Edwards et al. v Usher Raymond IV et al., No. 1:13-cv-07985-DLC (S.D.N.Y. filed 05/23/14) [Doc. 36].
Plaintiffs alleged that a song recorded and published by defendants, including Usher, willfully copied the plaintiffs' original musical composition. On defendants' Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss, the Court found that plaintiffs failed to state a claim for copyright infringement because the two songs were not substantially similar as a matter of law. Accordingly, the Court dismissed the sole copyright infringement claim, and declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the state law claim for breach of contract.
First, the Court found that the phrase "caught up," which is the title of both songs, is not eligible for copyright protection because it is a common phrase. Second, the Court found that lyrics from the two songs expressing the ideas in question were not substantially similar. Third, the Court ignored bare legal conclusions in the complaint that the songs are substantially similar. Lastly, the Court also took a "holistic" approach, and determined that the two songs' music and lyrics, considered as a whole, confirmed a lack of substantial similarity.
May 27, 2014
May 23, 2014
Attorney Sanctioned In Usher Copyright Action
Marino v. Usher et al., Index No. 6811-cv-11 (E.D. Pa. memorandum dated May 21, 2014).
The court dismissed most of the plaintiff song-writer's copyright infringement claims against Usher and other defendants, and sanctioned plaintiff's counsel for behaving "in a flagrantly unprofessional and offensive manner." The sanctionable conduct: the attorney "(1) inveigled an inculpatory affidavit from unrepresented Defendant William Guice; and (2) after falsely assuring Guice that he was only a witness, entered a default against him."
The court dismissed most of the plaintiff song-writer's copyright infringement claims against Usher and other defendants, and sanctioned plaintiff's counsel for behaving "in a flagrantly unprofessional and offensive manner." The sanctionable conduct: the attorney "(1) inveigled an inculpatory affidavit from unrepresented Defendant William Guice; and (2) after falsely assuring Guice that he was only a witness, entered a default against him."
April 30, 2014
Attorney's Fees Awarded To Madonna In Infringement Action
VMG Salsoul LLC v. Madonna Louise Ciccone et al., No. 2:12-cv-05967 (C.D. Cal. filed Apr. 28, 2014) [Doc. 148].
Madonna and other music-industry defendants were awarded their attorney's fees in a copyright infringement action in which the Court had dismissed plaintiff's claim, finding that the alleged infringement of the musical composition was not sufficiently original to be copyrightable and that any alleged sampling was de minimis. Although the Court found that the fees and costs were unreasonable and unnecessary to the litigation, and therefore declined to award the full amount requested, the Court nonetheless awarded defendants $670.117.25 in attorneys’ fees and $50,055.00 in costs, pursuant to 17 U.S.C. 505.
Madonna and other music-industry defendants were awarded their attorney's fees in a copyright infringement action in which the Court had dismissed plaintiff's claim, finding that the alleged infringement of the musical composition was not sufficiently original to be copyrightable and that any alleged sampling was de minimis. Although the Court found that the fees and costs were unreasonable and unnecessary to the litigation, and therefore declined to award the full amount requested, the Court nonetheless awarded defendants $670.117.25 in attorneys’ fees and $50,055.00 in costs, pursuant to 17 U.S.C. 505.
Labels:
Attorney's Fees,
Copyright,
Costs,
Infringement,
Madonna,
Section 505
April 11, 2014
2d Cir. To Hear Vimeo Interlocutory Appeal
Capitol Records, LLC v. Vimeo LLC, 2d Cir. Index Nos. 14-15 and 14-16 (2d Cir. April 9, 2014) [Doc. 57].
The Second Circuit agreed to hear interlocutory appeals, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b), and to consolidate the appeals. The Second Circuit is now in a position to rule on whether the DMCA applies to pre-1972 sound recordings, and to clarify the willful blindness doctrine.
The Second Circuit agreed to hear interlocutory appeals, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b), and to consolidate the appeals. The Second Circuit is now in a position to rule on whether the DMCA applies to pre-1972 sound recordings, and to clarify the willful blindness doctrine.
Labels:
DMCA,
Interlocutory Appeal,
Pre-1972,
Second Circuit,
Vimeo,
Willfulness
March 27, 2014
Use Of Rapper's Image On Website Constitutes Copyright Infringement And Violated Right Of Publicity; Questions Remain on Trademark And Third-Party Contribution Claims
Jackson v. Odenot, No. 09-cv-05583 (S.D.N.Y. filed March 24, 2014) [Doc. 150].
