OPINION OF THE COURT
The en banc court has granted the Petition for Rehearing filed by plaintiff Orson, Inc., d/b/a Roxy Screening Rooms, and vacated the decision of the panel which held that section 203-7 of the Pennsylvania Feature Motion Picture Fair Business Practices Law, 73 Pa. Stat. § 203-7, was invalid because it was preempted by the federal Copyright Act.
See Orson, Inc. v. Miramax Film Corp.,
The positions of the parties are fully set forth in their original briefs. In addition, we have received amicus briefs from the Motion Picture Association of America (“MPAA”) in support of appellant Mira-max Film Corp. and from the National Association of Theatre Owners of Pennsylvania (“Theatre Owners”) in support of affirmance. Because the issue is a straightforward one, the court en banc has decided to consider this case on the basis of the submitted briefs.
*379 I.
BACKGROUND
Section 106 of the Copyright Act providеs that, subject to certain exceptions inapplicable here, the owner of a copyright has:
the exclusive rights to do and to authorize any of the following:
(3) to distribute copies or phonorecords of the copyrighted work to the public by sale or other transfer of ownership, or by rental, lease, or lending; [and]
(4) in the case of literary, musical, dramatic, and choreographic works, pantomimes, and motion pictures and other audiovisual works, to perform the copyrighted work publicly.
17 U.S.C. § 106.
Another section of the same statute provides:
On and after Januаry 1,1978, all legal or equitable rights that are equivalent to any of the exclusive rights within the general scope of copyright as specified by section 106 ... are governed exclusively by this title. Thereafter, no person is entitled to any such right or equivalent right in any such work under the common law or statutes of any State.
17 U.S.C. § 301.
Section 203-7 of the Pennsylvania Feature Motion Picture Fair Business Practices Law (the “Pennsylvania Act”) provides:
No license agreement shall be entered into between distributor and exhibitor to grant an exclusive first run or an exclusivе multiple first run for more than 42 days without provision to expand the run to second run or subsequent run theatres within the geographical area and license agreements and prints of said feature motion picture shall be made available by the distributor to those subsequent run theatres that would normally be served on subsequent run availability.
73 Pa. Stat. § 203-7.
Plaintiff Orson, Inc., the owner of a Center City Philadelphia (referred to as “Center City”) movie theater, brought suit in August 1993 against Miramax Film Corp., a motion picture production and distribution company, alleging that Miramax violatеd section 203-7 of the Pennsylvania Act by entering into an exclusive first-run exhibition agreement for more than forty-two days with another Center City theater.
See Orson, Inc. v. Miramax Film Corp.,
Miramax distributes art films nationally, including in Philadelphia and the surrounding metropolitan area. The parties have not attempted to define “art films” other than as this court did in a prior opinion between the same parties by contrasting “art films” with “movies that may be characterized as ‘commercial’ or ‘mainstream.’”
See Orson, Inc. v. Miramax Film Corp.,
Orson showed primarily second-run art films frоm January 1992 through October 1994 through the Roxy Screening Rooms, a Center City movie theater with two screens. The first runs of Miramax’s art films were shown in Center City at the Ritz Theaters, a pair of theaters with five screens each, the Ritz Five and the Ritz at the Bourse (collectively, “the Ritz”). During its two and one-half years of operation by Orson, the Roxy received only one first-run movie from Miramax, and rarely received second-run movies after the forty-second day of play at the Ritz, despite repeated requests.
In its complaint, Orson charged that Miramax’s distributiоn of films, specifically in its dealings with the Ritz, violated the Sherman Act, the Pennsylvania common law tort of unreasonable restraint of trade, and section 203-7 of the Pennsylvania Act. The District Court granted Miramax’s mo-
*380
tion for summary judgment.
1
Orson, Inc. v. Miramax Film Corp.,
On the other hand, we vacated the judgment that the District Court had entered for Miramax on Orson’s claim under section 203-7 of the Pennsylvania Act beсause we determined that the District Court had erred in its interpretation of section 203-7.
