ORDER
This сause comes before the Court on a motion to dismiss filed by State defendants [DE 49] and a motion to dismiss filed by defendant Friends of the Queen Anne’s Revenge. [DE 47]. The appropriate responses and replies have been filed and a hearing was held before the undersigned on November 2, 2016, in Edenton, North Carolina. For the, reasons discussed below, the motions to dismiss are denied in part and granted in part.
BACKGROUND
Plaintiffs, Frederick Allen and his production company Nautilus Productions, have been the substantially exclusive underwater photographers of the shipwreck Queen Anne’s Revenge (“QAR”), the ship of the pirate commonly known as Blackbeard.
Plaintiffs allege that prior to October 2013, the State of North Carolina and its Departmеnt of Natural and Cultural Resources (“DNCR”) infringed, contributed to infringement, and induced infringement of Allen’s registered copyrights by uploading 'Allen’s video-footage to the internet
Plaintiffs allege that after entry of the settlement agreement the State and DNCR resumed infringing on plaintiffs’ copyrights. Plaintiffs allege that the State and DNCR have published, performed, and/or displayed plaintiffs’ video footage as well as still images in print materials. Plaintiffs further allege that in an effort to convert plaintiffs’ copyright assets to State property without payment to plaintiff, defendants collectively wrote and obtained passage of an amendment to an existing North Carolina statute, the effect of which is to convert copyrighted works of plaintiffs and others into public record, upon which under state law there is no limitation on use. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 121-25(b). The full text of the amended statute at the time of the filing of the complaint read as follows:
(b) All photographs, video recordings, or other documentary materials of a derelict vessel or shipwreck or its contents, relics, artifacts, or historic materials in the custody of any agency of North Carolina government or its subdivisions shall be a public record pursuant to G.S. 132-1. There shall be no limitation on the use of or no requirement to alter any such photograph, video recordings, or other documentary material, and any such provision in any agreement, pеrmit, or license shall be void and unenforceable as a matter of public policy.
Effective July 1, 2016, Session law 2016-94, s. 162, amended subsection (b) to read as follows:
All photographs, video recordings, or other documentary materials of a derelict vessel or shipwreck or its contents, relics, artifacts, or historic materials in the custody of any-agency of North Carolina government or its subdivisions shall be a public record pursuant to Chapter 132 of the' General Statutes.
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 121-25(b).
Plaintiffs seek a declaratory judgment that § 121-25(b) as amended is void and unenforceable as it is preempted by the Copyright Act, 17 U.S.C. §§ 101 et seq., and violates the Takings and Due Process Clause of the United States Constitution. U.S. Const. Amends] V and XIV. Plaintiffs further allege claims for copyright infringement, for unconstitutional taking pursuant to § 1983, as well as state law claims for unfair and deceptive trade practices and civil conspiracy.
The State defendants have moved to dismiss plaintiffs’ amended complaint, arguing that it is barred by the Eleventh Amendment,' that the individual defendants sued in their individual capacities are protected by qualified immunity and legislative immunity, that the complaint fails to state a plausible claim for relief, that plaintiffs lack standing to challenge § 121-25(b) as amended, and that this Court should abstain from issuing an opinion of first impression regarding North Carolina’s public record statute. Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(1), (2), (6). Defendant Friends of Queen Anne’s Revenge move to dismiss plaintiffs’ complaint for failure to state a plausible claim for relief. Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6).
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1) authorizes dismissal of a claim for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. When subject matter jurisdiction is challenged, the plaintiff has the burden of proving jurisdiction to survive the motion. Evans v. B.F. Perkins Co.,
Rule 8 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure “requires only a short and plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief’ and which provides “the defendant fair notice of what the claim is and the grounds upon which it rests.” Erickson v. Pardus,
The Court addresses first the immunity defenses rаised by the State and DNCR defendants.
