OPINION AND ORDER
The Sheldon Abend Revocable Trust (“Plaintiff’), brings this action asserting copyright infringement, contributory infringement, and vicarious copyright infringement pursuant to 17 U.S.C. § 101 et seq. as well as common law breach of contract claims against Defendants Steven Spielberg; DW Studios, LLC; Paramount Pictures Corporation; Viacom, Inc.; NBC Universal, Inc.; Universal Pictures Company, Inc.; Universal City Studios, LLP; United International Pictures, B.V.; and Does 1-10, 1 alleging that the motion picture Disturbia — a film produced by Spielberg, owner of DW Studios, LLC, which is in turn a wholly-owned subsidiary of Paramount Pictures Corporation and its parent company, Viacom, Inc. — infringed upon Plaintiffs copyright in the short story Rear Window and upon the derivative Alfred Hitchcock film of the same name. 2 On October 27, 2009, Plaintiff filed its Second Amended Complaint, adding defendants Montecito Picture Company LLC, Cold Spring Pictures LLC, and Universal Pictures International, GmbH. Plaintiff asserted copyright infringement, contributory infringement, and vicarious copyright infringement claims against these new defendants. The Court has jurisdiction of Plaintiffs copyright claims pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331 and 1338.
The case is now before the Court on Defendants’ motion for partial summary judgment dismissing Plaintiffs copyright infringement claims. The Court has reviewed thoroughly and considered carefully all of the parties’ submissions. For the reasons discussed below, Defendants’ motion for partial summary judgment is granted.
Background
The following material facts are undisputed, unless expressly noted.
In 1942, Cornell Woolrich wrote the short story
Rear Window
(also known as
In 1953, a predecessor to Defendant Paramount Pictures obtained the motion picture rights to the Short Story, which was subsequently made into a film of the same title, directed by Alfred Hitchcock, in 1954. Plaintiff relies heavily on the film in its claims of substantial similarity and copyright infringement.
Defendants produced and distributed the motion picture Disturbia; distribution began in April 2007. The record before the Court includes a published version of the Short Story and a DVD copy of Disturbia.
Plaintiff has also submitted thousands of pages of exhibits, including: expert reports; previous drafts of the screenplay; references to and copies of media articles and film critics’ reviews likening Disturbia to the Rear Window film; and many lists, charts and DVDs purporting to identify similarities among the Short Story, the Rear Window film, and Disturbia. Defendants have proffered copies of numerous published works predating the Short Story, in support of their contention that various elements of the Short Story are not protectable and/or not original.
Discussion
Summary judgment is appropriate where the “pleadings, the discovery and disclosure materials on file, and any affidavits show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c). A fact is material “if it ‘might affect the outcome of the suit under the governing law,’” and “[a]n issue of fact is ‘genuine’ if ‘the evidence is such that a reasonable jury could return a verdict for the nonmoving party.’ ”
Holtz v. Rockefeller & Co.,
Copyright Infringement
For a plaintiff to prevail in a copyright infringement case, “two elements must be proved: (1) ownership of a valid copyright, and (2) copying of constituent elements of the work that are original.”
Feist Publ’ns, Inc. v. Rural Telephone Service Co.,
To prove unlawful appropriation of proteetible elements, a plaintiff must show that there is substantial similarity between proteetible elements in the two disputed works.
Laureyssens v. Idea
Where, as here, a work is an amalgamation of protectible and unprotectible elements, a “more discerning” ordinary observer test is employed,
Knitwaves, Inc. v. Lollytogs, Ltd.,
Because questions of substantial similarity often present close questions of fact,
Arnstein v. Porter,
Substantial Similarity
A determination of copyright infringement requires a side-by-side comparison of the disputed works themselves.
4
In considering the similarities between these elements, the proper inquiry is “whether an ordinary observer, unless he set out to detect the disparities, would be disposed to overlook them, and regard [the] aesthetic appeal as the same.”
Yurman Design,
Summary Overview of Each Work
Cornell Woolrich’s Rear Window
The Short Story spans four days and depicts, through first-person narrative, protagonist Hal Jeffries’ observations of his neighbors’ activities which eventually lead him to discover and solve a crime through deductive logic. It is set in New York City.
