| LOS ANGELES NEWS SERVICE, ROBERT TUR v. FRANK TULLO; CHARLES
BICKERT; AUDIO VIDEO REPORTING SERVICES
973 F.2d 791
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
1992
PRIOR HISTORY: Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Central District of California. D.C. No. CV-89-1414-MRP.
Mariana R. Pfaelzer, District Judge, Presiding.
COUNSEL:
Jeffrey L. Graubart, Los Angeles, California, for the
defendants-counter-claimants-appellants.
Elliot S. Ganezer, Ganezer Law Firm, Santa Monica, California,
for the plaintiff-counter-defendant-appellee.
JUDGES: Before: James R. Browning, Arthur L. Alarcon and Thomas
G. Nelson, Circuit Judges.
Opinion by Judge Browning.
OPINIONBY: BROWNING
OPINION: OPINION
BROWNING, Circuit Judge.
I. Overview
Los Angeles News Service ("LANS") records newsworthy events
on videotape and licenses television stations and networks
to use all or segments of the unedited ("raw") footage in
edited broadcast news stories. Audio Video Reporting Services
("AVRS") provides a video "news clipping" service: It monitors
television news programs, records them on videotape and sells
copies of all or segments of the tapes to interested individuals
and businesses.
LANS videotaped the sites of an airplane crash and a train
wreck, registered its copyrights to the tapes, and licensed
certain Los Angeles-area television stations to use them on
news programs. AVRS made video recordings of these news programs,
which included portions of LANS's footage, and marketed the
recordings.
LANS sued, claiming copyright infringement. AVRS counterclaimed,
alleging LANS had fraudulently induced AVRS to provide LANS
with copies of AVRS recordings by falsely promising to pay
for the tapes. n1 After a bench trial, the district court
entered judgment for LANS on the copyright infringement claims
and awarded statutory damages of $ 10,000 for each infringement,
a total of $ 20,000. The court found for AVRS on its fraud
claim and awarded AVRS $ 346.13.
AVRS appeals, making the following claims: (1) the raw videotapes
are not sufficiently original to merit copyright protection;
(2) the public's First Amendment right of access to videotapes
of newsworthy events, such as the crash and the wreck, precludes
copyright protection for the tapes; (3) even if the tapes
are copyrightable, AVRS made "fair use" of them and is therefore
shielded from liability for copyright infringement; (4) even
if AVRS would otherwise be liable for copyright infringement,
LANS's "unclean hands" barred recovery; (5) having found AVRS
liable for copyright infringement, the court should have permanently
enjoined AVRS from copying LANS's copyrighted material without
license from LANS, fixed the terms of a license that would
permit AVRS to copy LANS's copyrighted material, and required
LANS to notify AVRS when LANS's copyrighted material was broadcast;
(6) the damage award was excessive; and (7) a videotape of
the train wreck should not have been admitted into evidence.
We affirm.
II. Raw Videotapes as Original Works of Authorship
AVRS claims LANS's raw videotapes, as opposed to the edited
news stories in which portions of those tapes were combined
with other footage, narrative, interview excerpts and graphics
to form a television news "package," are not "original works
of authorship" and thus do not merit copyright protection
under @ 102(a) of the Copyright Act of 1976, 17 U.S.C. @@
101-914. Whether the raw tapes are sufficiently original to
merit copyright protection is a mixed question of law and
fact that we examine denovo. See Harper House, Inc. v. Thomas
Nelson, Inc., 889 F.2d 197, 201 (9th Cir. 1989).
AVRS argues LANS's tapes merely captured whatever was before
the camera, involved no creativity or intellectual input,
and so are not original works deserving copyright protection.
The Supreme Court rejected a similar argument more than 100
years ago. In Burrow-Giles Lithographic Co. v. Sarony, 111
U.S. 53 (1884), the plaintiff argued a photograph of the author
Oscar Wilde was not original and therefore not copyrightable
because a "photograph is the mere mechanical reproduction
of the physical features or outlines of some object animate
or inanimate, and involves no originality of thought or any
novelty in the intellectual operation connected with its visible
reproduction in shape of a picture." Id. at 59. The Court
did not decide whether all photographs reflected the necessary
originality, id., but held the Wilde photograph clearly was
original because of the creative and intellectual decisions
involved in producing it:
[The court below found that the photograph was] a "useful,
new, harmonious, characteristic, and graceful picture, and
that plaintiff made the same . . . entirely from his own original
mental conception, to which he gave visible form by posing
the said Oscar Wilde in front of the camera, selecting and
arranging the costume, draperies, and other various accessories
in said photograph, arranging the subject so as to present
graceful outlines, arranging and disposing the light and shade,
[and] suggesting and evoking the desired expression . . .
