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Full Opinion
The picture which is portrayed by this motion to dismiss the amended complaint for insufficiency, or alternatively for other relief, is of far reaching importance to â Fashion Houses â and to the dress and allied trades generally. In legal contemplation the situation is of equal moment. The specific question posed is whether piracy of style is to receive the imprimatur of law in a case where there has been a disclosure of the style and design to a limited group of people under an agreement that they would not reveal or copy such styles and design.
This court has had occasion in Metropolitan Opera Assn. v. Wagner-Nichols Recorder Corp. (199 Misc. 786, affd. 279 App. Div. 632), to write on a very closely related issue. The challenge to its authority by the moving defendant, or rather the vigorous attempt to distinguish it in principle from the instant case, requires a remarshalling of the applicable rules of equity.
Plaintiffs are well-known Parisian fashion houses. The defendants in New York, two of them corporations, publish a â â sketch service â â through which there is produced reproductions of plaintiffsâ original designs and sketches, and these are sold to subscribers to the service conducted by the defendants. Such acts are sought to be restrained by the plaintiffs who claim that they have certain property rights in the designs of great commercial value which, through an unlawful conspiracy, have been appropriated by the defendants.
The individual defendant moves to dismiss the amended complaint on the following grounds:
(1) That it fails to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action; t
(2j That the plaintiffs did not follow the direction of the court heretofore made that they separately state and number each cause of action in an amended complaint;
(3) That it does not comply with the requirements of section 241 of the Civil Practice Act.
Additionally, defendant seeks to have certain paragraphs of the amended complaint stricken out, pursuant to rule 103 of the Buies of Civil Practice, as irrelevant, redundant, conclusory and evidentiary.
Also, the fact that specifications of the various unlawful acts and conduct by the defendants are set forth in the complaint does not import that each wrongful act alleged constitutes a separate and distinct cause of action. The complaint postures a single actionable wrong to the plaintiffs giving them a single primary right. Accordingly, that branch of the motion stated under item 2 is denied.
Insofar as the defendant seeks relief under section 241 of the Civil Practice Act and to have certain allegations in the complaint stricken out, it is denied. The amended complaint sets forth a clear and concise statement of the facts upon which plaintiffs relied. The allegations which it is claimed will prove harmful will not be removed from the complaint unless it can be shown that they have no reasonable or probable bearing on the controversy or that they will prejudice the party seeking to have them stricken out. On this score there has been a cojnplete failure.
We come now to the allegations of the complaint and the heart of the controversy. The plaintiff Christian Dior, etc., is, and, for many years, has been known and esteemed throughout the world as an outstanding, leading and famous haute couture house. Christian Dior has been recognized as a leading and famous designer of dresses and accessories and other items of womenâs apparel. He is a principal executive of the plaintiff and has designed exclusively for plaintiff dresses and accessories and other items of womenâs apparel which are unique, exclusive and original and represent the product of his special skill and genius.
The complaint alleges matter in regard to the other three plaintiffs of a similar character which need not be repeated here. : It. is then alleged that each of the plaintiffs in order to further ..the exploitation of its unique, exclusive and original designs - and to protect its valuable and recognized property rights therein, uses and for many years has used an elaborate and extensive system of displaying and showing the unique, exclusive and original dresses and accessories and other items of womenâs apparel manufactured by it under such conditions as , to make certain that the designs are never published, and the ..models are never revealed to any person or persons other than ....those, who .are legally bound not to make or divulge any reproduction of any or all of the models shown, or any details thereof, - whether by. photographs, sketches, detailed descriptions or otherwise, unless and until specifically authorised by each of the plaintiffs respectively.
Pursuant to the established and existing system set forth above the wearing apparel designed by the plaintiffs are dis- ⢠played and shown at the establishments of each of the plaintiffs in. Paris,- France, at showings held throughout the year, and -..in addition at two major semiannual displays of the collections commencing in or about February and August of each year. Such unique, exclusive and original models as created by each of. the plaintiffs are thereafter displayed by them individually . .to a restricted and exclusive group which includes representatives of the press agencies, representatives of manufacturers, buyers and.retailers in the dress and womenâs apparel industry, and other. individuals who are admitted to the displays only -.at.the express invitation of plaintiffs and only after they are ⢠fully aware of, assent to, and agree to be bound by the conditions of admission to the displays and agree to observe and abide by the conditions.