At the opening of the Short Story, the reader learns that Jeffries is incapacitated such that he can only move from his bed to a chair near the window of his second floor bedroom. (Brenner Decl., Ex. A., 1.) The reader learns little of Jeffries’ background and personality, as the character is minimally developed.
To pass the time, Jeffries observes from his window the goings-on in several of his neighbors’ homes. He watches a young couple with an active social life, a young widow and her child, and a couple whom he later learns are the Thorwalds. (Id. 1, 10.)
Mrs. Thorwald, he notices, is in chronic poor health. (Id. 2.) At first, her husband, Lars Thorwald (“Thorwald”), appears concerned about her health but, as Jeffries observes the Thorwalds over a period of days, he notices that Mrs. Thorwald has disappeared. (Id. 8.) Jeffries speculates that Thorwald has murdered her. (Id.) He phones his old friend, Detective Boyne, to report his suspicion, and Boyne institutes an investigation. (Id. 10-11.) Following a lead that Mrs. Thorwald’s belongings had been shipped to the countryside, the police encounter a woman who identifies herself as Mrs. Thorwald. (Id. 14-15.) Boyne then stops the investigation, to Jeffries’ dismay. (Id.)
To obtain more concrete evidence of murder, Jeffries phones Thorwald, pretending to be a blackmailer, and convinces Thorwald to meet him in a local park. (Id. 17-18.) When Thorwald sets out to pay off his blackmailer, Jeffries dispatches Sam to Thorwald’s apartment with instructions to make it appear as if the apartment has been searched, in order to make Thorwald believe that his blackmailer has obtained concrete evidence of the murder. (Id. 18-19.) Sam does as he is told. (Id. 19.) When Thorwald returns, Jeffries immediately phones him, pretending to have discovered evidence, but Thorwald does not believe him. (Id. 19-20.)
Thorwald then unexpectedly phones Jeffries, and, hearing his voice, deduces that Jeffries is his blackmailer. (Id. 21.) After this phone call, Jeffries suddenly recalls the mirrored movements of Thorwald and the realtor two floors above. (Id. 22-23.) He realizes that, when passing from the kitchen to the living room, the realtor’s height relative to the window changed while Thorwald’s remained the same because, as part of the ongoing renovations to the building, a raised kitchen floor had been poured in concrete for decorative effect. (Id.) Jeffries deduces that Thorwald buried his wife’s body in the still-wet concrete of the fifth floor apartment, which was under renovation. (Id. 26.)
Jeffries attempts to phone Inspector Boyne, but the line goes dead: Thorwald has entered Jeffries’ building and severed the telephone line. (Id. 23.) Jeffries realizes Thorwald is coming to kill him. (Id.) Rendered unable to escape by his cast, Jeffries conceals himself with a rug, and places a bust sculpture upon his shoulder, hoping that in the dark Thorwald would be tricked by the ruse. (Id. 23-24.) As Thorwald enters and shoots the bust, Inspector Boyne arrives. (Id. 24-25.) Thorwald escapes out the window, climbs to the roof of his own building, then shoots into Jeffries’ apartment. (Id. 24-25.) Inspector Boyne returns fire and strikes Thorwald, causing him to fall to his death. (Id. 25.)
From the available information, Jeffries completes his theory of the case for the reader: Thorwald had been poisoning his wife for some time, but killed her outright when she discovered what he was doing; and he concocted a scheme with another woman, likely his lover, to suggest that his wife had gone upstate. (Id. 26-27.) The other woman impersonated Mrs. Thorwald when the police investigated, and was going to stage her suicide. (Id.) In the closing lines of the story, a doctor arrives to remove the cast and notes, ironically, that Jeffries must have been bored while sitting around. (Id. 27.)
Disturbia
The events depicted in
Disturbia
span more than a year. The story’s chief protagonist is Kale Brecht, a troubled teenager who, sentenced to house arrest, spies on neighbors to stave off boredom and, after learning of the disappearance of several
Kale is introduced to the viewer while on a fishing trip with his father. In a picturesque wilderness setting, Kale and his father joke and bond. On the trip home, however, while Kale is driving, a horrific accident occurs and his father is killed. A year later, Kale has become a troubled and depressed teenager. After assaulting a teacher, Kale goes to court and is sentenced to three months of house arrest in suburban California. His probation officer outfits him with an ankle bracelet that confines him to a 100-yard radius from the receiver in his kitchen.
