Plaintiffs bring this case alleging copyright infringement, hot news misappropriation, fraud, breach of contract, unfair competition, and unjust enrichment in connection with Defendants’ use of Plaintiffs’ BanxQuote National Average Money Market and CD rates. Defendants move to dismiss the case in its entirety. For the reasons given herein, Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss is granted in part and denied in part.
I. Background
A. Factual Background
For the purposes of this Motion to Dismiss, the Court accepts the allegations in the Second Amended Complaint (“SAC”) as true. Plaintiffs Norbert Mehl (“Mehl”) and BanxCorp do business as BanxQuote. (SAC ¶¶ 1-2.) BanxQuote publishes “database compilations and market research performance indices] known as BanxQuote National Average Money Market and CD rates” (“BanxQuote Indices”). (Id. ¶ 21.) Plaintiffs describe the BanxQuote Indices as systematic compilations of selected banking, mortgage, and loan data that “are frequently used as original benchmarks to measure the rates and performance of the U.S. banking and mortgage markets.” (Id. ¶¶ 33-34, 36.)
Plaintiffs allege that Defendant Costco Wholesale Corporation (“Costco”) entered into an agreement with Defendant Capital One Financial Corporation through its subsidiaries (collectively, “Capital One”) to provide a co-branded direct banking service that offered high yield savings accounts (“HYSAs”) and certificate of deposit accounts (“CDs”) to Costco’s members. (Id. ¶¶ 19-20.) On January 28, 2004, Capital One and BanxCorp entered into a limited, non-transferable license agreement (the “License Agreement”) commencing on January 12, 2004 with automatic annual renewals. (Id. ¶ 89.) The License Agreement permitted Capital One to access and use, for limited purposes, the BanxQuote Indices and the data contained therein. (Id. ¶¶ 89-91.) Plaintiffs allege that at the time Capital One entered into this agreement, it was acting on behalf of Costco (without disclosure), and that Capital One breached the License Agreement by redistributing the BanxQuote Indices to Costco in order to benefit the co-branded banking services. (Id. ¶¶ 88, 93.) Plaintiffs allege that they would not have entered into the License Agreement had they known of Capital One’s intentions. (Id. ¶ 95.) Finally, Plaintiffs allege that data from the BanxQuote Indices have been distributed by Capital One and Costco in “direct mail, print advertisements, newspaper advertisements, websites, and marketing presentations” from December 2003 to December 2008. (Id. ¶¶ 95-96, 98.)
*600 B. Procedural Background
Plaintiffs, proceeding pro se, filed their Complaint on February 25, 2009, and filed an Amended Complaint on March 25, 2009. After retaining counsel, Plaintiffs filed the SAC on September 2, 2009.
Plaintiffs allege seven causes of action. The two federal causes of action are Count One, which alleges copyright infringement based upon Defendants’ improper use of the BanxQuote Indices (id. ¶¶ 106-16), and Count Three which alleges violation of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (“DMCA”), based on allegations that when Defendants copied the BanxQuote Indices they altered or removed the copyright management information BanxCorp had associated with the data, (id. ¶¶ 126-33). The remaining causes of action arise under New York law. Count Two alleges hot news misappropriation of the time-sensitive data contained in the BanxQuote Indices. (Id. ¶¶ 117-25.) Count Four alleges fraud based on allegations that Defendants materially misrepresented their intentions with respect to their use of the BanxQuote Indices pursuant to the License Agreement. (Id. ¶¶ 134-43.) Count Five alleges breach of contract against Capital One only, based on the alleged distribution to, and use of the BanxQuote Indices by, Costco in violation of the License Agreement. (Id. ¶¶ 144-51.) Count Six alleges unfair competition based on allegations that Defendants’ use of the BanxQuote Indices gave Defendants an unfair competitive advantage both in terms of decreased web traffic at Plaintiffs’ websites, and in terms of direct competition in providing HYSAs and CDs. (Id. ¶¶ 121, 152-57.) Finally, Count Seven alleges unjust enrichment based on allegations that Defendants received value due to their wrongful use of the BanxQuote Indices. (Id. ¶¶ 158-61.) Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss was fully submitted as of December 10, 2009. The Court held oral argument on May 11, 2010.
II. Discussion
A. Standard of Review
“On a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss a complaint, the court must accept a plaintiffs factual allegations as true and draw all reasonable inferences in [the plaintiffs] favor.”
Gonzalez v. Caballero,
The Supreme Court has held that “[w]hile a complaint attacked by a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss does not need detailed factual allegations, a plaintiffs obligation to provide the ‘grounds’ of his ‘entitle[ment] to relief requires more than labels and conclusions, and a formulaic recitation of the elements of a cause of action will not do.”
Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly,
B. Federal Law Causes of Action
Defendants argue that Counts One (copyright infringement) and Three (DMCA violation) fail to state a claim. (Mem. of Law in Supp. of Defs.’ Mot. to Dismiss (“Defs.’ Mem.”) 3; SAC ¶¶ 106-16, 126-33.)