."
These findings, we think, show this photograph to be an original
work of art, the product of plaintiff's intellectual invention,
of which plaintiff is the author . . . .
Id. at 60.
Thirty-seven years later, Judge Learned Hand suggested the
question left open in Burrow-Giles - whether all photographs
are sufficiently original by their nature to merit copyright
protection - had been answered in the affirmative by Bleistein
v. Donaldson Lithographing Co., 188 U.S. 239 (1903), which
held that chromolithographs that depicted real scenes and
people, as photographs do, were copyrightable because they
were "the personal reaction of an individual upon nature.
Personality always contains something unique. It expresses
its singularity even in handwriting, and a very modest grade
of art has in it something irreducible, which is one man's
alone. That something he may copyright . . . ." Id. at 250.
In Jewelers' Circular Publishing Co. v. Keystone Publishing
Co., 274 F. 932, 934 (S.D.N.Y. 1921), aff'd, 281 F. 83 (2d
Cir. 1922), Judge Hand said, "Burrow-Giles [Lithographic]
Co. v. Sarony . . . left open an intimation that some photographs
might not be protected . . . . I think that . . . Bleistein
v. Donaldson Lithographing Co. . . . rules, because no photograph,
however simple, can be unaffected by the personal influence
of the author, and no two will be absolutely alike."
Professor Nimmer's treatise reports that Judge Hand's statement
of the law "has become the prevailing view, so that [almost]
any . . . photograph may claim the necessary originality to
support a copyright merely by virtue of the photographers'
personal choice of subject matter, angle of photograph, lighting,
and determination of the precise time when the photograph
is to be taken." 1 Melville B. Nimmer & David Nimmer, Nimmer
on Copyright (" Nimmer") @ 2.08[E][1], at 2 - 126.3 (1992
ed.) (footnote omitted). n2 We have stated before that the
courts have recognized repeatedly that the creative decisions
involved in producing a photograph may render it sufficiently
original to be copyrightable and "have carefully delineated
selection of subject, posture, background, lighting, and perhaps
even perspective alone as protectible elements of a photographer's
work." United States v. Hamilton, 583 F.2d 448, 452 (9th Cir.
1978); see also Time, Inc. v. Bernard Geis Assocs., 293 F.
Supp. 130, 142-43 (S.D.N.Y. 1968) (amateur photographer's
raw footage of the assassination of President John Kennedy
was sufficiently original because of the creative effort involved
in selecting type of camera, film, lens, area in which to
shoot, time to film, and position of camera).
Whether or not every photograph or raw videotape is original
and therefore copyrightable, it is clear from the record in
this case that the preparation of the two videotapes at issue
required the intellectual and creative input entitled to copyright
protection. n3 The district court so concluded after hearing
testimony, from the operator of the video camera and the pilot
of the helicopter in which the camera operator flew, regarding
the production of LANS's news videotapes in general and the
tapes in this case in particular. The witnesses described
the initial decisions about the newsworthiness of the events
and how best to tell the stories succinctly and effectively;
the selections of camera lenses, angles and exposures; the
choices of the heights and directions from which to tape and
what portions of the events to film and for how long. The
camera operator described herself as "an artist. I use a paintbrush.
I use the camera to tell a story."
AVRS's reliance on Cable News Network, Inc. v. Video Monitoring
Services of America, Inc. ("CNN"), 940 F.2d 1471, vacated,
949 F.2d 378 (11th Cir. 1991), to support its contention that
under Feist Publications, Inc. v. Rural Telephone Service
Co., Inc., 111 S. Ct. 1282 (1991), the videotapes did not
possess the required originality, is misplaced. n4 Feist stated
the "requisite level of creativity is extremely low; even
a slight amount will suffice. The vast majority of works make
the grade quite easily, as they possess some creative spark,
'no matter how crude, humble or obvious' it might be." Feist,
111 S. Ct. at 1287 (citation omitted). Feist held only that
a "garden-variety" telephone directory listing subscribers
alphabetically by surname was not sufficiently original because
the selection and arrangement was "entirely typical" and "devoid
of even the slightest trace of creativity." Id. at 1296-97.