Kale begins to entertain himself by watching his neighbors live their unrestricted lives. He observes his new neighbors moving in, and takes particular note of their attractive teenage daughter, Ashley.
Among other things, he notices, almost in passing, Robert Turner, a neighbor who constantly mows his lawn. After hearing news reports about a missing woman, and of a string of missing women in Texas, Kale recalls that Turner’s car matches the description of the suspect’s vehicle, right down to a dented fender. Venturing outside, Kale spies on Turner. Kale’s friend Ronnie joins Kale in his surveillance of Turner and in spying on Ashley. Eventually, Ashley catches them watching her and confronts them. Ronnie explains then-interest in Turner, and she joins them in the stake-out. During their stake-outs, a romance develops between Kale and Ashley.
One night, Kale observes Turner escorting a red-haired woman to his home, and then later sees her panicked and trying to escape the house. A reflection of Kale’s video camera alerts Turner to the fact that Kale is watching. Kale later sees a redhead leaving Turner’s house, and reasons that he may have been mistaken (although the viewer later learns that it was, in fact, Turner wearing a wig). Some time later, at Turner’s house, there is a scream and blood spatters across the inside of a window.
Ashley later notices Turner dragging a blood-covered blue bag into his garage. Kale, Ashley, and Ronnie decide to investigate Turner’s garage. With Ashley acting as a lookout and Kale watching via live-feed video camera, Ronnie finds the blue bag, in which he sees something decomposing. Ronnie panics, and, fearing for his friend, Kale rushes to Turner’s house wielding a baseball bat, triggering his ankle bracelet, and summoning the police. He tells the police about the blue bag, in which they discover the decomposing carcass of a deer.
Upon reviewing the footage that Ronnie shot while sneaking about Turner’s house, Kale notices the face of a dead woman, visible in the basement through a heating-grate. At the same time, Kale’s mother is attacked by Turner in Turner’s home. Turner then comes to Kale’s house and attacks Ronnie and Kale, rendering them unconscious. Kale awakens, bound with tape. Turner informs Kale of his plan to frame Kale for murdering his own mother and to stage Kale’s suicide. Ashley arrives at the last moment, however, and in the course of a struggle, Kale and Ashley escape to safety by jumping off Kale’s roof and into Ashley’s pool.
Kale then returns to Turner’s house, armed with hedge clippers, to rescue his mother. He discovers the body of the dead woman he had seen in Ronnie’s video, as well as an operating room filled with gruesome mementos. Summoned by Kale’s ankle bracelet, a police officer arrives at Turner’s house, but is killed by Turner. Meanwhile, while searching the basement of Turner’s house for his mother, Kale falls into a pool of water filled
The next day, Kale’s parole officer removes his ankle bracelet, releasing him from house arrest early for good behavior. The film ends with Kale and Ashley kissing while Ronnie attempts to videotape them.
Comparison of the Works
Plot
It cannot be disputed that both works tell the story of a male protagonist, confined to his home, who spies on neighbors to stave off boredom and, in so doing, discovers that one of his neighbors is a murderer. The voyeur is himself discovered by the suspected murderer, is attacked by the murderer, and is ultimately vindicated. Although it is possible to characterize the plots of both works so they appear indistinguishable, such similarity is not, standing alone, indicative of substantial similarity. The law of copyright only protects an author’s particular expression of an idea, not the idea itself.
Arden v. Columbia Pictures Indus., Inc.,
Upon any work ... a great number of patterns of increasing generality will fit equally well, as more and more of the incident is left out. The last may perhaps be no more than the most general statement of what the [work] is about, and at times might consist of only its title. But there is a point in this series of abstractions where they are no longer protected, since otherwise the [author] could prevent the use of his ‘ideas,’ to which, apart from their expression, his property is never extended.
Nichols,
Characters
Plaintiff contends that “[c]haracter elements of ...
Disturbia
are derivative of (i.e. substantially similar to)
Rear Window,
notwithstanding some differences.”
(See
Pl.’s Opp. 24.) “In determining whether characters are similar, a court looks at the ‘totality of [the characters’] attributes and traits as well as the extent to which the defendants’ characters capture the ‘total concept and feel’ of figures in [plaintiffs work].”
Hogan v. DC Comics,
The bar for substantial similarity in a character is set quite high. For example, in
Arden v. Columbia Pictures Industries, Inc.,
the protagonists of the two disputed works were both self-centered bachelors in their mid-thirties who pursued love interests and became trapped in a repeating day.
