The grievance of the plaintiffs upon this appeal is that they have not been awarded all the relief to which they claim to be entitled. The interlocutory judgment proceeds upon the theory that the agreements of the American Publishers' Association and the American Booksellers' Association, which have given rise to the controversy in this action, are unlawful only so far as they relate to uncopyrighted books; but are lawful so far as they relate to copyrighted books. Such was the view of this court upon the previous appeal, when an order of the Appellate Division overruling a demurrer to the complaint was sustained. (Straus v. American Publishers' Assn., 177 N.Y. 473.)
Upon that appeal the court, speaking through PARKER, Ch. J., held in substance that the agreements in question would have been free from legal objection if they had been intended to operate solely upon transactions in copyrighted publications. They were condemned only because they affected "the right of a dealer to sell books not copyrighted at the price he chooses, or to sell at all, if he fails to comply with the rules of the association." The two members of the court who then dissented upheld the validity of the agreements on the ground that they did not in their opinion really extend to uncopyrighted books. (See dissenting opinion of GRAY, J., 177 N.Y. on p. 490.) It is apparent, therefore, that all the judges who participated in the decision of the first appeal in this case agreed as to one point — that is, that there was something in the Federal copyright statutes which permitted a restraint of trade in copyrighted books that the law would not tolerate as applied to books not copyrighted.
This being the law of the case as laid down upon the first appeal we are bound upon well-recognized principles to *Page 500 adhere to it upon any subsequent review of the controversy in any aspect, unless the doctrine of our previous decision has been adjudged to be erroneous by a tribunal of superior authority. In the great mass of litigations which are brought here for review this is the court of last resort. Our construction and interpretation of the law, however, is not final and conclusive in regard to the meaning, scope and effect of the laws of the United States. "The doctrine of stare decisis is based upon the assumption that the rules of law to which this doctrine applies have previously been determined by a court having final jurisdiction of the question involved. For this reason, where the decision of a tribunal is subject to review by one having superior authority over it, for that purpose, or the question determined may be passed upon by such tribunal in another case, the doctrine of stare decisis does not apply with full force until the same questions have been determined by the court of last resort. The construction of an act of Congress cannot be said to be authoritatively settled until passed upon by the highest court authorized to do so. This is the supreme court of the United States." (Calhoun G.M. Co. v. Ajax G.M. Co., 27 Col. 11.)
The view which this court adopted upon the first appeal in this case as to the effect of the copyright laws of the United States upon the subject-matter of the agreements which are attacked as being in restraint of trade has, it seems to me, been quite distinctly rejected in a subsequent decision by the Supreme Court of the United States in a litigation to which the plaintiffs here were parties. (Bobbs-Merrill Co. v. Straus, 210 U.S. 339.) On the previous appeal in this court Chief Judge PARKER, after quoting the language used by the United States Supreme Court inBement v. Nat'l. Harrow Co. (186 U.S. 70) to the effect that the courts would uphold any conditions not in their very nature illegal in regard to patents, imposed by the patentee and agreed to by the licensee, for the right to manufacture or use or sell the article, went on to say that such reasoning although employed in the case cited in respect to patent rights was "equally applicable *Page 501 to copyrights." On the other hand, Mr. Justice DAY, writing for the Supreme Court of the United States in the Bobbs-Merrill case, expressly declares that "there are differences between the patent and copyright statutes in the extent of the protection granted by them," and cites with approval an opinion by Circuit Judge LURTON in which he said that these differences are so wide "that the cases which relate to the one subject are not controlling as to the other." (210 U.S. on p. 246.) In theBobbs-Merrill case the owner of a copyrighted book inserted below the copyright notice in each copy the following statement: "The price of this book at retail is $1.00 net. No dealer is licensed to sell it at less price and a sale at a less price will be treated as an infringement of the copyright." The question presented for decision was whether the sole right to vend given to the owner of the copyright by the Federal law was such as to "secure to the owner of the copyright the right after a sale of the book to a purchaser to restrict the future sale of the book at retail to the right to sell it at a certain price per copy because of a notice in the book that a sale at a different price will be treated as an infringement, which notice has been brought home to the one undertaking to sell for less than the named sum?" The court answered this question in the negative, holding in substance that while the copyright laws secure to the owner of a copyright the right of multiplication and the right to vend copies, he may not qualify the title of a future purchaser by means of such a notice as has been quoted. The fair import of the decision is that the owner of a copyright obtains nothing as such under the Federal law but the exclusive right to publish and multiply copies of the protected work and vend the same. Where he sells copies, the contracts of sale are unaffected by the copyright statutes but are subject to the same rules of law as those which apply to contracts for the sale of other personal property.
If I understand the decision in the Bobbs-Merrill case correctly, the fact that the agreements in question here related to copyrighted books could not operate to make *Page 502 those agreements valid if they were otherwise in violation of the statutes forbidding contracts in restraint of trade. In other words, a copyright does not carry to the owner thereof any more right to enter into a contract in restraint of trade in the copyrighted book than he has to enter into a contract which will restrain trade in a book which is not copyrighted. As was said by the present chief judge of this court when a member of the Appellate Division in the second department, referring to the publication of a copyrighted book: "We suppose that the author of a new geometry may fix the price at which he will sell his work at any sum, or arrange with others for its publication and sale at the stipulated price. But if all the publishers of books on geometry were to combine and agree not to sell any publication on that subject except for a stipulated price, the contract would be in restraint of trade and void." (Murphy v. Christian PressAssn. Pub. Co., 38 App. Div. 430.)
Although it is true that the question decided by the Supreme Court of the United States in Bobbs-Merrill Co. v. Straus (supra) was not the precise question presented in the case at bar, nevertheless it seems to me that what was said in the opinion therein as to the scope and effect of the copyright statutes is inconsistent, and indeed irreconcilable with the view originally taken by this court as to the effect of a copyright upon books which are the subject-matter of a contract in restraint of trade. The effect of a copyright is a Federal question. A decision by the Supreme Court of the United States upon such a question is binding upon the Court of Appeals. So far, then, as the previous decision of this court was in conflict with the construction of the copyright laws adopted by the Supreme Court of the United States it must be deemed to have been overruled.
Subject to the modification rendered necessary by the decision in the Bobbs-Merrill case I think we are bound to construe the agreements in controversy as we construed them upon the previous appeal. We then held that the contracts were bad so far as they related to uncopyrighted books. *Page 503 That view remains unassailed. We held, on the other hand, that they were good so far as they related to copyrighted books. That view must now be deemed erroneous and must be abandoned. Those parts of the agreements which deal with copyrighted books must now be regarded as equally objectionable and subject to the condemnation of the statutes forbidding contracts in restraint of trade. In so holding, we shall be applying the doctrine of staredecisis as far as we can, and at the same time shall pay due regard to an adjudication which I think we ought to treat as a controlling authority.
I advise a reversal of the interlocutory judgment so far as it denies relief to the plaintiff in reference to transactions in copyrighted books under the agreements in controversy, and that the question certified be answered in the affirmative.
HAIGHT, VANN and HISCOCK, JJ., concur with GRAY, J.; CULLEN, Ch. J., and CHASE, J., concur with WILLARD BARTLETT, J.
Order affirmed, and question certified answered in the negative.