In [King vs. CBS], the district court ruled that the speech was in the public domain, because King's speech (and his prior dissemination of it to the press) was a "general publication without notice", which, under the then-existing 1909 copyright act, placed the work in the public domain (today, no notice is required for copyright). King's estate appealed, and the circuit court [reversed and remanded], finding the trial court's order of summary judgment invalid, but not specificially ruling on the validity of the copyright claim. King's estate and CBS reached a settlement that granted CBS the right to use the speech in certain ways in exchange for CBS donating to the King Center for Non-violent Social Change, and so this particular case will not be taken to final judgment, leaviing the issue up in the air. King's estate is pretty liberal about permission to reproduce the speech, so there are places on the net to which we can point for the full text. But we cannot put the actual text here, because even if the King family allowed us to display it, they would not allow us to re-license it under the GFDL, which is required for use here. --LDC
However, in 1992, Harry Hampton, producer of the acclaimed television documentary "Eyes on the Prize" paid "less than $100,000" to settle a suit brought by King's widow [Coretta Scott King]? and their four children. In 1993, they sued [USA Today]? for reprinting "I Have a Dream" to mark the 30th anniversary of the march in Washington, D.C. The paper settled out of court for the $1,700 license fee and legal costs. In 1994, CBS produced a documentary series entitled "The 20th Century with Mike Wallace," which included Rev. King's speech. In 1998, the estate sued CBS for copyright infringement.
CBS argued that the licensing scheme is invalid because the speech was in the public domain. CBS stressed that King delivered his speech in front of 200,000 people in Washington, D.C., that the organizers of the march sought broad media coverage, that many newspapers reprinted the speech, and that the Southern Christian Leadership Conference made it available to its members in the group's newsletter.
However, the court concluded that, despite its initial wide dissemination, the speech did not pass into the public domain. King's performance constituted only "limited publication" of the speech because it was distributed mainly to the media, and not to the general public at large. Under common law of copyright, a limited publication does not divest an author of his exclusive rights in the work.
(Decision on File, Estate of Martin Luther King v. CBS, No. 98-9079, Nov. 5, 1999.)