Because substantial similarity should be determined based on the Court’s “considered impressions,”
Nichols,
Nor are the antagonists in Plaintiffs Short Story and Defendants’
Disturbia
substantially similar. Turner is a single middle aged man who is suspected — and later is confirmed — to be a serial killer. Thorwald is a married man, who kills his wife — apparently the first and only woman he murders — to be with another woman. Plaintiff attempts to demonstrate substantial similarity between the antagonists by characterizing Turner as a neighbor suspected of killing women and Thorwald as a neighbor who murders a woman. (Compl. ¶ 86.) The similarity between these two characters ends, however, with their middle age and their position as the protagonist’s neighbor: a serial killer is distinguishable from a one-time killer. These similarities amount to nothing more than age, sex, and status as a personification of evil living next door — a basic character type — and therefore do not rise to the level of protectible expression of an idea.
See Hogan,
Plaintiff also asserts that the supporting characters in each work are substantially similar. Notwithstanding the fact that Ronnie and Ashley are, in fact two people, and Sam is but one, Plaintiff attempts to demonstrate substantial similarity by designating their character types as “the Assistants).”
(See, e.g.,
Compl. ¶ 86.) The characters of Ronnie and Ashley however, bear no resemblance to Sam, beyond the most generalized level of supporting characters. Such a basic character type and functional role warrants no copyright protection.
See Hogan,
Plaintiff contends that there is substantial similarity between settings in the Short Story and
Rear Window.
Plaintiffs position cannot withstand scrutiny.
Dis
“Total Concept and Feel”
Plaintiff argues principally that
Disturbia
is, as a whole, substantially similar to the total concept and feel of the Short Story. The total concept and feel of a work is comprised of the way an author “selected, coordinated and arranged the elements of his or her work,”
Feist,
There is no substantial similarity between the total concept and feel of the Short Story and that of Disturbia. The main plots are similar only at a high, unprotectible, level of generality. WTiere Disturbia is rife with subplots, the Short Story has none. The setting and mood of the Short Story are static and tense, whereas the setting and mood of Disturbia are more dynamic and peppered with humor and teen romance. The pace of the two works is dramatically different: the Short Story takes place in just four days, while Disturbia spans more than a year and the main action takes place over an indeterminate period of days or weeks.
The Short Story and Disturbia thus are only similar at very general levels of abstraction. Their similarities derive entirely from unprotectible elements and the total look and feel of the works is so distinct that no reasonable trier of fact could find the works substantially similar within the meaning of copyright law. There is, thus, no genuine issue of material fact and Defendants are entitled as a matter of law to summary judgment dismissing Plaintiffs copyright infringement claims.
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the Defendant’s motion for partial summary judgment is granted. Plaintiffs claims of copyright infringement, vicarious infringement, and contributory infringement are dismissed. 5
The opinion resolves docket entry 49.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Pursuant to Joint Stipulations (docket entry nos. 40, 53), Plaintiff's claims against Defendants NBC Universal, Inc.; Universal Pictures Company, Inc.; and Universal City Studios, LLP were dismissed on December 8, 2008 (Universal Pictures Company, Inc.) and March 30, 2009 (NBC Universal, Inc. and Universal City Studios, LLP). Because the contract claims in the First Amended Complaint were asserted only against those defendants, those claims, too, have been dismissed.
. Pursuant to a joint stipulation dated May 28, 2009 (docket entry no. 61), Plaintiff’s claims premised upon similarity of Disturbia to the film version of Rear Window have been dismissed.
. Plaintiff, seeking to apply a rule referred to in this Circuit as the inverse ratio rule, argues in its Opposition that Defendants' concession of access and evidence of actual copying lessens plaintiff's burden to prove substantial similarity. That rule, however, is irrelevant here, as it is applied only in the determination of whether there was actual copying.
Aldon Accessories, Ltd. v. Spiegel, Inc.,
. The opinions of experts or other third parties are irrelevant to a determination of substantial similarity.
See Laureyssens,
. Defendants Dreamworks Home Entertainment, Inc., and Does 1-10 have not joined Defendants' Motion for Summary Judgment. However, because the Court has determined that there was no copyright infringement as a matter of law, the claims against these Defendants are also dismissed.
