Shoptalk, LTD., Alan Menken, Plaintiffs-Counterclaim-Defendants-Appellants v. Concorde-New Horizons Corp., Defendant-Counterclaimant-Appellee-Cross-Appellant, 168 F.3d 586, 2d Cir. (1999)
Shoptalk, LTD., Alan Menken, Plaintiffs-Counterclaim-Defendants-Appellants v. Concorde-New Horizons Corp., Defendant-Counterclaimant-Appellee-Cross-Appellant, 168 F.3d 586, 2d Cir. (1999)
Shoptalk, LTD., Alan Menken, Plaintiffs-Counterclaim-Defendants-Appellants v. Concorde-New Horizons Corp., Defendant-Counterclaimant-Appellee-Cross-Appellant, 168 F.3d 586, 2d Cir. (1999)
3d 586
1999 Copr.L.Dec. P 27,857, 49 U.S.P.Q.2d 1599
Dorothy M. Weber, New York, New York (Lisa Martinez, Shukat Arrow
Hafer & Weber, New York, NY, on the brief), Plaintiffs-CounterclaimDefendants-Appellants- Cross-Appellees.
Howard R. Cohen, New York, New York, (Eric M. Kraus, Natalie A.
Napierala, Sedgwick, Detert, Moran & Arnold, New York, NY, on the
brief), Defendant-Counter Claimant-Appellee-Cross-Appellant.
Daniel S. Alter, Assistant United States Attorney, New York, NY (Mary
Jo White, United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York,
Steven M. Haber, Assistant United States Attorney, New York, NY, on
the brief), for United States Copyright Office as amicus curiae.
James Niss, New York, NY, filed a brief as Amicus Curiae pro se.
Before MESKILL and KEARSE, Circuit Judges, and TELESCA* , District
Judge.
KEARSE, Circuit Judge:
Plaintiffs Shoptalk, Ltd. ("Shoptalk"), and Alan Menken appeal from so much
of a final judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern District
of New York, Deborah A. Batts, Judge, as (a) ordered Shoptalk to pay
defendant Concorde-New Horizons Corp. ("Concorde") $75,592.65 and
ordered Menken to pay Concorde $56,843.84, both sums representing unpaid
royalties and prejudgment interest, for use of material in a 1959 screenplay coowned by Concorde and registered for copyright protection in 1982 as an
unpublished work, and (b) ordered plaintiffs to make future royalty payments
until the expiration of the copyright in the screenplay. The district court ruled
that Concorde's copyright in the screenplay has not expired because the
screenplay was neither published nor registered prior to 1982, notwithstanding
the 1960 publication of a motion picture (whose copyright has now expired)
based on the screenplay. On appeal, Shoptalk and Menken, supported by the
United States Copyright Office ("Copyright Office") as amicus curiae, argue
that the district court erred in ruling that publication of the motion picture did
not constitute publication of its underlying screenplay. Concorde has crossappealed from so much of the judgment as limits its recovery of royalties to the
lives of the copyrights in the screenplay and the motion picture, contending that
an agreement among the parties obligates plaintiffs to pay royalties
independently of the existence of the copyrights. For the reasons that follow,
we reject Concorde's arguments in support of its cross-appeal, and we agree
with plaintiffs and the Copyright Office that, under the Copyright Act of 1909,
which governs works published before 1978, see 17 U.S.C. 1 et seq., ("1909
Act"), repealed effective 1978 by Copyright Act of 1976, 17 U.S.C. 101 et
seq. ("1976 Act"), the publication of the Motion Picture in 1960 published so
much of the Screenplay as was disclosed in the Film. We therefore affirm in
part, vacate in part, and remand for further proceedings.
I. BACKGROUND
2
3A. The Film, the Musical Stage Play, and the 1983 Agreement
4
In the 1983 Agreement, the Musical's producers were given the rights, inter
alia, to "make, write[,] compose," and produce a "dramatico-musical stage
play" based on the Motion Picture and the Screenplay (1983 Agreement p
SECOND); in return, Menken, Ashman, and the producers agreed to pay
royalties (id. p THIRD). The 1983 Agreement provided that the copyright
"Owner" (defined as Millennium and Griffith) would "renew or extend" the
copyright in "the Work" (defined as the Motion Picture) prior to its expiration,
and that if they
7
should
fail or neglect to execute or record any document required to renew or extend
such copyright, and/or to confirm or effectuate the rights granted hereunder, ...
[Menken and Ashman] shall have the right to execute or record such document, in
Owner's name as Owner's irrevocable attorney-in-fact.
8
(Id. p NINTH.)
The copyright in the Film was not renewed; it expired in 1988, and the Film
entered the public domain. Sometime prior to 1991, Shoptalk and Menken
learned of the failure to renew, and they thereafter ceased making royalty
payments to Concorde. (They continued, however, to pay royalties to Griffith.)