The Court did not disavow the century-old proposition that
photographs may be copyrightable as the original products
of creative and artistic decisions; rather, the Court explicitly
reaffirmed Burrow-Giles, stating that "the originality requirement
articulated [therein] remains the touchstone of copyright
protection today." Id. at 1288.
III. First Amendment Preclusion of Copyright Protection
AVRS contends that even if the tapes are original enough to
merit copyright protection, we should adopt a bright-line
rule that no videotape of a newsworthy event is copyrightable
because its creator's proprietary interest must give way to
the public's First Amendment right of access to information.
Copyright law incorporates First Amendment goals by ensuring
that copyright protection extends only to the forms in which
ideas and information are expressed and not to the ideas and
information themselves. "The idea-expression dichotomy . .
. serves to accommodate the competing interests of copyright
and the first amendment. The 'marketplace of ideas' is not
limited by copyright because copyright is limited to protection
of expression." Sid & Marty Krofft Television Prods., Inc.
v. McDonald's Corp. ("Krofft"), 562 F.2d 1157, 1170 (9th Cir.
1977); see also Harper & Row, Publishers, Inc. v. Nation Enters.,
471 U.S. 539, 556 (1985) ("copyright's idea/expression dichotomy
'strikes a definitional balance between the First Amendment
and the Copyright Act by permitting free communication of
facts while still protecting an author's expression' " (citation
omitted)).
First Amendment concerns are also addressed in the copyright
field through the "fair use" doctrine, discussed in part IV
of this opinion. As we will note, First Amendment considerations
are relevant in determining whether the purpose of copying
a work and the nature of the work copied militate in favor
of finding a given use of a particular work to be a "fair
use," for which no liability should be imposed.
Professor Nimmer has suggested the idea-expression dichotomy
and the fair use doctrine may not adequately protect First
Amendment interests in some circumstances. 1 Nimmer @ 1.10[C][2],
at 1 - 81. Citing the exclusive photographs of the My Lai
massacre during the Vietnam War and the Zapruder home movie
of the assassination of President John Kennedy as examples,
Nimmer proposes that "where the 'idea' of a work contributes
almost nothing to the democratic dialogue, and it is only
its expression which is meaningful," copyright protection
of the expression should be limited in the interest of public
access to information necessary to effective public dialogue.
Id. at 1 - 82-1 - 84. Nimmer explains:
No amount of words describing the "idea" of the massacre could
substitute for the public insight gained through the photographs.
The photographic expression, not merely the idea, became essential
if the public was to fully understand what occurred in that
tragic episode. It would be intolerable if the public's comprehension
of the full meaning of My Lai could be censored by the copyright
owner of the photographs. . . .
Similarly, in the welter of conflicting versions of what happened
that tragic day in Dallas, the Zapruder film gave the public
authoritative answers that it desperately sought; answers
that no other source could supply with equal credibility.
Again, it was only the expression, not the idea alone, that
could adequately serve the needs of an enlightened democratic
dialogue.
Id. at 1 - 83-1 - 84.
Nimmer recognizes, however, that denying copyright protection
to news pictures might defeat the ultimate First Amendment
goal of greater public access to information by inhibiting
or destroying the business of news photography. Id. at 1 -
84.1-1 - 85. The treatise therefore suggests a news photograph
in which idea and expression are inseparable should be subject
to a compulsory licensing scheme unless within a month of
its making, the photograph appears in the newspapers, magazines
or television news programs servicing a given area. Id. at
1 - 85. n5
Because there was no showing that other depictions and reports
of the plane crash and train wreck were unavailable or omitted
information vital to the public understanding of the events,
and because the record establishes that LANS's tapes were
shown on local television programs immediately after the events
and thus were freely available to the public, we conclude
the problem perceived by Professor Nimmer was not present
in this case, and we reject, as indeed would Professor Nimmer,
AVRS's contention that the First Amendment precludes liability
for infringement of LANS's copyrights.
