In 1999 the Chicago Board of Education brought this suit for copyright infringement against a Chicago public school teacher named Schmidt and a corporation that owns a local newspaper called
Substance,
aimed at such teachers, which Schmidt edits. (To simplify the opinion, we’ll ignore the corporation.) In August 2002 the magistrate judge issued
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an injunction mysteriously captioned “Permanent Restraining Order,” from which no appeal was taken. He issued a “Final Judgment Order” in January of the following year, awarding the school board $500 in damages but not referring to the injunction. Schmidt filed a timely notice of appeal from that order. But was that too late to challenge the “Permanent Restraining Order”? One possibility is that the order was a temporary injunction that became permanent when the “Final Judgment Order” was issued. If so, then since an appeal from a final judgment brings up for review any interlocutory order that has not become moot, Schmidt could defer his appellate challenge until the final judgment was entered. And if, as other orders in the case suggest, including the clerk’s minute order recording the issuance of the “Permanent Restraining Order,” the magistrate judge meant by that term “Permanent Injunction,” the failure to appeal from it when it was entered was still not fatal. “[IJnterlocutory appeal of a permanent injunction is not mandatory, as the order remains part of the case and merges with the final judgment, from which an appeal can then be taken.”
Prudential Securities, Inc. v. Tingling,
The following facts are either undisputed or indisputable. At some considerable expense (more than $1 million, according to Schmidt, though the actual figure is not in the record), the school board created and copyrighted a series of standardized tests that it called the “Chicago Academic Standards Exams” (CASE). These were, in copyright lingo, “secure tests.” “A secure test is a nonmarketed test administered under supervision at specified centers on specific dates, all copies of which are accounted for and either destroyed or returned to restricted locked storage following each administration. For these purposes a test is not marketed if copies are not sold but it is distributed and used in such a manner that ownership and control of copies remain with the test sponsor or publisher.” 37 C.F.R. § 202.20(b)(4). To maintain secrecy, the Library of Congress does not retain a copy of such a test. § 202.20(c)(2)(vi).
The first step in making the CASE tests was to create a pool of questions — the record does not indicate how many- — that would be drawn on to create the individual exams, each consisting of between three and 30 questions. The teachers who administered the exams were instructed not to make copies of them and to collect the test papers at the end of each exam so that the tests could be reused. Reuse of questions in standardized testing is not a sign of laziness but a way of validating a test, since if performance on the same questions is inconsistent from year to year this may indicate that the questions are not well designed and are therefore eliciting random answers.
Educational Testing Service v. Simon,
It may seem paradoxical to allow copyright to be obtained in secret documents, but it is not. See
National Conference of Bar Examiners v. Multistate Legal Studies, Inc.,
In the newspaper that he edits, Schmidt published six of the tests given in January 1999. He did this because he thought them bad tests and that he could best demonstrate this by publishing them in full. His answer to the school board’s complaint asserted that the unauthorized copying and publication of the tests were a fair use and therefore not a copyright infringement. The district court dismissed the fair use defense on the pleadings. This was irregular, since no evidence had yet been presented and the defense was not meritless on its face. The judge said that Schmidt had offered “no indication that [the defendants] plan to present facts, arguments, or analyses in support of a fair use.” The judge was mistaken. He had overlooked a memorandum submitted by Schmidt that attempted to do just that.
To convert the school board’s motion to dismiss into a motion for summary judgment, the judge would have had to notify Schmidt of his intention and give him an opportunity to present evidence that would create a triable issue. Fed. R.Civ.P. 12(b);
R.J. Corman Derailment Services, LLC v. International Union of Operating Engineers, Local Union 150,
Each side of this case has a one-sided view of the law. The school board contends that the case is governed by
Harper & Row Publishers, Inc. v. Nation Enterprises, supra,
a case in which a magazine published unauthorized excerpts from Gerald Ford’s copyrighted memoirs before the memoirs were published, thus jumping the gun and by doing so reducing the value of the copyright. The school board points out that Schmidt impaired the value of the exams by publishing them prematurely. (Presumably the school board will not complain if they are published in
Substance
a century from now.) But the board overlooks the fact that the
Nation
was not publishing the excerpts from Ford’s memoirs in order to be able to criticize Ford, or anyone or anything else, and the further fact that Schmidt was not trying to steal the school board’s market, because unlike Harper & Row the school board did not intend ever to publish the copyrighted work that the alleged infringer published first. The second point has little force, as we’ll see; but the first is important. As Schmidt points out, one office of the fair use defense is to facilitate criticism of copyrighted works by enabling the critic to quote enough of the criticized work to make his criticisms intelligible. Copyright should not be a means by which criticism is stifled with the backing of the courts. And since doubts that fair use could ever be a defense to infringement of a copyright on an unpublished work (see, e.g.,
Salinger v. Random House, Inc., supra,
But Schmidt overreads our decision in
Ty, Inc. v. Publications Int’l Ltd.,
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The board thus is correct that Schmidt did it harm going beyond the force of his criticisms. Yet he was entitled to criticize the tests and to do that effectively he had to be able to quote from them, just as a parodist has to be able to quote, sometimes very extensively, from the parodied work in order to make the criticism of it that is implicit in parodying it comprehensible.