Concorde took the position that plaintiffs' rights and obligations under the 1983
Agreement were not conditioned on the renewal of the Motion Picture
copyright and that it was plaintiffs who had breached. Concorde alleged that
plaintiffs had agreed to pay royalties based on "the right to prepare, produce,
and publicly perform and/or display a musical play based upon and derived
from the screenplay and the original motion picture" (Answer p 46), and that by
failing to pay royalties on the performance or display of "derivative works
based upon the screenplay and motion picture," plaintiffs had breached and
were continuing to breach the 1983 Agreement (id. p 49). Concorde contended
that its nonrenewal of the Motion Picture copyright gave plaintiffs the right to
renew the copyright but gave them no other rights.
12
Concorde also contended, inter alia, that a valid copyright subsisted in the
underlying Screenplay, which preserved Concorde's right to receive royalty
payments under the Agreement, and that plaintiffs' claims were barred by
estoppel, ratification, laches, and waiver. In a counterclaim, Concorde
requested, inter alia, a judgment declaring that plaintiffs remained bound by the
terms of the 1983 Agreement, an injunction prohibiting plaintiffs from
exercising rights granted by the Agreement, and compensatory damages for
unpaid royalties due under the 1983 Agreement.
13
14
The parties submitted to the court a joint statement of the material facts as to
which they agreed there was no genuine dispute, and both sides moved for
Id. at 146 (citing April Productions, Inc. v. G. Schirmer Inc., 308 N.Y. 366,
374, 126 N.E.2d 283, 288 (1955)). Thus the court concluded that plaintiffs
were entitled to a declaration that Concorde's "right, pursuant to the 1983
Agreement, to receive domestic royalties, based on the use of the Motion
Picture, expired simultaneously with the expiration of the Motion Picture
copyright," and it denied Concorde's request for "damages for unpaid royalties
relating to the Motion Picture." 897 F.Supp. at 147.
17
However, the district court agreed with Concorde that a valid copyright in the
Screenplay survived the expiration of the statutory copyright in the Film. It
rejected plaintiffs' contention that publication of the Motion Picture also
published the underlying Screenplay, stating that a motion picture is a distinct
"derivative work" of the underlying screenplay that "[does] not vitiate common
law copyrights in the ... original work." Id. at 146 (internal quotation marks
omitted). The court also rejected plaintiffs' contention that the Motion Picture
and Screenplay were so nearly identical as to constitute a single work for
copyright purposes, stating that
a18rule stating that works with minimal variation between them are the same work for
copyright purposes would require extensive examination of the alleged comparable
works by the finder of fact, which would both unnecessarily waste judicial resources
as well as introduce substantial uncertainty as to a copyright's validity prior to a
Court's adjudication of the issue.
19
Id. at 147. The court concluded that "the Screenplay enjoys continued
protection, and all rights stemming from the Screenplay, including any rights
retained by [Concorde] ... remain in effect," and that Concorde "retains the right
to receive royalties for use of the Screenplay under the 1983 Agreement." Id.
20
In this Court, plaintiffs and Concorde principally pursue the positions they
advocated in the district court. On its cross-appeal, Concorde contends chiefly
that the 1983 Agreement is enforceable independently of the validity its
copyright in the Motion Picture or the Screenplay, and that plaintiffs waived
their rights to seek relief from their contractual obligations. We reject these
contentions substantially for the reasons stated by the district court. See April
Productions, Inc. v. G. Schirmer, Inc., 308 N.Y. at 375, 126 N.E.2d at 289
(under rules of construction applicable to copyright licenses, an "agreement
may not ... in the absence of express language ... be construed to require
payment of royalties after the expiration of the underlying copyrights."). We see
no such express contractual language in this case, nor any waiver. Accordingly,
we affirm so much of the district court's judgment as is challenged in the crossappeal.
22
On plaintiffs' appeal, the Copyright Office--which did not appear in the district
court--has submitted a brief as amicus curiae, arguing that, under the 1909 Act,
"portions of screenplays embodied in the motion picture are published upon
publication of the motion picture." (Brief of Copyright Office at 16 (internal
quotation marks omitted).) Concorde urges that we reject this view on the basis
that Griffith had a common-law copyright in the Screenplay and that constituted
a "subsisting copyright" within the meaning of 7 of the 1909 Act and hence,
by the terms of that section, was not affected by the publication of the Film as a
derivative work. For the reasons that follow, we reject Concorde's reading of
the 1909 Act and agree with plaintiffs and the Copyright Office that the
publication of the Motion Picture in 1960 published so much of the Screenplay
as was disclosed in the Film.
II. DISCUSSION
23
The Constitution gives Congress the power "[t]o promote the progress of
Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and
Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries...."
