Wheaton v. Peters

Last updated
Wheaton v. Peters
Seal of the United States Supreme Court.svg
Decided March 19, 1834
Full case name Henry Wheaton and Robert Donaldson, Appellants
v.
Richard Peters and John Grigg
Citations33 U.S. 591 ( more )
8 Pet. 591; 8 L. Ed. 1055; 1834 U.S. LEXIS 619
Holding
There is no common law copyright after a work's publication, and court reporters cannot hold copyrights on the cases compiled in the course of their work.
Court membership
Chief Justice
John Marshall
Associate Justices
William Johnson  · Gabriel Duvall
Joseph Story  · Smith Thompson
John McLean  · Henry Baldwin
Case opinions
MajorityMcLean, joined by Marshall, Johnson, Duvall, Story
DissentThompson
DissentBaldwin

Wheaton v. Peters, 33 U.S. (8 Pet.) 591 (1834), was the first United States Supreme Court ruling on copyright. The case upheld the power of Congress to make a grant of copyright protection subject to conditions and rejected the doctrine of a common law copyright in published works. The Court also declared that there could be no copyright in the Court's own judicial decisions. [1]

Contents

Facts

The case arose out of the printing of the Supreme Court's own opinions. Henry Wheaton, the third reporter of decisions, had compiled the opinions of the Court, complete with annotations and summaries of the arguments in Court. This was useful material but made the volumes of his reports costly and out of the reach of most lawyers. His successor as reporter, Richard Peters, in addition to publishing the current volumes of reports, had gone over his predecessor's work, eliminated the arguments of counsel and other material beyond the opinions themselves, and published an abridged edition reducing twenty-four volumes into six. The Reporter's salary of $1,000 per year did not cover the full expenses of preparing the reports, and the Reporters relied on sales of their books to recoup their costs. By creating more affordable volumes, Peters devastated the market for Wheaton's more expensive ones.

Wheaton sued Peters in Pennsylvania and lost in the circuit court. [2] The judge, Joseph Hopkinson, ruled that copyright is purely the creation of statute and that one must comply with the formal requirements for copyright, such as registering the copyright and placing a copyright notice in the work, in order to receive protection. Judge Hopkinson also ruled that there was no federal common law; one must look to the states for common law; and even then, the states did not necessarily adopt the entire English common law if there even was a common law copyright.

Wheaton appealed to the Supreme Court.

Result

Justice John McLean, who had publishing experience as the founder of an Ohio newspaper, wrote the opinion of the Court. It ruled that while the common law protected copyright in unpublished writings (such as diaries or personal letters), "this is a very different right from that which asserts a perpetual and exclusive property in the future publication of the work, after the author shall have published it to the world." [3] McLean declared that post-publication copyright did not exist in the United States but only as a function of statute. "Congress, then, by this act, instead of sanctioning an existing right, as contended, created it." [4] McLean also rejected Wheaton's contention that requiring registration and the deposit of a copy of the copyrighted work with the Department of State were improper prerequisites to copyright protection. Because Congress was granting authors the protection of copyright, it could require them to observe the statutory formalities. That precedent corresponded to the English decision in Donaldson v Beckett , which was cited in the Court's opinion.

The Court remanded the case to the circuit court to determine whether Wheaton had satisfied the requirements for copyright protection. Finally, in an often-quoted sentence, the opinion concluded: "It may be proper to remark that the Court is unanimously of opinion that no reporter has or can have any copyright in the written opinions delivered by this Court, and that the judges thereof cannot confer on any reporter any such right." [5] Thus, any copyright protection for published judicial opinions could cover ancillary materials such as summaries of the opinions and commentaries on them but not the judicially-authored texts of the opinions themselves.

Dissents

Justice Smith Thompson wrote a dissenting opinion in which he concluded that Wheaton was entitled to an injunction against Peters' publication of his reports.

Justice Henry Baldwin also dissented, but his reasoning was not recorded in the original opinion. It appeared in a revised edition of the U.S. Reports, published posthumously in 1884. [6]

Later developments

Case resolution

As the Supreme Court had directed, the Circuit Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania held a trial on the issue of whether Wheaton had satisfied the copyright formalities. The court ruled that he had. Peters appealed, but while the second appeal was pending, both Wheaton and Peters died. The case was then settled, with Peters' estate paying Wheaton's estate $400.

