Salinger v. Random House, Inc.
Salinger v. Random House, Inc. | |
---|---|
Holding | |
An author has a right to protect the expressive content of his unpublished writings for the term of his copyright, and that right prevails over a claim of fair use under "ordinary circumstances" | |
Court membership | |
Judge(s) sitting | Jon O. Newman, Roger Miner |
Case opinions | |
Majority | Newman, joined by Miner |
Keywords | |
copyright infringement, unpublished works |
Salinger v. Random House, Inc., 811
Background
J. D. Salinger (1919–2010) was an American author whose best-known work is The Catcher in the Rye, a novel that had taken him ten years to write and was published in 1951.[3] A very private person, at the time the trial began he had spent the last thirty-four years living in the small community of Cornish, New Hampshire, with an unlisted telephone number and a post office box for his mail.[4]
Ian Hamilton (1938–2001) was a respected British literary critic and biographer who decided to write a biography of Salinger. He was poetry and fiction editor of The Times Literary Supplement and had written a well-received biography of Robert Lowell, approved by the poet's family.[5]
Hamilton asked Salinger to collaborate on the project but Salinger refused. Hamilton decided to proceed on his own. In his work, Hamilton made extensive use of letters Salinger had written to friends and others such as his neighbor, Judge Learned Hand, the novelist Ernest Hemingway, and his British publishers Hamish Hamilton and Roger Machell. The owners of these letters had donated them to the universities of Harvard, Princeton and Texas. Hamilton was able to read them after signing forms where he agreed not to publish them without consent.[6] Hamilton said, "I regard these letters as a tremendous autobiographical source ... In my view, it would be totally inconsistent with the craft of biography to omit such materials."[7]
Hamilton interviewed many people who knew or had known Salinger including Dorothy Olding, his agent. When
District court findings
In October 1986 Salinger sued Hamilton and Random House, asking for damages and an injunction against publication of the book.
Hamilton's use of Salinger's copyrighted material is minimal and insubstantial; it does not exploit or appropriate the literary value of Salinger's letters; it does not diminish the commercial value of Salinger's letters for future publication; it does not impair Salinger's control over first publication of his copyrighted letters or interfere with his exercise of control over his artistic reputation.
However, the court did note that in the May draft of the book Hamilton "was certainly giving himself a generous benefit of the doubt in concluding that the library agreement did not call for permissions."[8] The claim of breach of contract was based on an alleged violation of the terms set out in the library forms used to obtain access to the letter. The unfair competition claim was based on cases where Hamilton had prefaced close paraphrases with words like "he writes" or "he states," which allegedly could mislead readers into thinking they were seeing Salinger's own words. The district court also rejected these claims.[6] On the question of the library forms, the court considered that any restriction in the use contracts
... should be understood as applying only to quotations and excerpts that infringe copyright ... to read them as absolutely forbidding any quotation, no matter how limited or appropriate, would severely limit proper, lawful scholarly use and place an arbitrary power in the hands of the copyright owner going far beyond the protection provided by law.
However, the court did accept that Salinger had suffered a privacy invasion, against which copyright law gave no protection.[9] Despite its findings, the district court issued a temporary restraining order pending an appeal.[6]
Appeals court findings
The United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit heard the appeal in January 1987 and reversed the district court's decision, barring Random House from publishing the book. The court noted that the Copyright Act of 1976 had preempted common law as it applied to copyright of unpublished works. Under the Act the copyright owner had the right of first publication and the literary property rights, the rights to the expressive content, although they did not own the facts or ideas contained in the work. The court found further that with an unpublished work the right to control publication normally insulated the work against "fair use" copying. The court then examined the defendant's "fair use" defense under the four standard criteria: purpose of use, nature of the copyrighted work, amount used and effect on the market for the work. It concluded that the weight was in favor of Salinger on all but the first.[6]
The court considered that the purpose of using the letters fell within the categories of criticism, scholarship and research, all of which are considered fair uses. The court observed that a biographer may copy facts from an unpublished letter without risk but has no inherent right to copy the author's protected expression from such a letter, even as a means of illustrating the author's style. The court found that the fact of not being published was a critical element of the nature of the copyrighted work. It noted that the Supreme Court ruling on Harper & Row v. Nation Enterprises (1985) had observed "the scope of fair use is narrower with respect to unpublished works." The circuit court noted that this is ambiguous, meaning either there are fewer cases in which fair use may be found or that less material may be copied. However, the court decided it meant that unpublished works normally had complete protection against any copying of protected expression, which would be a form of first publication without the consent of the copyright owner.[6]
The Second Circuit Appeals court disagreed with the district court about the amount and substantiality of the portion used, and found that paraphrasing had not reduced the amount of copying, which was extensive. The court quoted a 1929 decision that the protected expression was more than the literal words but also included the "association, presentation, and combination of the ideas and thought which go to make up the [author's] literary composition." It quoted a 1977 decision that, "What is protected is the manner of expression, the author's analysis or interpretation of events, the way he structures his material and marshals facts, his choice of words and the emphasis he gives to particular developments." Taking into account paraphrasing, the court noted that often more than ten lines of one letter had been copied in this way, and that about 40% of the book's pages included material from the letters. [6] The court noted the fair use standard takes into account quality as well as quantity. Even short quotes may infringe copyright if they are what "makes the book worth reading." The court gave several examples of paraphrasing, including:[10][6]
Context | Original letter | Paraphrase |
---|---|---|
Phrases used in describing an imaginary scene | like a dead rat ... grey and nude ... applauding madly | resembling a lifeless rodent ... ancient and unclothed ... claps her hands in appreciation |
Comment on presidential candidate Wendell Willkie | He looks to me like a guy who makes his wife keep a scrapbook for him. | [Salinger] had fingered [Willkie] as the sort of fellow who makes his wife keep an album of his press cuttings. |
Of an editor describing a story by Salinger as "competent handling," and rejecting it | Like saying, She's a beautiful girl, except for her face. | How would a girl feel if you told her she was stunning to look at but that facially there was something not quite right about her? |
Parisians' view of Americans in Paris after liberation | [they would have said] "What a charming custom!" if "we had stood on top of the jeep and taken a leak." | ...if "the conquerors had chosen to urinate from the roofs of their vehicles." |
The last and perhaps most important aspect in evaluating fair use is the effect on the market for the copyright-protected work. The second circuit court of appeals considered the impact Hamilton's biography would have if Salinger later decided to publish his letters, which could have significant financial value. It found that the biography included, or paraphrased, almost all the most interesting parts of the letters. Hamilton's practice of including phrases like "Salinger says," or "he said" within his paraphrase could give readers of the biography the false impression that they had read Salinger's own words. They might therefore decide not to buy a collection of the original letters. The court found that this meant there would be a financial impact.[6] Although Salinger had said he did not intend to publish the letters, the judge said that he could change his mind and that, "He is entitled to protect his opportunity to sell his letters."[11] Given the strong balance in favor of Salinger, the court banned publication of the biography.
