Defendant-appellant Albert E. Price, Inc. (Price, Inc.) appeals the judgment awarding damages, injunctive relief and attorney’s fees to Carolyn N. McCulloch, Lucyann W. Cameron, Elizabeth P. Smoot, and the Original Red Plate Company (collectively referred to as plaintiffs or ORP) for copyright infringement following a bench trial.
Price, Inc. contends (1) the district court failed to apply the first prong of this court’s two-part test for “substantial similarity” to determine copyright infringement, (2) the district court failed to conclude that the “idea” and “expression” behind ORP’s plate are inseparable and thus not subject to copyright protection, (3) the district court failed to discount the phrase, “You Are Special Today,” in evaluating the two-part substantial similarity test for copyright infringement, and (4) the district court abused its discretion in awarding attorney’s fees. We affirm in part, and reverse and remand the issue of attorney’s fees.
I.
Carolyn N. McCulloch, Lucyann W. Cameron, and Elizabeth P. Smoot jointly designed a decorative red plate which bears the phrase “You Are Special Today.” The plate is red with white lettering and contains a floral design. The designers formed The Original Red Plate Company to market their creation. The plaintiffs also developed a booklet entitled “The Magic of the Red Plate” to accompany each sale.
In March 1979, prior to the first sale of the plate, the plaintiffs filed an application with the Copyright Office to register their plate as an unpublished work. A copyright, certificate number VAu-8-504, was issued effective July 9, 1979. ORP also applied for and received a copyright certificate on the plate and booklet in 1982.
In January 1984, ORP filed a complaint claiming copyright and trademark infringement. These claims were based on Price, Inc.’s sale of a decorative plate which bears the phrase “You Are Special Today” and a floral rose design. The plate is white with red lettering. Price, Inc. began selling its plate in 1983.
The district court granted Price, Inc.’s motion for summary judgment on the trademark infringement claim. ORP has not appealed this order.
Following a bench trial, the district court held that (1) Price, Inc. infringed ORP’s copyright by copying and selling its plate, (2) Price, Inc. is enjoined from making further sales of the infringing plate, (3) Price, Inc.’s inventory of infringing plates is to be destroyed, and (4) Price, Inc. is liable to ORP for its damages and profits derived by Price, Inc. as a result of the copyright infringement. The court awarded ORP costs and attorney’s fees.
H.
Findings of fact are subject to the clearly erroneous standard of review.
Cooling Systems & Flexibles, Inc. v. Stuart Radiator, Inc., 777
F.2d 485, 487 (9th Cir.1985);
Anderson v. City of Bessemer City,
III.
To make out a claim for copyright infringement, the plaintiff must establish that (1) he owns the copyright in the work in question, (2) the defendant had access to the copyrighted work, and (3) there is “substantial similarity” not only of the general ideas of the works but of the expression of those ideas as well.
Landsberg v. Scrabble Crossword Game Players, Inc.,
736 F.2d
We have developed a two-step test to determine substantial similarity in the ideas of a work and their expression.
Cooling Systems, 111
F.2d at 492 n. 9;
Litchfield v. Spielberg,
Similarity of
expression
depends on a subjective, intrinsic test which focuses on the response of the “ordinary reasonable person” to the works.
Litchfield,
Price, Inc. contends the district court failed to apply this court’s two-step test for substantial similarity. Price, Inc. argues “the district court short circuited this two-step test by proceeding directly to the second step,” and that “no findings were made on the idea behind ORP’s plate or on the substantial similarity of ideas behind ORP’s plate and Price’s plate.” (Emphasis added).
Paragraph 17 of the district court’s Findings of Fáct states that Price, Inc.’s plate “is confusingly similar in appearance to Plaintiffs’ plate_” This finding satisfies the similarity of ideas prong of the two-part test applied in
Litchfield.
In
Litchfield,
we stated that the similarity of ideas prong may be shown by focusing on the similarities in the objective details of the works.
Price, Inc. next argues that “[ejveri if the ideas behind the ORP plate and the Price plate are substantially similar, the failure to identify the idea behind the ORP plate undermined the district court’s ability to properly evaluate the scope of copyright protection to be accorded ORP’s work.”