1. Count One: Copyright Infringement
There is no disagreement as to the elements Plaintiffs must establish to state a claim for copyright infringement. (Defs.’ Mem. 3; Pis.’ Mem. of Law in Opp’n to Defs.’ Mot. to Dismiss (“Pis.’ Mem.”) 4.) “ ‘To prevail on a claim of copyright infringement, the plaintiff must demonstrate both (1) ownership of a valid copyright and (2) infringement of the copyright by the defendant.’ ”
Cameron Indus., Inc. v. Caravan, Ltd.,
In this case, Defendants concede that Plaintiffs have pled actual copying, and do not contest that, if the works at issue are protectable, Plaintiffs own a copyright. (Defs.’ Mem. 3-8.) Instead, Defendants argue that Plaintiffs “have not validly al *602 leged infringement of protectable elements of Plaintiffs’ work.” (Id. at 8.)
There are three levels of generality at which Plaintiffs could be alleging copyright infringement. The lowest level of generality is the raw data from which the BanxQuote Indices are created (the “raw data”). The second level of generality is the product of the raw data, i.e. the actual average listed in the BanxQuote Indices (the “final value”). The third level of generality is the arrangement and presentation of the final values (the “arrangement”).
2
Both the final value and the arrangement are, in different ways, compilations, which the Second Circuit has suggested must meet three requirements for copyright protection: “(1) the collection and assembly of preexisting data; (2) the selection, coordination, or arrangement of that data; and (3) a resulting work that is original, by virtue of the selection, coordination, or arrangement of the data contained in the work.”
Key Publ’ns, Inc. v. Chinatown Today Publ’g Enters., Inc.,
To advance their Motion, Defendants make two arguments. First, Defendants contend that the raw data and final values are facts, which are not protectable, and not predictions or estimates, which Defendants concede would be protectable. (Defs.’ Mem. 4-6.) Second, Defendants claim that “[t]o the extent that Plaintiffs claim [that] Defendants infringed copyright in a compilation, the claim should be dismissed because it is conclusory and implausible,” and go on to argue that Plaintiffs have not alleged copyright in the arrangement. (Id. at 6-8.) Plaintiffs respond by conceding that they do not allege a copyright in the raw data (Pis.’ Mem. 3), but argue that they have a copyright in the final values (id. at 4-9), because the final values are not facts. Plaintiffs make no claim that they have a copyright in the arrangement.
No copyright can exist in facts “because facts do not owe their origin to an act of authorship!,] ... [and are] not created!,] • • • [but] merely discovered.... ”
Feist,
The Second Circuit has provided some guidance on how to determine the border between unprotected data and protectable compilations of data in the form of final values. In dicta in
New York Mercantile Exchange, Inc. v. IntercontinentalExchange, Inc.,
A futures contract requires the delivery of a commodity at a specified price at a specified future time, though most contracts are liquidated before physical delivery occurs.... The settlement prices are used to value the open positions.... Unlike on a securities exchange, the settlement price may not be the final trade, *603 for two reasons. First, because of the nature of trading, it is not always clear which trade was the closing trade.... Second, ... [f]or the “outer” months, those further from the trading date, there is often little or no trading on a particular day.... For high-volume months, settlement prices are based on a formula: “a weighted average of all trades done within the closing range.” ... For low-volume months, the extent of the ... creative judgment is disputed.
Id. at 110-11 (footnote omitted). The Second Circuit ultimately decided the case on alternative grounds, id. at 115 (“we do not decide whether settlement prices are unoriginal, and instead affirm based on the merger doctrine”), but stated that “there [wa]s a strong argument” that the settlement prices were unprotectable facts, id. at 114, though that argument was weaker for the low-volume months, id. at 116 (stating that if “there is no real market to speak of’ in the low-volume months, the settlement prices “appear[ ] closer to creation, to making predictions of expected values” (internal quotation and ellipsis omitted)). As the New York Mercantile court noted:
For high-volume months, settlement prices are determinations of how the market values a particular futures contract ... [,] not how the market should value them or will value them. Under this view, the market is an empirical reality, an economic fact about the world.... So characterized, there is one proper settlement price; other seemingly-accurate prices are mistakes which actually overvalue or undervalue the futures contract.
Id.
at 115 (emphasis in original). Therefore, consistent with the dicta in
New York Mercantile,
when confronted with raw data that have been converted into a final value through the use of an original formula, the Court should put significant weight on the degree of consensus and objectivity that attaches to the formula.
3
For example, if a scientist knew an object’s mass and the force acting upon the object, this raw data could be converted into the object’s acceleration due to that force by using the “formula” known as Newton’s Second Law of Motion. This use of a formula would merely discover an “empirical reality.” On the other hand, “formulae” that purport to identify the best baseball player based on some weighted composition of batting average, on-base percentage, defensive efficiency, and a myriad of other selective factors, are not discovering “empirical realities.” The difference lies in the originality of the method used to compile or analyze the data.