Id.
at 1374. The District Court had construed the statutory requirement that a distributor, such as Miramax, expand the run of the film after forty-two days to other theaters in the “geographical area” to have been satisfied by Miramax’s expansion to suburban theaters before the forty-third day of their runs at the Ritz.
Orson, Inc.,
On remand, the case proceeded to a jury trial, and the jury awarded Orson damages of $159,780.
See Orson, Inc.,
On appeal, the panel majority sought to distinguish the language in our earlier decisions and held that section 203-7 conflicts with the Copyright Act. The dissenting judge believed that we were bound by those opinions. Because we are now en banc, neither the language nor the holdings of those panel decisions bind us here. Therefore, we need not reach the issue of the effect of our prior decisions, and we are free to consider the preemption issue as a matter of law. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
II.
DISCUSSION
A.
Before we can consider the effect of the Copyright Act on the validity of section 203-7 of the Pennsylvania Act, wе must address the meaning of that provision. The district courts have characterized the statutory language as vague and uncertain.
See, e.g., Orson, Inc.,
*381
days.”);
Associated Film Distrib. v. Thornburgh,
Finally, as we noted above, in
Orson I
we construed section 203-7 to “prohibit! ] a distributor and exhibitor from entering into a license agreement which grants an exclusive first-run for more than 42 days without providing for expansion in the same geographical area covered by the license [here, Center City Philadelphia].”
Orson I,
Amicus Theatre Owners recognizes that the Pennsylvania General Assembly “may very well have wanted to require that the first-run be expanded after 42 days,” but it argues that “there is nothing in the statutоry language which mandates that the first run must be expanded on the 43rd day.” Theatre Owners Br. at 6. It states that all that the forty-two day rule requires is that provision must be made in the licensing agreement to expand the run if the term of the licensing agreement exceeds forty-two days and that “it is entirely consistent with federal copyright law for the distributor to enter into multiple licenses of 42 days each, or in good faith to consider multiple requests by exhibitors to license on the 43rd day but to reject on a reasonable business basis such requests to license.” Theatre Owners Br. at 7.
This is of course the construction that this court rejected in its earlier opinions.
See AFD II,
We believe the panel in
Orson I
correctly construed the language of section 203-7 to prohibit a motion picture distributor from entering into an exclusive first run arrangement for more than forty-two days.
See Orson I,
B.
The Supreme Court has recognized three ways in which federal law may preempt, and thereby displace, state law: (1) “express preemption,” (2) “field preemption” (which is also sometimes referred to as “implied preemption”), or (3) “conflict preemption.”
See Pacific Gas & Elec. Co. v. Energy Resources Conservation and Dev. Comm’n,
Under field or implied preemption principles, state law may be displaced “if federal law so thoroughly occupies a legislative field as to make reasonable the inference that Congress left no room for the States to supplement it.”
Cipollone v. Liggett Group, Inc.,
Finally, state law may be displaced under conflict preemption principles if the state law in question presents a conflict
*382
with federal law in one of two situations: when it is impossible to comply with both the state and the federal law,
see Pacific Gas,
As the Court has noted, these categories are not necessarily airtight.
See English v. General Elec. Co.,
The Copyright Act contains an express preemption provision in § 301, which states, in relevant part:
On and after January 1, 1978, all legal or equitable rights that are equivalent to any of the exclusive rights within the general scope of copyright as specified by section 106 in works of authorship that are fixed in a tangible medium of expression and come within the subject matter of copyright as specified by sections 102 and 103, whether created before or after that date and whether published or unpublished, are governed exclusively by this title. Thereafter, no person is entitled to any such right or equivalent right in any such work under the common law or statutes of any State.
17 U.S.C. § 301(a) (emphasis added). The exclusive rights in the copyrighted work granted by the Act are reproduction; preparation of derivativе works; distribution by sale, rental, lease or lending; public performance, in the case of motion pictures or audiovisual works; and public display of individual images from motion pictures or audiovisual works. 17 U.S.C. § 106.
State laws, whether statutory or common law, are subject to express preemption under Copyright Act § 301 only if they create rights that are “equivalent” to the exclusive rights within the general scope of copyright.