I. Eleventh Amendment Immunity
“The Eleventh Amendment bars suit against non-consenting states by private individuals in federal court.” Bd. of Trustees of the Univ. of Ala. v. Garrett,
Plaintiffs argue in earnest that the State has waived its Eleventh Amendment immunity by the express language in the 2013 settlement agreement. That language reads: “In the event DCR, Intersal, or Nautilus breaches this agreement, DCR, Intersal, or Nautilus may avail themselves of all remedies provided by law or equity.” [DE 1-1 ¶ 32]. “The Supreme Court repeatedly has admonished that ‘[t]he test for determining whether a State has waived its immunity from federal-court
General consent to suit, including such consent as found in sue-and-be-sued clauses, has been found to be insufficient to waive a state’s Eleventh Amendment immunity. Port Auth. Trans-Hudson Corp. v. Feeney,
Although the State’s consent to suit in this instance is broad, in the absence of any clear declaration of its intent to submit to suit in federal court, the Court is constrained to find that the State has not waived its Eleventh Amendment immunity by entering into its settlement agreement with plaintiffs. See, e.g., Maynard v. Bd. of Regents of Div. of Universities of Florida Dep’t of Educ. ex rel. Univ. of S. Florida,
The Court next turns to the question of whether, in passing the Copyright Remedy Clarification Act of 1990 (“CRCA”), 17 U.S.C. § 501(a), Congress abrogated North Carolina’s state sovereign immunity to be sued for copyright violations of the type alleged by plaintiffs. Two questions must be answered in the affirmative in order for Congress to have properly abrogated the states’ sovereign immunity: (1) Congress must have unequivocally expressed its intent to abrogate sovereign immunity, and (2) and in so doing Congress must have acted “pursuant to a valid exercise of power.” Green v. Mansour,
By enacting the CRCA, there can be no doubt that Congress has stated clearly its intent to abrogate sovereign immunity for copyright claims against a state, its instru-mentalities, or its officers or employees in their official capacities.
Thus, as Congress may not rely on Article I alone to abrogate the state’s sovereign immunity, remaining for consideration is whether it may do so under Section 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment. Section 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment “grants Congress the power to enforce the provisions of the Amendment by creating private remedies against the States for actual violations of those provisions.” United States v. Georgia,
It is well-understood that the Fourteenth Amendment was “specifically designed to alter the federal-state balance.” Florida Prepaid,
In Florida Prepaid, the Supreme Court considered whether the Patent Remedy Act could be viewed as “remedial or preventive legislation aimed at securing the protections of the Fourteenth Amendment” for holders of patents. College Sav. Bank v. Florida Prepaid Postsecondary Educ. Expense Bd.,
Congress was dearly responding to a pattern of current and anticipated abuse by the states of the copyrights held by their citizens. If the text of the CRCA and the legislative history were not enough to demonstrate this pattern of abuse, the amount of suits filed against allegedly infringing states in recent years, even despite little chance of success, demonstrates the extent of the issue.
Having found that Congress appropriately abrogated State defendants’ immunity to copyright claims under the standards set out by the Supreme Court in recent cases, the Court finds it appropriate at this point to note its disagreement with those very standards which have resulted from Hans and the Eleventh Amendment jurisprudence it has spawned. If not constrained by the Supreme Court’s commands on this point, this Court believes that, under a proper understanding of the Eleventh Amendment, defendants would have no basis upon which to raise a defense of sovereign immunity in petitioning for a dismissal of this action. The Court is mindful that such an opinion is contrary to the decisions of courts in this nation which extend as least as far back as Hans v. Louisiana,
The Eleventh Amendment was meant to be only what it purports to be by its plain language: a bar of suits against states by citizens of other states or nations brought under the federal courts’ diversity jurisdiction. Indeed, it is сlear to this Court that the Eleventh Amendment was meant to clarify the basis of diversity jurisdiction in the federal courts, commanding simply
The literature supports this view. Many commentators and jurists have undertaken intensive studies of the history and structure of the Amendment. Rather than undertake a rigorous exegesis of the text of the Amendment here, the Court is content to cite to the substantial body of work that demonstrates convincingly that the history and structure of the Eleventh Amendment show that it reaches only to suits subject to federal jurisdiction exclusively under the diversity clauses. The body of commentary broadly agrees with this point, as it also agrees that Hans’s holding that a principle of sovereign immunity derived from the common law insulates a State from federal-question jurisdiction at the suit of its own citizen was wrongly decided.
A sober assessment of the ratification debates thus shows that there was no firm consensus concerning the extent to which the judicial power of the United States extended to suits against States. Certain opponents of ratification, like Mason, Henry, and the “Federal Farmer,” believed that the state-citizen diversity clause abrogated state sovereign immunity on state causes of action and predicted dire consequences as a result. On the other hand, certain proponents of the Constitution, like Pendleton, Randolph, and Pickering, agreed concerning the interpretation of Article III but believed that this constituted an argument in favor of the new Constitutiоn. Finally, Madison, Marshall, and Hamilton believed that a State could not be made a defendant in federal court in a state-citizen diversity suit. The majority of the recorded comments on the question contravene the Court’s statement in Hans ... that suits against States in federal court were inconceivable....
