ORDER
This case arises out of alleged copyright infringement. Plaintiff Donna Corbello is the widow and heir of Rex Woodard, who assisted Defendant Thomas Gaetano “Tommy” DeVito in writing his unpublished autobiography (the “Work”). Plaintiff alleges that DeVito and others wrongfully appropriated the Work to develop the screenplay for Jersey Boys, a hit musical based on the band The Four Seasons that has played in the United States, Canada, England, and Australia. Corbello has sued several companies and individuals, including several members of The Four Seasons, for copyright infringement, and has sued DeVito on several state law causes of action. The Court has ruled that DeVito and Plaintiff were 50% joint owners of the Work, that DeVito had granted Defendants Frankie Valli and Robert “Bob” Gaudio a selectively exclusive license to exploit the Work, i.e., a license that was exclusive as against DeVito but nonexclusive as against Plaintiff, and that Valli and Gaudio had in turn granted a nonexclusive sublicense to Defendant DSHT, Inc. The Court made no rulings as to any further licenses. The Court also ailed that only DeVito was potentially liable for a direct accounting. Pending before the Court are eight motions for summary judgment.
I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
A. The Work
Rex Woodard was an attorney, author, and avid Four Seasons fan who finally met Defendant and founding Four Seasons member Tommy DeVito for an interview on December 9, 1981 as a result of the publicity generated from an article Woodard had written about the band in Goldmine magazine earlier that year (the “1981 Article”) that focused on the years between the band’s breakup in 1970 and reconstitution in 1975. (See Third Am. Compl. ¶¶ 26-29, Mar. 18, 2011, ECF No. 457). On December 23, 1981, Woodard interviewed Tommy’s brother Nick DeVito, and on January 8, 1982 he interviewed Nick Massi, another founding member of The Four Seasons. (/¿¶29). The result of these three interviews was a second article published in Goldmine in June of 1982 (the “1982 Article”), which focused on the band’s earliest incarnation, The Four Lovers. (Id.).
Woodard kept in touch with DeVito and founding Four Seasons member Frankie Valli throughout the 1980s, and in November of 1988 Woodard flew to Las Vegas,
Woodard returned to Beaumont, Texas to begin writing DeVito’s authorized biography (the ‘Work”), which has never been published. (See id.). On December 1, 1988, Woodard sent DeVito a letter (the “Letter Agreement”) memorializing their previous verbal understandings concerning creation of the Work. (Id. ¶ 33). DeVito signed the Letter Agreement beneath the word “APPROVED” and mailed it back to Woodard. (See id.; Letter Agreement, Dec. 1, 1988, ECF No. 457-11). The Letter Agreement reads in full:
December 1,1988
Mr. Tommy DeVito
[street address]
Las Vegas, Nevada [zip code]
Dear Tommy:
I am making progress on the taped interviews we did. You suggested that I prepare a written memorandum of our arrangement for future reference. I will do so by this letter.
I agreed to write your authorized biography based on the recorded interviews you gave me, plus any other relevant information which would benefit the book. You and I will be shown as co-authors, with you receiving first billing. I will do all of the actual writing, but you will have absolute and exclusive control over the final text of this book.
We have further agreed that we will share equally in any profits arising from this book, whether they be in the form of royalties, advances, adaptations fees, or whatever. This agreement will be binding upon our heirs, both as to obligations and benefits, in the event one or both of us should die.
If this letter accurately sets forth our agreement as you understand it, sign the enclosed photocopy where indicated and return it to me in the enclosed self-addressed, stamped envelope. Keep this original letter in your own file.
Thank you for asking me to work with you on this project. I look forward to working with you over the next several months.
Sincerely,
[signed] Rex Woodard
Rex Woodard RW/ml Enclosures APPROVED:
[signed] Tommy DeVito TOMMY DEVITO
(Letter Agreement). Over the next two years, Woodard used the 1988 Interviews and all of his other knowledge about the band to create the Work, including his past interviews with band members, newspaper articles, magazine articles, album linings, Freedom of Information Act requests he filed with law enforcement agencies, and questionnaires he sent to DeVito. (Third Am. Compl. ¶ 34). Woodard compiled all of this information into the Work, resulting in a first-person, narrative-style biography told from DeVito’s perspective. (See id.). Woodard remained in close contact with
B. Woodard’s and DeVito’s Publication Attempts
As the Work neared completion in late 1990, Woodard and DeVito attempted to find a publisher and even provided an outline of the Work to actor Joe Pesci to explore adaptation to a screenplay. (See id. ¶ 36). Plaintiff provides a copy of what she claims is a cover sheet to a January 1991 version of the Work, which reads in full:
UNTITLED
TOMMY DEVITO/FOUR SEASONS BIOGRAPHY
TOMMY DEVITO REX WOODARD ©, January, 1991
(See January 1991 Work Cover Page, ECF No. 457-15).
Though he never smoked, Woodard had been diagnosed with lung cancer in 1989, and his condition had begun seriously to worsen by late 1990. (Id. ¶ 39). . By February or March of 1991, he was bedridden, and he died on May 25, 1991 at age forty-one. (Id. ¶ 40). Woodard had hoped that income generated from the Work would support his wife and children. (Id. ¶ 41).
C. Plaintiffs and Ceen’s Publication Attempts
In accordance with Woodard’s wishes, Plaintiff and Woodard’s sister Cindy Ceen continued to seek publication after Woodard’s death independently of DeVito; however, public interest in The Four Seasons had waned, making it difficult to find a publisher. (Id. ¶ 42). Ceen determined in September 2005 to contact DeVito for his assistance in getting the Work published. (See id.). Ceen first contacted a prominent member of an Internet Four Seasons fan group named Charles Alexander to facilitate contact with DeVito. (See id. ¶ 43). Alexander responded to Ceen on September 22, 2005 that he had met with DeVito the previous day, had told DeVito of Ceen’s desire to publish the Work, and that DeVito had agreed to help. (See id.). Ceen called DeVito the same day (using a telephone number provided by Alexander), and DeVito indicated that he wanted to update the Work with post-1990 events and restore some “obscene” language Woodard had omitted. (Id.). DeVito also claimed he had lost his copy of the Work and asked Ceen for a replacement, which she mailed to DeVito the next day, along with a letter memorializing their telephone conversation and informing DeVito that Plaintiff was considering self-publishing the Work if a traditional publisher could not be found. (Id.). Neither Plaintiff nor Ceen heard from DeVito again. (Id. ¶ 44). DeVito’s attorney Jay Julien left Ceen a voice mail message on November 2, 2005, and Ceen returned his call the next day, during which conversation Julien told Ceen that he had spoken with DeVito regarding the Work and concluded that it was “not saleable.” (Id.). Ceen was surprised by this conclusion, because the play Jersey Boys was scheduled to open on Broadway a few days later. (Id.). Mien did not disclose that the Work had been used or exploited in any way or that rights in the Work had been licensed or assigned. (Id.).
