1. In an equity suit for the infringement of a copyright, where the defend- aut appeals from the final decree, if exceptions were taken to the report of a master in favor of the plaintiff, it is the duty of the appel- lant to bring the exceptions into this court, as part of the record; and, if he took no exceptions, the report stands without exception. Belford v. Scribner, 490.
2. Where the authoress of a book was a married woman, the copyright of which was taken by her assignee as proprietor, it was held, that, inas- much as she settled, from time to time, with the proprietor, for her royalties, the court would presume that her legal title as author was duly vested in such proprietor, and that long acquiescence, by all parties, in such claim of proprietorship, was enough to answer the suggestion of the husband's possible marital interest in the wife's earnings. Ib.
3. If the husband was entitled to any part of the wife's earnings, that was a matter to be settled between the husband and the proprietor, and could not be interposed as a defence to a trespass on the rights of the proprietor of the copyright. Ib.
4. The proof showed that the title to the book was vested in the plaintiff, and that the copyright was secured by him in accordance with law. Ib. 5. Under § 4956 of the Revised Statutes, it is sufficient if the two printed copies of the book are deposited with the Librarian of Congress the day before its publication. Ib.
6. A certificate of the Librarian of Congress as to the day of the receipt by him of the two copies is competent evidence, though not under seal. Ib.
7. The finding by the Circuit Court that a certified copy of copyright had been theretofore filed as proof and lost, is sufficient evidence of that fact to sustain an order granting leave to file a new certified copy in its place, there being nothing in the record to control such finding. lb.
8. As two of the defendants printed the infringing books by contract with the third defendant, who published and sold them, and as, under § 4964 of the Revised Statutes, both the printer and the publisher are equally liable to the owner of the copyright for an infringement, and as the sum decreed was found to be the profit shown to have been made by the defendants from the defendants' infringement, the two defendants who did the printing were held to be sharers in the profits so realized from the sales, and to be properly chargeable with such profits. Ib.
9. The matter and language in the infringing books being the same as the plaintiff's in every substantial sense, but so distributed through such books as to make it almost impossible to separate the one from the other, the entire profits realized by the defendants must be given to the plaintiff. 1b.
1. Under the statute of Missouri, authorizing execution upon a judgment against a corporation to be ordered against any of its stockholders to the extent of the unpaid balance of their stock, "upon motion in open court, after sufficient notice in writing to the persons sought to be charged," a notice served in another State upon a person alleged to be a stockholder, and who has never resided in Missouri, is insufficient to support an order charging him with personal liability. Wilson v. Seligman, 41.
2. The trust arising in favor of creditors by subscriptions to the stock of a corporation cannot be defeated by a simulated payment of such ́sub- scription, nor by any devise short of an actual payment in good faith; and it was not intended, by anything said in Clark v. Bever, 139 U. S. 96; Fogg v. Blair, 139 U. S. 118; or Handley v. Stutz, 139 U. S. 417, to overrule this principle, or qualify it in any way, but only to draw a line beyond which the court was unwilling to go in affixing a lia- bility upon those who had purchased stock of the corporation, or had taken it in good faith in satisfaction of their demands. Camden v. Stuart, 104.
3. Applying this rule to the testimony and mass of figures in this case, the court affirms the judgments of the court below against stockholders in these cases, whose subscriptions for their stock in the corporation, defendant in error in No. 643, were shown to be in part unpaid. Ib. See JURISDICTION, C, 4.
See PRACTICE, 10;
REMOVAL OF CAUSES, 2, 4.
This action was brought by the defendant in error as plaintiff below against the plaintiff in error, defendant below, to recover a balance alleged to be due from him to the plaintiff below as its treasurer. The defendant below denied that any sum was due, and set up an accord and satisfaction. At the trial, after the plaintiff rested, the defendant opened his case at length, setting forth the grounds of his defence. After some evidence had been introduced including the books of account and the evidence of a witness who kept those books, a conversation took place between the court and the defendant respect- ing the introduction of evidence alleged by the court to be outside of the statements made in the opening. The defendant, insisted that the evidence offered was within those statements. A further conversation resulted in the defendant's offering to show that all the moneys ever received by him as treasurer were duly accounted for and paid over. The court held this to be a mixed proposition of law and fact, and
therefore not to be proved by witnesses or other evidence; and, having excluded it, charged the jury that the question at issue was a book- keeper's puzzle or problem, which must be solved in favor of the plain- tiff, although nothing had occurred in the testimony which reflected in the slightest degree upon the integrity or honesty or upright conduct of anybody who was concerned or had at any time been concerned in the transaction. Held, (1) That under the rule laid down in Oscanyan v. Arms Co., 103 U. S. 261, it was competent for the court, if, assuming all the statements and claims made in the defendant's opening with all explanations and qualifications to be true, he had no case, to direct a verdict for the plaintiff; but (2) that he should have been allowed, especially in view of the statement that there was no imputation upon his integrity or honesty, to offer proof to show that he had accounted for and paid over the money for which he was sued; and that if the proof, when offered, did not tend in law to establish those facts, it could have been excluded. Butler v. National Home for Disabled Sol- diers, 64.
1. The consolidation, under section 1024 of the Revised Statutes, of several
indictments against different persons for one conspiracy, if not ex- cepted to at the time, cannot be objected to after verdict. Logan v. United States, 263.
2. An act of Congress, requiring courts to be held at three places in a judi- cial district, and prosecutions for offences committed in certain coun- ties to be tried, and writs and recognizances to be returned, at each place, does not affect the power of the grand jury, sitting at either place, to present indictments for offences committed anywhere within the district. Ib.
