As almost every red-blooded American knows, the National Football League (“NFL”) televises most of its weekly football games. Simultaneously with the broadcast, NFL makes videotape recordings of the games, which it registers with the United States Copyright Office.
PrimeTime 24 Joint Venture (“Prime-Time”) is a satellite carrier that makes secondary transmissions of copyrighted television network programming to owners and renters of satellite dish antennae. PrimeTime has a statutorily granted license to make satellite transmissions to its subscribers in United States households that do not have adequate over-the-air broadcast reception from primary television stations, i.e., “unserved” households. See generally 17 U.S.C. § 119. However, PrimeTime has not limited its retransmissions to unserved households in the United States. Without securing permission from NFL, PrimeTime also makes secondary transmissions of football broadcasts to its satellite subscribers in Canada.
On several occasions in 1997, NFL officials wrote to PrimeTime demanding that this practice stop. The following excerpt from one of PrimeTime’s replies explains why PrimeTime believes it has the right to continue this practice:
Next, I would like to address your assertion that the provision of PrimeTime 24’s service to subscribers in Canada infringes your copyright in the United States, notwithstanding the facts that all of the recipients in question are in Canada, and PrimeTime 24’s actions in this regard comport with applicable Canadian law. Under United States copyright law, the NFL is entitled to control the “public” display or performance of any audiovisual work for which it holds a valid copyright. Accordingly, there can be no infringement of the NFL’s rights unless and until there has been a public display or performance. Because the copyright laws of the United States have no extraterritorial applicability, “public” performances that occur in other countries cannot trigger liability for copyright infringement under the laws of the United States. Instead, the law of the country in which the public performance does take place protects the copyright holder.
Letter from Sid Amira, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of PrimeTime, to Frank Hawkins, Vice President of NFL (Aug. 8,1997).
PrimeTime’s continued retransmission of NFL programming into Canada resulted in the litigation now before us. By a memorandum and order dated March 23, 1999, the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (McKenna, J.) denied PrimeTime’s motion to dismiss NFL’s complaint. By a decision dated September 24,1999, the district court granted NFL’s motion for summary judgment and referred the case to a magistrate judge for calculation of fees and damages. On October 18, 1999, the district court issued an order permanently enjoining PrimeTime from retransmitting telecasts of NFL football games outside the United States. PrimeTime asks us to reverse the final injunction.
Under the Copyright Act, the owner of a copyright has the exclusive right publicly to perform and display the copyrighted material. 17 U.S.C. § 106(4) & (5). The *12 Act explains that the right to perform copyrighted material publicly includes the right “to transmit or otherwise communicate a performance ... of the work ... to the public, by means of any device or process, whether the members of the public capable of receiving the performance ... receive it in the same place or in separate places and at the same time or at different times.” Id. § 101. Congress stated that “[e]ach and every method by which [] images or sounds comprising a performance or display are picked up and conveyed is a ‘transmission,’ and if the transmission reaches the public in [any] form, the case comes within the scope of [§ 106(4) or (5) ].” H.R.Rep. No. 94-1476, at 64 (1976), reprinted in 1976 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5659, 5678.
The issue in this case is whether PrimeTime publicly performed or displayed NFL’s copyrighted material. PrimeTime argues that capturing or uplinking copyrighted material and transmitting it to a satellite does not constitute a public display or performance of that material. PrimeTime argues that any public performance or display occurs during the downlink from the satellite to the home subscriber in Canada, which is in a foreign country where the Copyright Act does not apply. Although this Court has not squarely resolved the issue, several courts have rejected PrimeTime’s reasoning.
In
WGN Continental Broadcasting Co. v. United Video, Inc.,
Judge Posner, writing for the court in
WGN,
noted that a contrary result would render the passive carrier exemption in the Act superfluous.
Id.
The passive carrier exemption provides that a secondary transmission is not copyright infringement if the transmitter has no control over the content or selection of the original signal or over the recipients of the secondary transmission and provides only the wires, cables, or communication channels for the use of others.
See
17 U.S.C. § 111(a)(3). In other words, if a copyrighted signal is publicly performed or displayed only when received by viewers, there would be no need for a passive carrier exemption because these passive intermediate carriers “do not transmit directly to the public.”
WGN,
District courts in this Circuit have agreed that a transmission need not be made directly to the public in order for there to be a public performance or display. For example, in
David v. Showtime/The Movie Channel, Inc.,
Other district courts have relied on
David
to reach the same conclusion.
See
*13
National Cable Television Ass’n, Inc. v. Broadcast Music, Inc.,
The Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit has suggested a different result. When considering whether the Copyright Act preempted state law, that Court stated that copyright infringement does not occur until the signal is received by the viewing public.
See Allarcom Pay Television, Ltd. v. General Instrument Corp.,
We believe the most logical interpretation of the Copyright Act is to hold that a public performance or display includes “each step in the process by which a protected work wends its way to its audience.”
David,
We do not rely on the Satellite Home Viewer Act (“SHVA”), 17 U.S.C. § 119, in arriving at this conclusion. Both parties contend that the Act’s creation of a statutory copyright license for certain United States households supports their interpretation of the Copyright Act with respect to PrimeTime’s Canadian subscribers. An examination of the congressional reports leading to the adoption of the SHVA discloses that Congress was concerned about the “millions of Americans” who live “in areas where the reception of off-air network signals is not possible or is of unacceptable quality,” and the proposed bill simply “resolves the legal issues surrounding provision of broadcast signals to rural America.” TrademaRK Law Revision Act of 1988—Satellite Home VieweR Act of 1988, H.R.Rep. No. 100-887(11), at 6-7 (1988), reprinted in 1988 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5638, 5643-44. We see no need to extract more from this “interim” statutory solution than Congress put into it.