Reactions and results
Salinger seemed to have created a
However, another editor said, "We are in the process of doing two biographies. This decision is crippling."[5] The defendant's lawyer said "If you take this opinion to an extreme, what it says is that you cannot quote anything that has not been published before, and if you attempt to paraphrase, you are at serious peril. Copyright law was created to protect an author in a property right, not to permit an author to obliterate the past."[5] In February 1987 Random House asked for the case to be reheard en banc, that is, by the full bench of sixteen appeals judges in the Second Circuit Court of Appeals. The court refused.[4] In May 1987 Judges Jon O. Newman and Roger Miner reaffirmed the ruling they had made in January.[5] In rejecting the petition for a rehearing, the court quoted the finding in Nutt v. National Institute Inc. (1929) that passages impermissibly took the expressive content of Salinger's letters by copying the author's "association, presentation, and combination of the ideas and thought which go to make up [his] literary composition."[14]
In 1988 Judge Newman published an essay on "Copyright Law and the Protection of Privacy". He argued that with copyright cases involving unpublished material the court should be allowed to consider privacy issues, and that in cases where personal rights were involved the laws could possibly be extended to protect facts as well as expression. This was an extreme position that Newman later dropped.[15] However, the essay illustrates that a judge may be tempted to use copyright law to support an objective other than simply protecting commercial rights.[16] Hamilton did eventually publish a book, In Search of J.D. Salinger (1988), but it was mostly about the experiences of Hamilton himself in researching the biography, including his legal problems, rather than about Salinger himself.[10]
In 1991 the Second Circuit Court of Appeal heard
See also
- Wright v. Warner Books, Inc.: A lawsuit over first publication by the estate of Richard Wright
References
- Citations
- ^ Salinger v. Random House, Inc., 811 F.2d 90 (2nd Cir. 1987).
- ^ 17 U.S.C. 107.
- ^ Hoban 1987, p. 38.
- ^ a b Hoban 1987, p. 37.
- ^ a b c d e Hoban 1987, p. 42.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Salinger v. Random House, Inc. 1987.
- ^ Fowler 2011, p. 220.
- ^ a b c Welch 1993, p. 114.
- ^ Welch 1993, p. 115.
- ^ a b Sableman 1997, p. 265.
- ^ Torremans 2010, p. 75.
- ^ Welch 1993, p. 109.
- ^ McDowell 1987.
- ^ Newman and Miner 1987.
- ^ Torremans 2010, p. 77.
- ^ Torremans 2010, p. 78.
- ^ Meskill 1991.
- ^ Perle, Fischer & Williams 1999, p. 13-7.
- Sources
- Text of Salinger v. Random House, Inc., 811
- Fowler, Mark A. (2011). "The Quick in Pursuit of the Dead". In Saint-Amour, Paul K. (ed.). Modernism and Copyright. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-973153-4. Retrieved June 13, 2012.
- Hoban, Phoebe (June 15, 1987). "The Salinger File". New York. Retrieved June 14, 2012.
- McDowell, Edwin (January 31, 1987). "Salinger v. Random House, A Gray Area for Publishers". The New York Times. Retrieved June 14, 2012.
- Meskill (November 21, 1991). "953 F.2d 731: Ellen Wright, Plaintiff-appellant, v. Warner Books, Inc. and Margaret Walker, also known as Margaret Walker Alexander, Defendants-appellees". United States Court of Appeals, Second Circuit. Retrieved June 27, 2012.
- Perle, E. Gabriel; Fischer, Mark A.; Williams, John Taylor (June 1, 1999). Perle & Williams on Publishing Law. Aspen Publishers Online. ISBN 978-0-7355-0448-6. Retrieved June 13, 2012.
- Sableman, Mark (November 21, 1997). More Speech, Not Less: Communications Law in the Information Age. SIU Press. p. 162. ISBN 978-0-8093-2135-3. Retrieved June 13, 2012.
- "Salinger v. Random House, Inc., 811 F.2d 90 (2nd Cir. 1987)". Cornell University Law School. Retrieved June 13, 2012.
- Torremans, Paul (October 1, 2010). Global Copyright: Three Hundred Years Since the Statute of Anne, from 1709 to Cyberspace. Edward Elgar Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84844-766-0. Retrieved June 13, 2012.
- Welch, C. Brigid (1993). Unpublished Materials: Libraries and Fair Use. Association of Research Libr. UOM:39015029868364. Retrieved June 13, 2012.