
    MURRAY v. GAST LITHOGRAPHIC AND ENGRAVING CO.
    
      N. Y. Court of Common Pleas, Special Term;
    
    
      April, 1894.
    1. Injunction.] A parent cannot maintain an action to enjoin the unauthorized publication of the portrait of- an infant child, and for damages for injury to his sensibilities caused by the invasion of his child’s privacy; for the law takes no cognizance of a sentimental injury independent of a wrong to person or property.
    
    2. The same.] Nor can such suit be maintained upon the ground that the plaintiff had caused the portrait to be painted, and that the publication is an invasion of his proprietary rights, where it appears that he had given the portrait to his wife.
    Trial by the court without a jury.
    Action by William Murray against the Gast Lithographic and Engraving Company to enjoin the unauthorized publication of a portrait of plaintiff’s infant daughter,, and for damages for the injury caused thereby.
    The facts are fully stated in the opinion.
    
      B. B. Foster and Isaac Angel, for plaintiff.
    
      William B. Ellison, for defendant.
    
      
      See note on injunction against publications infringing on privacy, or affecting character or reputation, in 27 Abb. N. C. 379.
    
   Bischoff, J.

On the trial plaintiff’s counsel contended that this action is one brought to recover damages for the alleged unauthorized publication of a portrait of plaintiff’s infant daughter, and for an injunction restraining such further publication. Consistently with that contention I have been asked .to find as the only proposition of fact deemed established by the evidence that defendant has committed the act of which the claim to relief is predicated.

Assuming this theory of the complaint and action to be correct two insuperable objections arise to preclude any recovery. First, as conjunctapersona merely, plaintiff has no right of action for a wrong committed against the person of another, assuming the unauthorized publication of .a portrait of the latter to be an unlawful invasion of his right to the enjoyment of personal privacy. Secondly, as parent, his only right of action, growing out of wrongs committed against the person of his child, is for the recovery of damages for loss of the services of the child and the expenses to which he has been subjected in effecting a cure from the injury, elements of damages which are obviously wanting in this action ; and even in an action for loss of services, and expenses attending the cure, no recovery can be had for the outraged mental sensibility of the parent (Sutherland on Damages, vol. iii. § 952; Cowden v. Wright, 24 Wend. 429; Cuming v. The Brooklyn City R. R. Co., 109 N. Y. 95).

If, still pursuing the same theory of the action, it be insisted that the parent has suffered a personal injury— one to his mental sensibility by the invasion of his child’s right to the enjoyment of personal privacy and the indiscriminate distribution of her portraits—the answer is, that the law does not take cognizance of and will not afford compensation for sentimental • injury independent of redress for a wrong involving physical injury to person or property. “ The law protects the person and the purse. The person includes the reputation. The body, reputation and property of the citizen are not to be invaded without responsibility in damages to the sufferer. But, outside these protected spheres, the law does not yet attempt to guard the peace of mind, the feelings or the happiness of every one by giving recovery of damages for mental anguish produced by mere negligence. There is no right, capable of enforcement by process of law, to possess •or maintain without disturbance any particular condition of feeling. The law leaves feeling to be helped and vindicated by the tremendous force of sympathy. The temperaments of individuals are various and variable, and the imagination exerts a powerful and incalculable influence in injuries of this kind. . There are many moral obligations too delicate and subtle to be enforced in the rude way of giving money compensation for their violation. Perhaps the feelings find as full protection as it is possible to give in moral law and a responsive public opinion. The civil law is a practical business system, dealing with what is tangible, and does not undertake to redress psychological injuries ” (LUMPKIN, J., in Chapman v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 88 Ga. 763; 46 Albany Law J. 409).

If plaintiff is not entitled in this action to recover damages for the infraction of a legal right, still less is he entitled to injunctive relief. A court of equity is powerless to enforce a right or to prevent a wrong in the abstract, and, apart from an injury or damage to the person seeking relief (High on Injunctions, § 1), it 'cannot ■enforce a purely moral obligation or the performance of a purely moral duty ; and in the absence of actual or threatened injury to property rights, injunctive relief must be denied (Id. § 23). It is fundamental to the jurisdiction of the court, in any case where it is applied to for an injunction, that some property right belonging to the party seeking the relief is in jeopardy (Matter of Sawyer, 124 U. S. 200, 210; Kerrm on Injunctions, 1); and an injunction was upon that ground refused where it was sought to restrain a libelous publication (Brandreth v. Lance, 8 Paige 24) and in another case, where the surviving relatives of another applied to restrain the publication of his unauthorized biography, though the latter was admitted to be wholly laudatory (Corliss v. E. W. Walker Co., U. S. Circuit Court, Mass., 30 Abb. N. C. 372; s. c., 48 Alb. L. J. 431).

Should it now be urged that this action was in fact brought, and that its true theory is to recover damages for the unauthorized publication of the portrait which plaintiff caused to be painted of his infant daughter, and to restrain such further publication, and that the unauthorized publication of the portrait was and is an invasion of plaintiff’s proprietary rights therein, it seems a conclusive answer that he is not the owner of the portrait, for, from his own admission, it is his wife’s property.

I refrain from discussing the rights of plaintiff’s wife or infant daughter, upon the facts in evidence, for two reasons, namely, that it is unnecessary for the purposes of this action, and that the urgency of the parties for a speedy decision precludes the possibility of doing so satisfactorily to me.

Defendant is entitled to judgment, with costs.  