D. Jersey Boys and Plaintiffs Discovery of the Alleged Infringements
By late 2006, Jersey Boys had become a Broadway hit, earning four Tony Awards. (Id. ¶ 45). Plaintiff had not seen the show, but she and Ceen estimated that the show’s success would revive interest in the band and make publication of the Work viable. (Id.). Plaintiff and Ceen engaged
TXu 454 118
Tommy DeVito—Then and Now
by
Tommy DeVito
(Id. ¶ 49; see DeVito Work Cover Page, ECF No. 457-23). Second, the first page of Chapter 41 (page 264 of the Work) was missing. (See Third Am. Compl. ¶49). Plaintiff concluded in light of the Letter Agreement and her dealings with DeVito and his counsel after Woodard’s death that DeVito had registered the Work without credit to Woodard or disclosure to Woodard or his heirs. (Id. ¶ 50).
Plaintiff also soon discovered that the writers of and several actors in Jersey Boys had access to the Work and that DeVito had received royalties or other profits from Jersey Boys, and she concluded that the Work had “inspired the form, structure, and content of the musical----” (See id. ¶ 51). As support for this conclusion, Plaintiff notes that Defendant Des McAnuff, the director of Jersey Boys, was quoted in a July 8, 2006 report in Backstage magazine as stating that Defendants Marshall Brickipan and Eric Elice had relied in part on “an unpublished autobiography by DeVito” in creating the libretto. (See id. ¶ 52). The source apparently does not indicate whether the libretto served as the script, a program for audiences, or something else. (See id.). Plaintiff notes that Christian Hoff, the first actor to play DeVito in Jersey Boys, stated in what appears to be an online interview that he was provided with a synopsis of the Work for his audition and a full copy for background research. (See id.). Plaintiff also cites to a Wikipedia entry for support that the Work served as a basis for the musical. (See id.). Plaintiff also notes an exchange on a Jersey Boys podcast website indicating that one fan had reported to another that the musical was based on DeVito’s unpublished biography. (See id.). Plaintiff also saw public reports of DeVito’s financial profits from the musical. (See id.).
E. Pre-Litigation Negotiations
On June 13, 2007, Plaintiffs counsel wrote Julien by email and overnight courier demanding that DeVito execute an application for supplementary registration with the U.S. Copyright Office to add Woodard as a coauthor and co-claimant of the Work and demanding an accounting of profits in accordance with the Letter Agreement. (Id. ¶ 53). Counsel conferred with one another by email and telephone between June and October 2007, and Ju
On July 2, 2007, Plaintiff filed her own supplementary application with the U.S. Copyright Office to add Woodard as a coauthor and co-claimant of the Work, but the office rejected the application because DeVito, the original claimant, had not signed it. (Id. ¶ 55). The office could not under 17 U.S.C. § 201(a) permit a non-author, non-claimant as to an original registration, i.e., a “basic registration,” to supplement the basic application, but such a person could apply to register her own work, in which case the office would consider the new claim to be adverse to the existing claim if the claims purported to register the same work exclusively to different claimants. (See Copyright Office Letter, June 16, 2008, ECF No. 457-27, at 7). However, the Copyright Office Review Board granted Plaintiffs appeal based on a closer examination of regulations and practices, determining that her supplemental registration could be accepted, and that a certificate of registration would be issued after processing. (See Copyright Office Letter, Mar. 27, 2009, ECF No. 457-28). The amended certificate, Reg. No. Txul 372-636, lists Woodard and DeVito as coauthors of the entire text of the Work and co-claimants thereto. (See Certificate of Registration TXul 372-636, July 3, 2007, ECF No. 457-29).
F. The “Cover-up”
DeVito and Julien then took steps to conceal the fact that DeVito had exploited the Work to create and profit from Jersey Boys. (See id. ¶ 58). First, DeVito withdrew his quotes from Charles Alexander’s forward to the upcoming Jersey Boys book, because the use of those quotations would have linked the book, and hence the musical, to the Work. (See id.). Second, DeVito reported in an interview that he had never shown the Work to anyone except Brickman, Elice, and McAnuff, the writers and director of Jersey Boys. (Id.). Third, DeVito “dismantled” his website <www.tommydevito.com> to remove reference to “his SMASH HIT Jersey Boys ” (Id.). Fourth, he stated in an interview that he had dictated the Work to a lawyer and that the book was not to be published yet. (Id.). At this point, Plaintiff instituted the present lawsuit.
G. DeVito’s Licensing of the Work
Certain documents made public during Valli’s divorce proceedings in July 2008 revealed that DeVito had granted Valli and Gaudio an exclusive, irrevocable, perpetual, worldwide, assignable license (the “Valli/Gaudio License”) freely to use and adapt certain “Materials,” including his “biographies,” for the purpose of creating a musical based on the “life and music” of The Four Seasons. (Id. ¶ 59). The Valli/Gaudio License included the right to “ancillary and subsidiary exploitations thereof including, without limitation, cast albums, motion picture and televised versions, merchandise, and/or other works ... in all media now existing or later devised.” (Id.). The Valli/Gaudio License waived any claim of copyright infringement by DeVito, provided that DeVito would be entitled to 20% of any royalties Valli and Gaudio obtained through exploitation of the Materials, and provided that Massi would be entitled to 5% of any such royalties. (See id.). Plaintiff suspects that Valli and Gaudio further licensed the Materials, which included the Work, to one or more, unknown authors in 1999 for adaptation into an early version of Jersey Boys called Walk Like a Man, (See id.). When the original producer rejected Walk Like a Man, Valli and Gaudio fired its authors, permitted their agreement with the original producer to lapse, and further licensed the Materials to Brickman and Elice, who used them to write Jersey Boys. (See id.). Plaintiff implies that Valli’s and Gaudio’s informal joint ventures related to their exploitation of the Materials constitutes a general partnership as a matter of law that Plaintiff refers to as “The Four Seasons Partnership.” (See id. ¶ 4-5).
H. Jersey Boys
The Jersey Boys foundational production agreement (the “Jersey Boys Agreement”) is dated May 1, 2004. (See id. ¶ 61; Jer
Plaintiff believes that DSHT further assigned or licensed its rights under the Jersey Boys Agreement to Defendant Dodger Theatricals, Ltd., which is the primary producer of Jersey Boys on Broadway, tours throughout the United States, and in London, U.K. {See Third Am. Compl. ¶ 62). Plaintiff believes that DSHT and/or Dodger Theatricals further licensed their rights to others and eventually assigned them to Defendant Jersey Boys Broadway, which in turn licensed them to several parties, including Defendants JB Viva Vegas and Jersey Boys Records. {See id.). Plaintiff alleges that Jersey Boys has earned gross revenues of approximately $300 million per year and believes she is entitled to at least $6.5 million. {See id. ¶ 70).