IV. Fair Use
AVRS contends that if the videotapes are copyrightable, AVRS's
use of them is protected by the doctrine of fair use, which
" 'allows a holder of the privilege to use copyrighted material
in a reasonable manner without the consent of the copyright
owner.' " Lewis Galoob Toys, Inc. v. Nintendo of America,
Inc., No. 91-16205, slip op. 9345, 9354 (9th Cir. May 21,
1992, as amended Aug. 5, 1992) (citation omitted). Fair use
is a mixed question of law and fact. Harper & Row, 471 U.S.
at 560. Where the district court has found facts sufficient
to evaluate each of the statutory factors considered in determining
fair use, as did the court here, we may determine as a matter
of law whether the challenged use is a fair one. Id.
Congress has identified four nonexclusive factors as "especially
relevant" in determining fair use. Id. The Copyright Act provides:
The fair use of a copyrighted work . . . for purposes such
as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching . . ., scholarship,
or research, is not an infringement of copyright. In determining
whether the use made of a work in any particular case is a
fair use the factors to be considered shall include -
(1) the purpose and character of the use, including whether
such use is of a commercial nature or is for nonprofit educational
purposes;
(2) the nature of the copyrighted work;
(3) the amount and substantiality of the portion used in relation
to the copyrighted work as a whole; and
(4) the effect of the use upon the potential market for or
value of the copyrighted work.
17 U.S.C. @ 107.
(1) AVRS argues the district court erred in finding AVRS's
use of the tapes was not a fair use because the use was commercial
in character. AVRS maintains its clients used the tapes for
"research, scholarship and private study," and therefore AVRS's
use must be considered fair in light of Sony Corp. of America
v. Universal City Studios, Inc., 464 U.S. 417 (1984).
Even assuming AVRS's representation of its clients' use of
the tapes to be accurate, Sony does not dictate the result
for which AVRS argues. Sony held distributors of videotape
recorders ("VTRs") were not vicariously liable for copyright
infringements allegedly committed by VTR purchasers because
VTRs could be used for "private, noncommercial time-shifting
[taping for later viewing] in the home," id. at 442, and such
a private, noncommercial, nonprofit activity is presumptively
a fair use, id. at 449.
Unlike the claim against the VTR distributors involved in
Sony, LANS's claim against AVRS is not that AVRS is vicariously
liable for alleged infringements by its customers but that
it is directly liable for its own infringements. The difference
is crucial: Under Sony, a VTR owner who tapes a copyrighted
movie broadcast over a public television station to watch
at home at a later time is protected by the fair use doctrine,
but a VTR owner who tapes the movie to sell copies to others
without the copyright owner's consent is subject to a range
of civil and criminal sanctions. See, e.g., id. at 434 n.15
("anyone who willfully infringes the copyright to reproduce
a motion picture for purposes of commercial advantage or private
financial gain is subject to substantial criminal penalties").
The fact that the VTR owner's customer buys the tape to watch
the movie at home at a convenient time will not shield the
VTR owner from liability; the ultimate use to which the customer
puts the tape is irrelevant, as is the use AVRS's customers
make of the tapes AVRS sells.
Moreover, if AVRS had been sued on a theory of vicarious liability,
AVRS's clients' use of LANS's footage for "research, scholarship
and private study" would not automatically be deemed fair.
The four statutory factors must still be considered. For the
same reason, AVRS's argument that its use of the tapes was
fair as a matter of law because its purpose was "private news
reporting" is unavailing. Even if AVRS's characterization
of its purposewas correct, it would not be dispositive:
News reporting is one of the examples enumerated in @ 107
to "give some idea of the sort of activities the courts might
regard as fair use under the circumstances." This listing
was not intended . . . to single out any particular use as
presumptively a "fair" use. . . . The fact that an article
arguably is "news" and therefore a productive use is simply
one factor in a fair use analysis.
Harper & Row, 471 U.S. at 561 (citations omitted). In any
case, AVRS is no more a "news reporter" than the VTR owner
who tapes a publicly broadcast movie is a filmmaker.