See Key Publ’ns,
Since
New York Mercantile,
at least one district court has attempted to navigate the current state of the law, though noting that the point at which raw data have become copyright-able expressions through the use of sufficiently original formulae “has not been fully clarified by the Second Circuit.”
RBC Nice Bearings, Inc. v. Peer Bearing Co.,
[w]hile there may be some level of judgment involved in selecting which particular “life factors” to utilize in adjusting the standard load rating calculation, based upon the record before the Court such judgment is very minimal given that the relevant life factors are published in industry guidelines. The level of judgment necessary to calculate the load rating information is undoubtedly no more than that needed to determine the settlement prices at issue in [New York Mercantile ]....
Id. However, as in New York Mercantile, the court did not rest its decision solely on this ground, and stated that it would reach the same decision even if “the load bearing ratings are expressions rather than facts,” because of the court’s application of the merger doctrine. Id. at 23. The court’s reasoning, therefore, like the reasoning in New York Mercantile, is merely dicta.
Nonetheless, the Court considers the reasoning in
New York Mercantile
and
RBC Nice Bearings
as persuasive authority. The key factors uniting these decisions, and distinguishing the results from that in
CCC Information Services,
are: (1) the raw data used to create the final value were unprotectable facts; (2) the method of converting raw data into the final value was an industry standard, or otherwise widely accepted as an objective methodology; and (3) the final value attempted to measure an empirical reality. When these three things are true, the final value produced from raw data ordinarily is not protected by copyright. In other words, to demonstrate that the final values produced from raw data are protectable by copyright, a plaintiff must demonstrate either that (1) the raw data used to create the
*605
final value were protectable; or (2) the method of converting the raw data into a final value was an original (but not necessarily novel) process that is neither widely accepted as objective, nor an industry standard; or (3) the final value did not attempt to measure an empirical reality.
5
This test captures the Supreme Court’s focus on “minimal” originality, as an expression can be copyrighted if minimal originality exists in the raw data, the method of producing the final value, or the object the final value attempts to measure.
See CDN Inc.,
The Court will, therefore, apply this analysis to the SAC. The SAC repeatedly refers to the BanxQuote Indices as “original” and “creative” (SAC ¶¶ 21, 25, 33, 36-37, 55, 107-08, 110), but without underlying facts supporting these conclusions, such statements are not by themselves sufficient.
See Twombly,
*606 More concrete, are the various descriptions of the BanxQuote Indices which are scattered throughout the SAC. These include allegations that the BanxQuote In-dices are: (1) “original database compilations which required complex custom software development and programming, computer program updates, original selection and arrangement of data, real time database input and output systems, complex algorithms and multiple computer hardware systems, and training” (id. ¶ 25); (2) the result of “systematically compiling, creating and publishing original works of authorship consisting of extensively researched, highly time-sensitive bank rate databases and indices] for a selected series of banking, mortgage and loan products throughout the United States” (id. ¶ 33); (3) “selected, coordinated and arranged in a complex and particular manner” (id. ¶34); (4) “original works of authorship consisting of the systematically researched and highly time-sensitive bank rate databases and indices] for a series of banking, mortgage and loan products throughout the United States, collected, selected, coordinated, and arranged in a particular manner” (id. ¶¶ 55, 110); (5) produced by “compiling thousands of constantly changing interest rates and banking information from discretionary and periodically changing leading banks in all fifty states of the United States at a substantial cost, both monetary and in the form of corporate resources and sophisticated technological infrastructure” (id. ¶ 118); and (6) “based on thousands of variable interest rates subject to change at any time by the banks, Fed Funds, the U.S. Treasury market, domestic and global money markets, London Interbank LIBOR rates, Eurodollar markets, bond markets, futures markets and foreign exchange markets,” (id. ¶ 119 (footnote omitted)).
As an initial matter, it is clear from these descriptions, that Plaintiffs cannot seek copyright protection based upon the underlying raw data, which consists of unprotectable facts about interest rates charged by certain banks and a variety of economic indicators. These are akin to the actual trade values at issue in New York Mercantile, and the physical characteristics of the ball bearings in RBC Nice Bearings. Therefore, Plaintiffs have failed to establish the requisite originality in the raw data. Similarly, the object of the BanxQuote Indices is to measure, among other things, the “rates paid by investors on negotiable certificates of deposit and high yield savings accounts” (SAC ¶ 42), which is an objective fact about the banking market. This is akin to the attempt to measure the value of settlement prices as they are (not as they should be or will be) in New York Mercantile or the radial strength of ball bearings in RBC Nice Bearings. Therefore, Plaintiffs have failed to establish originality in the object of the final values.