See
17 U.S.C. § 301(a);
see also Ehat v. Tanner,
As noted above, conflict preemption may arise either because “ ‘compliance with both regulations is a physical impossibility’ or because the state law ‘stands as an obstacle to the accomplishment and execution of the full purposes and objectives of Congress.’ ”
Jones,
An illustration of conflict preemption under the Copyright Act is provided by
Capital Cities Cable, Inc. v. Crisp,
A further illustration is provided by the recent opinion in
Rodrigue v. Rodrigue,
In this case, Miramax argues both express preemption and conflict preemption. Although both may be applicable, because our analysis more closely parallels that used in cases applying conflict principles, we proceed on that ground. Before we do so, it is necessary to understand the forces behind the passage of the Pennsylvania Act.
C.
The distribution of motion picturеs has been the subject of attention since at least the 1940s when the Department of Justice filed antitrust suits attacking certain business practices prevailing within the industry.
See generally United States v. Paramount Pictures, Inc., 334
U.S. 131,
The exhibitors and their trade association then lobbied state legislatures to adopt laws that prohibited blind bidding, and nearly half the states did so between 1978 through 1983. See Kathy Herman, Comment, “Anti-Blind Bidding Legislation in the Motion Picture Industry: Associated Film Distribution Carp. v. Thornburgh,,” 5 J.L. & Com. 293, 299 (1984).
The Pennsylvania Act is one of the most comprehensive of the regulatory statutes enacted in that period.
See Associated Film Distrib.,
The legislative findings and purposes included in the Pennsylvania Act set forth a litany of the unfair market practices the state sought to prevent or ameliorate.
3
One of the most egregious practices was that of blind bidding: the marketing and licensing of a film prior to its completion and without offering exhibitors a chance to trade screen the finаl product. -As a result, distributors could make deceptive claims regarding films offered for bidding.
See Associated Film Distrib.,
Closely tied to the problem of blind bidding was the unfairness in the bidding process itself which occurred when distributors would unseal closed bids in collusion with a favored exhibitor (the use of “five o’clock looks”) in order to enable the exhibitor to offer a sufficiently high bid to obtain the film.
See Associated Film Distrib.,
■ To curtail these practices, the Pennsylvania Act requires that distributors issue invitations to bid that contain, in addition to the usual information, the names of all exhibitors invited to bid, and the day, time, and location for bid opening. See 73 Pa. Stat. § 203-8(a)-(c). The Pennsylvania statute also requirеs that exhibitors be able to examine all the bids. See 73 Pa. Stat. § 203-8(d). 4
Another industry practice that Pennsylvania considered ripe for reform was the use of minimum guarantees and advances,
see Associated Film Distrib.,
In
AFD II,
we recognized that statutes that bar exaction of advances from exhibitors, limit guarantees, and regulate the bidding and negotiation process may keep a distributor from achieving the optimal monetary return for the film.
See AFD II,
These market regulations, which we upheld in AFD II and Orson I, do not create a preemption issue because they only touch copyrighted works indirectly, if at all. However, a state regulatory scheme that is “copyright-based in essence” presents a different matter. See 1 Nimmer & Nimmer, supra, § 1.01[B][3][c] at 1-65. The forty-two day exclusive first-run license limitation in section 203-7 of the Pennsylvania Act is a distinctly different regulation from those within the state’s power over improper market practices. If the state’s ban on exclusivity after forty-two days directly regulates a right that is prоtected by federal copyright law, it must, of necessity, be preempted under conflict preemption principles.
Applications of these well-established legal principles to section 203-7, as construed in Orson I and as we construe it today, lead to the ineluctable conclusion that the section cannot stand because it prohibits the copyright holder from exercising rights protected by the Copyright Act. Among the “exclusive rights” granted under § 106 in the Copyright Act are the rights to “distribute” and to “perform the copyrighted work publicly.” However, section 203-7 requires the distributor to expand its distribution after forty-two days by licensing another exhibitor in the same geographic area, even if such expansion is involuntary and uneconomic. See MPAA Br. at 10 (uneconomic for first-run theater to exhibit art film simultaneously exhibited in same geographic market).