AVRS's purposes are "unabashedly commercial." Pacific & S.
Co., Inc. v. Duncan ("Duncan"), 744 F.2d 1490, 1496 (11th
Cir. 1984) ("Of course, every commercial exchange of goods
and services involves both the giving of the good or service
and the taking of the purchase price. The fact that [the defendant]
focuses on the giving rather than the taking cannot hide the
fact that profit is its primary motive for making the exchange.").
In Sony, the Court emphasized that if a VTR owner copied material
previously broadcast over the public airwaves for a commercial
or profit-making purpose, that use "would presumptively be
unfair." Sony, 464 U.S. at 449. This factor weighs against
AVRS.
(2) The second factor bearing on the availability of the fair
use exception is the nature of the copyrighted work - here,
videotapes of news events. "The law generally recognizes a
greater need to disseminate factual works than works of fiction
or fantasy." Harper & Row, 471 U.S. at 563; see also Sony,
464 U.S. at 454 (interest in expanding public access to television
broadcasting is factor to be considered in determining fair
use); Duncan, 744 F.2d at 1497 (the "importance to society
of the news could affect the definition of a fair use for
a number of reasons"). This factor weighs in AVRS's favor.
n6
(3) AVRS contends the third factor, the amount and substantiality
of the portion used in relation to the copyrighted work as
a whole, also weighs in its favor because AVRS copied only
a small portion of LANS's copyrighted footage: the "clips"
included in the television newscasts AVRS recorded. Copying
even a small portion of a copyrighted work may exceed the
boundaries of fair use if the material taken is the "heart"
of the work. See Harper & Row, 471 U.S. at 564-65 (while words
quoted by copyright infringers were "an insubstantial portion"
of President Ford's unpublished memoirs, they were the "heart
of the book" in that they were among the most "interesting,"
"moving" and "powerful" passages).
Although AVRS copied only a small part of the raw footage
shot by LANS, it was the most valuable part of that footage.
In preparing a newscast, a television station selects the
most effective and illustrative shots from the raw footage
available. Thus the news programs AVRS copied included what
LANS's customers thought was the best of the LANS footage
- its "heart." The third factor weighs against AVRS. n7
(4) The fourth factor, the effect of the use upon the potential
market for or value of the copyrighted work, "is undoubtedly
the single most important element of fair use." Harper & Row,
471 U.S. at 566. This factor militates against a finding of
fair use if there is a "showing by a preponderance of the
evidence that some meaningful likelihood of future harm exists.
If the intended use is for commercial gain, that likelihood
may be presumed." Sony, 464 U.S. at 451 (emphasis deleted).
Although the AVRS and LANS markets are not identical - AVRS
sells edited news stories copied from television news programs
to individuals and businesses while LANS licenses television
stations to use its raw footage in producing news programs
- there is an overlap between the AVRS market and the potential
LANS market. At least some AVRS customers might choose to
buy raw footage from LANS if they could not purchase edited
news stories from AVRS, and LANS might choose to sell the
raw footage to them. Cf. Duncan, 744 F.2d at 1496 ("[The news
clipping service] uses the broadcasts for a purpose that [the
broadcaster] might use for its own benefit. The fact that
[the broadcaster] does not actively market copies of the news
programs does not matter, for Section 107 [of the Copyright
Act] looks to the 'potential market' in analyzing the effects
of an alleged infringement."). This factor also weighs against
AVRS.
Only one of the four statutory factors (the nature of the
copyrighted work) argues in favor of classifying AVRS's unauthorized
use of LANS's copyrighted material as fair. The remainder
(the commercial character of the use, the use of the most
valuable part of the material, and the adverse impact upon
LANS's potential market) argue strongly to the contrary. On
balance, we conclude that the doctrine of fair use does not
protect AVRS from liability for infringing LANS's copyrights.
n8
V. Unclean Hands
AVRS contends the district court erred by failing to find
LANS was barred from prevailing on its copyright claim because
of its "unclean hands." "The application of the unclean hands
doctrine raises primarily a question of fact." Dollar Sys.,
Inc. v. Avcar Leasing Sys., Inc., 890 F.2d 165, 173 (9th Cir.
1989). We review factual findings for clear error. Lewis Galoob
Toys, slip op. at 9349.
