OPINION
Novelis Corporation appeals from the order of the district court granting summary judgment to plaintiff Cincom Sysems, Inc. (“Cincom”), on its claim of copyright infringement.
See
17 U.S.C. § 501. Novelis argues that the district court erred by concluding that a series of mergers Novelis underwent as part of an internal corporate restructuring resulted in a prohibited transfer of the software license Cincom had granted to a former Novelis subsidiary. Finding that our prior decision in
PPG Industries, Inc. v. Guardian Industries Corp.,
I.
Cincom is an Ohio-based corporation that develops, licenses, and services software for its corporate customers. The
On July 5, 1989, Cincom agreed to license SUPRA© and MANTIS© to Alcan Rolled Products Division (“Alcan Ohio”), an Ohio-based corporation that would later become known as Novelis. The license Cincom issued listed “Alcan Rolled products [sic] Division” as the “Customer” and granted to Alcan Ohio “a non-exclusive and nontransferable license” to use Cincom’s software. (License at 1.) The license agreement clarified that the two software programs “constitute proprietary and confidential information of Cincom and that the protection of this information is of the highest importance.” (License at 2.) Consequently, Alcan Ohio could only place the software on designated computers that the parties specifically listed in a schedule attached to the license. (License at 1.) Al-can Ohio listed the designated computer as one located at its facility in Oswego, New York. The license agreement closed by noting that Ohio law would govern its terms and that Alcan Ohio could “not transfer its rights or obligations under this Agreement without the prior written approval of Cincom.” (License at 3.)
Before the commencement of Alcan Ohio’s internal reorganization, Alcan Ohio was a wholly-owned subsidiary of Alcan, Inc., a Canadian corporation. On May 15, 2003, Alcan Ohio created a separate corporation known as Alcan of Texas (“Alcan Texas”), organized under the laws of Texas. Alcan Texas, like Alcan Ohio, was also a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Canadian parent corporation Alcan, Inc. On July 30, 2003, Alcan Ohio merged into Alcan Texas, with Alcan Texas remaining as the surviving corporate entity. The next day, Alcan Texas simultaneously merged into itself and its three Texas subsidiaries. As a result, the former rolled products division of Alcan Ohio became a subsidiary of Al-can Texas known as Alcan Fabrication Corporation. In September 2003, Alcan Fabrication Corporation changed its name to Alcan Aluminum Corporation. A final name change occurred on January 1, 2005, when Alcan Aluminum Corporation changed its name to its current appellation, Novelis. Thus, as of January 2005, the software Alcan Ohio licensed from Cincom remained on the same computer in Oswego, New York, but in a plant now owned by an entity named Novelis. Alcan Ohio never sought or obtained Cincom’s written approval to continue to use the SUPRA© and MANTIS© software before restructuring its rolled products division.
Upon learning of the corporate changes Alcan Ohio underwent, Cincom filed suit on March 11, 2005, in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Ohio, alleging that Novelis’s actions violated the license agreement Cincom entered with Alcan Ohio. Following discovery, the parties agreed upon stipulated facts and filed separate motions for summary judgment. The district court determined that Alcan Ohio’s merger with Alcan Texas effected a transfer of the license under Ohio law.
Cincom Sys., Inc. v. Novelis Corp.,
No. 1:05cv152,
II.
We review a district court’s grant of a summary judgment motion
de novo. Smith Wholesale Co. v. R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co.,
Novelis argues on appeal that the district court erred in granting summary judgment to Cincom for two reasons. First, Novelis asserts that the district court misinterpreted our prior holding in PPG by failing to look at the individual contracting parties’ intent as expressed in the licensing agreement. Novelis claims that while the agreement at issue in PPG showed a clear intent to prevent the license from coming into the possession of a competitor, Cincom’s license demonstrates no concern with preventing internal corporate reorganizations. Second, Novelis claims that a change in Ohio substantive corporate law since our PPG decision, as demonstrated by state cases interpreting the new language, requires us to find that no transfer of the license occurred as a result of Alcan Ohio’s merger with Alcan Texas. We will consider each argument Novelis advances in turn.
A.
In
PPG,
we addressed the question of “whether the surviving or resultant corporation in a statutory merger acquires patent license rights of the constituent corporations.”
2
1.
We have had no occasion to consider our holding in
PPG
since its original issuance in 1979. Consequently, we take this opportunity to explain more fully the complex interaction of federal and state law that occurs when interpreting intellectual property licenses. Federal common law governs “questions with respect to the assignability of a patent [or copyright] license.”
Id.
at 1093. While the Supreme Court famously declared in
Erie Railroad Co. v. Tompkins,
2.
