matter. The
novelty of the art or thing described or explained has nothing to do with the
validity of the copyright. To give to the author of the book an exclusive
property in the art described therein, when no examination of its novelty has
ever been officially made, would be a surprise and a fraud upon the public.
That is the province of letters‑patent, not of copyright. The claim to an
invention or discovery of an art or manufacture must be subjected to the
examination of the Patent Office before an exclusive right therein can be
obtained; and it can only be secured by a patent from the government.
The difference between the two things, letters‑patent and
copyright, may be illustrated by reference to the subjects just enumerated.
Take the case of medicines. Certain mixtures are found to be of great value in
the healing art. If the discoverer writes and publishes a book on the subject
(as regular physicians generally do), he gains no exclusive right to the
manufacture and sale of the medicine; he gives that to the public. If he
desires to acquire such exclusive right, he must obtain a patent for the
mixture as a new art, manufacture, or composition of matter. He may copyright
his book, if he pleases; but that only secures to him the exclusive right of
printing and publishing his book. So of all other inventions or discoveries.
The copyright of a book on perspective, no matter how many
drawings and illustrations it may contain, gives no exclusive right to the
modes of drawing described, though they may never have been known or used
before. By publishing the book, without getting a patent for the art, the
latter is given to the public. The fact that the art described in the book by
illustrations of lines and figures which are reproduced in practice in the
application of the art, makes no difference. Those illustrations are the mere
language employed by the author to convey his ideas more clearly. Had he used
words of description instead of diagrams (which merely stand in the place of
words), there could not be the slightest doubt that others, applying the art to
practical use, might lawfully draw the lines and diagrams which were in the
author's mind, and which he thus described by words in his book.
The copyright of a work on mathematical science cannot give to the
author an exclusive right to the methods of operation which he propounds, or to
the diagrams which he employs to explain them, so as to prevent an engineer
from using them whenever occasion requires. The very object of publishing a
book on science or the useful arts is to communicate to the world the useful
knowledge which it contains. But this object would be frustrated if the
knowledge could not be used without incurring the guilt of piracy of the book.
And where the art it teaches cannot be used without employing the methods and
diagrams used to illustrate the book, or such as are similar to them, such methods
and diagrams are to be considered as necessary incidents to the art, and given
therewith to the public; not given for the purpose of publication in other
works explanatory of the art, but for the purpose of practical application.
Of course, these observations are not intended to apply to
ornamental designs, or pictorial illustrations addressed to the taste. Of these
it may be said, that their form is their essence, and their object, the
production of pleasure in their contemplation. This is their final end. They
are as much the product of genius and the result of composition, as are the
lines of the poet or the historian's period. On the other hand, the teachings
of science and the rules and methods of useful art have their final end in
application and use; and this application and use are what the public derive
from the publication of a book which teaches them. But as embodied and taught
in a literary composition or book, their essence consists only in their
statement. This alone is what is secured by the copyright. The use by another
of the same methods of statement, whether in words or illustrations, in a book
published for teaching the art, would undoubtedly be an infringement of the
copyright.
Recurring to the case before us, we observe that Charles Selden,
by his books, explained and described a peculiar system of book‑keeping,
and illustrated his method by means of ruled lines and blank columns, with
proper headings on a page, or on successive pages. Now, whilst no one has a
right to print or publish his book, or any material part thereof, as a book
intended to convey instruction in the art, any person may practise and use the
art itself which he has described and illustrated therein. The use of the art
is a totally different thing from a publication of the book explaining it. The
copyright of a book on book‑keeping cannot secure the exclusive right to
make, sell, and use account‑books prepared upon the plan set forth in
such book. Whether the art might or might not have been patented, is a question
which is not before us. It was not patented, and is open and free to the use of
the public. And, of course, in using the art, the ruled lines and headings of
accounts must necessarily be used as incident to it.
The plausibility of the claim put forward by the complainant in
this case arises from a confusion of ideas produced by the peculiar nature of
the art described in the books which have been made the subject of copyright.
In describing the art, the illustrations and diagrams employed happen to correspond
more closely than usual with the actual work performed by the operator who uses
the art. Those illustrations and diagrams consist of ruled lines and headings
of accounts; and it is similar ruled lines and headings of accounts which, in
the application of the art, the book‑keeper makes with his pen, or the
stationer with his press; whilst in most other cases the diagrams and
illustrations can only be represented in concrete forms of wood, metal, stone,
or some other physical embodiment. But the principle is the same in all. The
description of the art in a book, though entitled to the benefit of copyright,
lays no foundation for an exclusive claim to the art itself. The object of the
one is explanation; the object of the other is use. The former may be secured
by copyright. The latter can only be secured, if it can be secured at all, by
letters‑patent.