According to the plaintiffs, unauthorized and premature disclosure of information and knowledge relating to the designs and models, manufactured by them, and each of them, greatly affects and destroys the demand for the designs and models and greatly interferes with and hinders the profitable exploitation
The conditions above mentioned include an agreement by the viewers not to infringe said rights nor to make or divulge any reproductions of any of the models, whether by photographs or sketches, or to transmit them to third persons for the purpose of permitting such persons to make or divulge any such reproduction.
The complaint further alleges that the defendants conspiring together and having full knowledge of the extensive steps taken by the plaintiffs to protect their specific property rights in the designs and models, and to prevent the unauthorized copying and reproduction, and with full knowledge of the conditions which cover the displays, presentations and showings, and also with knowledge of the terms and provisions of the contract used in connection with sales by each of the plaintiffs of models, continuously in use from about 1948, falsely represented to plaintiffs and each of them that they were acting for persons other than the defendants; that they concealed from plaintiffs that they were acting for the defendants; that they fradulently promised and represented that they would not disclose or divulge knowledge and information obtained at said displays; that they gained admittance to the showings and presentations by means of false representations, fraudulent concealment and fraudulent promises; that the defendants fraudulently, wrongfully and willfully induced employees of plaintiffs and each of them and others having confidential and contractual relationship with the plaintiffs to violate the terms of their employment, to breach their positions of trust, and to deliver to the defendant, Milton, and his co-conspirators models and copies of designs and models, and information and knowledge relating to designs and models.
In violation of the conditions for entry to the displays and presentations, and in violation of the agreements, the defendants copied and reproduced surreptitiously, designs and models of plaintiffs and each of the mÂŁnd published and sold, rented and loaned such copies and reproductions to other co-conspirators unauthorized to receive and use them in the United States and elsewhere.
By such acts, the defendants appropriated and continue to appropriate, for their own use and benefit, the results of the expenditures, labor, skill and knowledge of plaintiffs, and unlawfully interfered with and continue to interfere with their property and contractual rights.
The complaint finally alleges that by reason of the wrongful acts of the defendants, they have impaired the business of the plaintiffs and have been unjustly enriched.
Accordingly, injunctive relief is sought restraining the defendants from exploitation of the designs of plaintiffs, the sale of models and reproductions, the publication of sketches and the sale of the service to others, and generally from competing unfairly with the plaintiffs in the manner and method set forth in the complaint. Plaintiffs also ask for substantial damages and for an accounting.
In support of his claim that the complaint fails to state a sufficient cause of action, the defendant urges that (a) there is no protection against style piracy or the publication of anotherâs styles; (b) plaintiffsâ publication of the styles destroys any protection which they might otherwise have been entitled to; (c) there is no public interest involved, and therefore the granting of relief to plaintiffs would violate the due process clause of the Constitution, and defendantsâ right to free speech and publication; (d) plaintiffsâ practices are in restraint of trade; and (e) only internal trade secrets under certain circumstances should be protected.
In passing upon the question of the sufficiency of this complaint alleging unfair competition, it is helpful to bear in mind the origin and evolution of this branch of the law. It originated in the conscience, justice and equity of common-law judges. It developed, within the framework of a society dedicated to the freest competition, to deal with business malpractices offensive to the ethics of that society. The theoretic basis is obscure, but the birth and growth of this branch of the law is clear. It is a persuasive example of the lawâs capacity for growth in response to the ethical, as well as the economic needs of society. As a result of this background, the legal concept of unfair competition has evolved as a broad and flexible doctrine with a capacity for further growth to meet changing conditions.
The statement of a sufficient cause of action in unfair competition in the last analysis is therefore dependent more upon the facts set forth, and less upon technical requirements than in most causes of action. For example, in the earlier cases, there was a requirement that the complaint set forth an allegation of â â palming off â â. While there is, in effect, such an allegation in this complaint, even in the absence of such an allegation, there would not be a fatal defect in the complaint. It was thought that an allegation of â â palming off â â was required, that is, the fraudulent representation of the goods of the seller as those of another. The early decisions condemning this practice were based on the two wrongs inflicted thereby: (1) the deceit and fraud on the public; (2) the misappropriation to one person of the benefit of a name, reputation or business good will belonging to another. (Taylor v. Carpenter, 3 Story 458 [U. S. Circuit Ct., Mass., 1844]; Howard v. Henriques, 3 Sandf. 725 [1851].)