Rapper 50 Cent was granted summary judgment on his claims against a website for the unauthorized use of photographs that appeared on the masthead of the website. 50 Cent's claim for copyright infringement was based on a registration for a sound recording which included the relating artwork/photos, and exact copies were used by the defendants. 50 Cent's claim under New York state law for the right of publicity (Civil Rights Law sections 50-51) succeeded because: (1) the pictures "are recognizable likenesses of Jackson because someone familiar with Jackson would be able to identify him in each of the mastheads", and (2) defendants' waived their statute of limitations defense. However, the Court found that there were questions of fact that precluded summary judgment on 50 Cent's claim under the Lanham Act for false endorsement, 15 USC 1125(a)(1), and also on his claim for common law unfair competition. The Court did dismiss the defendants' affirmative defenses of fair use, implied license, equitable estoppel, and unclean hands, and found that the other affirmative defenses had been abandoned. Lastly, the Court held that defendant could not recover on a contribution theory under copyright and trademark law against the third-party defendants, but could seek contribution under the New York state claims.
Rapper 50 Cent was granted summary judgment on his claims against a website for the unauthorized use of photographs that appeared on the masthead of the website. 50 Cent's claim for copyright infringement was based on a registration for a sound recording which included the relating artwork/photos, and exact copies were used by the defendants. 50 Cent's claim under New York state law for the right of publicity (Civil Rights Law sections 50-51) succeeded because: (1) the pictures "are recognizable likenesses of Jackson because someone familiar with Jackson would be able to identify him in each of the mastheads", and (2) defendants' waived their statute of limitations defense. However, the Court found that there were questions of fact that precluded summary judgment on 50 Cent's claim under the Lanham Act for false endorsement, 15 USC 1125(a)(1), and also on his claim for common law unfair competition. The Court did dismiss the defendants' affirmative defenses of fair use, implied license, equitable estoppel, and unclean hands, and found that the other affirmative defenses had been abandoned. Lastly, the Court held that defendant could not recover on a contribution theory under copyright and trademark law against the third-party defendants, but could seek contribution under the New York state claims.
March 20, 2014
Rate Court Sets ASCAP Fee For Pandora
IN RE PETITION OF PANDORA MEDIA, INC., No. 12 Civ. 8035 (S.D.N.Y. filed 03/18/14) [Doc. 738].
In a lengthy decision, the ASCAP rate court held that: "The headline rate for the ASCAP-Pandora license for the years 2011 through 2015 is set at 1.85% of revenue for every year of the license term. Pandora is entitled to take a deduction for any direct payments to publishers made following their partial withdrawals from ASCAP."
In a lengthy decision, the ASCAP rate court held that: "The headline rate for the ASCAP-Pandora license for the years 2011 through 2015 is set at 1.85% of revenue for every year of the license term. Pandora is entitled to take a deduction for any direct payments to publishers made following their partial withdrawals from ASCAP."
March 7, 2014
SESAC Can't Escape Antitrust Claims
Meredith Corp. v. SESAC LLC, No. 09 Civ. 9177 (PAE)., 2014 BL 57263 (S.D.N.Y. Mar. 03, 2014).
The issue in this putative class action is whether SESAC's
licensing practices since 2008 have violated federal antitrust law. Plaintiffs
are groups of local television stations. They sue SESAC aand allege that, in practice, they must obtain licenses for some music in SESAC's
repertory. That is because SESAC's repertory is large and includes works so
ubiquitous that some are inevitably embedded in shows that the stations acquire
and wish to air. Plaintiffs contend that, since 2008, SESAC, with its
affiliates' assent, has taken steps to make illusory any alternative to the
blanket license it sells, which conveys the right to play the music of all SESAC
affiliates. Having insulated this product from
competition and forced local television stations to acquire it, plaintiffs
allege, SESAC has set an exorbitant price for that "all or nothing" license,
even though stations have no interest in buying the rights to the entirety of
SESAC's repertory. Plaintiffs assert that SESAC and its affiliates have thereby
violated §
1 of the Sherman Act, 15
U.S.C. § 1, by combining to unlawfully restrain trade; and §
2 of the same Act, 15
U.S.C. § 2, by conspiring to monopolize the market for the performance
rights to the musical works within SESAC's repertory. Plaintiffs also assert a
monopolization claim against SESAC under §
2.
SESAC moved for summary judgment. The Court denied the motion as to all three counts, except that on
the § 1 claim, the Court granted summary judgment to defendants in two ways that
narrowed that claim. Specifically, the Court rejected plaintiffs' (1) per se
theory of liability; and (2) claim of an agreement to restrain trade among all
20,000-plus SESAC affiliates, as opposed to among only the far smaller subset
(under 1%) of affiliates who were party to a supplemental affiliation agreement
with SESAC.
The Court first reviewed the history of antitrust litigation involving the PROs'
licensing practices. The Court then considered the § 1 claim, assessing whether
(1) the conduct plaintiffs assail is amenable to per se condemnation; (2)
there is adequate evidence of concerted action among SESAC's affiliates to
restrain trade; and (3) the evidence would support a conclusion that the
anti-competitive effects of SESAC's conduct outweighed its pro-competitive
tendencies, i.e., whether a jury could find harm to competition.
The Court then considered the § 2 claims, addressing first the monopolization
claim and then the claim of a conspiracy to monopolize.
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