The remarks of Mr. Justice Thompson in the Circuit Court in
Clayton v. Stone & Hall (2 Paine, 392), in which copyright was claimed in a
daily price‑ current, are apposite and instructive. He says: 'In
determining the true construction to be given to the act of Congress, it is
proper to look at the Constitution of the United States, to aid us in
ascertaining the nature of the property intended to be protected. 'Congress
shall have power to promote the progress of science and useful arts, by
securing for limited times to authors and inventors the exclusive right to
their writings and discoveries.' The act in question was passed in execution of
the power here given, and the object, therefore, was the promotion of science;
and it would certainly be a pretty extraordinary view of the sciences to
consider a daily or weekly publication of the state of the market as falling
within any class of them. They are of a more fixed, permanent, and durable
character. The term 'science' cannot, with any propriety, by applied to a work
of so fluctuating and fugitive a form as that of a newspaper or price‑current,
the subject‑matter of which is daily changing, and is of mere temporary
use. Although great praise may be due to the plaintiffs for their industry and
enterprise in publishing this paper, yet the law does not contemplate their
being rewarded in this way: it must seek patronage and protection from its
utility to the public, and not a work of science. The title of the act of
Congress is, 'for the encouragement of learning,' and was not intended for the
encouragement of mere industry, unconnected with learning and the sciences. . .
. We are, accordingly, of opinion that the paper in question is not a book the
copyright to which can be secured under the act of Congress.'
The case of Cobbett v. Woodward (Law Rep. 14 Eq. 407) was a claim
to copyright in a catalogue of furniture which the publisher had on sale in his
establishment, illustrated with many drawings of furniture and decorations. The
defendants, being dealers in the same business, published a similar book, and
copied many of the plaintiff's drawings, though it was shown that they had for
sale the articles represented thereby.
The court held that these drawings were not subjects of copyright.
Lord Romilly, M. R., said: 'This is a mere advertisement for the sale of
particular articles which any one might imitate, and any one might advertise
for sale. If a man not being a vendor of any of the articles in question were
to publish a work for the purpose of informing the public of what was the most
convenient species of articles for household furniture, or the most graceful
species of decorations for articles of home furniture, what they ought to cost,
and where they might be bought, and were to illustrate his work with designs of
each article he described,‑‑such a work as this could not be
pirated with impunity, and the attempt to do so would be stopped by the
injunction of the Court of Chancery; yet if it were done with no such object,
but solely for the purpose of advertising particular articles for sale, and
promoting the private trade of the publisher by the sale of articles which any
other person might sell as well as the first advertiser, and if in fact it
contained little more than an illustrated inventory of the contents of a
warehouse, I know of no law which, while it would not prevent the second
advertiser from selling the same articles, would prevent him from using the
same advertisement; provided he did not in such advertisement by any device
suggest that he was selling the works and designs of the first advertiser.'
Another case, that of Page v. Wisden (20 L. T. N. S. 435), which
came before Vice‑Chancellor Malins in 1869, has some resemblance to the
present. There a copyright was claimed in a cricket scoring‑shett, and
the Vice‑ Chancellor held that it was not a fit subject for copyright,
partly because it was not new, but also because 'to say that a particular mode
of ruling a book constituted an object for a copyright is absurd.'
These cases, if not precisely in point, come near to the matter in
hand, and, in our view, corroborate the general proposition which we have laid
down.
In Drury v. Ewing (1 Bond, 540), which is much relied on by the
complainant, a copyright was claimed in a chart of patterns for cutting dresses
and basques for ladies, and coats, jackets, &c., for boys. It is obvious
that such designs could only be printed and published for information, and not
for use in themselves. Their practical use could only be exemplified in cloth
on the tailor's board and under his shears; in other words, by the application
of a mechanical operation to the cutting of cloth in certain patterns and
forms. Surely the exclusive right to this practical use was not reserved to the
publisher by his copyright of the chart. Without undertaking to say whether we
should or should not concur in the decision in that case, we think it cannot
control the present.
The conclusion to which we have come is, that blank account‑books
are not the subject of copyright; and that the mere copyright of Selden's book
did not confer upon him the exclusive right to make and use account‑books,
ruled and arranged as designated by him and described and illustrated in said
book.
The decree of the Circuit Court must be reversed, and the cause
remanded with instructions to dismiss the complainant's bill; and it is
So ordered