I. The Present Lawsuit
In December 2007, Plaintiff sued DeVito in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas on three causes of action: (1) declaratory judgment; (2) equitable accounting; and (3) breach of contract. That court transferred the case to this District in 2008 pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a), without deciding whether it had personal jurisdiction over DeVito, and it denied Plaintiffs motion to reconsider. The TAC, filed in March 2011, lists fourteen Defendants and twenty causes of action: (1) declaratory judgment (DeVito); (2) equitable accounting (DeVito); (3) breach of contract (DeVito); (4) unjust enrichment (DeVito); (5) breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing (DeVito); (6) constructive fraud (DeVito); (7) fraud (DeVito); (8) conversion (DeVito); (9) copyright infringement under § 16(2) of the Copyright, Designs, and Patents Act of 1988 (U.K.) (DeVito); (10) copyright infringement under § 27(1) of the Copyright Act, R.S.C.1985 (Can.) (DeVito); (11) copyright infringement under §§ 115(1), 36, and 39 of the Copyright Act of 1968 (Cth) (Austl.) (DeVito); (12)-(13) declaratory judgment (Valli, Gaudio, DSHT, Dodger Theatricals, and Jersey Boys Broadway); (14) equitable accounting (Valli, Gaudio, DSHT, Dodger Theatricals, and Jersey Boys Broadway, in the alternative) (15) copyright infringement under 17 U.S.C. § 501(a) (Valli, Gaudio, Brickman, Elice, McAnuff, DSHT, Dodger Theatricals, Jersey Boys Broadway, JB Viva Vegas, and Jersey Boys Records); (16) vicarious copyright infringement under 17 U.S.C. § 502 (Valli, Gaudio, Brick-man, Elice, McAnuff, DSHT, Dodger The
II. LEGAL STANDARDS
A. Summary Judgment
A court must grant summary judgment when “the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(a). Material facts are those which may affect the outcome of the case. See Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
When the party moving for summary judgment would bear the burden of proof at trial, it must come forward with evidence which would entitle it to a directed verdict if the evidence went uncontroverted at trial. In such a case, the moving party has the initial burden of establishing the absence of a genuine issue of fact on each issue material to its case.
C.A.R. Transp. Brokerage Co. v. Darden Rests., Inc.,
If the moving party meets its initial burden, the burden then shifts to the opposing party to establish a genuine issue of material fact. See Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp.,
At the summary judgment stage, a court’s function is not to weigh the evidence and determine the truth, but to determine whether there is a genuine issue for trial. See Anderson,
B. Personal Jurisdiction
A defendant may move to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(2). Jurisdiction exists if: (1) provided for by law; and (2) the exercise of jurisdiction comports with due process. See Greenspun v. Del E. Webb Corp.,
Nevada’s long-arm rule restricts extraterritorial jurisdiction to the limits of both the U.S. and Nevada Constitutions. See Nev.Rev.Stat. § 14.065(1). However, Nevada’s due process clause is textually identical to the federal clause in relevant respects, see Nev. Const, art. 1, § 8(5), and the Nevada Supreme Court reads the state clause coextensively with the federal clause, see, e.g., Wyman v. State,
There are two categories of personal jurisdiction: general jurisdiction and specific jurisdiction. General jurisdiction exists over a defendant who has “substantial” or “continuous and systematic” con
Even where there is no general jurisdiction over a defendant, specific jurisdiction exists when there are sufficient minimal contacts with the forum such that the assertion of personal jurisdiction “does not offend ‘traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.’ ” Int’l Shoe Co. v. State of Wash., Office of Unemployment Comp. & Placement,
(1) The non-resident defendant must purposefully direct his activities or consummate some transaction with the forum or resident thereof; or perform some act by which he purposefully avails himself of the privilege of conducting activities in the forum, thereby invoking the benefits and protections of its laws;
(2) the claim must be one which arises out of or relates to the defendant’s forum-related activities; and
(3) the exercise of jurisdiction must comport with fair play and substantial justice, i.e. it must be reasonable.
Boschetto,
The plaintiff bears the burden on the first two prongs. If the plaintiff establishes both prongs one and two, the defendant must come forward with a “compelling case” that the exercise of jurisdiction would not be reasonable. But if the plaintiff fails at the first step, the jurisdictional inquiry ends and the case must be dismissed.
Id. (citations omitted). The third prong is itself a seven-factor balancing test, under which a court considers:
(1) the extent of the defendant’s purposeful interjection into the forum state’s affairs; (2) the burden on the defendant of defending in the forum; (3) the extent of conflict with the sovereignty of the defendants’ state; (4) the forum state’s interest in adjudicating the dispute; (5) the most efficient judicial resolution of the controversy; (6) the importance of the forum to the plaintiffs interest in convenient and effective re*1150 lief; and (7) the existence of an alternative forum.
Menken v. Emm,
III. ANALYSIS
A. Jersey Boys Records Limited Partnership’s Motion for Summary Judgment (ECF No. 605)
Jersey Boys Records Limited Partnership (“JB Records”) argues that there is no personal jurisdiction over JB Records in Nevada and that Plaintiff has failed to state a claim of copyright infringement against JB Records. Plaintiff implicates JB Records in the fifteenth through seventeenth causes of action for infringement, vicarious infringement, and contributory infringement, respectively.
“In order to succeed in a copyright infringement claim, a plaintiff must show that he or she owns the copyright and that defendant copied protected elements of the work.” Jada Toys, Inc. v. Mattel,
The terms “contributory infringement” and “vicarious infringement” do not appear in the infringement statute, but the courts have permitted plaintiffs to proceed on these theories of relief. The seminal ease for both theories was Gershwin Publishing Corp. v. Columbia Artists Management,
one may be liable for copyright infringement even though he has not himself performed the protected composition. For example, a person who has promoted or induced the infringing acts of the performer has been held jointly and severally liable as a ‘vicarious’ infringer, even though he has no actual knowledge that copyright monopoly is being impaired.
Id. at 1161-62 (footnote omitted). “[T]o succeed in imposing vicarious liability, a plaintiff must establish that the defendant exercises the requisite control over the direct infringer and that the defendant derives a direct financial benefit from the direct infringement.” Perfect 10, Inc. v. Amazon.com, Inc.,
As to personal jurisdiction, JB Records notes that it is a New York limited partnership with its principal place of business in New York and that it does not have any real property, offices, or employees in Nevada. Assuming this is true, there is no general jurisdiction over JB Records in Nevada, but it appears that Plaintiffs claims arise out of JB Records’s conduct in this state. The Cast Album is sold at the performances of Jersey Boys in Las Vegas, and Plaintiff alleges JB Records receives royalties from these sales. The allegation that the Cast Album infringes the Work therefore is sufficient to provide specific jurisdiction over JB Records in Nevada. JB Records also notes that it produced the Cast Album but that Rhino Entertainment Co. manufactured, distributed, and sold the CDs. Plaintiff alleges not only direct infringement, but also contributory infringement, apparently based upon the theory that JB Records’s production of the CDs contributed to the infringement of the Work by others because the production of the Cast Album was a part of the promotion for the musical. By producing the record, the theory goes, JB Records infringed the copyright directly or at least contributed to its infringement by those who manufactured, distributed, and sold it. The Court finds that the allegations in the TAC are sufficient to satisfy the first two prongs of the personal jurisdiction test over JB Records, and that requiring JB Records to defend in Nevada would not be unreasonable.