The language of the Eleventh Amendment, its legislative history, and the attendant historical circumstances all strongly suggest that the Amendment was intended to remedy an interpretation of the Constitution that would have had the state-citizen and state-alien diversity clauses of Article III abrogating the state law of sovereign immunity on state-law causes of action brought in federal courts. The economy of this explanation, which accounts for the rather legalistic terms in which the Amendment and Article III were written, does not require extravagant assumptions about the unexpressed intent of Congress and the state legislatures, and is itself a*537 strong point in its favor. The original Constitution did not embody a princiрle of sovereign immunity as a limit on the federal judicial power. There is simply no reason to believe that the Eleventh Amendment established such a broad principle for the first time.
Atascadero,
The position that the Eleventh Amendment was intended to constitutionalize a broad principle of sovereign immunity does not comport with the historical evidence or the plain meaning of the Amendment. There was no consensus at the time of ratification whether the doctrine of state sovereign immunity would have any application in federal court. Even if the evidence could show a consensus view that the Eleventh Amendment should embody such a position, that still would not explain why the particular language of the amendment was ratified. Any person embarking on a study of the Amendment and its subsequent re interpretations can be forgiven for the confusion that is sure to follow from trying to understand how these laconic words could have spawned such a far reaching doctrine. As Justice Stevens wrote, there are two Eleventh Amendments: the one in the Constitution and the one created by the Supreme Court. Pennsylvania v. Union Gas Co.,
The founders envisioned and wrote a Constitution founded upon the sovereignty of the people, not the states. There is little doubt that the whole purpose of the Constitution was to replace the failed government of sovereign confederate states with a government of sovereign individuals whose rights and liberties were ensured by a federal Constitution and a system of courts bound to that supreme law. The people of the United States delegated through the Constitution limited powers to the various organs and branches of government. Indeed, it is clеar from the first words of the Constitution (“We the People of the United States ...) that the true sovereignty in our system lies with the people, not any entity of government. Ours is a limited government, and only those powers expressly granted may be exercised by this limited government. This is an animating principle inherent in our founding and very society; it is an idea birthed in the Declaration of Independence
The doctrine of state sovereign immunity to federal law in federal court has frustrated the essential function of the federal courts to ensure the uniform interpretation and enforcement of the supreme law of the land. It frustrates the ability of individuals to receive what may be the only practical remedy available to them as plaintiffs. It does not enhance constitutional protections or advance the ideals of our constitutional form of government in which the people are sovereign. It is not required by the structure of the federal system designed by the Founders, and in fact has strangely turned our federal form of government and the Supremacy Clause on its head by leaving states free to resist at their pleasure that federal law which we claim is the supreme law of the land. Far from protecting the dignity of the states or ensuring domestic harmony, in modem times this anachronistic vestige of English commonwealth doctrine has been shown to accomplish one thing only: to shield state governments from the consequences of their illegal conduct that intrudes upon federal protections. -
Fundamental to the Founders’ understanding of the new constitutional government they wеre enacting was the principle that the federal government’s judicial power must be coextensive with its legislative power. See The Federalist, No. 80, p. 535 (J. Cooke ed. 1961) (“If there are such things as political axioms, the propriety of the judicial power of a government being co-extensive with its legislative, may be ranked among the number”); 3 Elliot’s Debates,- at 532 (remarks of Madison) (“With respect to the laws of the Union, it is so necessary and expedient ■ that the judicial power should correspond with the legislative, that it has not been objected to”). Indeed, any honest assessment of these circumstances must note the peculiar absurdity of a government in which the lawmaking body can create rights and remedies that cannot be recognized- in any court of law. The Founders could hardly have imagined constitutionalizing such an exercise in futility, but that is precisely what the extra-textual and unmoored application of the Eleventh Amendment has created today. ■
In this particular case, the effects are indeed troubling because, without express abrogation of immunity by Congress under the stringent standards laid out by the Supreme Court, plaintiffs would have been left with the unenviable and unjust position of holding a Constitutional right which cannot be vindicated in any court, federal or state.
In the end, the Supreme Court’s-vision of state sovereign immunity warps the*539 very notion of government under law. The Court’s invocation of state ‘sovereign’ immunity in cases where the state plainly is not sovereign—because it has acted ultra vires—resurrects the British theory of governmental supremacy that was anathema to the framers. It puts governments above, not under, the law. It makes government officers masters, not servants, of the People.