Wheaton v. Peters was the first in a line of cases in which the Supreme Court traditionally tried to prevent people from monopolizing information by using copyright law, especially the text of the laws that govern everyone. The decision was upheld and expanded to all judicial opinions in Banks v. Manchester although Callaghan v. Myers established that editorial additions to the materials could be restricted by copyright. [7]

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Reporter of Decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States</span> Official

The reporter of decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States is the official charged with editing and publishing the opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, both when announced and when they are published in permanent bound volumes of the United States Reports. The reporter is responsible for only the contents of the United States Reports issued by the Government Publishing Office, first in preliminary prints and later in the final bound volumes. The reporter is not responsible for the editorial content of unofficial reports of the court's decisions, such as the privately published Supreme Court Reporter and Lawyers' Edition.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Richard Peters (reporter)</span> American attorney

Richard Peters, Jr. was an American attorney and the fourth reporter of decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States, serving from 1828 to 1843.

<i>United States Reports</i> United States Supreme Court decisions

The United States Reports are the official record of the Supreme Court of the United States. They include rulings, orders, case tables, in alphabetical order both by the name of the petitioner and by the name of the respondent, and other proceedings. United States Reports, once printed and bound, are the final version of court opinions and cannot be changed. Opinions of the court in each case are prepended with a headnote prepared by the Reporter of Decisions, and any concurring or dissenting opinions are published sequentially. The Court's Publication Office oversees the binding and publication of the volumes of United States Reports, although the actual printing, binding, and publication are performed by private firms under contract with the United States Government Publishing Office.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Joseph Hopkinson</span> American politician, Representative from Pennsylvania and United States District Judge (1770–1842)

Joseph Hopkinson was a United States representative from Pennsylvania and a United States district judge of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania.

Edict of government is a technical term associated with the United States Copyright Office's guidelines and practices that comprehensively includes laws, which advises that such submissions will neither be accepted nor processed for copyright registration. It is based on the principle of public policy that citizens must have unrestrained access to the laws that govern them. Similar provisions occur in most, but not all, systems of copyright law; the main exceptions are in those copyright laws which have developed from English law, under which the copyright in laws rests with the Crown or the government.

<i>Veeck v. Southern Building Code Congress Intl</i>

Veeck v. Southern Bldg. Code Congress Int'l, Inc., 293 F.3d 791, was a 2002 en banc 9-6 decision of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, about the scope of copyright protection for building codes and by implication other privately drafted laws adopted by states and municipal governments. A three-fifths majority of the court's fifteen judges held that copyright protection no longer applied to model codes once they were enacted into law.

Banks v. Manchester, 128 U.S. 244 (1888), was a United States Supreme Court ruling that dealt with copyright.

Georgia v. Public.Resource.Org, Inc., No. 18-1150, 590 U.S. ___ (2020), is a United States Supreme Court case regarding "whether the government edicts doctrine extends to—and thus renders uncopyrightable—works that lack the force of law, such as the annotations in the Official Code of Georgia Annotated" (OCGA). On April 27, 2020, the Court ruled 5–4 that the OCGA cannot be copyrighted because the OCGA's annotations were "authored by an arm of the legislature in the course of its legislative duties"; thus the Court found that the annotations fall under the government edicts doctrine and are ineligible for copyright.

References

  1. Wheaton v. Peters, 33 U.S. (8 Pet. ) 591 (1834).
  2. Wheaton v. Peters, 29 F. Cas. 862 (C.C.E.D. Pa. 1832) (No. 17,486).
  3. 33 U.S. at 658.
  4. 33 U.S. at 66061.
  5. 33 U.S. at 668.
  6. "Copyright in State Legal Materials – Looking Back to 1888". 10 October 2019.
  7. Colendich, Katie M. (November 2003). "Who Owns "the Law"? The Effect on Copyrights When Privately-Authored Works Are Adopted or Enacted by Reference into Law" (PDF). Washington Law Journal. 78.

Further reading