Arguing Over The Copyright In Schindler's List — The Actual List, Not The Movie

from the copyright-gone-mad dept

The movie Schindler’s List famously covers the story of Oskar Schindler, who saved over 1,000 Jews during the Holocaust by creating his “list” of essential workers, which kept them from being sent to their deaths. Now that the list itself is famous, apparently there’s a bit of a legal fight over the copyright on the actual list (found via THREsq). The details are somewhat ridiculous. Basically, Schindler made three separate copies of the actual list. One copy of the list is at the Holocaust Museum Yad Vashem in Israel. Another list, which is slightly different, but considered equally authentic, ended up in the possession of Marta Erika Rosenberg, an author who had written about Schindler, and was left the list in the will after it got passed around a bit. Finally, the third list is held by a guy named Gary Zimet, who buys and sells historical memorabilia. That list came from Nathan Stern, who is the nephew of Schindler’s accountant, who was in charge of keeping the list.

Stern hired Zimet to sell the list, which seems straightforward enough… except that Rosenberg claimed that she has full ownership of the list, via her copy, including a copyright on the list. The court, in its decision basically punted on the question of copyright, because Zimet isn’t looking to publish the list, but merely sell the physical copy of the list — which has nothing to do with copyright. However, the court still does suggest that there may be a (state) common law copyright claim here. However, I have to agree with Eugene Volokh, who suggests the court got this wrong. While (as we’ve discussed) there are state common law copyrights, they’re very limited, and are mostly preempted by federal copyright law. So, as a written work, this should fall under federal copyright law. And since it’s just a list of names, there’s no copyright to be had at all. On top of that, even if there were a copyright, it’s not at all clear that Rosenberg received the copyright to the document at all when she received her copy. All in all, it’s yet another example of how people have been trained to believe that such things can be “owned.”

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Comments on “Arguing Over The Copyright In Schindler's List — The Actual List, Not The Movie”

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38 Comments
weneedhelp (profile) says:

intended purpose

So, as a written work, this should fall under federal copyright law.

That is if its intention was to be published as a written work. I dont believe that Oskar Schindler had that intention. Nor do I believe he would have approved of these actions by misguided individuals.

it’s yet another example of how people have been trained… indeed.
Sit Ubu sit. Thats a good dog.

Anonymous Coward says:

Weird

For some reason, Nazi Memorabilia always seems to play by counter-intuitive rules.

It looks like it was authenticated, so in my mind all three list should reside in a museum and not tying up the court system and used to leverage ownership of the other list/s.

But again, it’ Nazi Memorabilia so these types of items often play by their own rules.

Not an electronic Rodent says:

Er? Duh? What???

Like others I’m left wondering how a list of names has any copyright claim in it at all. It does remind me of the article a while ago where the Ministry of Sound sued people and it turned out to be basically over the track listing rather than the tunes themselves.

Maybe I’m missing something and someone can enlighten me?

Surely the “value” here lies, like almost any historical object, not in the list itself (which I would guess though I’m not interested enough to find out, might even be a matter of public record by now), but in the actual historical piece of paper itself? And by that measure each of the 3 copies has a separate valid providence and potentially separate value. Under what circumstances would this list of names quoted instead of being on the “historical” paper have any actual value that ought to be protected?

Mike Masnick (profile) says:

Re:

Isn’t a list of names (no matter how significant)just factual data?

Hence: “since it’s just a list of names, there’s no copyright to be had at all”

That’s why the judge appears to be mistaken. That said, I think the judge is suggesting that a list of names might be covered by common law copyright — and that could be the case if federal copyright law didn’t preempt written works from common law copyright. State common law copyright did not follow the same rules about what was coverable, and depending on the state, that might have included things like factual data or lists (I’m not familiar with each specific state common law copyright, so not sure if that’s definitely the case in NY where this took place — but either way, it’s meaningless given federal copyright law rendering most state common law copyright moot).

Jack Repenning (profile) says:

"The" list?

As I read the opinion, I think the question put to the court is whether someone owns copyright to “the” list–a right that would extend over arbitrarily many copies, even if they differ. Am I getting that claim right? But in fact, these three documents are separate “lists.” They’re all “authentic,” in one sense or another, but they’re completely different documents, not copies one of another but rather all are (basically) independent chronicles of the same underlying historical events. Even if copyright counted for the sort of documents they are, if the various possessors of the physical documents had legal claim to that right, and the use proposed was controlled by copyright (all of which which seem in doubt), the fact that these are three distinct documents would seem to me to mean that their possession, ownership, and use were independent, one document from another. Right?