The remaining question, therefore, is whether Plaintiffs have pled sufficient facts to allege “minimal” originality in the method of converting the raw data to the final values. Plaintiffs allege that the method involves “complex algorithms.” (SAC ¶ 25.) Alone, this is insufficient.
See Sparaco,
*607
further allege that the methodology was developed “independently.” (SAC ¶¶ 34, 37, 55, 110.) This is relevant, as it suggests that the methodology is neither widely used nor an industry standard, but is not sufficient because purely objective methodologies could be developed independently.
See N.Y. Merc.,
measures were considered and others were omitted (why, for example, the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR) and not the equivalent Japanese (TIBOR) or German (FIBOR) rates?).
See N.Y. Times Co. v. Tasini,
Finally, the Court must consider whether copyright protection is barred by the merger doctrine. “[IJdeas cannot be copyrighted. Instead, only the manner of an idea’s expression is copyrightable.”
N.Y. Merc.,
all possible expressions are so ‘substantially similar’ that granting the copyright would bar others from expressing the underlying idea.”
N.Y. Merc.,
2. Count Three: DMCA
Plaintiffs allege violation of 17 U.S.C. § 1202(b)(1) and (3). (SAC ¶¶ 129-30.) These are sections of the DMCA, which provide:
No person shall, without the authority of the copyright owner or the law—
(1) intentionally remove or alter any copyright management information,
(2) distribute or import for distribution copyright management information knowing that the copyright management information has been removed or altered without authority of the copyright owner or the law, or
(3) distribute, import for distribution, or publicly perform works, copies of works, or phonorecords, knowing that copyright management information has been removed or altered without authority of the copyright owner or the law, knowing, or, ... having reasonable grounds to know, that it will induce, enable, facilitate, or conceal an infringement of any right under this title.
17 U.S.C. § 1202(b). Copyright management information (“CMI”) includes, inter alia, the title or identifying information of the work, author or copyright owner, the terms and conditions of use of the work, and identifying numbers or symbols referring to such information.
See id.
§ 1202(c)(l)-(3), (6)-(7). Courts have applied this statute in a straightforward manner such that Plaintiffs here need only allege (1) the existence of CMI on the BanxQuote Indices; (2) removal and/or alteration of that information; and (3) that the removal and/or alteration was done intentionally.
See Associated Press v. All Headline News Corp.,
Defendants argue that these allegations fail because they are conclusory and implausible. (Defs.’ Mem. 9.) What Defendants do not acknowledge, however, are the other allegations contained in the SAC, which include an example of an ad Defendants allegedly ran which includes the following CMI: “National Average of [Annual Percentage Yields] for money market accounts as published by BanxQuote.com as of 5/22/07.” (SAC ¶ 74 Fig. 1.) This differs from the CMI that Plaintiffs allege was associated with the BanxQuote Indices: “© [year of publication] BanxCorp. All Rights Reserved.”
(Id.
¶ 127.) Providing an actual example of the allegedly infringing ad is obviously more than a conclusory allegation. Defendants counter that the License Agreement includes “BanxQuote.com National Averages” as an acceptable means of identifying the BanxQuote Indices. (Defs.’ Mem. 10.) However, Plaintiffs allege that the altered CMI was distributed to a third party, Costco, in violation of the License Agreement and subsequently published by all Defendants in the altered form. (SAC ¶ 93.) Defendants cannot assert the protection of the License Agreement for conduct that allegedly breached the License Agreement. Finally, Defendants argue that Plaintiffs have failed to allege sufficient facts to establish a reasonable inference that Defendants knew they were infringing Plaintiffs’ DMCA rights. (Defs.’ Mem. 11.) However, Plaintiffs allege intentional breach of the License Agreement, and continued breach after Defendants were confronted with evidence of their allegedly infringing conduct. (SAC ¶¶ 93-98.) In addition, as noted above, Plaintiffs allege that Defendants used (slightly) different CMI than that laid out in the License Agreement. Taken together, these allegations are sufficient to give rise to a plausible inference that Defendants were aware of the appropriate uses of Plaintiffs’ CMI and chose to alter the information regardless.
Cf. Meijer, Inc. v. Ferring B.V. (In re DDAVP Direct Purchaser Antitrust Litig.),
At summary judgment, Defendants will have an opportunity to present evidence that the placement of the CMI either indi *611 cated that it did not refer to the BanxQuote Indices, or was sufficiently removed to demonstrate that Defendants lacked the intent required to show a violation of the DMCA. However, the Court declines to hold that, as a matter of law, CMI must be placed on the actual information on a website in order to state a claim under the DMCA. Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss Count Three is, therefore, denied. 12
C. Pre-emption of State Law Causes of Action
Defendants argue that Counts Two (hot news misappropriation), Five (breach of contract), Six (unfair competition), and Seven (unjust enrichment), are preempted. (Defs.’ Mem. 11.) As no party disputes,
[t]he Copyright Act exclusively governs a claim when: (1) the particular work to which the claim is being applied falls within the type of works protected by the Copyright Act under 17 U.S.C. §§ 102 and 103, and (2) the claim seeks to vindicate legal or equitable rights that are equivalent to one of the bundle[s] of exclusive rights already protected by copyright law under 17 U.S.C. § 106. The first prong of this test is called the “subject matter requirement,” and the second prong is called the “general scope requirement.”
