Hirsch v. Paramount Pictures, 787-Y.

Decision Date16 January 1937
Docket NumberNo. 787-Y.,787-Y.
Citation17 F. Supp. 816
CourtU.S. District Court — Southern District of California
PartiesHIRSCH v. PARAMOUNT PICTURES, Inc., et al.

Hortense Hirsch and William Hicks, of Glendale, Cal., for plaintiff.

O'Melveny, Tuller & Myers, Homer Mitchell, Jackson W. Chance, and J. H. Karp, all of Los Angeles, Cal., for defendants.

YANKWICH, District Judge.

The plaintiff, Hortense Hirsch, has brought suit against Paramount Pictures, Inc., Mack Gordon, Harry Revel, and others, charging infringement of a copyrighted musical composition entitled "Lady of Love" upon which she had secured a copyright registration as an unpublished work on July 16, 1930. In the complaint, Mack Gordon, a writer of lyrics, and Harry Revel, a composer of popular songs, while in the employ of the motion picture corporation, are charged by the plaintiff to have appropriated eight bars of her musical composition and incorporated it into a musical composition of their own, later copyrighted, entitled "Without a Word of Warning," and which was later used as a "song hit" in the talking picture production produced and exhibited under the title "Two for Tonight."

She seeks damages in the sum of $500,000 and an accounting.

The defendants deny infringement.

The protection of the copyright law is extended to musical compositions. 17 U. S.C.A. §§ 1(e), 5(d).

In determining whether there has been an infringement of the copyright of a work, certain fundamental principles have been evolved, which the trial of almost every suit for infringement always brings into play.

Every such suit turns upon two fundamental problems — the existence of a copyright protecting an original work and the infringement of the right, through copying.

Ultimately, the determination of these two problems turns on the issues of originality, access, and similarity.

Originality is, ordinarily, challenged by the defendant. And, when he offers proof of lack of originality, by showing the source of the plaintiff's work in material in the public domain, the burden shifts to the plaintiff to overcome that proof. Werner Co. v. Encyclopædia Britannica Co. (C.C.A. 3, 1905) 134 F. 831; Amdur on Copyright (1936) 1057.

In determining the originality of a popular song, we are confronted with the fact that it is built upon a rather simple, accepted pattern. It has, as a rule, three parts in the chorus: The opening strain, which usually runs for eight bars and is repeated for another eight bars, a middle tune of eight bars, and a concluding eight bars, which repeat the first strain. Shafter, Musical Copyright, pp. 155, 161, 166, 171. Similarity of tone succession, which is, to a certain degree, inevitable in all musical compositions, because of the limits of the chromatic scale, is more likely to appear within this narrow pattern. So that if, as Judge Hand has stated, Fred Fisher, Inc., v. Dillingham (D.C.N.Y.1924) 298 F. 145, a musical composition is original if it is "the spontaneous, unsuggested result of the author's imagination," originality in the realm of popular music lies within a very narrow scope. Slight variations in the use of rhythm, or harmony — of accent and tempo — may achieve it.

Even within this simple range, the portion of the plaintiff's composition, of the infringement of which she complains, lacks originality. For the evidence shows conclusively that the source of the eight bars in her composition which she claims to have been copied by the defendants lay in previously published material, some of which had become a part of the public domain of music, through the absence of copyright protection. The original source was given by Mr. Sigmund Romberg, himself a very well-known composer, as a waltz in Johann Strauss' "Die Fledermaus." The first four bars of the chorus, which the plaintiff claims to have been pirated by the defendants, are identical with the Strauss waltz — the sequence of notes, when transposed to the same key, being g-f-e-c sharp-d-f-c natural-c-c. In the fourth bar there is one change, plaintiff using "b" instead of the "c" in the Strauss waltz. The plaintiff has made no explanation of this similarity. Nor has she attempted to refute the other testimony which demonstrated the similarity between the entire eight bars, as they appear in her composition, and others, all presumably modeled after the Strauss composition. There were offered into evidence and played for the court portions of the following copyrighted compositions "Stairway of Love," "Everybody Rag With Me," "Asleep in the Deep," "Sympathy," "Love Sends a Little Gift of Roses," "Every Day Can't Be Sunday," "Sweethearts," which incorporated, in some form or other, the notes, phrasing, and melodic sequence of the Strauss composition. (See note at end of opinion.)

It is true that infringement may result from copying a work which is based upon material in the public domain. But this happens only when the material so taken has been transformed by the first taker or borrower as to entitle him to a claim of originality. Banks v. McDivitt (C.C.N.Y.1875) 2 Fed.Cas. p. 759, No. 961; Emerson v. Davies (C.C.Mass.1845) 8 Fed.Cas. p. 615, No. 4,436; Gray v. Russell (C.C.Mass. 1839) 10 Fed.Cas. p. 1035, No. 5,728; ...

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19 cases
  • Arnstein v. Porter
    • United States
    • U.S. Court of Appeals — Second Circuit
    • February 11, 1946
    ...and p. 194, where he approves of Judge Yankwich's course in attaching an exhibit of analysis to his opinion in Hirsch v. Paramount Pictures, Inc., D.C.S.D.Cal., 17 F.Supp. 816 — "this sensible procedure," "a splendid model for future copyright decisions." I find nowhere any suggestion of tw......
  • Stanley v. Columbia Broadcasting System
    • United States
    • California Supreme Court
    • August 4, 1950
    ...something new has been added, that there has been a variation of the old that in some measure transforms it. See, Hirsch v. Paramount Pictures, D.C., 17 F.Supp. 816, 818. II. Whatever the validity of plaintiff's claim to novelty for his application of the listener participation idea, it con......
  • Greenbie v. Noble
    • United States
    • U.S. District Court — Southern District of New York
    • April 3, 1957
    ...entitle him to a claim of originality. American Code Co., Inc. v. Bensinger, 2 Cir., 1922, 282 F. 829 834; Hirsch v. Paramount Pictures, Inc., D.C.S.D.Cal., 1937, 17 F.Supp. 816, 818. In American Code Co., Inc. v. Bensinger, supra, Judge Rogers "If one takes matter which lies in the public ......
  • Cain v. Universal Pictures Co., 1755-Y.
    • United States
    • U.S. District Court — Southern District of California
    • December 14, 1942
    ...composition, similarity in accent, harmony or melody means "resemblance noticeable to the average hearer" (Hirsch v. Paramount Pictures Corp., D.C.Cal.1937, 17 F.Supp. 816, 818; and see, Carew v. R. K. O. Radio Pictures, Inc., D.C.Cal.1942, 43 F.Supp. 199, 200 et seq.; Darrell v. Joe Morris......
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