DC Cоmics Inc. (“DC”) appeals from a judgment of the United States District Court,
I
For purposes of this appeal, we may assume thе following facts. DC is the sole owner of all trademarks and copyrights relating to numerous comic strip characters who appear in cartoon adventure stories in which the principal heroes are Batman and Green Arrow. In those adventures, Batman’s secret hideout and headquarters is called the Batcave, and has been a prominent feature since 1944. “The Batcave” is also the title of a column which appeared in DC’s Batman comic magazines since 1959. For over twenty-one years, DC has derived substantial revenues from licensing the use of the Batman character and related Bat-paraphernalia, including licensing of the “Batcave” mark to a toy manufacturer which markets a plastic replica of Batman’s hideout.
Defendant RFI is a New York corporation which owns a chain of retail bookstores in the New York metropolitan аrea and a related mail order business, all of which operate under the name of “The Batcave.” The Batcave bookstores sell books, comic magazines, including Batman and Green Arrow comic books, and movie memorabilia. Inside RFI’s Manhattan store is at least one depiction of the stylized bat symbol worn by DC’s Batman character. On at least two occasions, RFI has also used drawings of DC’s Batman and Green Arrow characters in its advertising flyers.
DC commenced this action in April, 1982, seeking damages and injunctive relief against RFI and its president Frank Verzyl. DC alleged that RFI’s use of the Batman and Green Arrow figures in its advertising flyers, its display of the Batman insignia in its store and its use of the name “The Batcave” for its bookstore and mail order business constituted: (i) copyright infringement under the Copyright Act of 1976, 17 U.S.C. §§ 101-810 (1976); (ii) trademark
Defendant Frank Verzyl, appearing pro se, filed a motion to dismiss. Although RFI submitted only an unsworn statement, no pre-trial discovery was conducted, and DC offered substantial evidentiary submission in opposition, Judge Duffy, without oral argument or evidentiary hearing, granted summary judgment for RFI and dismissed the complaint. In so doing, he found that DC had “failed to establish” a likelihood of confusion resulting from RFI’s use of the “Batcave” mark and that RFI’s use of the Batman and Green Arrow characters on its advertising came within the “fair use” defense to copyright infringement liability.
We reverse.
II
It is apparent from the face of his opinion that Judge Duffy believed DC bore a burden of proving its case on RFI’s motion and resolved a host of material factual disputes against DC in granting summary judgment. He stated, for example, that DC “failed to show that defendants’ use of ‘Batcаve’ has in fact infringed upon that mark,”
DC Comics Inc. v. Reel
Fantasy,
Inc.,
DC alleged that RFI’s use of the name “The Batcave” for its stores infringed on its registered trademark for “Batman” and a common law trademark in “Batcave.” The district court granted summary judgment because it found that no confusion was likely to result from RFI’s use of the name the “Batcave” for its stores. As we noted in
American International Group,
however, “[wjhether or not there is a likelihood of confusion is a question of fact аs to the probable or actual actions and reactions of prospective purchasers of the goods or services of the parties.”
As to the strength of DC’s mark, the district court concluded that “Batman” did not extend to “Batcave” because the only similarity between the two words was the “Bаt” prefix common to both words, and “Bat” had not “acquired a secondary meaning which would automatically link any word it modified with the Batman character.” DC Comics, Inc. at 144. In so concluding, the court simply ignored DC’s allegations and evidentiаry submission which more than adequately raised the possibility that the Batcave is an integral part of the Batman stories and thus strongly associated with the mark “Batman.”
The district court’s conclusion that the “Batman” and “Batcave” marks were dissimilar also ignored the evidentiary ma
The district court simply adopted the unsworn statements of RFI in concluding that it used the “Batcave” mark in good faith:
[T]he defendants claim that they picked ‘Batcave’ to capitalize upon the subterranean location of their store and upon its resemblance, with its long corrider [sic] leading to a rоom with a rough unfinished ceiling, to a cave inhabited by bats. These facts establish a good faith basis for their use of the mark ‘Batcave.’
Id.
at 145. In so concluding, the district judge resolved yet another factual issue which we have said is “singularly inappropriate for determination on summary judgment.”
American International Group,
The district judge also found there was “no evidence substantiating DC’s allegation that consumers were likely to believe that the store was in fact an official ‘Batman’ store,” although he acknowledged that “[a]n affidavit was presented as evidence that a consumer associatеd the store, which indeed does sell comic books, with Batman.” DC Comics Inc. at 144. He reached this conclusion by reasoning that customers entering a Batcave bookstore would quickly perceive that it sold many different, comic books. At the risk of understatement, we will say only that the logic of how such sales would inexorably dispel any thought of a connection between the store and the publishers of Batman was far more obvious to him than it is to us. And, at the risk of repetition, we state that such factual conclusions are inappropriate on a motion for summary judgment.
Finally, the district court held that RFI’s use of DC’s Batman and Green Arrow figures on its advertising flyers came within the fair use defense. The doctrine of fair use, originally a creature of the common law and now codified in 17 U.S.C. § 107(2) (1976), permits the reasonable use of copyrighted material without the owner’s consent when such use would tip the balance between the public interest in the free flow of information and the copyright holder’s exclusive control over the work in favor of the public.
Meeropol v. Nizer,
[T]he fair use of a copyrighted work, including such use by reproduction in copies or phonorecords or by any other means specified by that section, for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching (including multiple copies for classroom use), scholarship, or resеarch, is not an infringement of copyright. In determining whether the use made of a work in any particular case is a fair use the factors to be considered shall include—
(1) the purpose and character of the use, including whether such use is of a commercial nature or is for nonprofit educational purposes;
(2) the nature of the copyrighted work;
(3) the amount and substantiality of the portion used in relation to the copyrighted work as a whole; and
(4) the effect of the use upon the potential market for or value of the copyrighted work.
While it appears that DC’s copyrights may have been secured before the statute
The fair use defense turns not on hard and fast rules but rather on “an examination of the facts in each case.”
Meeropol v. Nizer,
Since the flyers utilizing the coрyrighted figures were obviously of a commercial nature and part of an alleged overall appropriation of DC’s property in the Batman character, we cannot say as a matter of law that a fair use defense will succeed. Moreover, we do not agree with the district court’s statement relating to the fourth fair use criterion:
[i]t does not appear that plaintiff was harmed by defendants’ use of the figures. On the contrary, defendants’ use of the figures advertised their sale of plaintiff’s comic books, leading to an increased market for plaintiff’s goods.
DC Comics Inc. at 147. Since one of the benefits of ownership of copyrighted material is the right to license its use for a fee, even a speculated increase in DC’s comic book sales as a consequence of RFI’s infringement would not call the fair use defense into play as a matter of law. The owner оf the copyright is in the best position to balance the prospect of increased sales against revenue from a license.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. Frank Verzyl appears pro se and RFI is not represented by counsel. We assume, for the purposes of this appeal, that the corporation has joined in and adopted all of Verzyl’s pro se papers. Fed.R.App.P. 28(i).
