Master The Supreme Court held that The Nation's prepublication use of verbatim excerpts from President Ford's unpublished memoir was not fair use. with this comprehensive case brief.
Harper & Row v. Nation Enterprises is a cornerstone Supreme Court decision defining the contours of fair use under 17 U.S.C. § 107. The case involved a high-profile dispute over leaked excerpts from former President Gerald Ford's unpublished memoirs, focused on his decision to pardon Richard Nixon. The Nation magazine published a short article containing verbatim quotations from the manuscript just before Time magazine's scheduled exclusive, triggering the loss of a lucrative first-serial rights deal and prompting a copyright infringement suit.
The Court's opinion crystallizes several durable fair use principles: it emphasizes the author's right of first publication, treats the unpublished nature of a work as a critical element in the analysis, underscores the primacy of market harm (including harm to licensing markets), and rejects a generalized "public interest" or newsworthiness override to copyright. For students, the case is essential for understanding how fair use balances expressive rights with the public's interest in news and commentary, and how that balance can turn on the qualitative value of even a small quantity of copied text—the "heart of the work."
Supreme Court of the United States, 471 U.S. 539 (1985)
Harper & Row obtained the rights to publish former President Gerald Ford's memoir, A Time to Heal. As part of its publication strategy, Harper & Row licensed Time magazine the exclusive right to publish prepublication excerpts—specifically focusing on the Nixon pardon—in exchange for $25,000, with publication timed to build anticipation for the forthcoming book. Before Time could publish, The Nation magazine obtained a purloined copy of the unpublished manuscript from an unauthorized source. The Nation then rushed out a roughly 2,250-word article, "The Ford Memoirs—Behind the Nixon Pardon," quoting approximately 300–400 words from the manuscript, including expressive passages that revealed Ford's reasoning about the Nixon pardon. Time, scooped by The Nation and deprived of the value of exclusivity, canceled its agreement and refused to pay the remaining portion of the fee (approximately $12,500). Harper & Row (and related rightsholders) sued The Nation for copyright infringement. The district court found infringement and rejected the fair use defense; the Second Circuit reversed, holding the use fair in light of newsworthiness; the Supreme Court granted certiorari.
Does The Nation's prepublication use of verbatim excerpts from President Ford's unpublished memoir—obtained from a leaked, unauthorized manuscript—constitute fair use under 17 U.S.C. § 107, notwithstanding the newsworthy nature of the subject matter and the article's news-reporting purpose?
Under 17 U.S.C. § 107, fair use is evaluated case-by-case by weighing four nonexclusive factors: (1) the purpose and character of the use (including whether the use is of a commercial nature or for nonprofit educational purposes), (2) the nature of the copyrighted work, (3) the amount and substantiality of the portion used in relation to the copyrighted work as a whole, and (4) the effect of the use upon the potential market for or value of the copyrighted work. The burden of proving fair use rests with the proponent of the defense. News reporting is an enumerated purpose in § 107, but it does not automatically render a use fair. The author's right of first publication is a critical interest protected by copyright, and the unpublished status of a work is a key—though not necessarily dispositive—consideration. The fourth factor (market effect) is often given particular weight, including harm to traditional and derivative markets such as first-serial rights. First Amendment interests are accommodated through the idea–expression dichotomy and the fair use doctrine; there is no free-standing public interest or public-figure exception that licenses the appropriation of protected expression.
No. The Nation's use was not fair use. The Supreme Court reversed the Second Circuit and held that The Nation's verbatim quotations from President Ford's unpublished manuscript infringed copyright; the case was remanded for further proceedings consistent with the opinion.