Under our two-part test for copyright infringement, it is not necessary to determine the scope of copyright protection or to identify the idea behind the ORP plate as suggested by Price, Inc. Price, Inc. has not cited any authority which supplements this court’s two-part test for copyright infringement with these additional elements, and our research has disclosed none. The district court did not err in failing to identify the idea behind the ORP plate or to determine the scope of copyright protection accorded the ORP plate.
IV.
Price, Inc. also contends the district court’s finding that the ORP plate and the Price, Inc. plate are substantially similar is clearly erroneous. Price, Inc. argues that “[a]ny similarities in the two plates are the unavoidable consequence of expressing the same uncopyrightable idea,” relying on
Herbert Rosenthal Jewelry Corp. v. Kalpakian,
In
Kalpakian,
plaintiff sued for copyright infringement of its jeweled bee pin claiming it should be protected against the manufacture of any substantially similar object.
What is basically at stake is the extent of the copyright owner’s monopoly—from how large an area of activity did Congress intend to allow the copyright owner to exclude others? We think the production of jeweled bee pins is a larger private preserve than Congress intended to be set aside in the public market without a patent. A jeweled bee pin is therefore an “idea” that defendants were free to copy. Plaintiff seems to agree, for it disavows any claim that defendants cannot manufacture and sell jeweled bee pins and concedes that only plaintiffs particular design or “expression” of the jeweled bee pin “idea” is protected under its copyright. The difficulty, as we have noted, is that on this record the “idea” and its “expression” appear to be indistinguishable. There is no greater similarity between the pins of plaintiff and defendants than is inevitable from the use of jewel-encrusted bee forms in both.
When the “idea” and its “expression” are thus inseparable, copying the “expression” will not be barred, since protecting the “expression” in such circumstances would confer a monopoly of the “idea” upon the copyright owner free of the conditions and limitations imposed by the patent law.
Id. at 742 (emphasis added). In Krofft, we further explained:
The idea and the expression will coincide when the expression provides nothing new or additional over the idea.... [¶] When idea and expression coincide, there will be protection against nothing other than identical copying of the work_ [T]he scope of copyright protection increases with the extent expression differs from the idea.
The
Krofft
court provides a test for determining whether idea and expression are indistinguishable: “If, in describing
how a work is expressed,
the description differs little from a
simple
description of
what the work is,
then idea and expression coincide.”
Id.
at 1168 n. 10 (emphasis added). Put otherwise, “if a work cannot be described in abstract terms, the expression adds nothing to the idea.”
Midway Mfg. Co. v. Bandai-America, Inc.,
Lucyann Cameron, one of the co-designers of the ORP plate, testified “[t]he idea behind the plate was to honor somebody at dinner if they had done something.” This idea is expressed in a red plate with the phrase “You Are Special Today” printed around the rim of the plate. Clearly there are many other possible ways of honoring someone special at dinner. Traditionally, plaques, gold watches, and jeweled pins have also been used to express such appreciation. The idea and its expression are not unified in this case under the Krofft test.
Y.
Price, Inc. claims that the district court erred in considering the uncopyrightable phrase, “You Are Special Today,” in evaluating substantial similarity. Relying on this court’s decision in
Cooling Systems,
Price, Inc. argues that after discounting the uncopyrightable phrase, the ORP plate and the Price, Inc. plate “are not similar, much less substantially similar. ...” ORP responds that under
Roth Greeting Cards v. United Card Co.,
In
Roth Greeting Cards,
both litigants were engaged in the greeting card business.
Price, Inc. attempts to distinguish Roth Greeting Cards on its facts by arguing that “the allegedly infringing greeting cards were similar in much more than the unprotectable element involved, the text.” This argument is not supported by the record. The district court found the plates “confusingly similar in appearance,” and concluded: “Analysis of the copying issue calls for an assessment of the concept, feel and mood of the respective works when considered in their totalities.” The district court's finding supports the conclusion that the plates were substantially similar in more than text.
Price, Inc. asserts that our decision in
Cooling Systems
requires us to discount the text “You Are Special Today” in evaluating substantial similarity. In
Cooling Systems,
the subject matter of the copyright infringement action was an illustrated radiator catalog.
What is important is not whether there is substantial similarity in the total concept and feel of the works, but whether the very small amount of protectible expression in Cooling Systems’ catalog is substantially similar to the equivalent portions of Stuart’s catalog.
