This is a copyright dispute between two organizations that offer competing courses to prepare students to pass the Project Management Professional (PMP) Exam given by the Project Management Institute (PMI). Rita Mulcahy filed the lawsuit, claiming copyright infringement and unfair competition by Cheetah Learning LLC and by Jeff Schurrer, an instructor who distributed allegedly infringing materials to Cheetah students. The district court granted Mulcahy partial summary judgment and a permanent injunction on her claim that defendants infringed her copyrighted work, PMP Exam Prep. Cheetah and Schurrer appeal. We conclude there are genuine issues of material fact regarding whether PMP Exam Prep infringes PMI’s exclusive right to prepare derivative works based on its preexisting copyrighted work and whether PMP Exam Prep is a fair use of that work. Accordingly, we reverse the grant of partial summary judgment and vacate the permanent injunction.
I. Background.
Established in 1969, PMI is a not-for-profit association for project management professionals (PMPs) that now “supports over 100,000 members in 125 countries worldwide.” As part of its continuing and seemingly successful effort to establish project management as a true profession, PMI first offered a PMP certification exam in 1984 and first published a work entitled
Project Management Body of Knowledge
in 1987. In 1996, PMI published a superseding copyrighted work entitled
Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge,
which we will refer to as the
PMBOK
PMI advertises that the
PMBOK
is approved by the American National Standards Institute and is “[t]he foundation document for project management training and/or education.” PMI’s PMP exam has been “based upon” the
PMBOK
during the period relevant to this dispute. However, the PMBOK’s introductory statement of purpose suggests that it serves as a desk reference work for
PMI certification has come to be viewed as an important credential, creating a market for textbooks and courses that prepare aspiring PMPs to pass the PMI exam. PMI website materials in the record suggest that PMI, colleges and universities, and numerous private vendors have entered this market. Because PMI bases the PMP exam on the PMBOK, a comprehensive reference work, it is hard to imagine that a vendor could devise a successful course teaching students to pass the PMP exam without using — or plagiarizing — the PMBOK. In this regard, PMPs copyright notice in the front of the PMBOK advises:
All rights reserved. Permission to republish in full is granted freely. No part of this work may be reproduced or transmitted in any form ... without pri- or written permission of the publisher.
Likewise, a PMI website warns:
Anyone wishing to use excerpts from the PMBOK Guide must obtain written permission to do so and pay the appropriate permission fee, where applicable. This includes PMI members, PMI Components and PMI Registered Education Providers.
Mulcahy is an expert in the field of project management who offers test preparation courses and materials to teach students to pass the PMP exam. To this end, Mulcahy wrote and copyrighted PMP Exam Prep. The book begins with materials specifically focused on passing the PMP exam that have no counterparts in the PMBOK such as sections entitled “An Overview of the Exam,” “Types of Questions on the Exam,” “How to Study for the Exam,” and “Tricks for Taking the Exam.” However, the subsequent sections, which are entitled “The Materials” and take up 150 of the work’s 165 pages, track the PMBOK’s organization of the project management “knowledge areas” and reproduce or condense the materials presented in the PMBOK. Although PMP Exam Prep states that it is “intended to work hand-in-hand” with the PMBOK and the record includes a PMI website that says, “Get Rita’s book,” whether PMI authorized Mulcahy to use excerpts from the PMBOK in her work is a disputed issue of fact.
Cheetah offers a variety of exam preparation and professional training courses. Founder Michelle LaBrosse testified that she uses “a unique educational model which utilizes dietary control, yoga meditative techniques, color recognition, state conditioning and psych-acoustics to accelerate the learning process.” In 2000, Cheetah retained Eric Nielsen to develop the substantive content for a PMP exam preparation course. Cheetah began offering the four-day course in September 2001, using the PMBOK as the “primary reference” and also distributing to students loose-leaf materials called the Candidate Notetaker. LaBrosse was soon advised of significant similarities between Cheetah’s Candidate Notetaker and Mulcahy’s PMP Exam Prep. LaBrosse compared the two works and informed Mulcahy’s attorney that she “had revised Cheetah’s course materials to remove what I believed to be the allegedly infringing content.” Unsatisfied, Mulcahy filed this lawsuit. Nielsen testified that he used PMP Exam Prep and other reference works in preparing the Cheetah course materials and sample test questions.
Ruling on the parties’ cross motions for summary judgment, the district court granted Mulcahy summary judgment
II. Discussion.
Two elements are required to establish copyright infringement, ownership of a valid copyright and copying of original elements of the work.
Feist Publ'ns, Inc. v. Rural Tel. Serv. Co.,
A. Unauthorized Derivative. The statutory rights of a copyright owner include the exclusive right “to prepare derivative works based upon the copyrighted work.” 17 U.S.C. § 106(2). The Copyright Act broadly defines a derivative work as -
a work based upon one or more preexisting works, such as a translation, musical arrangement, dramatization, fictionalization, motion picture version, sound recording, art reproduction, abridgment, condensation, or any other form in which a work may be recast, transformed, or adapted.
17 U.S.C. § 101. One who violates the copyright owner’s right to create derivative works is an infringer. See 17 U.S.C. § 501(a).
A derivative work may itself be copyrighted if it has the requisite originality. However, “the copyright is limited to the features that the derivative work adds to the original.”