However, the Court will grant summary judgment to JB Records on the merits. First, Plaintiff makes no sufficient allegation that JB Records had the legal right or ability to prevent other parties from infringing, either through an employment relationship or otherwise, so there is no vicarious infringement by JB Records. Plaintiffs’s allegation that “[all Defendants] each had the right and ability to control the acts of other infringers herein,” (see Third Am. Compl. ¶ 233), is precisely the kind of bare-bones recitation of a cause of action that does not withstand scrutiny under the Twombly-Iqbal plausibility standard, much less under a motion for summary judgment.
Second, Plaintiff does not sufficiently allege that JB records was aware of any infringement of the Work, so it cannot be liable for contributory infringement, which requires knowledge. Plaintiff alleges that all Defendants had “access to” the Work but simply lumps all Defendants in together with this allegation. There is no plausible allegation that JB Records knew of any infringement of the Work. Plaintiff alleges in conclusory fashion that Michael S. David, a principal of Dodger Theatricals, which is in turn a general partner of JB Records, “was aware, or should reasonably have been aware, that Defendant DeVito was not the sole author of the Work....” (See id. ¶239). This is too attenuated to impute knowledge of infringement to JB Records.
Third, Defendant is entitled to summary judgment on the clams of direct infringement, because the Cast Album is simply not substantially similar to the Work. For this reason, also, there cannot be contributory or vicarious infringement
The extrinsic test is an objective test based on specific expressive elements: the test focuses on articulable similarities between the plot, themes, dialogue, mood, setting, pace, characters, and sequence of events in two works. A court must take care to inquire only whether the protect[able] elements, standing alone, are substantially similar. Copyright law only protects expression of ideas, not the ideas themselves. Familiar stock scenes and themes that are staples of literature are not protected. Scenes-a-faire, or situations and incidents that flow necessarily or naturally from a basic plot premise, cannot sustain a finding of infringement. Historical facts are also unprotected by copyright law.
Under the “inverse ratio” rule, if a defendant had access to a copyrighted work, the plaintiff may show infringement baséd on a lesser degree of similarity between the copyrighted work and the allegedly infringing work.
Id. at 624-25 (citations and internal quotation marks omitted; alterations in original).
Plaintiff alleges that the Cast Album infringes the Work directly because it “captures- the presentational style and straightforward street tone/mood that is found in Jersey Boys and the Work.” (Third Am. Compl. ¶¶ 14, 16, 70, 96, 204, 218, 224, 240). The magistrate judge correctly noted that this was insufficient to state a claim of infringement and compelled Plaintiff to comply with Brickman’s interrogatory requesting Plaintiff to identify any points of substantial similarity between the Cast Album and the Work. Plaintiff responded only by claiming that “The line adapted from the Work’s, ‘A little surprise’ for Frankie, at page 46, is present in ‘The Early Years: A Scrapbook’ cut on the Jersey Boys Cast Album.” In the present motion, JB Records notes again that Plaintiffs only allegations of infringement as to the Cast Album is that the word “surprise” is used in both the Work and the Cast Album in connection with Tommy DeVito’s “set[ting] up a little surprise” by having Frankie Valli sing with DeVito’s band in a small club, and that the few minutes of spoken dialogue at the beginning of the Cast Album—-which consists mainly of Four Seasons songs to which Plaintiff does not claim any copyright ownership—-infringed the “presentational style” and “mood/tone” of the Work.
JB Records is correct that the Cast Album is not substantially similar to the Work under the extrinsic test. The Cast Album consists mainly of Four Seasons songs, plus a few minutes of dialogue. The Work is a 274-page autobiography. The similarity between the two, even assuming for the sake of argument that the “surprise” comment standing alone is protectable material, is negligible. The “surprise” sequence is a brief comment on a historical event. The presentational style of the Cast Album is that of the biography of a popular music group, but apart from the “surprise” line, Plaintiff does not allege that the Cast Album presents anything other than historical facts and Four Seasons works. In response, Plaintiff argues that JB Records has not complied with
B. Valli’s, Gaudio’s, Brickman’s, Elice’s, McAnuff s, DSHT’s, Dodger Theatricals, Ltd.’s, JB Viva Vegas L.P.’s, and Getting Home, Inc.’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (ECF No. 613)
Valli, Gaudio, Brickman, Elice, McAnuff, DSHT, Dodger Theatricals, Ltd., JB Viva Vegas L.P., and Getting Home, Inc. (collectively, “Movants”) argue that the statute of limitations bars Plaintiffs copyright infringement claim against them as to “drafts or other non-final script materials” and that Movants need not account to Plaintiff for profits generated from such materials. Movants note that the TAC is the first version of the Complaint to allege that drafts, treatments, and outlines of Jersey Boys, which Movants refer to as “non-final script materials,” infringed the Work.
First, Plaintiff may have an accounting as a remedy under 17 U.S.C. § 504 to the extent any Movant is ultimately found liable for infringement, though there is no separate action for an accounting except against a joint owner. Second, Plaintiff does not appear to (and could not) allege that the pre-production drafts in-and-of-themselves constituted independently actionable infringements. She properly alleges that the performance of Jersey Boys and distribution of other finished materials for sale to the public constituted infringement, but she would not be aggrieved if all she alleged was that certain Defendants crafted a play out of the Work and privately performed it for their own entertainment. Plaintiffs identification of the pre-production materials in the TAC is not in support of any new and separate cause of action. The pre-production materials would presumably be part of her proof of the existing infringement claim. That is, they are relevant to proving infringement via the final production, because draft scripts and treatments may prove a connection between the Work and Jersey Boys. But the inclusion of allegations concerning the pre-production materials do not constitute a new and separate cause of action. The fifteenth claim for copyright infringement in the TAC is the same as that in the Second Amended Complaint, and it is brought against the same eight Defendants. The only difference is that the TAC includes some additional language further explaining why and how Plaintiff believes Jersey Boys infringes the Work, i.e., because it is based on the Work and also “the various drafts, treatments, and outlines for Jersey Boys which preceded the finalized versions of the script....” (Third Am. Compl. ¶ 210).
Movants’ argument is of the form: (1) the plaintiffs complaint alleged a tort by the defendant against the plaintiff; (2) after the statute of limitations ran, the plaintiff amended the complaint to further allege the instrumentality of the tort; (3) therefore, the court should grant the defendant summary judgment as against any claim involving the use of the newly alleged instrumentality. It is as if a party were to ask a court to grant summary judgment as against any injuries arising out of an alleged battery with a baseball bat because the plaintiff had, after the statute of limitations for battery had run, amended the complaint to add the allegation that the defendant used a baseball bat to the existing allegations that the defendant had struck the plaintiff. Plaintiff has simply added no theory of relief but has merely added language indicating the particular instrumentality by which the Plaintiff believes the infringement came about, which details were not before and are not
Insofar as Movants fear Plaintiff will seek damages from the jury based purely on the private, non-commercial creation of the pre-production materials themselves, apart from the claim that Jersey Boys itself infringed the Work, the Court assures Movants that such a theory will not go to the jury. Such private, noncommercial activity in-and-of-itself is fair use. See 17 U.S.C. § 107; Sony Corp. of Am. v. Universal City Studios, Inc.,
C. David’s Motion for Summary Judgment (ECF No. 622)
David argues that there is no personal jurisdiction over him in Nevada. Plaintiff alleges that David is a New York citizen who is a principal, officer, and shareholder of Dodger Theatricals, Ltd., and that he was an officer and/or shareholder of DSHT in 2004 when DSHT agreed to produce Jersey Boys in La Jolla, California. {See Third Am. Compl. ¶ 9). Plaintiff alleges that David is a signatory to various licensing agreements concerning Jersey Boys. She also alleges that David “organiz[edj” Jersey Boys Broadway LP, JB Records, Dodger Theatricals, Ltd., DSHT, and JB Viva Vegas, LP. {See id. ¶ 240).