Briarpatch Ltd. v. Phoenix Pictures, Inc.,
“In order for a state cause of action to survive preemption, it must have an ‘extra element’ beyond reproduction, preparation of derivative works, distribution, performance or display, which ‘changes the nature of the action so that it is qualitatively different from a copyright infringement claim.’ ”
Gusler v. Fischer,
1. Count Two: Hot News Misappropriation
The Parties are in agreement on the legal standard governing Plaintiffs’ hot news claim.
14
Plaintiffs rely on
Associated Press,
which states that “[a] cause of action for misappropriation of hot news remains viable under New York law, and the Second Circuit has unambiguously held that it is not preempted by federal law.”
Id.
at 461 (citing
NBA
under New York Law, a valid, non-preempted claim for misappropriation arises when: “(i) a plaintiff generates or gathers information at a cost; (ii) the information is time-sensitive; (iii) a defendant’s use of the information constitutes free riding on the plaintiffs efforts; (iv) the defendant is in direct competition with a product or service offered by the plaintiffs; and (v) the ability of other parties to free-ride on the efforts of the plaintiff or others would so reduce the incentive to produce the product or service that its existence or quality would be substantially threatened.”
Assoc. Press,
To satisfy the second element, Plaintiffs must allege not only that the news was time-sensitive when it was gathered, but that it was time-sensitive when it was misappropriated.
See NBA
It is less clear that Plaintiffs allege that the information was appropriated while it was still hot. To support this claim, Plaintiffs allege that “Defendants managed to steal 100% of the 2004-2008 database series of BanxQuote Indices]”
(id.
¶ 22), that “Defendants were responsible for the illegal publication and distribution of the BanxQuote Indices] online on their co-branded website ... for a period of approximately 1,800 consecutive days around the clock” (id ¶ 72), that Defendants’ “infringement include[d] the unlawful reproduction, distribution and public display [of] the BanxQuote Indftces] on Defendants’ co-branded products and marketing channels”
(id.
¶ 112), and that Defendants engaged in “constant and continuous unauthorized
daily
reproduction and multimedia redistribution,”
(id.
¶ 120 (emphasis added)). Nowhere do Plaintiffs explicitly allege that the “daily reproduction” of the BanxQuote Indices was of hot information. However, one of the two examples Plaintiffs provide of Defendants’ alleged misappropriation of the BanxQuote Indices is an instance of “approximately 146 million or more [] media impressions ... [distributed] by mail and in print[ ] through the publication of the BanxQuote Indi[ces] in
The Costco Connection.”
(SAC ¶¶ 73-74 (emphasis in original).) This publication dates the BanxQuote Indices data as “as of 5/22/07,” and dates the publication itself as “5/07.”
(Id.
Fig. 1.) Though the other example provided by Plaintiffs suggests a delay of approximately a month
(id.
Fig. 4), Plaintiffs need only show that they have a plausible claim for hot news misappropriation, not that every misappropriation gave rise to a hot news claim. Moreover, it is plausible to infer that the purpose of “daily reproduction” was to misappropriate daily — i.e. hot — information. On a motion to dismiss the Court must “draw all reasonable inferences in [Plaintiffs’] favor.”
Gonzalez,
Defendants argue that Plaintiffs have not pled the third element of their claim because “Defendant Capital One paid Plaintiffs to use the [BanxQuote Indices] during the term of the License Agreement. Additionally, the SAC is devoid of plausible allegations of free-riding by Costco.” (Reply Mem. of Law in Supp. of Defs.’ Mot. to Dismiss (“Reply Mem.”) 6.) This argument is unpersuasive as Plaintiffs allege use of the BanxQuote Indices over and above, and in breach of, the License Agreement as part of providing a co-branded service with the knowledge of all Defendants. (SAC ¶¶ 19, 27, 69-71, 86-96.) Plaintiffs have, therefore, adequately pled the third element of their claim.
To establish the fourth element of their claim, Plaintiffs allege that “Defendants were in direct competition with services offered by Plaintiffs. BanxQuote not only licensed its BanxQuote Indpces] to select third parties, but it also used its BanxQuote Indices] ... as a performance benchmark to facilitate the marketing of High Yield Savings Accounts and CDs of *614 fered by BanxQuote on behalf of other banks such as Defendant Capital One----” {Id. ¶ 121.) Defendants argue that this claim is “eonclusory and implausible.” (Defs.’ Mem. 16.) The statement that the Parties are in direct competition is, indeed, a conclusion, but it is not eonclusory because it is supported by the factual allegation that Plaintiffs market HYSAs and CDs that compete with Defendants’ co-branded savings accounts. Thus, Plaintiffs have alleged a non-preempted hot news claim, and, therefore, Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss Count Two is denied.
