FUTURESOURCE LLC, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. REUTERS LIMITED; REUTERS S.A.; and REUTERS AMERICA INC., Defendants-Appellants.
No. 02-2060
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
Argued October 18, 2002—Decided November 27, 2002
Before POSNER, DIANE P. WOOD, and EVANS, Circuit Judges.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 02 C 2073—Elaine E. Bucklo, Judge.
The facts of this case are not in dispute; simplified, they are as follows. The Reuters news service provides news and financial information to paying subscribers, such as newspapers. Bridge Information Services was, and FutureSource is, a competitor of Reuters. In 1999, FutureSource made a contract with Bridge, the “Intercompany Service Agreement” (ISA), under which, in exchange for royalties of roughly $1.5 million a year, Bridge agreed to furnish FutureSource with continuously updated, consolidated, rearranged, and reformatted financial-markets data for resale to FutureSource‘s customers, and also with the software necessary to download the data. The agreement was to remain in force essentially as long as FutureSource wanted it to.
Two years after the making of the Intercompany Service Agreement, Bridge filed for bankruptcy. The bankruptcy court conducted an auction of Bridge‘s assets at which Reuters bought the assets used in Bridge‘s financial-markets data service for $275 million, pursuant to an asset purchase agreement between the parties. The agreement provided that Reuters was assuming no contractual or other obligations of Bridge other than those specified. Bridge‘s obligations under the Interservice Company Agreement were not among those specified; and in its order approving
Among the assets of Bridge that were not bought by Reuters (or by anyone else) at the auction were the rights conferred on Bridge by the Intercompany Service Agreement, including the right to receive royalties from FutureSource in exchange for providing the service that the agreement required Bridge to provide to that company. At a subsequent stage in the bankruptcy proceeding those assets were sold to another company, Moneyline Network, as part of an assignment of the agreement to that company. So Moneyline became the obligee of FutureSource‘s royalty obligation under the ISA to Bridge and the obligor of Bridge‘s service obligation to FutureSource. Moneyline assured the bankruptcy court that it would perform its obligations to FutureSource under the agreement, but apparently it has not done so and, as far as we know, FutureSource is not paying Moneyline the royalties called for by the agreement—understandably, if it‘s receiving no services from Moneyline.
Nonsensical interpretations of contracts, as of statutes, are disfavored. Level 3 Communications, Inc. v. Federal Ins. Co., 168 F.3d 956, 958 (7th Cir. 1999); Health Cost Controls of Illinois, Inc. v. Washington, 187 F.3d 703, 711-12 (7th Cir. 1999); Outlet Embroidery Co. v. Derwent Mills, 172 N.E. 462, 463 (1930) (Cardozo, C.J.); see also Public Citizen v. U.S. Dept. of Justice, 491 U.S. 440, 453-54 (1989); Green v. Bock Laundry Machine Co., 490 U.S. 504, 527 (1989) (Scalia, J., concurring). Not because of a judicial aversion to nonsense as such, but because people are unlikely to make contracts, or legislators statutes, that they believe will have absurd consequences. This principle is apt to the present case. Even though the Intercompany Service Agreement, the source of FutureSource‘s claim, required FutureSource to pay annual royalties of $1.5 million to continue receiving the Bridge data service, FutureSource intends to pay
We are not altogether certain that FutureSource is not paying and will not pay Moneyline, but its position would be hardly more sensible if it acknowledged an obligation to pay Moneyline for services received from Reuters. Moneyline would be receiving payment for nothing, and Reuters would be rendering valuable services for nothing.
The argument that FutureSource makes on behalf of these results is that the Intercompany Service Agreement gave it a license to use Bridge‘s intellectual property and that an intellectual-property license, like a tenancy in real estate, is not extinguished by the sale of the underlying property. This is true in general; and we may further assume that the contract did convey to FutureSource an interest in intellectual property. Although data are not copyrightable, compilations of data that involve a significant element of creativity are, Feist Publications, Inc. v. Rural Telephone Service Co., 499 U.S. 340, 348, 358-59 (1991);
And in any event the order approving a bankruptcy sale is a judicial order and can be attacked collaterally only within the tight limits that
There is an independently fatal flaw in FutureSource‘s position. It fails to distinguish between property that does and property that does not exist. Suppose a builder prom-
In the Intercompany Service Agreement, Bridge merely promised to license to FutureSource data specified in the contract as and when those data were created. If as we greatly doubt the license was not extinguished by the bankruptcy sale, all this means is that FutureSource remains free to use the data that it acquired from Bridge (stale data having little, maybe no, current value). Its contractual rights under the ISA, including the right to receive licenses of future data, run against Moneyline, by virtue of Moneyline‘s purchase of the ISA. FutureSource has no contractual rights against Reuters, with which it has no contract; and it has no license in data that Bridge-Reuters has not yet created.
FutureSource argues that if the agreement is deemed an executory contract to grant it future licenses (executory because the duty to perform had not yet materialized), the contract survived the bankruptcy sale because it was not
Obviously a preliminary injunction should not be entered if the plaintiff has no claim; and FutureSource has none. The next step in the district court presumably will be the filing of a motion for summary judgment by Reuters and its grant by the district judge. But we decline to anticipate the judge‘s ruling on such a motion (and have not been asked to do so).
REVERSED.
A true Copy:
Teste:
Clerk of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