Amar, Of Sovereignty and Federalism, 96 Yale L. J. 1425, 1480 (1987).
Though the Supreme Court’s current interpretation of the Eleventh Amendment reaches back to the nineteenth century, longstanding doctrines do not become correct simply by virtue of being beholden to tradition. It is true that the honoring of precedent promotes stability in society and protects the interests of those who have relied on judicial pronouncements when ordering their affairs. But just because a doctrine is long accepted does not make it right, and the principle of stare decisis is perverted when relied upon as a defense for deliberate violations of federal law. See Kimel v. Florida Bd. of Regents,
For these reasons, this Court is convinced that the holding of Hans and its progeny are in error.
Nonetheless, this Court is constrained, under the absolute hierarchical system of courts in the federal judiciary, to hold that the defense of sovereign immunity is available to the states in federal court in a case arising under this Court’s federal question jurisdiction. However, as discussed above, in this particular case Congress has clearly abrogated state immunity in cases arising under the CRCA, and such an abrogation is congruent and proportional to a clear pattern of abuse by the states. Therefore, plaintiffs’ copyright claims shall not be dismissed on state immunity grounds.
As to the state law causes of action that plaintiff asserts against the State defendants, the Court finds that such claims must be dismissed on immunity grounds. Congress cannot abrogate a state’s' immunity to state law causes of action, only state immunity to federal causes of action. Absent a state’s express waiver of sovereign immunity, under the Eleventh Amendment, a federal court lacks subject matter jurisdiction to determine if state officers have violated the state’s own law:
A federal court’s grant of relief against state officials on the basis of state law, whether prospective or retroactive, does not vindicate the supreme authority of federal law. On the contrary, it is difficult to think of a greater intrusion on state sovereignty than when a federal court instructs state officials on how to conform their conduct to state law. Such a result conflicts directly with the principles of federalism that underlie the Eleventh Amendment. We conclude that Young and Edelman are inapplicable in a suit against state officials on the basis of state law.
Pennhurst,
Finally, this Court must hold, under Fourth Circuit precedent, that plaintiffs’ takings claims brought under § 1983 are barred by the Eleventh Amendment when North Carolina courts are available for such a claim to be brought. Hutto v. S.C. Ret. Sys.,
II. Legislative and Qualified Immunity
Eleventh Amendment immunity does not protect the individual state defendants who have been sued in their individual capacities. The Court declines to dismiss plaintiffs’ claims against the individual defendants in their individual capacities under Martin v. Wood,
These individual defendants have raised additional defenses of legislative and qualified immunity. However, “the Court does not believe that qualified immunity applies to the individual defendants as a matter of law because the law of [copyright] infringement is clearly established, relegating the application of such immunity to be decided as a question of fact.” Kersavage v. Univ. of Tennessee,
The individual state defendants further raise legislative immunity as a defense to counts I, III, TV and V. “Legislative immunity protects those engaged in legislative functions against the pressures of litigation and the liability that may result.” McCray v. Maryland Dep’t of Transp., Maryland Transit Admin.,
III. Standing
Defendants argue that plaintiffs do not have standing to assert contest the validity of N.C. Gen. Stat. § 121-25(b) because they are not harmed by the statute and are under no imminent threat of harm. The Court does not agrée and finds thаt plaintiffs sufficiently allege ongoing' and imminent harm resulting from passage of the statute.
Federal courts may consider only cases or controversies, and “the doctrine of standing has always been an essential component” of the case or controversy requirement. Marshall v. Meadows,
Plaintiffs allege in their complaint that defendants have taken the position that the 2013 settlement is no longer valid or binding on the parties as a result of the passage of N.C, Gen. Stat. § 121—25(b). This is a concrete and particularized harm. Plaintiffs further allege in their complaint that defendants are taking advаntage of the statute, and their position that' the settlement agreement is invalid because of the statute, to enter into contracts that
IV. Abstention
Defendants next ask this Court to abstain from assessing plaintiffs’ claims concerning N.C, Gen. Stat. § 121-25(b) because no North Carolina court has had the opportunity to interpret the meaning of the statute or reviewing its validity. The Court declines defendants’ invitation to exercise its discretion to abstain from hearing this case.
Under Railroad Commission v. Pullman Co., federal courts should abstain from hearing and ruling on matters of state law if the issues essential to the case are uncertain such that a ruling by a state court might obviate the need for the federal court’s ruling.