A Count Five: Breach of Contract
Plaintiffs allege breach of contract (against Capital One only) on the basis of Capital One’s alleged distribution and use of the BanxQuote Indices beyond that allowed by the License Agreement, and in violation of promises not to distribute contained within the License Agreement. (SAC ¶¶ 146, 150.) Defendants argue that Plaintiffs’ claim of breach of contract is preempted. (Defs.’ Mem. 17.)
The only “extra element” that Plaintiffs identify is the promise inherent in the License Agreement itself. (Pis.’ Mem. 16.) Defendants acknowledge the existence of the promise, but argue that there is conflicting case law within the Second Circuit as to whether the promise inherent in a contract is sufficient to defeat preemption and, of course, argue that the Court should follow the cases which hold that the promise does not defeat preemption. (Defs.’ Mem. 18.) There is, indeed, an intra-district split that the Second Circuit has not yet resolved.
Compare Am. Movie Classics Co.,
Courts in this district have continued to disagree as to how to analyze preemption of breach of contract claims.
See, e.g., BroadVision, Inc. v. Gen. Elec. Co.,
No. 08-CV-1489,
Of particular note for this case, are the results in the license and non-disclosure cases. In
BroadVision, eScholar,
and
Cooper,
courts were confronted either with license agreements or similar distribution agreements and held that the breach of contract claims were preempted.
See BroadVision,
The Court agrees with the eases that hold that “the extra element that saves a contract claim from preemption is the, promise itself.”
Architectronics,
Second, though the Second Circuit has not directly addressed this issue, the Court notes that in
NBA,
the Second Circuit quoted at length from Judge Easter-brook’s decision in
ProCD
on the issue of partial preemption under the Copyright Act, and adopted his reasoning.
NBA,
Third, the Court is persuaded by the reasoning in
ProCD.
In that case, Judge Easterbrook observed that rights equivalent to copyright are rights “established
by law,”
and “copyright is a right against the world” whereas “[c]ontracts, by contrast, generally affect only their parties.”
ProCD,
Finally, the Court agrees with Judge Easterbrook’s view that permitting state law contract claims would not harm the federal copyright scheme. Id. at 1454-55. Preemption protects federal law by making sure that the rights granted by federal law are not removed or altered by state law, and by ensuring that the states do not create rights that federal law does not recognize. While a contract may create or remove rights it does so only against individuals who consent and receive consideration for their consent, and does not *617 change the default rules that apply to the general public. Id.
Therefore, the Court adopts the rule of
Architectronics
and
ProCD,
and holds that, as a general matter, a breach of contract action is not preempted by the Copyright Act. In doing so, the Court follows Judge Easterbrook’s lead in emphasizing substance over form and “refrain[s] from adopting a rule that anything with the label ‘contract’ is necessarily outside the preemption clause” of the Copyright Act,
3. Count Six: Unfair Competition
To state a claim for unfair competition, Plaintiffs must allege “that the [Defendants misappropriated the [Plaintiffs’ labors, skills, expenditures, or good will and displayed some element of bad faith in doing so.”
Abe’s Rooms, Inc. v. Space Hunters, Inc., 38
A.D.3d 690,
“[U]nfair competition and misappropriation claims grounded solely in the copying of a plaintiffs protected expression are preempted by [17 U.S.C. § 301].”
Computer Assocs.,
Defendants argue that Plaintiffs’ unfair competition claim is preempted because it does not sufficiently allege breach of a fiduciary, or similar, duty. (Defs.’ Mem. 20-21.) Plaintiffs rely primarily on Defendants’ bad faith to establish an “extra element.” (Pis.’ Mem. 17-18.) However, as Defendants point out (Reply Mem. 7), bad faith is, like other scienter requirements, insufficient to establish an “extra element.”
See Gusler,
Finally, Plaintiffs assert that Capital One owed Plaintiffs fiduciary duties. (Pis.’ Mem. 18.) Plaintiffs cite no law for the proposition that a bank owes a corporation it enters into a licensing agreement with a fiduciary duty. Nor do Plaintiffs’ citations to the SAC establish a fiduciary relationship, as all Plaintiffs have alleged is that BanxCorp entrusted its most valuable asset to Capital One, that BanxCorp expected “the highest standard of care and undi
*618
vided loyalty,” and that Capital One acted in bad faith. (SAC ¶¶ 91-96.) These allegations, which amount to no more than bad faith (discussed above), only establish the existence of a business relationship, and are insufficient to plead a fiduciary relationship.