AVRS maintains LANS should be barred from recovering for AVRS's
copyright infringement because LANS induced AVRS to provide
LANS with copies of videotapes at issue in this litigation
by giving AVRS a check for $ 346.13 on which LANS then stopped
payment. Arguably, this behavior could constitute unclean
hands. See 3 Nimmer @ 13.09[B], at 13 - 149-13 - 150 (defense
of unclean hands has been recognized where plaintiff "obtained
information as to the nature of defendant's work through unfair
means"). However, the defense is rarely effective, id. at
13 - 148, and is properly denied when the "plaintiff's transgression
is of an . . . inconsequential nature," id. at 13 - 150 (footnote
omitted). The district court did not err in concluding LANS's
behavior was not sufficiently serious to bar it from recovery.
VI. Injunctive Relief
AVRS contends the district court should have granted LANS's
request for an injunction barring AVRS from copying LANS's
copyrighted material without a license, and should have fixed
the terms of a license that would permit AVRS to copy LANS's
copyrighted material and ordered LANS to notify AVRS when
LANS's copyrighted material was broadcast. AVRS opposed LANS's
request initially but changed its position when the district
court ruled in LANS's favor on the merits. LANS now opposes
the injunctive relief it originally sought.
The district court had discretion to grant the injunction
LANS requested but had no obligation to do so after LANS abandoned
its request. Cf. Universal City Studios, Inc. v. Sony Corp.
of America, 659 F.2d 963, 976 (9th Cir. 1981) (citing Nimmer
for proposition it would be abuse of discretion to deny plaintiff's
request for permanent injunction after liability and threat
of continuing infringement had been established), rev'd on
other grounds, 464 U.S. 417 (1984). Neither was the court
required to compel LANS to grant AVRS license to copy LANS's
copyrighted material nor to protect AVRS from the possibility
that without the notification provision AVRS sought, it might
inadvertently copy LANS's copyrighted material and thus become
liable for further substantial damages. See Universal City
Studios, 659 F.2d at 976 ("In fashioning relief, the district
court should not be overly concerned with the prospective
harm to [defendant]. A defendant has no right to expect a
return on investment from activities which violate the copyright
laws. Once a determination has been made that an infringement
is involved, the continued profitability of [defendant's]
business[ ] is of secondary concern."). n9
VII. Damages
AVRS claims that because it had a good faith belief in the
legality of copying the newscasts containing LANS's copyrighted
material, the district court erred by awarding more than minimal
damages. AVRS relies on 17 U.S.C. @ 504(c)(2), which provides
that "in a case where the infringer sustains the burden of
proving, and the court finds, that such infringer was not
aware and had no reason to believe that his or her acts constituted
an infringement of copyright, the court in its discretion
may reduce the award of statutory damages to a sum of not
less than $ 200." The district court did not find AVRS "had
no reason to believe" its acts did not constitute infringement.
Even if the court had so found, @ 504(c)(2) does not mandate
a nominal award. On this record, the district court did not
abuse its discretion by declining to reduce the award. n10
VIII. Evidentiary Ruling
Finally, AVRS argues the district court erred by admitting
a videotape of the train wreck into evidence. "Evidentiary
rulings are reviewed for abuse of discretion and will not
be reversed absent prejudice." Roberts v. College of the Desert,
870 F.2d 1411, 1418 (9th Cir. 1988). AVRS argues it was prejudiced
because there would have been no evidence that AVRS infringed
LANS's copyright to the footage of the train wreck without
the tape. AVRS is incorrect. The videographer who shot the
footage testified at trial that she saw her video broadcast
on a local channel; another LANS employee testified the station
that broadcast on that channel had been licensed to use the
footage; and AVRS's log sheets showed AVRS sold a copy of
that station's newscast from the day in question to the Southern
Pacific Transportation Company, whose train derailed in the
wreck. This evidence was sufficient to permit the trier of
fact to infer AVRS sold a copy of a news program containing
LANS's copyrighted footage of the train wreck without LANS's
consent, thus infringing LANS's copyright. Assuming error,
AVRS was not prejudiced.
