Argument Counsel was heard on 4, 7–9 February. Seven months previously, in the case of
Hinton v Donaldson, the Scots
Court of Session had ruled that copyright did not exist in the common law of Scotland, so that
Alexander Donaldson (an appellant in
Donaldson v. Becket with his elder brother, John) could lawfully publish
Thomas Stackhouse's
New History of the Holy Bible. Attorney General Thurlow, speaking for the appellants, referred to the Scottish case in his opening argument to the Lords on 4 February:
Questions The practice of the House of Lords at the time when considering a challenging case was to ask the twelve judges of the King's Bench, Common Pleas, and the Exchequer for their expert views on particular issues identified, for the consideration of the House. This would then be followed by a debate, and then a vote of the full house. On 9 February,
Lord Apsley, the
Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain, formulated three questions for the judges: At the instigation of
Lord Camden, two further questions were also put: the balance of their opinions were: :* Eight answers to three,
supporting authors' right of first publication at common law and right of action against publication without consent :* Seven answers to four,
against the authors' rights at common law being taken away by first publication :* Six answers to five,
supporting that authors' rights at common law in published works
were superseded by the statute :* Seven answers to four,
supporting that, at common law, authors had sole right of publication, in perpetuity :* Six answers to five,
supporting that this right was circumscribed by the statute For a time in the late 20th century, some scholars believed that the tally in the journal for the crucial third question was incorrect, and that a majority of the judges had opined that a common-law copyright was
not "taken away" by the statute; but that their views had been rejected by the full House of Lords. in light of a review of a wider range of documents, that the journal reported the positions of the judges correctly, as did law reports based on it; and that it was the reporting of the view of Justice
George Nares in various works based ultimately on an account by
William Woodfall in
The Morning Chronicle that was incorrect. The balance of opinions on the first question has sometimes traditionally been represented as ten-to-one; however according to the tallies while both Barons Perrott and Adams accepted that an author should have the sole right of printing or publishing a book or literary composition, they rejected the second half of the proposition, advising that an author should only be able to bring an action against someone who printed, published or sold it if they had obtained the copy by fraud or violence. A report in
Hansard of Perrott's detailed reasons he makes clear that in his view the author's right at common law extended only to the physical copy, not to the content within it. Furthermore, while the Lord Chief Justice
Lord de Grey answered the first question affirmatively, his detailed answer made clear that his position on this related only to the physical manuscript; his views on rights to "more than the materials or the manuscript" were the province of the second question (in which he opined that author's right at common law was indeed extinguished by first publication). Arguably a true statement of the judges' positions on whether authors had a natural copyright at common law would therefore be seven to four. A twelfth judge who was entitled to state and give reasons for his answers was
Lord Mansfield. Presumably his views still conformed to his original judgment, in
Millar v Taylor. But – to the frustration of some – he did not speak.
Debate and vote On 22 February the motion was made to reverse the Chancery decree. The Lords then debated, the record showing that five Lords spoke. Four of these, Lord Camden, Lord Chancellor Apsley, the Bishop of Carlisle, and the Earl of Effingham, spoke in favour of the motion to reverse the decree, and one, Lord Lyttleton, spoke against the motion. Lord Camden, in his speech, was scathing toward the booksellers: In the end, the full House voted to reverse the decree against Donaldson. Thus the House of Lords rejected perpetual copyright in published works and held that they were subject to the durational limits of the Statute of Anne. As a result, published works would fall into the
public domain after their copyright terms expired. It had been thought, for many years, that the House of Lords voted by
division. But research has demonstrated that the vote in the case was taken by a collective voice vote, and thus without knowing how many Lords voted, their names, or how they each voted. ==Significance==