Alternatively, and as articulated in Burford v. Sun Oil Co., federal courts should also abstain from hearing and ruling on matters that involve a state’s complex regulatory scheme or efforts to create a coherent policy with respect to a jnatter of substantial public concern,
Further, in Martin v. Stewart,
V. Motions to Dismiss under Ride 12(b)(6)
Defendant Friends of the QAR moved to dismiss plaintiffs’ complaint, arguing that plaintiffs’ complaint fails to plausibly allege that it engaged in any acts of copyright infringement, unfair and deceptive trade practices, оr civil .conspiracy. - The State defendants similarly argue that plaintiffs’ complaint fails to support claims against the State or individuals sued in both their individual and official capacities.
Count I
The Court finds that plaintiffs have pled facts' sufficient to allow this Court to draw the reasonable inference that § 121—25(b) is invalid as it purports to regulate a matter in the express domain of federal law. “[A] 11 legal or equitable rights that are equivalent to any of the exclusive rights within the general scope of copyright ... are governed exclusively by [the. Copyright Act].” 17 U.S.C.. § 301(a). “[N]o person is entitled to, any such right or equivalent right in any such work under the common law or statutes of any State.” Id. State laws are pre-empted by the Copyright Act when a two-prong test is met: “(1) the work must be within the scope of the subject matter of copyright ... and (2) the rights granted under state law must be equivalent to any exclusive rights within the scope of federal copyright.” United States ex rel. Berge v. Board of Trs. of the Univ. of Ala.,
Central to this case is the State’s passage of N.C. Gen. Stat. § 121—25(b), which even in its current form purports to convert copyrighted materials into the public record of the State where such materials are “in the custody of agency of North Carolina government or its subdivisions.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 121-25(b). Public records are “the property of the people” under North Carolina law. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 132-l(b). North Carolina’s statute therefore purports to regulate the right to use and copy “photographs, video recordings, or other documentary materials,” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 121—25(b), which is subject matter within the scope of the Copyright Act. Plaintiffs assert the right to use such photographs, video recordings, and other documentary materials under exclusive copyright, but the state statute in question purports to transfer those exact same rights to the public domain. By asserting copyright over those works, plaintiffs would be in violation of this statute. For these reasons, plaintiffs have sufficiently stated a plausible claim that the statute is pre-empted by federal law and therefore invalid.
Count II
The Court also finds that plaintiffs have sufficiently stated a claim of copyright infringement on the part of all defendants. Original works of authorship that are fixed in a tangible medium of expression are federally protected rights, rooted in the United States Constitution and protected by the federal Copyright Act. 17 U.S.C. § 101 et seq. 17 U.S.C. § 102; U.S. Ex Rel. Berge v. Board of Trustees of Univ. of Ala.,
In their complaint, plaintiffs sufficiently pled specific facts that allow the inference that each defendant has infringed plaintiffs’ registered copyright works after the 2013 settlement agreement. Plaintiffs identify federal registrations and detail specific instances of infringement,, including the type of media allegedly infringed, where examples of the infringements can be found, and how the infringement has allegedly continued. The State defendants are not shielded by the Eleventh Amendment’s immunity from this claim, and plaintiffs have pled sufficient facts that, if true, allow the inference that both State defendants and defendant Friends of the QAR have violated plaintiffs’ federal copyrights. The defenses defendants raise to this claim, such as whether such uses of plaintiffs’ work can constitute “fair use” under federal law, is a question of fact that cannot be determined at this stage of the proceedings.
Finally, plaintiffs brought claims alleging violations of North Carolina’s Unfair and Deceptive Trade Practices Act (“UDTPA”) and civil conspiracy. As discussed before, State defendants are immune to such state law causes of action in federal court. As to defendant Friends of the QAR, the Court finds that plaintiffs have failed to state a plausible claims for relief and that these claims must be dismissed.