Campbell v. Acuff-Rose Music, Inc.,
So where to draw the line? The question cannot be answered precisely. The fair use defense defies codification. As we said in
Ty,
the four factors that Congress listed when it wrote a fair use defense (a judicial creation) into the Copyright Act in 1976 are not exhaustive and do not constitute an algorithm that enables decisions to be ground out mechanically.
Ty, Inc. v. Publications Int’l Ltd., supra,
The burden of proof is on the copier because fair use is an affirmative defense,
Campbell v. Acuff-Rose Music, Inc., supra,
Schmidt’s opening brief cites the memorandum that he had filed in the district court — the memorandum the judge had overlooked in rejecting the fair use defense on the pleadings. In the memorandum, Schmidt did offer answers to these questions. Only the answers are no good, so that even if incorporation by reference were a valid method of bringing facts and arguments to the attention of an appellate court — which it is not,
DeSilva v. DiLeonardi,
The memorandum argues that the school board does not intend to sell the tests, and so Schmidt isn’t eating into their market by publishing the tests. This is true, but irrelevant, because he is destroying the value of the tests and the fact that it’s not a market value has no significance once the right to copyright unpublished works is conceded, as it must be. The memorandum argues that expert testimony would establish that there is no educational value in publishing the exact same exam year after year. No one supposes there is; the argument rather is that some questions must be carried over to future years in order to validate the exam. The memorandum argues that if Schmidt quoted only a few of the questions, the school board would respond that he was cherry-picking the worst. But' if the board did that without a solid grounding, it would open the door for him to quote additional questions; it would be a pro tanto waiver of confidentiality. The memorandum’s remaining argument is that expert witnesses can be found to testify that the CASE tests are “dramatically inadequate.” No doubt. But in so arguing the memorandum misunderstands the fair use privilege of criticism. It is not a privilege to criticize just bad works, and there is no right to copy copyrighted works promiscuously merely upon a showing that they are bad.
There is more than a suspicion that Schmidt simply does not like standardized tests. That is his right. But he does not have the right, as he believes he does (he claims a right to copy any test that an expert will testify is no good), to destroy the tests by publishing them indiscriminately, any more than a person who dislikes Michelangelo’s statue of David has a right to take a sledgehammer to it. From the amicus curiae briefs filed in this ease, moreover, it is apparent that many other teachers share Schmidt’s unfavorable opinion of standardized tests. (A cynic might say that this is because such tests can make teachers look bad if their students don’t do well on them.) So if Schmidt can publish six tests, other dissenters can each publish six other tests, and in no time all 44 will be published. The board will never be able to use the same question twice, and after a few years of Schmidtian tactics there will be such difficulty in inventing new questions without restructuring the curriculum that the board will have to abandon standardized testing. Which is Schmidt’s goal.
If ever a “floodgates” argument had persuasive force, therefore, it is in this case. And this suggests another fair use factor that supports the school board: the aspect
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of academic freedom that consists of the autonomy of educational institutions, see, e.g.,
Grutter v. Bollinger,
The appeal raises other issues, but they require little discussion. Despite the Supreme Court’s recent statement that “copyright law contains built-in First Amendment accommodations” and that in any event the First Amendment “bears less heavily when speakers assert the right to make other people’s speeches,”
Eldred v. Ashcroft,
His further argument that the school board lacks a valid copyright registration on which to found this suit is frivolous. Although a copyright no longer need be registered with the Copyright Office to be valid, an application for registration must be filed before the copyright can be sued upon. 17 U.S.C. § 411(a); 2 Melville B. Nimmer & David Nimmer,
Nimmer on Copyright
§ 7.16[B][l][a] (2003). In its application for registration the school board claimed to have a copyright in the entire contents of the tests. Had the claim been false, the registration should not have issued and maybe therefore the copyright could not have been sued upon. See
Whimsicality, Inc. v. Rubie’s Costume Co.,
All that remains to consider is the injunction. Remarkably, Schmidt does not question its scope or application. But be
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cause an injunction frequently affects third parties and consumes judicial resources, a court has an independent duty
(Marseilles Hydro Power, LLC v. Marseilles Land & Water Co.,
The injunction flunks this test resoundingly. Cf.
Educational Testing Services v. Katzman, supra,
This is an appallingly bad injunction. It must be modified to enjoin the defendants, and those in privity with them or with notice of the injunction, just from copying or publishing or otherwise distributing copies of secure Chicago public school tests, in whole or substantial part, in which the school board has valid and subsisting copyright, without the board’s authorization. No evidentiary basis has been laid for a broader injunction.
The judgment is affirmed in part, and vacated in part, and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion, the parties to bear their own costs in this court.