AFFIRMED. n11
n1 LANS obtained copies of the infringing tapes by presenting
AVRS with a $ 346.13 check on which LANS later stopped payment.
n2 The exceptions Nimmer would recognize do not apply in this
case. See id. at 2 - 126.3-2 - 126.7 (suggesting a photograph
of a copyrighted photograph would not be copyrightable, nor
would a photograph that duplicated exactly every single element
of a copyrighted photograph).
n3 We do not imply the mere time and effort LANS invested
in making the videotapes entitle the tapes to copyright protection;
originality in the work product is required. See Feist Publications,
Inc. v. Rural Tel. Serv. Co., Inc., 111 S. Ct. 1282, 1291-92
(1991) (rejecting the "sweat of the brow" doctrine that held
mere industrious compilation deserving of copyright even if
the compilation was not original).
n4 CNN is not precedential even in the Eleventh Circuit since
it was vacated for reconsideration by the en banc court. See
Ierna v. Arthur Murray Int'l, Inc., 833 F.2d 1472, 1475 n.4
(11th Cir. 1987) (opinion vacated on rehearing is not binding
precedent). The en banc court dismissed the appeal. Cable
News Network, Inc. v. Video Monitoring Servs. of America,
Inc., 959 F.2d 188 (11th Cir. 1992) (en banc) (district court
had entered permanent injunction which was not before the
court so appeal was dismissed as it would not be judicious
to grant relief sought).
In any case, the CNN panel considered an injunction barring
the copying of any portion of an entire newscast, which consisted
of "various news stories, prerecorded segments, interviews,
and weather reports" which themselves were "preexisting, collected
and assembled" works, CNN, 940 F.2d at 1485, a very different
issue from the copyrightability of raw footage that may be
used in such a newscast. CNN found the injunction too broad
because the newscast was a compilation of preexisting materials,
see 17 U.S.C. @ 101, and so merited copyright protection only
to the extent the selection and arrangement of those materials
was original. CNN, 940 F.2d at 1485-86; see also 17 U.S.C.
@ 103(b) ("The copyright in a compilation . . . extends only
to the material contributed by the author of such work, as
distinguished from the preexisting material employed in the
work . . . ."). The tapes at issue in this case were not compilations
of preexisting works or data; they were preexisting creative
works that were incorporated into the kind of compilatory
news programs the CNN panel discussed.
n5 No court has adopted Nimmer's proposal. Those that have
discussed it have found it inapplicable to the facts before
them. See, e.g., Krofft, 562 F.2d at 1171 & n.16 (defendants
infringed by producing "McDonaldland" television commercials
substantially similar to plaintiffs' "H.R. Pufnstuf" children's
television show; court found there "may be certain rare instances
when first amendment considerations will operate to limit
copyright protection for graphic expressions of newsworthy
events" but Nimmer exception was inapplicable because plaintiffs'
work did not fit Nimmer's definition of a news photograph);
Roy Export Co. Estab. of Vaduz v. Columbia Broadcasting Sys.,
Inc., 672 F.2d 1095, 1100 (2d Cir. 1982) (defendant CBS infringed
by including copyrighted film clips from several Charlie Chaplin
movies in a television biography of the comedian; court stated
"even if we were inclined to recognize some narrow exception
[such as the one Nimmer suggests] on extraordinary facts,
we would still conclude that the facts in this case could
not support the invention or application of even a limited
privilege" because the "showing of copyrighted films was not
essential to CBS's news report of Charlie Chaplin's death
or to its assessment of his place in history"); Iowa State
Univ. Research Found., Inc. v. American Broadcasting Cos.,
Inc., 621 F.2d 57, 61 n.6 (2d Cir. 1980) (defendant ABC infringed
by including in its film biography of an Olympic wrestler
portions of an earlier film biography of the wrestler produced
by two university students; court recognized that in the "almost
unique instance" of the Zapruder film, "it is at least arguable
that the informational value of that film cannot be separated
from the photographer's expression" but "such situations are
rare" and the student film at issue "does not fall within
this limited category"); Pacific & S. Co., Inc. v. Duncan,
572 F. Supp. 1186, 1193 (N.D. Ga. 1983) (defendant, a video
monitoring service like AVRS, infringed television station's
copyright in a news feature about a "fitness trail" at a local
college; court found Nimmer's hypothesis "theoretically provocative"
but inapplicable because the "soft news" story, "though informational,
hardly fits in a category with film of the My Lai massacre"
and because both the story and the trail itself were available
for viewing), aff'd in part and rev'd in part, 744 F.2d 1490
(11th Cir. 1984).
n6 AVRS cites the Supreme Court's statement in Sony that "copying
a news broadcast may have a stronger claim to fair use than
copying a motion picture," 464 U.S. at 455 n.40, to support
its contention that the nature of the copyrighted work at
issue in this case outweighs the commercial use to which it
was put. AVRS takes the Sony Court's statement out of context.
