Plaintiffs Appeal in Manhattan Privacy Case

2890653367_3beb209a81Plaintiffs who lost last month their privacy case against a photographer who had taken pictures of them and their children without permission filed a notice of appeal to the Appellate Division of the New York Supreme Court on September 5.

This is an interesting case about balancing two competing interests, the right to privacy and the right to freedom of expression.

Using a telephoto lens, defendant Arne Svenson took several photographs of people living in the building across from his own apartment in Manhattan, taking advantage of the fact that the building is a glass tower with floor-to-ceiling windows for each apartment. People are shown going on with their daily activities, having their breakfast, cleaning or sleeping.

Svenson did not ask for permission to take these pictures and later used these images for an exhibition, “The Neighbors” presented this year at a Chelsea art gallery.

Some of the people photographed were minors, and their parents, Martha and Matthew Foster, filed suit individually and on behalf of their children against Svenson. Judge Eileen Rakower from the Supreme Court of New York granted on August 1 defendant’s motion to dismiss.

New York Privacy Law

The state of New York does not recognize a common law right of privacy. It only recognizes a right not to have one’s likeness used for commercial purposes, New York Civil Rights Law §§ 50 and 51. Under § 50,“[a] person, firm or corporation that uses for advertising purposes, or for the purposes of trade, the name, portrait or picture of any living person without having first obtained the written consent of such person, or if a minor of his or her parent or guardian, is guilty of a misdemeanor.” § 51 provides plaintiff for injunctive relief and damages.

Therefore, it is not illegal under New York law to use someone’s likeness without permission for a purpose which is not commercial. Plaintiff must prove to succeed in his claim the (1) use of his name, portrait, picture or voice (2) “for advertising purposes or for the purposes of trade” (3) without consent and (4) within the state of New York.

Svenson certainly used the likeness of plaintiffs. The faces of his subjects are not seen, but some of them are shown in “lost profile” which certainly would allow people knowing them to recognize them. The preliminary injunction sought to immediately end “the dissemination of two photographs showing the ‘[plaintiffs’] children faces and partially-clad bodies. “

So Svenson used the likeness of the plaintiffs, without their consent, within the state of New York. Was this use “for advertising purposes or for the purposes of trade”?

Trade/Advertising Purposes or Free Speech?

Plaintiffs alleged defendant’s photos constituted advertising and trade under §§ 50 and 51, as Svenson sold his photographs through the gallery which organized “The Neighbors” exhibition.

But their arguments did not convince Judge Rakower from the New York Supreme Court who found this was not a commercial use of the likeness of plaintiffs and their children. That is consistent with New York case law. For instance, in Simeonov v. Tiegs, the New York City Civil Court held in 1993 that” [a]n artist may make a work of art that includes a recognizable likeness of a person without her or his written consent and sell at least a limited number of copies thereof without violating Civil Rights Law §§ 50 and 51.”

Judge Rakower also noted that New York law protects freedom of expression, citing a 1982 New York Court of Appeals case, Arrington v. N.Y. Times. In Arrington, the photograph of plaintiff, taken without his permission in the streets of New York City, was later used to illustrate an article on “The Black Middle Class” in the New York Times magazine. The Court of Appeals ruled that the use was not commercial, even” though the dissemination of news and views is carried on for a profit or that illustrations are added for the very purpose of encouraging sales of the publications.”

Judge Rakower cited the Southern District of New York Hoepker v. Kruger case, where the SDNY ruled in 2002 that artist Barbara Kruger could use plaintiff Charlotte Dabney’s likeness in her “It’s a small world, but not if you have to clean it” work . The SDNY noted then that “[t]he advertising and trade limitation in New York’s privacy statutes was crafted with the First Amendment in mind. Through Sections 50 and 51, the New York legislature sought to protect a person’s right to be free from unwarranted intrusions into his or her privacy, while at the same time protecting the quintessential American right to freedom of expression.”

In our case, Judge Rakower reasoned that Svenson was “communicating his thoughts and ideas to the public” and that his photographs “serve more than just an advertising or trade purpose because they promote the enjoyment of art in a form of a displayed exhibition.” Even if the exhibition had been advertised, that was “beyond the limits of the statute because it related to the protected exhibition itself.

As plaintiffs could not establish a likelihood of success on the merits, the NY Supreme Court granted defendant’s motion to dismiss. Judge Rakower noted that “[w]hile it makes Plaintiffs cringe to think their private lives and images of their small children can find their way into the public forum of an art exhibition, there is no redress under the current laws of the State of New York.” It is doubtful that the Appellate Division will have a different view of the case, but we’ll see.

Image is Goat on a Ledge in Aruba,, courtesy of Flickr user Serge Melki pursuant to a CC BY 2.0 license.

 

Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmailby feather