David argues that because the alleged organization did not occur in Nevada, and because he has no personal contacts with Nevada, but only happens to be an officer and/or limited partner of several organizations that have done business in Nevada, there is no personal jurisdiction over him personally in Nevada.
Plaintiff has sufficiently shown that David purposely availed himself of the right to do business in Nevada and purposely directed his allegedly infringing activities toward Nevada. David admitted at his deposition that he owned 50% of Dodger Theatricals, that Dodger Theatricals’s primary activity was the supervision of Jersey Boys productions, that Dodger Theatricals receives income from those productions in the form of fees and royalties, and that David receives a small salary from Dodger Theatricals. {See David Dep. 14, 18-19, June 30, 2011, ECF No. 672-6). He also admitted to being “in charge” of Dodger Theatricals, though he delegated control. {See id. 22:11-18). He later clarified, “I’m the president of a company that produced Jersey Boys and as president, I oversee those 24 people.” {Id. 26:19-21). Nor is it unreasonable to expect David to defend in Nevada where his half-owned production company does regular business. The Court denies the motion.
D. Valli’s, Gaudio’s, Brickman’s, Elice’s, McAnuff s, DSHT’s, Dodger Theatricals, Ltd.’s, JB Viva Vegas L.P.’s, Getting Home, Inc.’s, Jersey Boys Broadway LP’s, and Skunk, Inc.’s Motion for Summary Judgment (ECF No. 626)
Valli, Gaudio, Brickman, Elice, McAnuff, DSHT, Dodger Theatricals, Ltd., JB Viva Vegas L.P., Getting Home, Inc., Jersey Boys Broadway LP, and Skunk, Inc. (collectively, “Movants”) argue that Jersey Boys simply does not infringe the Work, because the Work is a historical work with only “thin” protection under U.S. copyright law. The Court denies this motion as moot, because it grants these Movants’ separate motion for summary judgment
E. Valli’s, Gaudio’s, Brickman’s, Elice’s, McAnuff s, DSHT’s, Dodger Theatricals, Ltd.’s, JB Viva Vegas L.P.’s, Getting Home, Inc.’s, Jersey Boys Broadway LP’s, and Skunk, Inc.’s Motion for Summary Judgment (ECF No. 632)
Valli, Gaudio, Brickman, Elice, McAnuff, DSHT, Dodger Theatricals, Ltd., JB Viva Vegas L.P., Getting Home, Inc., Jersey Boys Broadway LP, and Skunk, Inc. (collectively, “Movants”) argue that the claims for copyright infringement under foreign law should be summarily adjudicated in favor of Movants for the same reasons noted in Part LV.D, supra, because regardless of whether the Court uses the law of the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, or Australia, the choice-of-law analysis will result in the application of the substantive copyright law of the United States.
In diversity cases, choice-of-law issues are considered substantive for the purposes of Erie, and a federal court therefore applies the choice-of-law rules used by the courts of the state in which it is located. See Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Elec. Mfg. Co.,
Plaintiff filed the present case in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas, invoking jurisdiction under both 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331 and 1332(a). (See Compl. ¶ 4, Dec. 26, 2007, ECF No. 36-5). The present issue is copyright infringement under federal law, so federal common law choice-of-law rules apply.
“Federal common law follows the approach of the Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws (1969).” Schoenberg,
(1) The rights and liabilities of the parties with respect to an issue in tort are determined by the local law of the state which, with respect to that issue, has the most significant relationship to the occurrence and the parties under the principles stated in § 6.
(2) Contacts to be taken into account in applying the principles of § 6 to determine the law applicable to an issue include:
(a) the place where the injury occurred,
(b) the place where the conduct causing the injury occurred,
(c) the domicil, residence, nationality, place of incorporation and place of business of the parties, and
(d) the place where the relationship, if any, between the parties is centered.
These contacts are to be evaluated according to their relative importance with respect to the particular issue.
Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws § 145 (1971). The principles stated in § 6 are:
(a) the needs of the interstate and international systems,
(b) the relevant policies of the forum,
*1156 (c) the relevant policies of other interested states and the relative interests of those states in the determination of the particular issue,
(d) the protection of justified expectations,
(e) the basic policies underlying the particular field of law,
(f) certainty, predictability and uniformity of result, and
(g) ease in the determination and application of the law to be applied.
Id. § 6(2)(a)-(g). Finally, the Second Restatement adopts the rule of dépegage, under which each issue arising under a single claim may receive its own choice-of-law analysis. See id. § 145(1) (applying the analysis to “issue[s]”). This may be the only practical difference between the state and federal choice-of-law rules in the present case, because the Nevada Supreme Court also employs §§ 145 and 6 in tort actions but appears not to have enforced the dépegage concept. See Gen. Motors Corp. v. Eighth Judicial Dist. Court of State of Nev. ex rel. Cnty. of Clark,
In Itar-Tass Russian News Agency v. Russian Kurier, the Second Circuit rejected Prof. Nimmer’s interpretation of the Berne Convention that the substantive law for an infringement claim should necessarily be the law of the nation where the infringement occurred as opposed to the law of the nation of which the author is a citizen or where the work was first published, i.e., the “national treatment principle.” See
Movants urge the Court to adopt the Itar-Tass approach, and the Court will do so. The application of Itar-Tass in this case results in the application of U.S. law as to copyright ownership issues, because it is not disputed that the Work was created in the United States. The present mo
The Itar-Tass court did not face the precise issue presented here, but a similar one. It found that under Russian law only the journalists who wrote the newspaper articles, not the newspaper company, owned the copyright in the text—although the newspaper company owned any copyright in the arrangement of those articles on its pages to the extent such a thing could be copyrighted—and therefore the newspapers had no standing to sue for infringement via reprinting of the text under U.S. law. See id. at 84. The precise question presented here is whether the validity of a copyright license is more akin to ownership or infringement for the purposes of an infringement action. The answer to this question is critical, because in the U.S. a license obtained from fewer than all joint owners protects a licensee from an infringement action, i.e., such a license is valid, but in the Commonwealth countries, such a license appears to be a nullity, though the Court has only referred to Nimmer thus far and has not yet performed any significant research on the Commonwealth law. Does the fact that a license granted by fewer than all joint owners is valid under U.S. law necessarily obviate a clearly applicable foreign action for infringement where the foreign jurisdiction would not recognize the license? The Court believes the better answer is “yes.” It is true that under this rule a licensee will be able to perform works in a jurisdiction where he would not be able to perform them had he obtained his license there. But this is the same result reached under Itar-Tass with respect to the ownership issue. Under the reasoning of that case, a person who is an owner of copyright under the law where he becomes a joint owner may perform the disputed act with impunity even in jurisdictions where his ownership would not be recognized had he purported to obtain it in that jurisdiction. In short, for the purposes of an infringement action, licensing is more akin to ownership than infringement. Just as a tenancies and profits a prendre are property interests, though they are only possessory and usufructory interests, respectively, a license in copyright is an analogous usufructory interest in intellectual property. The determination of such a property interest is properly determined under the law of the place where the interest arose. Here, that place is the United States. And once one has been declared to be a licensee under the law of the appropriate jurisdiction, the issue is settled, and the person is a licensee for the purposes of an infringement action under the law of any other jurisdiction. Because Movants had valid licenses or sub-licenses to exploit the Work under U.S. law, see infra, the foreign infringement claims fail. The Court therefore grants the motion for summary judgment.