Purpose and character: Although The Nation's article reported the news, it was a commercial, scooping use aimed at preempting the value of Time's exclusive. It was not transformative in any meaningful sense; rather, it appropriated the most salient expressive passages to supply the "news" The Nation wished to break. The Court also noted The Nation's bad faith in using a purloined, unpublished manuscript, which, while not dispositive, weighed against fair use. Nature of the work: The memoir was an unpublished, creative, narrative work. Copyright's protection is at its apex for such works, and the author's right to control the first public appearance of expression carries significant weight. The Court emphasized that the unpublished nature of the work is a critical factor in the analysis. Amount and substantiality: Quantitatively, The Nation copied only a few hundred words from a lengthy manuscript. Qualitatively, however, those quotations captured the "heart of the work"—President Ford's candid reasoning about the Nixon pardon—thereby usurping the most valuable and newsworthy expression. Copying the core expressive elements counts heavily against fair use even when the amount is small. Market effect: This factor weighed decisively against The Nation. Its scoop directly caused Time to cancel its exclusive and refuse to pay the remaining fee, demonstrating actual market harm. More broadly, such conduct undermines the established and foreseeable licensing market for first-serial rights—an important derivative market that copyright law protects. The Court stressed that fair use should not permit one publisher to appropriate the economic value created by another's exclusive prepublication rights. Rejecting a public interest override and First Amendment defense: The Nation argued that the public's interest in the Nixon pardon justified its use. The Court rejected a generalized public-figure/public-interest exception, explaining that the First Amendment is already reflected in copyright's limits and in fair use itself. Publishers remain free to convey the facts and ideas; what they cannot do is usurp the author's original expression, particularly at the critical first-publication moment. Balancing: Weighing all factors—especially the work's unpublished status, the taking of the expressive heart, and the direct, substantial market harm—the Court held that The Nation failed to meet its burden to prove fair use.
Harper & Row is a foundational fair use case that every copyright student must know. It establishes the special weight given to the author's right of first publication and frames the fourth factor—market harm, including harm to licensing markets—as often the most important consideration. The decision also makes clear that "news reporting" is not a free pass: appropriation of protected expression, particularly from unpublished works, will typically weigh heavily against fair use even when the copied quantity is small. The case also illuminates copyright's relationship to the First Amendment. By affirming that facts and ideas remain free while expressive choices are protected, the Court rejected a public-interest override that would license verbatim copying of expressive content. Later developments—such as the 1992 amendment clarifying that unpublished status does not itself bar fair use and the Supreme Court's focus on "transformative use" in Campbell v. Acuff-Rose—do not diminish Harper & Row's core teachings about market harm, qualitative substantiality, and first-publication rights.
The Nation copied roughly 300–400 words verbatim from a lengthy manuscript. Although this was a small quantitative amount, the Court emphasized its qualitative importance: the quotes captured the "heart of the work" by revealing Ford's own expressive account of the Nixon pardon. Copying a work's core expression, even in small quantities, can weigh strongly against fair use.
No. While news reporting is a favored purpose under § 107, it is not dispositive. The Court rejected a public-interest or public-figure exception that would allow taking protected expression. Reporters may freely convey facts and ideas but cannot appropriate copyrighted expression—especially to scoop an authorized first publication.
Unpublished status is a critical element in fair use analysis because copyright protects an author's right of first publication—the timing, manner, and form in which expression is first revealed. Here, the leaked status and prepublication scoop cut strongly against fair use. Although Congress later clarified that unpublished status alone does not bar fair use, it remains a significant factor.
A central one. The Nation's scoop caused Time to cancel its exclusive and withhold the remaining payment, demonstrating actual harm to the value of the licensed first-serial rights. The Court also protected the broader, foreseeable market for such licenses. Market harm, including to derivative licensing markets, often carries great weight in the fair use analysis.
Not by itself, but it counted against fair use under factor one. The Court considered that The Nation knowingly exploited an unauthorized leak to preempt the authorized release. While bad faith is not dispositive, it can tilt the balance against fair use when combined with other factors such as unpublished status, qualitative taking, and market harm.
Harper & Row predates Campbell's explicit focus on transformation, but its reasoning is compatible: The Nation's use was not transformative; it substituted for the original's key expressive value and impaired a recognized market. Even under Campbell, non-transformative uses that target the heart of a work and inflict market harm are unlikely to be fair.
Harper & Row underscores that fair use is not a blanket privilege for the press to reproduce copyrighted expression in pursuit of a scoop. The decision affirms the author's right of first publication, recognizes the qualitative importance of what is taken, and prioritizes the protection of legitimate licensing markets such as first-serial rights.
For students and practitioners, the case offers a durable framework for analyzing fair use in prepublication and news-reporting settings: ask whether the use is transformative, consider the unpublished status and creative nature of the work, scrutinize whether the quoted material embodies the work's expressive core, and give careful attention to both actual and potential market harm. When those considerations align as they did here, the fair use defense will likely fail.
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