A distributor who exercises its federal right to grant an exclusive license to an exhibitor of choice will be subject to liability under the Pennsylvania Act for refusing to grant licenses to other exhibitors in the same geographic area after the fоrty-second day. The potential for liability under the state law for the copyright holder’s exercise of its federal rights became a reality in this case and illustrates the conflict created by the Pennsylvania Act. It is evident that the Pennsylvania Act regulates the essence of the federally protected copyright.
That a copyright encompasses the right to refuse to license was reiterated by the Supreme Court in a decision postdating
AFD I
and
AFD II
which stated that the Copyright Act grants a copyright owner “the capacity аrbitrarily to refuse to license one who seeks to exploit the work.”
Stewart v. Abend,
In
Storer Cable,
Orson argues that once a copyright holder, such as Miramax, makes an initial distribution, a state is free to regulate the manner in which the work is thereafter distributed. 'We reject Orson’s contention. In
College Entrance Examination Board v. Pataki,
A similar analysis is applicable in this case. Congress determined that the copyright holder should be granted exclusive rights under § 106, albeit for a limited period. Although a state regulation falling within the federally established exceptions to those rights, such as fair use,
see
17 U.S.C. § 107, may obligate a copyright holder to change its practices to accommodate such uses,
see, e.g., Association of Am. Med. Colleges v. Cuomo
Rather, the Pennsylvania Act, like the New York law regulating standardized tests, would impose on copyright holders, contrary to their exclusive rights under § 106, an obligation to distribute and make available other copies of the work following their initial decision to publish and distribute copies of the copyrighted item. Although it is true, as Orson points out, that the examiners in Association of American Medical Colleges and in College Entrance engaged in extensive efforts to prevent disclosure of their tests, see Appellee Br. at 17 n. 10, this factor does not change the fundamental principle underlying these cases: the state may not mandate distribution and reproduction of a copyrighted work in the face of the exclusive rights to distribution granted under § 106.
Even Orson’s own quotation of
Warner Bros., Inc. v. Wilkinson,
The right to transfer or license copyrighted material for use by others under sections 106 and 201 et seq. of the Copyright Act has never encompassed a right to transfer the work at all times and at all places free and clear of all regulation; it has meant that the copyright owner has the exclusive right to transfer the material for a consideration to others.
Unlike the provisions in the Pennsylvania Act that are directed to market practices that have no counterpart in the Copyright law, section 203-7 conflicts with the Copyright Act’s grant to the copyright holder of an exclusive right to distribute and license a work, and it therefore follows that it is preempted.
III.
In conclusion, we hold that because section 203-7 of the Pennsylvania Feature Motion Picture Fair Business Practices Law “stands as an obstacle” to the federally created exclusive rights given to a copyright holder, namely, the exclusive right to distribute the copyrighted work, it is *387 preempted by the federal Copyright Act. 5
For the reasons set forth above, we will reverse the decision of the District Court denying Miramax’s Motion for Judgment as a Matter of Law and we will direct it to enter judgment for Miramax.
Notes
. The court found that there was a factual dispute as to six of the nineteen films at issue. Orson withdrew its claim as to those six films to permit an immediate appeal.
. In the mid-1980s, the Department of Justice also proceeded against improper market practices by theater exhibitors themselves. See generally Stanley I. Ornstein, “Motion Picture Distribution, Film Splitting, and Antitrust Policy,” 17 Hastings Comm. & Ent. L.J. 415 (1995).
. These legislative concerns included, inter alia, undue control • of exhibitors; restraint, destruction, or inhibition of fair and honest competition; unfair and deceptive acts or practices; and withholding full information regarding prospective motion picture purchases or rentals in a blind-bidding process. See 73 Pa. Stat. § 203-3.
. In
Associated Film Distribution,
the district court observed that the Pennsylvania Act "permits oral bid solicitation and oral bids.”
. In light of our conclusion, we need not address Miramax’s objections to the trial proceedings.