3. A jury in a capital case, who, after considering their verdict for forty hours, have announced in open court that they are unable to agree, may be discharged by the court of its own motion and at its discre- tion, and the defendant be put on trial by another jury. Ib. 4. A juror summoned in a capital case, who states on voir dire that he has conscientious scruples in regard to the infliction of the death penalty for crime, may be challenged by the government for cause. Ib.
5. The provision of section 858 of the Revised Statutes, that "the laws of the State in which the court is held shall be the rules of decision as to the competency of witnesses in the courts of the United States in trials at common law, and in equity and admiralty," has no application to criminal trials. Ib.
6. Under section 1033 of the Revised Statutes, any person indicted of a capital offence has the right to have delivered to him, at least two days before the trial, a list of the witnesses to be produced on the trial for proving the indictment; and if he seasonably claims this
right, it is error to put him on trial, and to allow witnesses to testify against him, without having previously delivered to him such a list; and, it seems, that the error is not cured by his acquittal of the capital offence, and conviction of a lesser offence charged in the same indict- Ib.
7. There are o common law offences against the United States. United States v. daton, 677.
8. It is necessary that a sufficient statutory authority should exist for declaring any act or omission a criminal offence; and the statutory authority in the present case was not sufficient. Ib.
See EVIDENCE, 2;
JURISDICTION, A, 8; WITNESS.
1. Under the provision in the act of May 9, 1890, 26 Stat. 105, c. 200, the duties on worsted cloths were, by the terms of the act, and irrespective of any action by the Secretary of the Treasury, to be such as were placed on woollen cloths by the act of March 3, 1883. 22 Stat. c. 121, pp. 488, 508. United States v. Ballin, 1.
2. Gloves made of cotton and silk, in which cotton was the material of chief value, were imported in January, 1874, and charged by the col- lector with a duty of 60 per cent ad valorem, that rate of duty being chargeable only on "silk gloves," under the act of June 30, 1864, c. 171, 13 Stat. 210, and on "ready made clothing of silk, or of which silk shall be a component material of chief value," under § 3 of the act of March 3, 1865, c. 80, 13 Stat. 493. The importer protested and appealed and brought suit. His protest stated that the goods were only liable to a duty of 35 per cent less 10 per cent, "being composed of cotton and silk, cotton chief part, the duty of 60 per cent being only legal where silk is the chief part." The goods were made on frames; Held, (1) Under § 14 of the act of June 30, 1864, c. 171, 13 Stat. 214, 215, the protest set forth distinctly and specifically the grounds of the objection of the importer to the decision of the collector, and was suf- ficient; (2) It was immaterial that the protest did not specify that the gloves were made on frames; (3) The goods were dutiable only at 35 per cent less 10 per cent under § 22 of the act of March 2, 1861, 12 Stat. 191, and § 13 of the act of July 14, 1862, 12 Stat. 555, 556, 559, and under § 2 of the act of June 6, 1872, 17 Stat. 231. Heinze v. Arthur's Executors, 28.
3. Photographic albums, made of paper, leather, metal clasps and plated clasps, imported in April, May and June, 1885, the paper being worth
more than all the rest of the materials put together, were not liable to a duty of 30 per cent ad valorem, as "manufactures and articles of leather," under Schedule N of the act of March 3, 1883, c. 121, (22 Stat. 513,) but were liable to a duty of only 15 per cent ad valorem, under Schedule M of that act, (22 Stat. 510,) as a manufacture of paper, or of which paper was "a component material, not specially enumerated or provided for" in that act. Liebenroth v. Robertson, 35.
4. Under § 6 of that act, (p. 491,) title 33 of the Revised Statutes was abro- gated after July 1, 1883, and § 2499 in that title was made to read so that "on all articles manufactured from two or more materials the duty shall be assessed at the highest rates at which the component material of chief value may be chargeable," instead of reading that "on all articles manufactured from two or more materials the duty shall be assessed at the highest rates at which any of its component parts may be chargeable;" and that new provision was applicable to this case, although the new § 2499 also provided that "if two or more rates of duty should be applicable to any imported article it shall be classified for duty under the highest of such rates." Ib.
5. This last provision was not properly applicable, under § 2499, to an arti- cle "manufactured from two or more materials," and it had sufficient scope if applied to articles not manufactured from two or more mate- rials, but still prima facie subject to "two or more rates of duty." lb. 6. Laces made by machinery out of linen thread were imported in 1881 and 1882, and charged with duty at 40 per cent ad valorem, as factures of flax, or of which flax shall be the component material of chief value, not otherwise provided for," under Schedule C of § 2504 of the Revised Statutes (p. 462). The importers claimed that they were chargeable with a duty of only 35 per cent ad valorem, as “thread lace," under the same schedule (p. 463). Held, that, as the evidence clearly showed that the goods were invariably bought and sold as "torchons," and not as thread laces, and that thread lace was always hand-made, it was proper to direct a verdict for the defendant, in a suit brought by the importer against the collector to recover an alleged excess of duty. Meyerheim v. Robertson, 601.
7. Elastic webbings, used as gorings for shoes, some composed of worsted and india-rubber, and the rest of cotton, silk and india-rubber, im- ported in March and June, 1884, were assessed with duties, the former as "gorings," at 30 cents per pound and 50 per cent ad valorem, under Schedule K of § 2502 of Title 33 of the Revised Statutes, as enacted by § 6 of the act of March 3, 1883, c. 121, 22 Stat. 509, and the latter at 35 per cent ad valorem, as "webbing, composed of cotton, flax or any other materials, not specially enumerated or provided for in this act," under Schedule N of the same section, Id. 514. The importers claimed that they were dutiable at 30 per cent ad valorem under said Schedule N, (Id. 513,) as "india-rubber fabrics, composed wholly or in part of india-rubber, not specially enumerated or provided for in
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