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Namath v. Sports Illustrated - Mark Roesler

Namath v. Sports Illustrated - Mark Roesler

Namath v. Sports Illustrated - Mark Roesler

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Rights Law (Booth v. CurtisPublishing Co., 15 A.D.2d 343, 223N.Y.S.2d 737, aff'd, 11 N.Y.2d 907,228 N.Y.S.2d 468, 182 N.E.2d 812).Certainly, defendants' subsequentrepublication of plaintiff's picturewas 'in motivation, sheeradvertising and solicitation. Thisalone is not determinative of thequestion so long as the law accordsan **12 exempt status to incidentaladvertising of the news mediumitself'. (Booth v. CurtisPublishing Co., supra, p. 349, 223N.Y.S.2d p. 744). Again, it wasstated, at 15 A.D.2d p. 350, 223N.Y.S.2d p. 744 of the cited case,as follows:'Consequently, it suffices herethat so long as the reproduction was used toillustrate the quality and content of theperiodical in which it originally appeared, thestatute was not violated, albeit thereproduction appeared in other media forpurposes of advertising the periodical.'Contrary to the dissent, we deemthe cited case to be dispositivehereof. The language from the<strong>Namath</strong> advertisements relied upon inthe dissent, does not indicateplaintiff's endorsement of themagazine <strong>Sports</strong> <strong>Illustrated</strong>. Hadthat been the situation, acompletely different issue wouldhave been presented. Rather, thatlanguage merely indicates, to thereaders of those advertisements, thegeneral nature of the contents ofwhat is likely to be included infuture issues of the magazine.The order of the Supreme Court, NewYork County, entered *489 onFebruary 5th, 1975, grantingdefendants' motion for summaryjudgment dismissing the complaintherein, and the judgment enteredthereon on February 10th, 1975,should be affirmed, with costs.*490 Order, Supreme Court, New YorkCounty, entered on February 5, 1975,and judgment entered thereon onFebruary 10, 1975, affirmed.Respondents shall recover ofappellant $60 costs anddisbursements of this appeal.All concur except KUPFERMAN, J.P.,and MURPHY, J., who dissent in adissenting opinion by KUPFERMAN,J.P.*489 KUPFERMAN, Justice(dissenting).It is undisputed that one Joseph W.<strong>Namath</strong> is an outstanding sportsfigure, redoubtable on the footballfield. Among other things, as thestar quarterback of the New YorkJets, he led his team to victory onJanuary 12, 1969 in the Super Bowlin Miami.This feat and the story of the gameand its star were heralded withillustrative photographs in theJanuary 20, 1969 issue of <strong>Sports</strong><strong>Illustrated</strong>, conceded to be anoutstanding magazine published byTime Incorporated and devoted, asits name implies, to the activitiesfor which it is famous. Of course,this was not the first nor the lasttime that <strong>Sports</strong> <strong>Illustrated</strong>featured Mr. <strong>Namath</strong> and properly so.The legal problem involves the useof one of his action photos from theJanuary 20, 1969 issue in subsequentadvertisements in other magazines aspromotional material for the sale ofsubscriptions to <strong>Sports</strong> <strong>Illustrated</strong>.**13 Plaintiff contends that theuse was commercial in violation ofhis right of privacy under ss 50 and51 of the Civil Rights Law. See, ingeneral, 'The Muddled State of Lawof Privacy' by J. Irwin Shapiro,N.Y.L.J., May 16 and May 19, 1975,p. 1, col. 3. Further, that becausehe was in the business of endorsingproducts and selling the use of hisname and likeness, it interfered

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