But then, IANAL. I’m just an engineer. I think that “Law is to Language, as Ballistics is to F=ma.”

RikuoAmero (profile) says:

Re:

“State laws trump federal laws”

No they don’t. I forget which state it is, but a while back, there was this state official who had gotten elected into office, but was an atheist. His opponents tried to use that against him, saying the STATE constitution required a religious oath. However, Article Six of the Federal Constitituon states “no religious Test shall ever be required as a Qualification to any Office or public Trust under the United States.”

Dark Helmet (profile) says:

Re:

I believe that was one of the Carolinas, if memory serves. But, actually, you’re both wrong and you’re both right. The way it’s SUPPOSED to work is that the Constitution trumps EVERYTHING, but state law is enumerated in any area not specifically covered by the Constitution, unless they willingly cede power to the Federal government.

Sadly, the states don’t seem to practice this power any longer….

harbingerofdoom (profile) says:

"The" list?

i didnt get that at all from reading that ruling.
what i did get is:
plaintiff claims copyright violation by sale of document
defendant says by not publishing and only selling, its not a copyright violation
court says yup, if you are only selling the document there is no copyright violation, but here is the only applicable copyright issue that may extend to plantiff

while they didnt rule on the copyright issue itself, inclusion of the issue that common copyright is gone once the list is published to the public, which it has been, unless the owner reserves rights, which the court found no records of, in the ruling pretty much would indicate that even if they had actually ruled on the copyright issue, plaintiff would have lost anyway.

but hey, IANAL

harbingerofdoom (profile) says:

"The" list?

i didnt get that at all from reading that ruling.
what i did get is:
plaintiff claims copyright violation by sale of document
defendant says by not publishing and only selling, its not a copyright violation
court says yup, if you are only selling the document there is no copyright violation, but here is the only applicable copyright issue that may extend to plantiff

while they didnt rule on the copyright issue itself, inclusion of the issue that common copyright is gone once the list is published to the public, which it has been, unless the owner reserves rights, which the court found no records of, in the ruling pretty much would indicate that even if they had actually ruled on the copyright issue, plaintiff would have lost anyway.

but hey, IANAL

harbingerofdoom (profile) says:

"The" list?

i didnt get that at all from reading that ruling.
what i did get is:
plaintiff claims copyright violation by sale of document
defendant says by not publishing and only selling, its not a copyright violation
court says yup, if you are only selling the document there is no copyright violation, but here is the only applicable copyright issue that may extend to plantiff

while they didnt rule on the copyright issue itself, inclusion of the issue that common copyright is gone once the list is published to the public, which it has been, unless the owner reserves rights, which the court found no records of, in the ruling pretty much would indicate that even if they had actually ruled on the copyright issue, plaintiff would have lost anyway.

but hey, IANAL either so…

btr1701 (profile) says:

Federalism

> The way it’s SUPPOSED to work is that the Constitution trumps
> EVERYTHING, but state law is enumerated in any area not
> specifically covered by the Constitution, unless they willingly
> cede power to the Federal government.

More accurately, Article I, Section 8 of the US Constitution lists the powers of the federal government and the federal government has only those powers that are specifically listed. Amendment X says that any power not specifically granted to the federal government belongs to the state and local governments.

In the case of copyright, it *is* one of the powers listed and granted to the federal government in Article I, Section 8, so the federal government’s power over copyright is superior to the states’ power.

G Thompson (NLI) says:

Re:

Correct. Though the rest of the worlds jurisdictions do laugh at this so called ability since it does not mean squat if the works are then taken outside of the USA

Though due to the Copyright treaty that you are referring to for when “US copyright law covers works created elsewhere, when those works are within the US” is extremely relevant here when the court has stated there might be a STATE based common law query.

There is NO State ability here for exactly the reason that the treaty onl;y covers Federal Copyright usage. NOT State based usage since the work in question was actually created outside of the State of New York and Outside of the USA no matter what the State of NY thinks.

ethorad (profile) says:

Another instance of Cpoyright being good!

I don’t know why people are bashing someone trying to enforce copyright on Schindler’s List.

After all, if it wasn’t for copyright and the ability to collect royalties on his list after the war, Schindler would never have written it and subsequently saved over 1,000 jews. Do you want those jews to have died? Are you a nazi??

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