In order to state a claim for unfair or deceptive trade practices, a plaintiff must show that: (1) the defendant committed an unfair or deceptive act or practice, (2) the action in question was in or affecting commerсe, and (3) the act proximately caused injury to the plaintiff. Dalton v. Camp,
To the extent plaintiffs allege a violation of UDTPA on the basis of copyright infringement, such a cause of action is preempted by the Copyright Act. See 17 U.S.C. § 301(a). To the extent plaintiffs allege a violation of UDTPA on the basis of Friends of the QAR’s efforts in favor of passage of N.C. Gen. Stat. § 121-25, such allegations fail to state a plausible claim for relief. “The First Amendment protects the right of an individual to speak freely, to advocate ideas, to associate with others, and to petition his government for redress of grievances,” Minnesota State Bd. for Cmty. Colleges v. Knight,
Plaintiffs’ claim of civil conspiracy fails for similar reasons. Under North Carolina law, “[t]here is no independent cause of action for civil conspiracy.” Toomer v. Garrett,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, State defendants’ motion to dismiss [DE 49] is DENIED IN PART and GRANTED IN PART and defendant Friends of the Queen Anne’s Revenge’s motion to dismiss is DENIED IN PART and GRANTED IN PART. [DE 47]. Plaintiffs’ first and second
Notes
. Edward Tеach, more famously known as Blackbeard, notoriously pirated vessels across the Caribbean and eastern coast of Britain’s North American colonies. In 1717 Teach captured a French merchant vessel, renamed her Queen Anne's Revenge, and equipped her with 40 guns. After giving himself the rank of com? modore, Teach formed an alliance of pirates and blockaded the port of Charles Town, South Carolina. Shortly after ransoming the town’s inhabitants, he ran the Queen Anne's Revenge aground on a sandbar near Beaufort, North Carolina, This year marks the 399th anniversary of his death in a battle with Lieutenant Robert Maynard in Ocracoke,- North Carolina.
. The full text of the CRCA is as follows:
Anyone who violates any of the exclusive rights of the copyright owner as provided by sections 106 through 122 or of the author as provided in section 106A(a), or who imports copies or phonorecords into the United States in violation of section 602, is an infringer of the copyright or right of the author, as the case may be. For purposes of this chapter (other thаn section 506), any reference to copyright shall be deemed to include the rights conferred by section 106A(a). As used in this subsection, the term ‘anyone’ includes any State, any instrumentality of a State, and any officer or employee of a State or instrumentality of a State acting in his or her official capacity. Any State, and any such instrumentality, officer, or employee, shall be subject to the provisions of this title in the same manner and to the same extent as any nongovernmental entity.
17 U.S.C. § 501(a).
. See, e.g., Chavez v. Arte Publico Press,
. See, e.g., Jackson, The Supreme Court, the Eleventh Amendment, and State Sovereign Immunity, 98 Yale L.J. 1 (1988); Amar, Of Sovereignty and Federalism, 96 Yale L.J. 1425 (1987); Fletcher, A Historical Interpretation of the Eleventh Amendment: A Narrow Construction of an Affirmative Grant of Jurisdiction Rather than a Prohibition Against Jurisdiction, 35 Stan. L.Rev. 1033 (1983); Gibbons, The Eleventh Amendment and State Sovereign Immunity: A Reinterpretation, 83 Colum. L.Rev. 1889 (1983); Field, The Eleventh Amendment and Other Sovereign Immunity Doctrines: Congressional Imposition of Suit Upon the States, 126 U. Pa. L.Rev. 1203 (1978). The literature is "remarkably consistent in its evaluation of the historical evidence and text of the amendment as not supporting a broad rule of constitutional immunity for states.” Jackson,
. See Alden v. Maine,
. The Court also notes the particularly troubling context in which the decision of Hans was written. According to many commentators, the precedential value of the opinion should be reconsidered because the decision was "an integral part of the nation's surrender to southern intransigence and racial oppression” and constituted a “rejection of both established Eleventh Amendment doctrine and the principles of the new post-Civil War Constitution.” Purcell, The Particularly Dubious Case of Hans v. Louisiana: An Essay on Law, Race, History, and "Federal Courts", 81 N.C.L.Rev, 1927 (2003); see also Gibbons, The Eleventh Amendment and State Sovereign Immunity: A Reinterpretation, 83 Colum. L. Rev. 1889, 2000 (1983) ("Without weakening the contract clause, which over the next two decades the [Hans] Court might need both in its fight against government regulation of business and as a weapon against defaulting local governments, the justices needed a way to let the South win the repudiation war,' The means [the ‘Hans court] chose was' to rewrite the eleventh amendment and the history of its adoption”); J, Orth, Judicial Power of the United States: The Eleventh Amendment in American History 9 (1982); but see generally Collins, The Conspiracy Theory of the Eleventh Amendment, 88 Colum. L. Rev. 212, 243 (1988) (suggesting that the Southern debt crisis may not have been the only factor driving the Court's Eleventh Amendment jurisprudence during this period, but acknowledging that "[i]t is perfectly conceivable that Compromise-related politics exerted their influence at the margin—in doubtful cases in which the Court might have gone either way”).
. 17 U.S.C. § 107 ("In determining whether the use made of a work in any particular case