U.S. Const. Art. I., 8, cl. 8. The copyright statutes enacted by Congress have
thus had as their purpose protecting the "benefit of [such] property for a limited
term of years," and those "statutes should be given a fair and reasonable
construction with a view to effecting such purpose." American Tobacco Co. v.
Werckmeister, 207 U.S. 284, 291, 28 S.Ct. 72, 52 L.Ed. 208 (1907).
24
The 1909 Act, which was repealed by the 1976 Act, governs works published
before 1978. See, e.g., 1976 Act, 17 U.S.C. 301(b)(2); Sanga Music, Inc. v.
EMI Blackwood Music, Inc., 55 F.3d 756, 758 (2d Cir.1995). The 1909 Act
established a regime in which published works could receive statutory
protection under federal law, while unpublished works retained such protection
as they were given by state common law.
25
Under the 1909 Act, the publication of a work, with a proper notice, secured
statutory copyright protection. See 17 U.S.C. 10 (repealed effective 1978). "
'[P]ublication occurs when by consent of the copyright owner, the original or
tangible copies of a work are sold, leased, loaned, given away, or otherwise
made available to the general public....' " Bartok v. Boosey & Hawkes, Inc.,
523 F.2d 941, 945 (2d Cir.1975) (quoting 1 M. Nimmer, The Law of Copyright
49, at 194-95 (1974)). The 1909 Act provided authors an initial 28-year term
of protection, calculated from the date of publication, which could be renewed
for an additional 28 years. See 17 U.S.C. 24 (repealed effective 1978). If the
initial copyright term expired without renewal, the work entered the public
domain; if the copyright was renewed, the work entered the public domain at
the conclusion of the renewal term.
26
27
Nothing
in this title shall be construed to annul or limit the right of the author or
proprietor of an unpublished work, at common law or in equity, to prevent the
copying, publication, or use of such unpublished work without his consent, or to
obtain damages therefor.
28
29
The common law "protects the author's interest prior to publication." Sanga
Music, Inc. v. EMI Blackwood Music, Inc., 55 F.3d at 758. It thus "allows the
author to control the first publication of the work." Id. Once the author
publishes the work, or a third party publishes the work with the consent of the
author, the author's common-law right of first publication ends. See, e.g.,
Caliga v. Inter Ocean Newspaper Co., 215 U.S. 182, 188, 30 S.Ct. 38, 54 L.Ed.
150 (1909) ("At common law, the exclusive right to copy existed in the author
until he permitted a general publication. Thus, when a book was published in
print, the owner's common-law right was lost."); Batjac Productions, Inc. v.
GoodTimes Home Video Corp., 160 F.3d 1223, 1226, 1235 (9th Cir.1998);
Sanga Music, Inc. v. EMI Blackwood Music, Inc., 55 F.3d at 758. Further, the
securing of a statutory copyright, either by general publication with a proper
notice or by registration of the work, ended the common-law protection. See,
e.g., Bobbs-Merrill Co. v. Straus, 210 U.S. 339, 347, 28 S.Ct. 722, 52 L.Ed.
1086 (1908) (common-law and statutory "rights do not co-exist in the same
composition; when the statutory right begins the common-law right ends");
Roy Export, 672 F.2d at 1101 n. 13 ("a single work cannot be protected from
copying under both federal and state law at the same time"); Jewelers'
Mercantile Agency v. Jewelers' Weekly Publishing Co., 155 N.Y. 241, 49 N.E.
872 (1898) ("no proposition is better settled than that a statutory copyright
operates to divest a party of the common law right"). So long as the original
work remained unregistered and unpublished, however, the common law
protected the author's rights in the work in perpetuity. See, e.g., Ferris v.
Frohman, 223 U.S. 424, 434, 32 S.Ct. 263, 56 L.Ed. 492 (1912).
30
"The right of first publication encompasses not only the choice whether to
publish at all, but also the choices when, where, and in what form first to
publish a work." Harper & Row Publishers, Inc. v. Nation Enterprises, 471 U.S.
539, 564, 105 S.Ct. 2218, 85 L.Ed.2d 588 (1985). This does not, however,
allow the author to treat each publication in a new medium as a "first"
publication. See, e.g., Batjac Productions, Inc. v. GoodTimes Home Video
Corp., 160 F.3d at 1235 (right to control first publication "does not entail
multiple first publication rights in every available medium"); cf. RCA
Manufacturing Co. v. Whiteman, 114 F.2d 86, 88 (2d Cir.) (music conductor's
"common-law property in [musical] performances ended with the sale of
records" because those records "embodied [his] 'common-law property'--his
contribution as a conductor--in precisely the same way that the record of such a
score would embody his composition"), cert. denied, 311 U.S. 712, 61 S.Ct.