With the passage of those simple and halcyon days, when the chief business malpractice was âpalming offâ, and with the development of more complex business relationships and, unfortunately, malpractices, many courts, including the courts of this State, extended the doctrine of unfair competition beyond the cases of â palming off â. The extension resulted in the granting of relief in cases where there was no fraud on the public, but only a misappropriation for the commercial advantage of one person of a benefit or â property right â belonging to another.
The courts have used various formulae in making this extension. Many of the earlier of such decisions relied on the presence of special elements: For example, inducing breach of trust or breach of contract in misappropriating the property. (Board of Trade v. Christie Grain & Stock Co., 198 U. S. 236; Bitterman v. Louisville & Nashville R. R. Co., 207 U. S. 205; Sperry & Hutchinson Co. v. Mechanicsâ Clothing Co., 128 F.
Subsequently, in 1918, the Supreme Court of the United States laid down a similar principle in International News Service v. Associated Press (248 U. S. 215). In that case the Associated Press sued to enjoin International News Service, among other things, from copying its news from bulletin boards and early editions of member newspapers and selling it bodily or in rewritten form to International News Service customers. The case presented particular difficulty because of the great public interest in the freest dissemination of the news. However, the court recognized that, as between the parties, even news was quasi-property.
In granting an injunction to the Associated Press against the pirating of its news the court held (p. 239 et seq.): â The right of the purchaser of a single newspaper to spread knowledge of its contents gratuitously, for any legitimate purpose not unreasonably interfering with complainantâs right to make merchandise of it, may be admitted; but to transmit that news for commercial use, in competition with complainant â which is what defendant has done and seeks to justify â is a very different matter. In doing this defendant, by its very act, admits that it is taking material that has been acquired by complainant as the result of organization and the expenditure
The significance and limits of this decision have been widely discussed. That it extended' the doctrine of unfair competition to cases based on misappropriation of property has been accepted by the leading authorities. Chief Justice Hughes in Schecter Corp. v. United States (295 U. S. 495, 531-532) stated: â â Unfair competition, â as known to the common law, is a limited concept. Primarily, and strictly, it relates to the palming off of oneâs goods as those of a rival trader. * * * In recent years, its scope has been extended. It has been held to apply to misappropriation as well as misrepresentation, to the selling of anotherâs goods as oneâs own, â to misappropriation of what equitably belongs to a competitor. International News Service v. Associated Press, 248 U. S. 215, 241, 242.â
In their endeavor to prevent unfair business practices, the courts have determined that it was unnecessary to the sufficiency of a complaint and to the granting of relief that it be alleged and established that the parties arĂŠ actual competitors. (Tiffany & Co. v. Tiffany Prods., 147 Misc. 679, affd. without opinion 237 App. Div. 801, affd. without opinion 262 N. Y. 482; Longâs Hat Stores Corp. v. Longâs Clothes, 224 App. Div. 497; Marvlo Mills v. Marvel Mills, 170 Misc. 770, affd. 258 App. Div. 715; Triangle Pubs. v. Rohrlich, 167 F. 2d 969; Yale Elec. Corp. v. Robertson, 26 F. 2d 972; Madison Square Garden Corp. v. Universal Pictures Co., supra; Maison Prunier v. Prunierâs Restaurant & Cafe, 159 Misc. 551 and cases cited therein.)
The modern view as to the law of unfair competition does not rest solely on the ground of direct competitive injury, but on the broader principle that property rights of commercial value are to be and will be protected from any form of unfair invasion or infringement and from any form of commercial immorality, and a court of equity will penetrate and restrain every guise resorted to by the wrongdoer. The courts have thus recognized that in the complex pattern of modern business relationships, persons in theoretically noncompetitive fields may, by unethical business practices, inflict as severe and reprehensible injuries upon others as can direct competitors. That defendantsâ piratical conduct and practices have injured and will continue to injure plaintiffs admits of no serious challenge, and possible money damages furnishes no adequate remedy.
That such practices constitute unfair competition with plaintiffs is made abundantly clear by the allegations of the complaint which, for the purposes of this motion, must be deemed to be true. Plaintiffs derive income from the uniqueness of their designs, and from their reputation, and the defendants, without any payment to plaintiffs, have profited, to what extent need not here be determined, from their misappropriation, through fraud, of the skill of the plaintiffs. This constitutes unfair competition. (International News Service v. Associated Press, 248 U. S. 215, supra.)