Id. at 493 (citation omitted). Cooling Systems is inapplicable because the instant case involves an artistic work, while Cooling Systems involved a factual work. In this respect, we noted as follows:
The works at issue here contain a great many unprotectible facts and very little protectible expression of arrangement of those facts. This is not altogether surprising. Catalogs, ,by definition, are saturated with facts, numbers, and literal depictions of concrete objects. As we emphasized in an only slightly different context, copyright law considers factual works to be fundamentally different from more artistic works: “similarity of expression may have to amount to verbatim reproduction or very close paraphrasing before a factual work will be deemed infringed.”
VI.
Price, Inc. further contends the district court erred in finding that ORP had secured a copyright on its plate as a whole. We are asked to conclude instead that the copyright only protected the floral designs on the plate. Price, Inc. argues that ORP should be estopped from claiming copyright protection beyond the floral designs on its plate.
Price, Inc.’s first claim is belied by the record. The district court did not make a finding that ORP had a copyright on its plate as a whole. Price, Inc. cites finding of fact paragraph 11 and conclusion of law paragraph 7 to support this assertion. The record does not support Price, Inc.’s contention. The court found as follows:
11. Plaintiffs have properly secured registration of their plate in the United States Copyright Office, both prior and subsequent to “publication” of their plate.
Based on this finding, the court concluded:
7. Proper analysis of the copyrightability of Plaintiffs’ ornamental plate requires that the work be considered as a whole, including any elements which may not be independently copyrightable apart from the work. Roth Greeting Cards v. United Card Co.,429 F.2d 1106 (CA 9, 1970).
Price, Inc. next claims ORP should be estopped from claiming copyright protection extending beyond the floral designs in its plate. Price, Inc. argues that estop-pel arose when the Copyright Office notified ORP regarding its third application for copyright “that the only portion of the work which is subject to copyright protection is the three floral illustrations applied to the plate.” This claim is without merit.
VII.
Finally, Price, Inc. contends the district court abused its discretion in awarding ORP attorney's fees totalling $24,637.75. Price, Inc. argues the district court did not make a finding of bad faith or frivolity as required by our recent decision in Cooling Systems. Price, Inc. does not challenge the amount of attorney’s fees the district court awarded.
The Copyright Act permits a district court to award attorney’s fees to the prevailing party in its discretion. 17 U.S.C. § 505. We will not reverse such an award absent abuse of discretion.
Transgo, Inc. v. Ajac Transmission Parts Corp.,
In
Cooling Systems,
the district court awarded attorney’s fees to the defendants under 17 U.S.C. § 505.
Cooling Systems
is not applicable to the instant matter.
Cooling Systems
involved an award of attorney’s fees to a prevailing
defendant.
In the instant case, the district court awarded attorney’s fees to the prevailing
plaintiff.
“[A] showing of bad faith or frivolity is not a requirement of a
grant
of fees” to a prevailing plaintiff.
Original Appalachian Artworks, Inc. v. Toy Loft, Inc.,
As noted above, we have previously determined that an award of attorney’s fees to a defendant under section 505 must be predicated on a finding of bad faith or frivolity.
See, e.g., Lifshitz v. Walter Drake & Sons, Inc.,
Because section 505 is intended in part to encourage the assertion of color-able copyright claims,
Roth, 787
F.2d at 57, to deter infringement,
Diamond v. Am-Law Publishing Corp.,
The district court did not make a finding concerning the basis for the award of attorney’s fees. Thus we do not know what motivated the district court to award fees. For that reason, we reverse and remand this issue to the district court to make an express finding as to the basis for the award of attorney’s fees. See Lieb, 788 F.2d at 154.
VIII.
ORP seeks attorney’s fees on appeal under Fed.R.App.P. 38. ORP has not requested attorney’s fees on appeal under 17 U.S.C. § 505.
Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 38 states that if we “determine that an appeal is frivolous, [we] may award just damages” to the appellee. This may include attorney’s fees.
McConnell v. Critchlow,
In the instant matter, the result was not obvious. The standard to be applied under section 505 in awarding attorney’s fees to a prevailing plaintiff is a novel issue for this circuit. Similarly, we do not find Price, Inc.’s appellate contentions “wholly without merit.” Thus, we decline to award ORP attorney’s fees on appeal under Fed. R.App.P. 38.
AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED AND REMANDED IN PART as to the issue of attorney’s fees.
