In reversing the judgment for the plaintiff in this suit for copyright infringement, we described it as a case “about the attempt of a copyright owner to use copyright law to block access to data that not only are neither copyrightable nor copyrighted, but were not created or obtained by the copyright owner; the owner is trying to secrete the data in its copyrighted program — a program the existence of which reduced the likelihood that the data would be retained in a form in which they would have been readily accessible.”
Before us now is the defendant’s motion for an award of attorneys’ fees incurred by it in defending the suit both in the district court and in our court. The
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Copyright Act authorizes the award of reasonable attorney’s fees to the prevailing party in a suit under the Act. 17 U.S.C. § 505. And unlike civil rights suits, where while a prevailing plaintiff is presumptively entitled to an award of fees a prevailing defendant is entitled to such an award only if the suit was groundless, e.g.,
Christiansburg Garment Co. v. EEOC,
The courts have not said, however, that the symmetry of plaintiff and defendant in copyright cases requires a presumption that the prevailing party, whichever it is, is entitled to an award of attorneys’ fees. They have instead left it to judicial discretion by setting forth a laundry list of factors, all relevant but none determinative.
Fogerty v. Fantasy, Inc., supra,
The two most important considerations in determining whether to award attorneys’ fees in a copyright case are the strength of the prevailing party’s case and the amount of damages or other relief the party obtained. If the case was a toss-up and the prevailing party obtained generous damages, or injunctive relief of substantial monetary value, there is no urgent need to add an award of attorneys’ fees. Cf.
Mathias v. Accor Economy Lodging, Inc.,
We of course were not saying that the smaller the damages, the larger the fee. The fee is independent of the size of the damages. The point is only that when a meritorious claim or defense is not lucrative, an award of attorneys’ fees may be necessary to enable the party possessing the meritorious claim or defense to press it to a successful conclusion rather than surrender it because the cost of vindication exceeds the private benefit to the party. The best illustration is in fact a case like this, where the party awarded the fees, being the defendant, could not obtain an award of damages from which to pay his lawyer no matter how costly it was for him to defend against the suit.
Although the plaintiff managed to obtain a judgment from the district court, and so we do not go so far as to call the suit frivolous, the suit was marginal, as we explained in our opinion. The plaintiff was rather transparently seeking to annex a portion of the intellectual public domain. And since the prevailing party was the defendant, it obtained no affirmative relief from its victory. Unless a party in that situation has a prospect of obtaining attorneys’ fees, it will be under pressure to throw in the towel if the cost is less than the anticipated attorneys’ fees. We suggested in our opinion that “for a copyright owner to use an infringement suit to obtain property protection, here in data, that copyright law clearly does not confer, hoping to force a settlement or even achieve an outright victory over an opponent that may lack the resources or the legal sophistication to resist effectively,” could be a form of copyright misuse.
Most of the fees incurred by the defendant were incurred in the district court proceedings, and ordinarily that would argue compellingly for our limiting our award to the appellate fees and inviting the defendant to file in the district court a motion for the award of the fees that he incurred in that court. But in some cases in which detailed billing records of the applicant are submitted to the court of appeals, as the defendant has done in this case, and the opposing party has
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had a chance to rebut, as it has, we can make the full award and save the parties the added expense and the district judge the added bother of a separate fees proceeding in the district court.
Cengr v. Fusibond Piping Systems, Inc.,
In all the cases cited, except
Hensley
and
Walz,
the court of appeals was fixing fees for services incurred in the district court as well, as we are asked to do here; and that might seem contrary to the principle that the award of fees is committed to the discretion of the court in which the services for which fees are being sought were rendered; for that is the court that observed the rendition of the services. Ordinarily, of course, discretion is to be exercised by the judicial officer to whom that discretion has been confided.
Icicle Seafoods, Inc. v. Worthington,
The defendant’s lawyer billed the defendant for 778.2 hours of work, up to and including the trial in the district court, at an average rate of $115 per hour, for a total of $88,374.35. The plaintiff does not question the total number of hours billed or the billing rate. But some of this work, the plaintiff contends and the defendant concedes, was allocable to the state court proceedings discussed in our opinion on the merits, and the defendant suggests that we reduce the total amount by a third, to $58,916.23, to reflect this fact. Our examination of the billing records persuades us that this is indeed the correct discount.
The defendant’s lawyer billed the defendant another $7,849.05 for 68.7 hours of work spent challenging the plaintiffs request in the district court for an award of attorneys’ fees, plus a flat fee of $7,500 for work on the wording of the injunction and another flat fee of $17,500 for representing the defendant on appeal. The defendant wants us to ignore the flat fees and award a larger fee based on the number of hours that the lawyer actually worked on the two matters.
The courts of appeals have split three ways on the question of the weight to be given to the terms of the contract between the party and his lawyer in determining an award of attorneys’ fees in a copyright case. Compare
Pinkham v. Camex, Inc.,
This conclusion may seem in tension with the decision of the Supreme Court in
Blanchard v. Bergeron,
That the defendant did not prevail on every single one of its contentions is no reason to cut down the award of fees, however. E.g.,
Hensley v. Eckerhart, supra,
To summarize, the plaintiff is ordered to pay the defendant a total of $91,765.28 ($58,916.23 + $7,849.05 + $7,500 + $17,500) in attorneys’ fees.