394, 85 L.Ed. 463 (1940). Thus, once a work is published with the author's
consent in any medium, it loses its common-law protection. In sum, under the
1909 Act, "[s]tate law protection begins with a work's creation and continues
until the work is 'published' " or registered, "at which point state protection is
lost." Roy Export, 672 F.2d at 1101.
31
The 1909 Act also provides protection for copyrighted works that are
incorporated in later works. Section 7 of the 1909 Act provided that
32
works subject to copyright under the provisions of this title; but the publication
of any such new work shall not affect the force or validity of any subsisting
copyright upon the matter employed or any part thereof, or be construed to
imply an exclusive right to such use of the original works, or to secure or extend
copyright in such original works.
33
34
Concorde argues, however, that 7 of the 1909 Act, in stating that the
publication of a new derivative work "shall not affect the force or validity of
any subsisting copyright upon the matter employed," 17 U.S.C. 7 (repealed
effective 1978), was meant to preserve the protection afforded an author under
the common law. We disagree. Reading the term "subsisting copyright" in the
context of the statute as a whole, we cannot conclude that that term refers to
common-law rights. Although some of the cases decided around the time the
1909 Act was passed used the term "copyright" to refer not only to statutory
copyright but also to common-law protection, the 1909 Act itself appeared
clearly to use the term "copyright" only when it was referring to the statutory
copyright. Thus, 2, which is the only section of the 1909 Act to refer
expressly to the common-law protection for unpublished works, see 17 U.S.C.
2 ("Nothing in this title shall be construed to annul or limit the right of the
author or proprietor of an unpublished work, at common law or in equity, to
prevent the copying, publication, or use of such unpublished work without his
consent, or to obtain damages therefor.") (repealed effective 1978), nowhere
uses the word "copyright."
35
In contrast, other sections of the 1909 Act used the words "copyright" and
"subsisting ... copyright" in ways that exclude the common-law right. For
example, 10 of the 1909 Act provided, in pertinent part, that "[a]ny person
entitled thereto by this title may secure copyright for his work by publication
thereof with the notice of copyright required by this title," 17 U.S.C. 10
(repealed effective 1978) (emphasis added); and 13 provided for certain
procedures after "[c ]opyright has been secured by publication of the work with
the notice of copyright," id. 13 (repealed effective 1978) (emphasis added).
Since the common-law right protected only unpublished works, the "copyright"
that those sections referred to as being "secured" by publication could not refer
to the common-law right. Further, if "copyright" referred to common-law rights,
these provisions would, nonsensically, have provided for the "secur[ing]" (for a
limited time) of a right that the owner already possessed (in perpetuity).
Similarly, 3 of the 1909 Act provided that "[t]he copyright provided by this
title shall protect all the copyrightable component parts of the work
copyrighted, and all matter therein in which copyright is already subsisting, but
without extending the duration or scope of such copyright." 17 U.S.C. 3
(repealed effective 1978) (emphasis added). Since the common-law right in a
work that remained unpublished existed in perpetuity, however, if "subsisting ...
copyright" meant the common-law right, the reference to "extending [its]
duration" would likewise make no sense. We conclude that the "subsisting
copyright" language in 7 of the 1909 Act refers only to statutory copyright,
and not to common-law protection. Accord Batjac Productions, Inc. v.
GoodTimes Home Video Corp., 160 F.3d at 1228-29.
36
In Batjac, the Ninth Circuit ruled that the publication of a motion picture
publishes so much of the underlying screenplay as was disclosed in the motion
picture. See, id. at 1225, 1236. The court reasoned that a contrary rule would
turn on its head the copyright principle of limited monopoly, in that "the
copyright in any film that has entered the public domain under the 1909 Act
could be resurrected by an unpublished screenplay." Id. at 1233. We find this
reasoning persuasive and consonant with the principles approved in our prior
cases, to wit, that when the author consents to the inclusion of his work in a
derivative work, the publication of the derivative work, to the extent that it
discloses the original work, also constitutes publication of that underlying
work. See, e.g., Roy Export, 672 F.2d at 1102. We conclude in the present
case, based on the statute and the principles underlying the scope of copyright
protection, that if a previously unpublished screenplay is embodied in a motion
picture, so much of the screenplay as is disclosed in the motion picture is
published when the motion picture is published.
37
38
40
41 ABC has not objected to [the author's] assertion of common law copyright in
Since
an unpublished script, we need not entertain the question on this appeal for a
preliminary injunction. We leave initial determination of this perplexing question to
the district court in its determination of all the issues on the merits.
42
43
The issue is squarely presented for the first time in the instant case, and we
conclude, for the reasons discussed above, that the Motion Picture at issue here,
which was published in 1960 and was based on the Screenplay, published the
Screenplay to the extent that the Screenplay was thereby disclosed.
CONCLUSION
44
45
Costs to plaintiffs.
Honorable Michael A. Telesca, of the United States District Court for the
Western District of New York, sitting by designation