Edgenet, Inc. v. Home Depot U.S.A., Inc.,

Docket Number: 10-1335
Judge: EASTERBROOK
Opinion Date: September 2, 2011

In 2004 HD contracted with plaintiff, to develop an inventory classification system, called a taxonomy,for HD’s database. Plaintiff would own the intellectual-property rights and would license HD to use it at no-cost as long as plaintiff remained HD’s data-pool vendor and HD continued paying for services. In 2008 HD began to develop an in-house database, incorporating the taxonomy that plaintiff had created. Plaintiff learned of the plan and registered a copyright. HD sent notice terminating the relationship, with a check for $100,000 to purchase a perpetual license, pursuant to the contract. HD notified suppliers to transmit their product data to its in-house system rather than to plaintiff, which returned the check and filed suit. The district judge dismissed. The Seventh Circuit affirmed, concluding that HD did not violate copyright law and that the case did not belong in federal court. HD acted in accordance with its contract rights. View “Edgenet, Inc. v. Home Depot U.S.A., Inc., ” on Justia Law

View "Edgenet, Inc. v. Home Depot U.S.A., Inc.," on Justia Law

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