Elementary, my dear
Watson: U.S. court rejects Sherlock Holmes dispute
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[November 04, 2014]
By Lawrence Hurley
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The
case of the disputed Sherlock Holmes copyright is hereby
closed after the U.S. Supreme Court on Monday left
intact a ruling that said 50 works featuring the famed
fictional detective are in the public domain.
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The high court's justices, which like the eccentric detective
get to decide which cases to tackle, declined to hear an appeal
filed by the estate of author Arthur Conan Doyle, who died in
1930.
The estate had wanted writer Leslie Klinger to pay a $5,000
license fee before a volume of new stories based on the Holmes
character, famed for his genius IQ, deerstalker hat and cocaine
habit, could be published.
The court’s action means that the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals ruling from June in Klinger’s favor is the final word in
the case. The appeals court held that the 50 Sherlock Holmes
works published before 1923 are in the public domain as
copyright protections have expired.
The works depict the brilliant Victorian-era detective and
include references to his sidekick Dr. Watson, his arch-enemy
Professor Moriarty, 221B Baker Street, and even Holmes' cocaine
use.
The appeals court said only Conan Doyle's last 10 Holmes works,
which were published between 1923 and 1927 and have copyrights
expiring after 95 years, deserved protection.
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Klinger is the editor of "The New Annotated Sherlock Holmes" and
other Holmes books. He had paid the estate a licensing fee for a
prior work but sued after refusing to pay another fee for a
compendium of new Holmes stories that he and co-editor Laurie King
were editing, "In the Company of Sherlock Holmes."
Their publisher, Pegasus Books, refused to publish the work after
the Conan Doyle estate threatened to stop sales by Amazon.com Inc
and Barnes & Noble Inc unless it received another fee.
The case is Conan Doyle Estate v. Klinger, U.S. Supreme Court, No.
14-316.
(Reporting by Lawrence Hurley; Editing by Will Dunham)
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