The appeal by Ferdinand Pickett, plaintiff in the district court, presents us with an issue concerning copyright in derivative works, while the cross-appeal, by the defendant, presents a procedural issue. The defendant, identified only as “Prince” in the caption of the various pleadings, is a well-known popular singer whose name at birth was Prince Rogers Nelson, but who for many years performed under the name Prince (which is what we’ll call him) and since 1992 has referred to himself by an unpronounceable symbol reproduced as Figure 1 at the end of this opinion. (See generally “The Independent, Unofficial and Uncensored Magazine Exploring the Artist Formerly Known as Prince,” <http://www.uptown.se/>.) The symbol (which rather strikingly resembles the Egyptian hieroglyph
ankh,
see Richard H. Wilkinson,.
Symbol & Magic in Egyptian Art
159, 169 (fig.128) (1994), but the parties make nothing of this, so neither shall we) is his trademark but it is also a copyrighted work of visual art that licensees of Prince have embodied in various forms,
*404
including jewelry, clothing, and musical instruments. Although Prince did not register a copyright of the symbol until 1997, the plaintiff concedes that Prince obtained a valid copyright in 1992, registration not being a precondition to copyright protection, 17 U.S.C. § 408(a), though it is a precondition to a suit for copyright infringement. § 411(a);
Raquel v. Education Mgmt. Corp.,
In 1993 the plaintiff made a guitar (Figure 2) in the shape of the Prince symbol; he concedes that it is a derivative work within the meaning of 17 U.S.C. § 101 (“a work based upon one or more preexisting works, such as a translation, musical arrangement, dramatization, fíctionalization, motion picture version, sound recording, art reproduction, abridgment, condensation, or any other form in which a work may be recast, transformed, or adapted. A work consisting of editorial revisions, annotations, elaborations, or other modifications which, as a whole, represent an original work of authorship, is a ‘derivative work’ ”). The plaintiff claims (truthfully, we assume for purposes of the appeal) to have shown the guitar to Prince. Shortly afterwards Prince appeared in public playing a guitar quite similar to the plaintiffs (Figure 3).
The plaintiff brought this suit for copyright infringement in 1994, but it languished for years in the district court. In January 1997 Prince counterclaimed for infringement of the copyright on his symbol, arguing (because he had not yet registered his copyright — indeed it hadn’t even been assigned to him yet) that in 1992 Warner Brothers had registered a copyright of the symbol in connection with a record of Prince’s music. Prince was mistaken; the copyright was of the music, not of the symbol, although the symbol appeared on the album cover. In any event Prince had no standing to enforce someone else’s copyright — so that, if only Warner Brothers held a copyright on the Prince symbol, Prince would have no defense against Pickett’s suit for infringement (or at least would not have the defense that he successfully asserted in the district court), as well as no basis for a counterclaim. In July 1997, however, on the Monday following the third anniversary of Pickett’s suit (which fell on a Saturday), Prince filed an amended counterclaim for infringement, claiming that it was his own, not Warner Brothers’, copyright that Pickett’s guitar infringed; for between January and July Prince had obtained the copyright by assignment and had registered it. The district court (Judge Shadur) held that the amended counterclaim, which superseded the original one, did not relate back to the original counterclaim because it did not arise out of the same copyright, and so it was barred by the three-year statute of limitations for claims of copyright infringement. 17 U.S.C. § 507(b). Later the suit was transferred to Judge Pallmeyer, who on Prince’s motion for summary judgment dismissed Pickett’s claim on the ground that he had no right to make a derivative work based on the Prince symbol without Prince’s consent, which was never sought or granted.
Pickett claims the right to copyright a work derivative from another person’s copyright without that person’s permission and then to sue that person for infringement by the person’s own derivative work. Pickett’s guitar was a derivative work of the copyrighted Prince symbol, and so was Prince’s guitar. Since Prince had (or so we must assume) access to Pickett’s guitar, and since the two guitars, being derivatives of the same underlying work, are, naturally, very similar in appearance, Pickett has — if he is correct that one can copyright a derivative work when the original work is copyrighted by someone else who hasn’t authorized the maker of the derivative work to copyright
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it — a prima facie case of infringement.