F. Valli’s, Gaudio’s, Brickman’s, Elice’s, McAnuff s, DSHT’s, Dodger Theatricals, Ltd.’s, JB Viva Vegas L.P.’s, and Getting Home, Inc.’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (ECF No. 635)
Valli, Gaudio, Brickman, Elice, McAnuff, DSHT, Dodger Theatricals, Ltd., JB Viva Vegas L.P., and Getting Home, Inc. (collectively, “Movants”) move for summary judgment against counts fifteen through seventeen for copyright infringement, vicarious copyright infringement, and con-
Valli and Gaudio are entitled to summary judgment against the infringement claims. The Court has already ruled that the Valli/Gaudio License permitted Valli and Gaudio to exploit the Materials identified therein, including the Work, and permitted Valli and Gaudio to further sublicense the Materials. The Court also ruled that the Jersey Boys Agreement was such a sublicense to DSHT (including Brickman and Elice) from Valli and Gaudio. These three Defendants therefore also cannot be held liable for infringement. The remaining Defendants are McAnuff, Dodger Theatricals, JB Viva Vegas L.P., and Getting Home.
Plaintiff alleges that McAnuff s infringement arose out of his direction of Jersey Boys, “along with Defendants Brickman and Elice, by authorization of Defendants Gaudio and Valli, under the [Jersey Boys Agreement] issued by Defendant DeVito.... ” (Third Am. Compl. ¶ 8). In other words, according to Plaintiffs own allegations, McAnuffs direction of Jersey Boys was pursuant to DSHT’s sub-license from Valli and Gaudio (the Jersey Boys Agreement), pursuant in turn to Valli’s and Gaudio’s license from DeVito (the Valli/Gaduio License), both of which the Court has ruled were valid. McAnuff therefore cannot have infringed the Work in his capacity as the director of Jersey Boys. Plaintiff does not allege that McAnuff engaged in any “rogue” exploitation of the Work unconnected to his efforts with Jersey Boys and uncovered by DSHT’s sublicense.
Plaintiff alleges that Dodger Theatricals is a signatory to the Jersey Boys Agreement under which it produced Jersey Boys along with DSHT. {See id. ¶ 11). Like McAnuff, Dodger Theatricals also cannot have infringed the Work via its efforts with Jersey Boys, and Plaintiff does not allege any “rogue” activity outside the scope of the Jersey Boys Agreement by Dodger Theatricals either. The same reasoning applies to JB Viva Vegas L.P., which Plaintiff alleges is implicated as a general partner of Dodger Theatricals and which serves “as a clearinghouse for revenues generated by the musical in Las Vegas, Nevada.” {Id. ¶ 13). Again, if this Defendant’s only actions were in cooperation with licensees or sublicensees of the Work, and it is not accused of any activity outside the scope of that license, it cannot have infringed the Work. Finally, Plaintiff alleges that Getting Home is a “loan-out” company through which Elice provided some of his services as a writer of Jersey Boys and which is also a signatory to an agreement concerning the Cast Album. {See id. ¶ 16). This Defendant is not accused of any activity outside the scope of the Jersey Boys Agreement. Elice was permitted under that sublicense to write the screenplay and other items for Jersey Boys. And the Court has held on the merits, supra, that the Cast Album does not infringe the Work. Movants are therefore correct that their alleged infringing activity falls within the scope of valid licenses and sublieenses, and they are entitled to summary judgment on the fifteenth through seventeenth causes of action.
Plaintiff responds that the Valli/Gaudio License terminated under its terms before Movants exploited the Work via Jersey Boys. The relevant portion of the Valli/Gaudio License reads:
*1159 In consideration of the foregoing payments, you grant to us the exclusive right to use and incorporate the Materials in one or more theatrical productions, and any and all ancillary and subsidiary exploitations thereof including, without limitation, cast albums, motion picture and televised versions, merchandise and/or other works.... You hereby consent to any such use and agree that the Works may be exploited throughout the world in all media now existing and later devised, and you further acknowledge that you shall not receive any compensation for the use of the Materials or in connection with any of the Works other than the compensation expressly set forth herein. The rights granted by you to us hereunder shall continue in perpetuity if the rights in the Play have merged with each other pursuant to the production contract between us and the initial commercial producer. If the rights of the initial commercial producer lapse prior to merger, and we enter into a production contract with another commercial producer within two (2) years following such lapse of rights, our rights hereunder shall continue only for the duration of such subsequent producer’s rights, and in perpetuity if merger has occurred pursuant to our production contract with such subsequent producer.
The rights granted to us herein are irrevocable and not subject to rescission or injunction under any circumstances.
(Valli/Gaudio License 2-4, ECF No. 457-34, at 38 (emphasis added)). Plaintiff argues that Valli and Gaudio entered into a production agreement with the initial producer, Metropolitan, in September 1999, but that the agreement lapsed without a merger on December 10, 2002, and that Valli and Gaudio did not enter into the Jersey Boys Agreement until October 27, 2005, over two years later.
As an initial matter, it is not clear what the parties meant here by “merger.” The case law uses the term “merger” in the copyright context to describe the principle that when the expression of an idea is inseparable from the idea itself, the expression of the idea cannot be protected by copyright because one cannot copyright an idea under 17 U.S.C. § 102(b). See CDN Inc. v. Rapes,
The term “merger” has also been used to describe the phenomenon whereby intangible intellectual property rights “merge” with tangible property, thereby making it possible to convert intellectual property under state law where only an infringement action would have lied before such a merger. See, e.g., WesternGeco v.