The defendants raise the further objection that the complaint fails to state a cause of action in that it sets forth no property rights of the plaintiffs which had been interfered with. Clearly, some property rights in the plaintiffs and interference with and misappropriation of them by defendants are necessary to a cause of action. However, âproperty rights â, as has often been pointed out, are rights which are recognized and protected by the courts by excluding others therefrom. The designation is therefore more in the nature of a legal conclusion than a description.
The rights which the plaintiffs allege in the amended complaint are:
(1) The creation of unique and valuable dress designs.
(2) Right of plaintiffs to exclusive use, directly or indirectly, of the name and reputation which they have developed over many years.
(3) The exclusive right of plaintiffs to the designs, models and sketches which they created by the use of their skill, money and the organizations they have developed.
(4) The exclusive right of plaintiffs to license the use of their unique and original designs and to sell their designs and models.
The question presented is thus whether these rights are rights which the courts have recognized and protected and should recognize and protect as â property rights
The Court of Appeals in Fisher v. Star Co. (231 N. Y. 414, 429, supra) quoted with approval the broad definition of property rights laid down by the Supreme Court of the United States in the International News Service case (supra): â â The rule that a court of equity concerns itself only in the protection of property rights treats any civil right of a pecuniary nature as a property right; and the right to acquire property by honest labor or the conduct of a lawful business is as much entitled to protection as the right to guard property already acquired. It
The right to the exclusive use of oneâs own name and reputation has long been recognized by the courts, as evidenced by the early protection of trade-marks and trade names and the â â palming off â â cases.
The law has also, as Justice BrandĂŠis pointed out in his dissent in the International News Service case (supra) protected the creative element in intellectual productions â that is the form of sequence of expression, the new combination of colors, sounds or words presented by the production. So, too, it would appear that the law would protect the creative element in the designing of garments where great skill and talent and ingenuity are employed.
In the Metropolitan Opera case (supra) the unauthorized recording of Metropolitan Opera broadcasts and sales of records thus obtained were enjoined. This court held that the Metropolitan had property rights in its performances which were not abandoned by performance broadcast or sale of records, all under exclusive contract, and that the misappropriation of these unabandoned rights constituted unfair competition. The defendantâs misappropriation was held to constitute an illegal interference with the Metropolitanâs contractual relations, and this alone was sufficient to bring the case within the rule against unfair competition.
The defendant in the Metropolitan Opera case advertised its records as Metropolitan Opera recordings. Yet this court held that this misappropriation and trading on the Metropolitanâs name and reputation were sufficient to constitute unfair competition. The decision of this court was affirmed by the Appellate Division which said (279 App. Div. 632, 633): â Defendantsâ acts, as alleged in the complaint, constitute a misappropriation of the work, skill, expenditure and goodwill of plaintiffs, and present a case of unfair competition.â
The unfairness required to sustain the cause of action for unfair competition is satisfied by any one of the allegations of the amended complaint by showing: that the defendants interfered with the plaintiffsâ valuable contractual relationships with their licensees (Metropolitan Opera Assn. v. Wagner-Nichols Recording Corp., supra); that they obtained entrance to the showings of plaintiffs by fraudulent representations, concealments and promises (Montegut v. Hickson, Inc., 178 App. Div. 94); that they violated their agreements upon entry of plaintiffsâ showings not to copy or reveal what they saw, Glass & Co. v. Art-Mor Togs (9 Misc 2d 339); that they obtained plaintiffsâ
Further attack upon the amended complaint made by the moving defendant in support of his argument that the complaint fails to state a cause of action is that the plaintiffs have abandoned their rights by inviting certain individuals to attend the various showings, including certain members of the press. At common law the public performance of a play, exhibition of a picture or sale of a copy of the film for public presentation did not constitute an abandonment nor deprive the owner of his common-law rights. (Palmer v. De Witt, 47 N. Y. 532; Ferris v. Frohman, 223 U. S. 424; American Tobacco Co. v. Werckmeister, 207 U. S. 284; Universal Film Mfg. Co. v. Copperman, 218 F. 577.) In the International News Service case (248 U. S. 215, supra) the court in discussing this question of publication and abandonment stated (pp. 240-241): â The contention that the news is abandoned to the public for all purposes when published in the first newspaper is untenable. Abandonment is a question of intent, and the entire organization of the Associated Press negatives such a purpose. The cost of the service would be prohibitive if the reward were to be so limited. * * * Their [by-laws] effect is that publication by each member must be deemed not by any means an abandonment of the news to the world for any and all purposes, but a publication for limited purposes; for the benefit of the readers of the bulletin or the newspaper as such; not for the purpose of making merchandise of it as news, with the result of depriving complainantâs other members of their reasonable opportunity to obtain just returns for their expenditures.â
The care with which plaintiffs protected their showings, the elaborate scheme devised for such protection, the method by which persons were admitted to: the showings clearly demonstrated the intent not to abandon, but on the contrary, an attempt to retain effective control over the reproduction, sale and copying of plaintiffs â original and unique designs. The publication in this case is certainly no wider nor more unlimited than the publication of news in the Associated Press member newspapers and bulletins which was held by the Supreme Court of the United States to constitute limited publication.