See Abercrombie v. Andrew Coll.,
A
Count Seven: Unjust Enrichment
[16] “To prevail on a claim of unjust enrichment, [ ][P]laintiff[s] must show that l)[D]efendant[s] w[ere] enriched; 2) at [P]laintiff[s’] expense; and 3) it is against equity and good conscience to permit [D]efendant[s] to retain what is sought to be recovered.”
Am. Med. & Life Ins. Co. v. Crossummit Enters., Inc.,
The preemption analysis governing unjust enrichment claims is substantially similar to that governing unfair competition.
See Briarpatch,
D. Count Four: Fraud
Plaintiffs allege fraud based on their claims concerning Defendants’ alleged joint scheme to induce BanxCorp to enter the License Agreement. (SAC ¶¶ 135-36.) To sufficiently allege fraud, Plaintiffs must allege “(1) a misrepresenta
*619
tion or a material omission of fact which was false and known to be false by [Defendants], (2) [that] the misrepresentation was made for the purpose of inducing the [P]laintiff[s] to rely upon it, (3) justifiable reliance ..., and (4) injury.”
JAF Partners, Inc. v. Rondout Sav. Bank,
Under New York law, the exact contours of what constitutes a duplicative fraud claim require careful parsing. One New York court has suggested that fraud and breach of contract causes of action can co-exist when there is fraud in the inducement:
A cause of action alleging fraud does not lie where the only fraud claim relates to a breach of contract. A present intent to deceive must be alleged and a mere misrepresentation of an intention to perform under the contract is insufficient to allege fraud. Conversely, a misrepresentation of material fact, which-is collateral to the contract and serves as an inducement for the contract, is sufficient to sustain a cause of action alleging fraud.
WIT Holding Corp. v. Klein,
*620 Plaintiffs do not allege the basis for a legal duty other than one rooted in the License Agreement. Plaintiffs allege misrepresentation as to Defendants’ intentions when Capital One signed the License Agreement, but these allegations are simply allegations of an intention to breach the contract by using the BanxQuote Indices in ways forbidden by the License Agreement. (SAC ¶¶ 135-36.) Furthermore, Plaintiffs do not seek any form of special damages that will not be available if Plaintiffs succeed on their contract claim. (Id. ¶ 143.) It follows that under New York law, Plaintiffs’ fraud claim is duplicative of their breach of contract claim. Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss Count Four, therefore, is granted.
E. Statutory and Punitive Damages
Defendants seek an order limiting the damages Plaintiffs could receive if successful on any of their claims. First, Defendants argue that Plaintiffs’ demand for statutory damages should be dismissed because Plaintiffs’ copyright registration, which was applied for more than three months after first publication, post-dates the allegedly infringing conduct. (Defs.’ Mem. 24 (citing 17 U.S.C. § 412(2)).) Plaintiffs concede that they are not entitled to statutory damages. (Pis.’ Mem. 23 n. 60.) Therefore, the Court grants Defendants’ Motion to Strike Plaintiffs’ demand for statutory damages. Second, Defendants argue that their alleged conduct was not egregious enough to warrant punitive damages. (Defs.’ Mem. 24.) Plaintiffs seek punitive damages on “each Count.” (SAC ¶ D.) Plaintiffs remaining claims are Counts One (copyright infringement), Two (hot news misappropriation), Three (DMCA violation), and Five (breach of contract).
Punitive damages are not available on Plaintiffs’ federal law claims. Punitive damages cannot be recovered under the Copyright Act.
See Football Ass’n Premier League Ltd. v. YouTube, Inc.,
Finally, Plaintiffs cannot receive punitive damages on their state law claims. Under New York law, to recover punitive damages on a breach of contract claim, Plaintiffs would need to show that Defendants’ “conduct is part of a pattern directed at the public generally,” but Plaintiffs have not offered any allegations that suggest that the conduct at issue in this case meets that requirement.
TVT Records v. Island Def Jam Music Group,
F. Standing
Defendants argue that this lawsuit can only be prosecuted by BanxCorp, and that Mehl should be dismissed from this action. (Defs.’ Mem. 1 n. 1.) Plaintiffs conceded this point at oral argument. Therefore, Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss Mehl for lack of standing is granted.
III. Conclusion
For the reasons stated herein, Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss is granted in part and denied in part. The Clerk of the Court is respectfully requested to terminate the relevant motion (Dkt. No. 20).
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Plaintiffs submitted a document entitled "Plaintiffs' Affidavit of Norbert Mehl in Opposition to Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss” with their Memorandum of Law. (Dkt. No. 29.) As the Court indicated in its memorandum endorsement of Defendants' letter of December 10, 2009 (Dkt. No. 30), because the affidavit is not mentioned in the SAC, the Court will not consider the affidavit in resolving Defendants' Motion to Dismiss. (Dkt. No. 30.)