Wildlife Express Corp. v. Carol Wright Sales, Inc.,
We doubt that he could show the requisite incremental originality,
Lee v. A.R.T. Co.,
Although Pickett’s guitar isn’t identical to the Prince .symbol, the difference in appearance may well be due to nothing more than the functional difference between a two-dimensional symbol and a guitar in the shape of that symbol. In that event even Prince could not have copyrighted the guitar version of the symbol. 17 U.S.C. § 101;
American Dental Ass’n v. Delta Dental Plans Ass’n,
We need not pursue the issue of originality of derivative works. The Copyright Act grants the owner .of a copyright the
exclusive
right to prepare derivative works based upon the copyrighted work. 17 U.S.C. § 106(2);
Lee v. A.R.T. Co.,
*406
supra,
Pickett relies for his implausible theory primarily on section 103(a) of the Copyright Act, which provides that while copyright can be obtained in derivative works, “protection for a work employing preexisting material in which copyright subsists does not extend to any part of the work in which such material has been used unlawfully.” Pickett reads this as authorizing a person other than the owner of the original work to make a derivative work, merely forbidding him to infringe the original. It is very difficult to see how a derivative work not made by the owner of the original work could fail to infringe it, given the definition of derivative works. (There is no infringement by the owner of the copyright of the original work, since, as note, section 106(2) entitles him to make derivative works based on his copyrighted work.
Cortner v. Israel,
Pickett relied in the district court on a dictum in
Eden Toys, Inc. v. Florelee Undergarment Co.,
It is apparent from what we have said so far not only that Pickett could not copyright his guitar, but that his guitar infringes Prince’s copyright. (Pickett’s further argument, that Prince’s copyright has evaporated if, as Judge Shadur ruled, the counterclaim to enforce it is time-barred and so Prince’s symbol fell into the public domain and became fair game for makers of derivative works, is ridiculous.) The remaining question, whether the counterclaim was properly dismissed on the basis of the statute of limitations, is the subject of Prince’s cross-appeal. Oddly, there is not the slightest doubt that the amended counterclaim was filed before the statute of limitations expired, and this regardless of whether it related back to the original, Fed.R.Civ.P. 15(c)(2), as probably it did not, since it was based on a different copyright. Cf. 6A Charles Alan Wright, Arthur R. Miller & Mary Kay Kane, Federal Practice and Procedure § 1497, pp. 70-74 (1990). Although the amended counterclaim was filed on the last possible day before expiration, namely the Monday after the Saturday that was the third anniversary of the filing of Pickett’s suit, see Fed. R. Civ.P. 6(a), the adage that a miss is as good as a mile applies in reverse here: a suit is timely whether filed the day after the claim accrues or the very last day before the suit would be time-barred.
So why was the counterclaim dismissed as untimely? The three-year period of limitations began running on July 5, 1994, and the judge ruled that the counterclaim was untimely because it had not been filed until July 7, 1997. Apparently no one, including the judge, noticed that July 5, 1997, was a Saturday. Prince’s lawyer finally woke up, and a couple of weeks after Judge Shadur had ruled filed a motion for reconsideration which the judge denied on the ground that a motion for reconsideration is not an appropriate vehicle for injecting a new legal theory into a case.
We think that in so ruling the judge abused his discretion. Unlike the case in which a
judgment
is sought to be vacated, to which the principle enunciated by the judge does apply, e.g.,
Caisse National de Credit Agricole v. CBI Industries, Inc.,
Although we can understand Judge Sha-dur’s annoyance at being led into plain error, a judge’s refusal to correct a plain error that he had committed weeks before is not justified by the doctrine of the law of the case, or anything else we can think of.
Creek v. Village of Westhaven,
It is conceivable though not argued that Prince’s failure to discover that July 5, 1997, was a Saturday (or to realize the significance of the fact) was harmful to Pickett; but such an argument would get nowhere, for it was as irresponsible for Pickett’s lawyer to argue the untimeliness of a counterclaim that he should have known was timely as it was for Prince’s lawyer to fail to refute the argument. As no effort was made to show that Pickett was harmed by Prince’s mistake (and it was, to repeat, Pickett’s mistake as well), let alone so gravely harmed as to warrant the dismissal of the counterclaim rather than just an order that Prince reimburse Pickett for any expense occasioned by the mistake, we cannot think of any reason at all why Judge Shadur should have refused to rescind his erroneous dismissal of the counterclaim.
The judgment is affirmed insofar as it dismisses Pickett’s suit but vacated insofar as it dismisses the. counterclaim, and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
AFFIRMED IN PART, VACATED IN PART, AND Remanded.
*409 [[Image here]]
*410 Figure 2
*411 [[Image here]]