Furthermore, abandonment is a question of intent. (International News Service v. Associated Press, 248 U. S. 215, supra; American Tobacco Co. v. Werckmeister, 207 U. S. 284, supra; Metropolitan Opera Assn. v. Wagner-Nichols Recording Corp., 199 Misc. 786, 794, supra.)
This court, under very similar circumstances, has held exhibiting dress designs under limited conditions was not an abandonment. In the Henry Glass & Co. case (supra) it was held that exhibiting plaintiffâs design to the defendant in expectation of obtaining orders, the defendant agreeing as a condition of being shown the design not to copy or cause to be copied plaintiffâs patterns, was not a publication. The plaintiffs here have placed similar restrictions upon allowing anyone to see their designs, and therefore have not abandoned those designs.
The case of Board of Trade v. Christie Grain & Stock Co. (198 U. S. 236 [1905], supra), is squarely in point on this issue. In that case, Mr. Justice Holmes granted an injunction preventing the defendant from copying market quotations gathered by the plaintiff, and sold by the plaintiff to approved customers. The court held that communicating quotations to persons in confidential and contractual relations to the plaintiff under obligation not to copy or disclose was not publication, saying at pages 250-251: â The plaintiff does not lose its rights by communicating the result to persons, even if many, in confidential relations to itself, under a contract not to make it public, and strangers to the trust will be restrained from getting at the knowledge by inducing a breach of trust and using knowledge obtained by such a breach.â
In the instant case, the plaintiffs lose no rights by showing their designs to persons who have agreed not to make public what they are shown.
The case of Varsity Sportswear v. Princess Fabrics Co. (174 Misc. 298) cited by defendant to indicate that designs and fashions are not entitled to protection because they are in the public domain, does not stand for the proposition for which it is cited. The case held that the copying by the defendant of the name of plaintiffâs line of dresses to describe similar dresses made by the defendant would be enjoined as unfair competition. The court said by way of dictum that an injunction would not have been granted on the basis of the copying alone by the
The case of Bristol v. Equitable Life Assur. Soc. (132 N. Y. 264) does not support the proposition that trade secrets are lost as soon as disclosed in any way. In the first place, the court in that case made clear that a trade secret is only lost if no steps are taken to protect it. The case has no application to the instant case in which the plaintiffs have taken elaborate precautions which are circumvented only by the tortious and wrongful acts of defendants. Second, one of the grounds upon which the decision in the Bristol case was decided was a finding that the defendant did not agree not to use the idea communicated to him by the plaintiff. In the instant case the co-conspirators of defendant Milton did agree, as a condition of entry to plaintiffsâ showings, not to communicate plaintiffs â designs.
The citation by defendant Milton of Nimsâ Treatise on Unfair Competition (Vol. 1, §§ 141, 143) is misleading even as to the law on trade secrets expounded there. In addition to the quotations which the defendant uses, it is said in section 141, at page 404: â1 Appropriation of such ideas can be protected on the grounds of violation of confidence or of contract but such cases are not within the scope of this book.â And in section 143, at page 406: âThe plaintiff does not lose its rights by communicating the results to persons, even if many in confidential relations to itself, under a contract not to make it public â
Spiselman v. Rabinowitz (270 App. Div. 548, supra) shows that even