The courts have also used the term “merger” to describe a doctrine that Congress overruled via its new definition of a joint work under the Copyright Act of 1976. See Batiste v. Island Records Inc.,
But even assuming for the sake of argument that merger meant something distinct that never occurred, the Valli/Gaudio License did not terminate. Under the “merger” clause, even if merger did not occur with the initial producer, Valli’s and Gaudio’s rights were to continue for the duration of the subsequent producer’s rights under a sublicense if Valli and Gaudio granted such a sublicense within two years of the lapse of the initial producer’s rights, and in perpetuity if merger first occurred pursuant to the sublicense to the subsequent producer. (See id.). Therefore, so long as Valli and Gaudio gave DSHT the sublicense, i.e., entered into the Jersey Boys Agreement, within two years of the lapse of Metropolitan’s rights, the Valli/Gaudio License would continue for the duration of DSHT’s rights under the Jersey Boys Agreement even if merger never occurred. Valli and Gaudio entered into the Jersey Boys Agreement with the subsequent producer, DSHT, on an unknown date. (See Jersey Boys Agreement, May 1, 2004, ECF No. 457-34). The signatures on that document are not dated, though the document is dated May 1, 2004, (see id.), which is within two years after Metropolitan’s rights expired on December 10, 2002 according to Plaintiffs conclusion of the date Metropolitan’s rights lapsed. (See Pl.’s Separate Statement of Facts ¶ 13, Nov. 28, 2011, ECF No. 720).
However, even if the Court assumes that the Jersey Boys Agreement was not executed until more than two years after the initial production agreement with Metropolitan lapsed,
First, DeVito clearly acquiesced in the continued validity of the Valli/Gaudio License by continually accepting royalties thereunder. Second, the “merger” clause provides for the automatic extension of rights to Valli and Gaudio upon certain conditions. But this contractual provision extending the term of the license under certain conditions inures to the benefit of Valli and Gaudio. It did not and could not
Plaintiff also argues that Valli and Gaudio could not sublicense their rights because their license was not exclusive. But the Court has already ruled that the Valli/Gaudio License was exclusive, and that DeVito gave them the explicit ability to sublicense their rights thereunder, though Valli and Gaudio stand in the shoes of nonexclusive licensees for the purposes of their standing to sue for infringement. See Sybersound Records, Inc. v. UAV Corp.,
G. Valli’s, Gaudio’s, Brickman’s, Elice’s, McAnuff s, DSHT’s, Dodger Theatricals, Ltd.’s, JB Viva Vegas L.P.’s, Jersey Boys Broadway LP’s, JB Records’s, Skunk, Inc.’s, and Getting Home, Inc.’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (ECF No. 638)
Valli, Gaudio, Brickman, Elice, McAnuff, DSHT, Dodger Theatricals, Ltd., JB Viva Vegas L.P., Jersey Boys Broadway LP, JB Records, Skunk, Inc., and Getting Home, Inc. (collectively, “Movants”) argue that any copyright infringement claim arising out of the 2004-2005 La Jolla, California production (the “La Jolla Production”) of Jersey Boys is barred by the statute of limitations. Movants note that the La Jolla Production closed on January 16, 2005, that Plaintiff did not sue Movants via the First Amended Complaint until August 12, 2008, and that the statute of limitations for copyright infringement is three years. See 17 U.S.C. § 507.
The question is whether Plaintiff discovered, or with due diligence should have discovered, the La Jolla Production’s infringement on or before August 13, 2005. See Polar Bear Prods., Inc. v. Timex Corp.,
Movants argue that Plaintiff “most certainly knew of the La Jolla production’s existence, and its end, long before she commenced this action.” But Plaintiff alleges that she first contacted DeVito in an attempt to publish the Work in September 2005 and that Jersey Boys first opened in November 2005. (See Third Am. Compl. ¶¶ 41-44). She also alleges she first learned of the infringement in January 2007. (See id. ¶¶ 45-51). Movants point only to Plaintiffs admission at her deposition that she knew of the La Jolla Production’s existence, not that she knew of the alleged infringement therein, and Plaintiff stated that she did not recall when she learned of the La Jolla Production. (See Corbello Dep. 212-13, June 14, 2011, ECF No. 648-1). It cannot be said that Plaintiff need have traveled from Texas to California to view the La Jolla Production to have acted reasonably under the discovery rule. Movants have not satisfied
H. Plaintiffs Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (ECF No. 641)
Plaintiff asks the Court to grant her offensive summary judgment on the first cause of action for declaratory judgment against DeVito concerning joint authorship of the Work. Plaintiff requests three declarations: (1) that the Work is a joint work under 17 U.S.C. § 101; (2) that Woodard was a co-author and hence a co-owner; and (3) that U.S. Copyright Reg. No. TXu 118, i.e., the DeVito Work, obtained by DeVito in his name only, was secured and has been held in part in constructive trust for Woodard, and subsequently for his heir, Plaintiff. The Court grants the motion.
The Court has already essentially made the first two declarations via its last summary judgment order, wherein it ruled that the Work was in fact a joint work between DeVito and Woodard, the only question being whether DeVito was himself a co-author. In short, the Letter Agreement is the “best objective manifestation of a shared intent.” See Aalmuhammed v. Lee,
A constructive trust in intellectual property is permitted as a remedy governed by state law. See Mattel, Inc. v. MGA Entm’t, Inc.,
A constructive trust will arise whenever the circumstances under which property was acquired makes it inequitable that it should be retained by him who holds the legal title, as against another, provided some confidential relationship exists between the two and provided the raising of the trust is necessary to prevent a failure of justice.
Schmidt v. Merriweather,
The relationship between Woodard and DeVito was sufficiently confidential, as evidenced by the Letter Agreement, to invoke this remedy. The remaining question is whether the DeVito Work is the same as the Work. Plaintiff provides a copy of the Work. (See Work, Jan. 1991, ECF No. 636, at 2). She has alleged that the Work and the DeVito Work are the same except that the title page of the DeVito Work is different and that the DeVito Work is missing page 264. (See Third Am. Compl. ¶¶ 4849). Plaintiff provides no copy of the DeVito Work, so the Court cannot directly compare the two. How-
The Court reaffirms its finding that the Work was a joint work between Woodard and DeVito. The intent of the parties, as expressed through the Letter Agreement was clearly that Woodard would “do all of the actual writing,” and that DeVito would have veto power over the final draft. All of the evidence supports this interpretation. DeVito admits as much in his deposition, confirming Plaintiff’s characterization of the situation, i.e., that Woodard made all creative efforts in compiling and writing the Work and that DeVito mainly looked at what Woodard had created and asked him to make minor edits. Although DeVito attempts to characterize Woodard’s contribution as that of a scribe and not an author, it is clear from a comparison of the Work to the 1988 Interview transcripts Plaintiff adduces that Woodard was more than a scribe. The 1988 Interviews are in question-and-answer format, not prose, as is the Work. DeVito admitted at his deposition that the reason he needed Woodard (or someone) was because he was not skilled enough to author the Work himself. He does not argue that his only impairment was poor penmanship, arthritis in his hands, or the inability to work a typewriter. He argues that his impairment was his lack of education. It is precisely the creative writing skill that DeVito admits he did not have that Woodard provided. It is not only works of fiction that are protectable by copyright. Non-fiction works are also protected—not the historical facts themselves, but the creative presentation of those facts. As the Court noted in the previous order, it is a close question whether DeVito would even be a joint author under the facts of this case in the absence of the Letter Agreement. And Plaintiff adduces additional research materials not provided by DeVito during the 1988 Interviews but used by Woodard to assist in writing the Work, showing that he was more than just a scribe.