Novelis’s argument that we can distinguish our decision in
PPG
based upon the specific intent of the contracting parties is incorrect. As in
PPG,
Cincom granted Novelis a non-exclusive and non-transferrable license.
Compare PPG,
The fact that the license at issue in
PPG
ultimately found its way into the hands of a competitor does not serve to distinguish our holding from the present set of facts. While it is true that the primary reason for the federal common law rule prohibiting the transfer of a license without authorization is to prevent the license from coming into a competitor’s possession, this does not translate into a rule of “no competitor possession, no foul.”
See In re CFLC, Inc.,
B.
Novelis argues that Ohio’s statutory merger law has changed since we first considered its effect on intellectual property licenses thirty years ago. Novelis thus reasons that our holding in PPG that Ohio’s merger law effects an impermissible transfer of ownership in a license must change, as well. Cincom responds that the changes in Ohio law are merely cosmetic and still result in an impermissible transfer of the license it originally granted Al-can Ohio.
At the time of our decision in
PPG,
Ohio’s statutory merger law provided that “all property of a constituent corporation shall be
‘deemed to be [transferred to and vested in
the surviving or new corporation without further act or deed.’ ”
PPG,
The surviving or new entity possesses all assets and property of every description, and every interest in the assets and property, wherever located, and the rights, privileges, immunities, powers, franchises, and authority, of a public as well as of a private nature, of each constituent entity, and, subject to the limitations specified in section 2307.97 of the Revised Code, all obligations belonging to or due to each constituent entity, all of which are vested in the surviving or new entity without further act or deed. Title to any real estate or any interest in the real estate vested in any constituent entity shall not revert or in any way be impaired by reason of such merger or consolidation.
Ohio Rev.Code Ann. § 1701.82(A)(3) (2009) (emphasis added). Novelis argues that the deletion of the prior statute’s language explaining that all property shall be deemed “[transferred to” the surviving corporation prevents a finding that Alcan Ohio’s merger with Alcan Texas transferred the license. See Id. § 1701.81(A)(4) (1955). Our holding in PPG did not hang by so slender a thread.
Ohio’s law provides that upon a merger, “[t]he separate existence of each constituent entity other than the surviving entity ... shall cease.”
Id.
§ 1701.82(A)(1). Alcan Ohio, the rightful holder of the Cincom license, thus no longer exists as a legal entity under Ohio law. Ohio law further provides that the license once held by Alcan Ohio automatically vested by operation of law in Novelis Corporation, Alcan Ohio’s successor, after the completion of the corporate restructuring.
See id.
§ 1701.82(A)(3). The vesting of the license in the surviving entity could not occur without being transferred by the old entity. As we explained in
PPG, “A
transfer is no less a transfer because it takes place by operation of law rather than by a particular act of the parties. The merger was effected by the parties and the transfer was a result of their act of merging.”
Further demonstrating that the deletion of the word “[transferred” from the Ohio statute does not change our analysis is the fact that the merger at issue in PPG actually occurred under both Ohio and Delaware law. Delaware law, both in 1979 and today, requires that all property of the constituent corporation “ ‘shall be vested in the corporation surviving or resulting from such merger or consolidation.’ ” Id. at 1096 (quoting 8 Del. C. § 259(a)). We considered the difference in statutory language and concluded that what matters for the purpose of determining whether the license actually transferred is if the same legal entity held the license. Under either statute, the legal entity holding the license changed; therefore, Guardian Industries infringed PPG’s patent. Id. at 1096-97.
The state cases Novelis cites in its briefs do not force us to reconsider our interpretation of Ohio law. In
TXO Production Co. v. M.D. Mark Inc.,
ASA Architects, Inc. v. Schlegel,
When Alcan Ohio merged with Alcan Texas, the license granted by Cincom solely to Alcan Ohio transferred to the surviving corporation, now known as Novelis. Because Novelis did not abide by the express terms of Cincom’s license and gain Cincom’s prior written approval, Novelis infringed Cincom’s copyright. We therefore affirm the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. Novelis and Cincom also agreed that each litigant would bear its own attorneys' fees, despite the language of the licensing agreement allowing the prevailing party to have its attorneys' fees paid by the unsuccessful party.
.
In copyright cases such as this, we refer to the case law interpreting patent law “because of the historic kinship between patent law and copyright law.”
Sony Corp. of Am. v. Univer
. It is undisputed that Novelis gave no notification to Cincom of its plans to merge Alcan Ohio out of existence as a part of its restructuring.
. We once again emphasize that even if the license were silent as to the issue of transfers, federal common law would serve to fill the gap with its default rule that no transfer is allowed without express authorization.
See PPG,
. The Texas Court of Appeals further observed that the contracting parties could have foreseen a merger and specifically prohibited a transfer in such an instance.
TXO,