Pickett v. Prince,
The district court did not discuss the concept of a derivative work. It simply concluded that
PMP Exam Prep
does not infringe PMI’s copyright in the
PMBOK
because, while the two works have “many substantive details in common,” they are not substantially similar “in substance, purpose, presentation, and functionality.” The court applied the two-part test for determining substantial similarity adopted by this court in diverse copyright infringement cases such as
Hartman v. Hallmark Cards, Inc.,
While substantial similarity is the test we use in determining copyright infringement, here the issue is whether Mulcahy’s book is a derivative work. In general, the two tests are similar. In the words of a leading copyright treatise, “Unless sufficient of the pre-existing work is contained in the later work so as to constitute the latter an infringement of the former, the latter by definition is not a derivative work.” 2
Nimmer on Copyright
§ 8.09[A], p. 8-138 (2004);
see Litchfield v. Spielberg,
PMI has created and copyrighted a multi-purpose reference work, the
PMBOK
and has made that work the “foundation” of its test that a student must pass to receive PMI’s valuable PMP certification. Without doubt, an outside educator could obtain copies of the
PMBOK
from PMI and lecture students on how to use that work to pass the exam without infringing the
PMBOK
copyright. In addition, the educator could create and distribute written materials on subjects not covered in the
PMBOK
— such as “How to Study for the Exam” and “Tricks for Taking the Exam” — without infringing. But Muleahy has done far more. Large portions of her
PMP Exam Prep
appear to copy, condense, and adapt those portions of the
PMBOK
that are relevant to passing the exam. She admits that these portions of her work are derived from and based upon the
PMBOK.
The question is whether this copying, condensing, and adapting of the
PMBOK
encroaches upon, i.e., infringes, PMI’s exclusive right “to prepare derivative works based upon the copyrighted work.” 17 U.S.C. § 106(2). This issue cannot be answered by looking at the percentage of the
PMBOK
that has been condensed or copied in
PMP Exam Prep.
Rather, a reasonable factfinder could find that
PMP Exam Prep
is an infringing derivative work if it copied or condensed the qualitative core of one marketable portion of the multi-purpose
PMBOK See Castle Rock Ent., Inc. v. Carol Pub. Group, Inc.,
Mulcahy argues that the
PMBOK
is entitled to only limited protection because it is “a common project management lexicon,” a collection of underlying facts and theories that cannot themselves' be copyrighted. The Supreme Court has warned that “the copyright in a factual compilation is thin” because “a subsequent compiler remains free to use the facts to aid in preparing a competing work.”
Feist,
For these reasons, we conclude that the district court erred in deciding that Mul-cahy’s PMP Exam Prep is not a derivative work as a matter of law.
B. Fair Use Doctrine.
Alternatively, Mulcahy argues and the district court concluded that
PMP Exam Prep
is a fair use of the
PMBOK
as a matter of law. The statute, 17 U.S.C. § 107, sets forth foui' non-exclusive factors that “shall” be considered in determining whether an otherwise infringing use is a non-infringing fair use. Though all four must be considered together, the fourth factor — “the effect of the use upon the potential market for or value of the copyrighted work” — “is undoubtedly the single most important element of fair use.”
Harper & Row,
In our view, the effect of Mulcahy’s use is not so clear. In the first place, students may find that
PMP Exam Prep
is such an effective condensation and adaptation that they need not obtain and study the
PMBOK
But more importantly, PMI has created a for-profit education market by offering a valued certification exam. PMI offers courses on passing its exam, demonstrating an intent to exploit that market. By basing its exam on the copyrighted
PMBOK
PMI has also created a market for selling or licensing this work to educators and students; “the potential for destruction of this market by widespread circumvention of the plaintiffs’ permission fee system is enough, under the
Harper & Row
test, ‘to negate fair use.’ ”
Princeton Univ. Press v. Mich. Document Servs., Inc.,
In addition, a finding that Mulcahy’s copyrights are valid only because
PMP Exam Prep
is a fair use of the
PMBOK
would likely affect other issues. Mulcahy emphasizes the extent to which Cheetah’s materials copy
PMP Exam Prep.
But “[a]n author’s right to protection of the derivative work only extends to the [original] elements that [she] has added to the work; [she] cannot receive protection for the underlying work.”
Dam Things,
III. Conclusion.
For the foregoing reasons, Paragraph l.a. of the district court’s order dated July 28, 2003, is reversed, the permanent injunction in paragraph 3. is vacated, and the case is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Notes
. By permanently enjoining defendants from using "any materials that are substantially similar to any edition of Plaintiff's
PMP Exam Prep,”
paragraph 3.b. of the court’s order threatens defendants with contempt sanctions if they continue using revised Cheetah course materials that were not before the court, contrary to the principle that blanket injunctions to obey the law are disfavored.
See Jake's, Ltd., Inc. v. City of Coates,
. We do not consider defendants' further contention that Mulcahy's copyrights are unenforceable because she filed knowingly false copyright applications.
. Mulcahy also argues that, if
PMP Exam Prep
is a derivative work, PMI ratified her use of the
PMBOK
by not responding when she sent PMI a pre-publication of the first
PMP Exam Prep
and by selling
PMP Exam Prep
in PMI's online bookstore.
See Eden Toys, Inc. v. Florelee Undergarment Co., Inc.,