The Court therefore grants Plaintiffs motion and rules that: (1) the Work is a joint work under 17 U.S.C. § 101; (2) Woodard and DeVito were coauthors, and hence, Plaintiff is a co-owner as Woodard’s heir; and (3) U.S. Copyright Reg. No. TXu 454 118, i.e., the DeVito Work, registered by DeVito in his name only, was secured and has been held in part in constructive trust for Woodard, and subsequently for his heir, Plaintiff.
I. Claims Disposition
Claim Short Title_Defendant(s) Disposition_
1 _Declarations_DeVito_Adjudicated via this Order
2 _Accounting_DeVit_Remains for Trial_
3 Breach of Contract DeVito Remains for Trial_
Bad Faith DeVito Remains for Trial
Constructive Fraud DeVito Remains for Trial
Fraud/Concealment DeVito Remains for Trial
Conversion DeVito Remains for Trial
9_ Infringement (UK) DeVito Remains for Trial
10_ Infringement (Can.) DeVito Remains for Trial
1L Infringement (Austl.) DeVito Remains for Trial
12_ Declarations (Multiple) Adjudicated via Order 661
13. Declarations (Multiple) Adjudicated via Order 661
14. Accounting (Multiple) Adjudicated via Order 661
15_ Infringement (Multiple) Adjudicated via this Order
16_ Vicarious Inf. (Multiple) Adjudicated via this Order
IlContributory Inf. (Multiple) Adjudicated via this Order
ls. Infringement (UK) (Multiple) Adjudicated via this Order
19_ Infringement (Can.) (Multiple) Adjudicated via this Order
20 Infringement (Austl.) (Multiple) Adjudicated via this Order
The second through eleventh claims remain for trial, with DeVito and David as the remaining Defendants.
CONCLUSION
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that Jersey Boys Records Limited Partnership’s Motion for Summary Judgment (ECF No. 605) is GRANTED in part and DENIED it in part. There is personal jurisdiction over JB Records in Nevada, but it is entitled to summary judgment on the merits.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Valli’s, Gaudio’s, Brickman’s, Elice’s, McAnuff s, DSHT’s, Dodger Theatricals, Ltd.’s, JB Viva Vegas L.P.’s, and Getting Home, Inc.’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (ECF No. 613) is DENIED.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that David’s Motion for Summary Judgment (ECF No. 622) is DENIED.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Valli’s, Gaudio’s, Brickman’s, Elice’s, McAnuff s, DSHT’s, Dodger Theatricals, Ltd.’s, JB Viva Vegas L.P.’s, Getting Home, Inc.’s, Jersey Boys Broadway LP’s, and Skunk, Inc.’s Motion for Summary Judgment (ECF No. 626) is DENIED as moot.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Valli’s, Gaudio’s, Brickman’s, Elice’s, McAnuffs, DSHT’s, Dodger Theatricals, Ltd.’s, JB Viva Vegas L.P.’s, Getting Home, Inc.’s, Jersey Boys Broadway LP’s, and Skunk, Inc.’s Motion for Summary Judgment (ECF No. 632) is GRANTED.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Valli’s, Gaudio’s, Brickman’s, Elice’s, McAnuff s, DSHT’s, Dodger Theatricals, Ltd.’s, JB Viva Vegas L.P.’s, and Getting Home, Inc.’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (ECF No. 635) is GRANTED.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Valli’s, Gaudio’s, Brickman’s, Elice’s, McAnuffs, DSHT’s, Dodger Theatricals, Ltd.’s, JB Viva Vegas L.P.’s, Jersey Boys Broadway LP’s, JB Records’s, Skunk, Inc.’s, and
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Plaintiffs Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (ECF No. 641) is GRANTED.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the Motion to Continue Hearing (ECF No. 743) is DENIED.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the Motion to Reconsider (ECF No. 744) is GRANTED.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the Motion to Continue Trial (ECF No. 670) is GRANTED.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the current trial date is VACATED.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the Clerk shall enter judgment as to all Defendants except DeVito and David.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Plaintiff alleges that her 2007 supplemental registration "was not cross-indexed” with DeVito’s original 1991 registration because DeVito had not signed his 1991 application. (See id..). She alleges that as a result, she cannot establish clear title in the Work. (See id.). But Plaintiff does not explain how DeVito could have obtained his basic registration without signing his application, and in fact she adduces a copy of DeVito's signed 1991 application. (See Form TX, Reg. No. Txu 454 118, July 11, 1991, ECF No. 457-22 (signed by DeVito on July 7, 2011)). This form appears to function as both an application (with the applicant’s signature at the bottom of page 2) and a certificate of registration (once approved by the office at the top of page 1). (See id.). Nor does it make sense that the office did not cross-reference Plaintiff's 2007 supplemental application with DeVito’s 1991 basic application, particularly as her 2007 application was a supplement to the 1991 registration and the certificate the office eventually issued specifically identifies the 1991 basic registration both by registration number and DeVito's name.
The applicable regulation, which Plaintiff cites, clarifies her complaint. Although her supplemental registration identifies DeVito’s basic registration, because no basic registrant (DeVito) signed the supplemental registration, the office could not annotate DeVito’s basic registration with the fact of Plaintiffs supplemental registration, see 37 C.F.R. § 201.5(b)(1) n. 1, so a person finding only DeVito's basic registration would not be aware of Plaintiff's supplemental registration. Even though the supplemental registration of Woodard’s and his heirs' rights in the Work is sufficient to give constructive notice under the statute, it is only sufficient if a "reasonable search” would reveal Woodard's rights in the Work, and it is theoretically possible that a search might reveal only DeVito's registration, so that the failure to annotate DeVito's basic registration with the fact of Plaintiffs supplemental registration is problematic. See 17 U.S.C. § 205(c)(1). Plaintiff's fear is practically unfounded, however, because the supplemental registration includes the title of the DeVito Work as it appears on the basic registration itself, as well as the basic registration number, (see Certificate of Registration TXul 372-636), so a reasonable search could not fail to reveal the supplemental registration, and the world is therefore on constructive notice of the supplemental registration as a matter of law regardless of the "one-way” cross-reference, see § 205(c). Plaintiff may
. Plaintiff provides evidence indicating that the first signatory to the Jersey Boys Agreement was Gaudio in May 2005.
. The Court assumes without deciding that Plaintiff is Woodard’s heir. No party appears to dispute this.
. The Court denied summary judgment to Plaintiff on the twelfth cause of action for a declaration, and Defendants did not move for summary judgment on that cause of action. But because that cause of action requested declarations on matters of law for the Court, and the Court ruled against Plaintiff, the claim has essentially been adjudicated such that a grant of summary judgment to Defendants on the twelfth cause of action would be a formality at this stage.