. To illustrate by way of example, imagine that there are three banks in the world, A, B, and C, which offer interest rates of 4%, 5%, and 6%, respectively, on a given type of account. These facts are the raw data. The average of these rates, 5%, is the final value. The table or graph containing this, and other, final values, is the arrangement.
. In
New York Mercantile,
the Second Circuit also engaged in a comparison of the settlement prices at issue, and the “compilation of estimated projections for used car prices” that the Second Circuit held merited copyright protection in
CCC Information Services, Inc. v. Maclean Hunter Market Reports, 44
F.3d 61 (2d Cir.1994).
See NY. Merc., 497
F.3d at 115 n. 5. The crucial distinction between the two cases was that "[t]he values [in
CCC Information Services
] were based on assumptions about ‘average’ cars; as these cars did not exist, there could be no actual market to discover.”
Id.
By contrast, "settlement prices can be seen as 'pre-existing facts' about the outside world which are discovered from actual market activity.”
Id.
This analysis reinforces the point that when raw data are converted into final values, the final values should not be considered "facts” when the process of conversion contains at least minimal originality as evidenced by estimates or subjective decisions.
See CCC Info. Servs.,
. Of course, the formula chosen can be generally accepted and objective enough to constitute a “fact” without being completely accurate. That is presumably true for settlement prices, and is even true for Newton’s Second Law of Motion, which is inaccurate because it fails to consider relativistic effects. See Albert Einstein & the Theory of Relativity, http://csep 10.phys.utk.edu/astrl61/lect/history/einstein. html (last visited May 24, 2010) (lecture from "Astronomy 161” course at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville).
. The distinction between original and novel was drawn by the Supreme Court in
Feist. See,
. The plaintiff in
CCC Information Services
passed the test because projected values of hypothetical average cars did not measure an objective reality.
See CCC Info. Servs.,
.Though at first counter-intuitive, it is actually to be expected that the more acceptance a financial measure obtains (i.e. the more successful it is), the more "fact-like” it becomes. Just as scientific theories start as mere speculation and eventually gain a patina of objectivity, economic indicators that we now rely on, such as CPI, were once just glimmers in the eyes of economists. Compare Inflation, http:// www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/ 287700/inflation (last visited May 24, 2010) (outlining four basic theories of inflation, the oldest of which dates back to David Hume in the eighteenth century) with Bureau of Labor Statistics Handbook of Methods, Ch. 17 The Consumer Price Index, at 7-11 (updated June, 2006), available at http://www.bls.gov/ *606 opub/hom/pdi/homchl7.pdf (outlining the history of the Federal Government’s official measurement of inflation starting in 1919).
. For example, if the discretion being exercised is merely the choice between using one industry standard list of “leading banks” and another, that would probably be an insufficient exercise of discretion. However, if the leading banks are chosen through a purely subjective assessment of various banks' importance to the global market, that could introduce a sufficient degree of originality into the process as to render the final values protectable.
. Obviously, this conclusion says nothing about whether Plaintiffs would survive summary judgment, if Defendants were to seek such at an appropriate time.
. The Court is mindful of the fact that calculating the settlement price in
New York Mercantile
required considering the only information available — the last batch of trades — and coming up with some kind of weighted average. As the court in that case emphasized, however, there was simply no other way of creating a value for the settlement price and, hence, there was a limited range of possible expressions.
N.Y. Merc.,
. Defendants attempt to rebut this conclusion by relying on
Schiffer Publishing, Ltd. v. Chronicle Books, LLC,
No. 03-CV-4962,
Kelly
is similarly unhelpful. In
Kelly,
the court held that CMI was not removed from a picture on a website when the only CMI available appeared on the website but not on the images themselves.
. Defendants also argue that Plaintiffs fail to adequately allege that Defendants “distribute[d]” the altered CMI as prohibited by 17 U.S.C. § 1202(b)(3). However, Plaintiffs allege distribution of the BanxQuote Indices in “direct mail, print advertisements, newspaper advertisements, websites, and marketing presentations” (SAC ¶ 95), and while Plaintiffs do not explicitly state which of these methods of publication contained the altered CMI, this allegation combined with the allegation that the altered CMI was contained on Defendants' “website and [in] various other media”
(id.
¶ 130), is sufficient to “nudge[] [Plaintiffs’] claim[ ] across the line from conceivable to plausible.”
Twombly,
. The Court notes that even if the Banxquote Indices were not protectable under the Copyright Act, the subject matter requirement is broad enough to encompass them.
See NBA,
. The Court follows the Parties' lead in analyzing this claim under preemption rather than failure to state a claim, but notes that the two arguments are, in this case, so similar as to be almost indistinguishable.
.
See Kewanee Oil Co. v. Bicron Corp.,
. The Parties’ dispute about whether the conduct underlying this claim is covered by the License Agreement does not affect this determination as it is irrelevant to the question of whether a well-pled claim of unjust enrichment is preempted by the Copyright Act. (Pis.’ Mem. 20.)