The Court was explaining that some copyrights are more valuable
because they "govern material with broad potential secondary
markets. Such material may well have a broader claim to protection
because of the greater potential for commercial harm." Id.
Thus, "copying a news broadcast may have a stronger claim
to fair use than copying a motion picture" because the potential
market for copies of news broadcasts is not as great as that
for copies of movies. This discussion concerns not the second
factor, the nature of the copyrighted work, but the fourth
factor, the effect upon the potential market for the copyrighted
work.
n7 AVRS argues that because its service is essentially one
of time-shifting, the third factor would not count against
a finding of fair use even if AVRS had copied all of LANS's
copyrighted footage of the train wreck and plane crash. AVRS
relies on the statement in Sony that because "time-shifting
merely enables a viewer to see [a televised copyrighted audiovisual
work] which he had been invited to witness in its entirety
free of charge, the fact that the entire work is reproduced
does not have its ordinary effect of militating against a
finding of fair use." Sony, 464 U.S. at 449-50 (citation omitted).
Again, AVRS's reliance on Sony is misplaced. While a viewer
is "invited to witness [a telecast program] in its entirety
free of charge" and may therefore do so at a time the viewer
finds convenient, the viewer is not invited to sell copies
of the program.
n8 AVRS does not qualify for the exemption from liability
provided by 17 U.S.C. @ 109(a), which allows the lawful owner
of a copy of a copyrighted work to sell the copy. AVRS did
not purchase from LANS the copies of the tapes AVRS sold,
and the television stations that broadcast the tapes were
only licensed to use them and could not authorize AVRS to
sell them. See 17 U.S.C. @ 109(d) (privilege of selling copy
does not "extend to any person who has acquired possession
of the copy . . . from the copyright owner, by rental, lease,
loan, or otherwise, without acquiring ownership of it"); Duncan,
744 F.2d at 1494 n.6 (for purposes of 17 U.S.C. @ 109, the
defendant video news monitoring service "cannot be considered
a newspaper clipping service because it does not purchase
the copy that it sells to its clients"); see also United States
v. Wise, 550 F.2d 1180, 1190-91 (9th Cir. 1977) (for purposes
of 17 U.S.C. @ 27, predecessor to 17 U.S.C. @ 109, theaters
granted license to exhibit films did not own the films and
so could not lawfully have sold them).
n9 Nonetheless, to avoid unnecessary litigation in the future,
it would be prudent for LANS to require its licensees to identify
LANS's footage when it is broadcast.
n10 We also reject AVRS's argument that the court erred in
awarding statutory damages of $ 10,000 rather than $ 5,000
for the infringement of the copyright to the plane crash footage.
The argument hinges on AVRS's theory that the district court
believed each of the two infringements was worth half the
statutory maximum of $ 20,000, but that because the statutory
maximum for the plane crash tape was actually $ 10,000, the
court should have awarded LANS only $ 5,000 for that infringement.
There is no evidence the district court awarded $ 10,000 for
the plane crash footage infringement based on a belief the
infringement was worth half the statutory maximum; the court
could simply have believed the infringement merited a $ 10,000
damage award.
In any case, the statutory maximum for the infringement of
the copyright to the plane crash footage was $ 20,000. The
court found the infringement occurred on March 1, 1989, the
date the statutory maximum increased from $ 10,000 to $ 20,000
under the Berne Convention. See Historical and Statutory Notes
to 17 U.S.C.A. @ 504 (West Supp. 1992).
n11 AVRS's motion to supplement the excerpts of record with
material previously stricken as outside the record is denied.
LANS's request for sanctions against AVRS for bringing the
motion is also denied.
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