This appeal challenges a preliminary injunction enjoining karaoke recording distributor 1729172 Ontario, Inc. and its president (collectively Ontario) from using musical compositions to which Sony/ATV Publishing, LLC and EMI Music Publishing, Ltd. (collectively Publishers) claim various ownership interests. Discerning no abuse of discretion, we uphold the injunction.
Publishers hold the rights to record, reproduce, distribute, advertise, or otherwise exploit thousands of musical compositions. As is customary in the music industry,Publishers make money by licensing these compositions for various uses — including the reproduction and distribution of karaoke recordings. Ontario is in the karaoke business and maintains websites through which it sells karaoke recordings via digital download, digital streaming, and physical CDs. Some six thousand of the musical compositions owned by Publishers (the Subject Works) are among the karaoke recordings Ontario sells.
Publishers sued for copyright infringement, claiming that Ontario’s reproduction and distribution of the Subject Works was unlicensed. See 17 U.S.C. § 106. Ontario responded by presenting various domestic and international licenses obtained from Publishers and their agents. It claimed that these licenses authorized international third parties (the Karaoke Labels) to manufacture the karaoke recordings and Ontario to reproduce and distribute those recordings in the United States. Publishers, on the other hand, argued that these various licenses either expired or did not authorize Ontario’s use of the Subject Works.
Publishers moved for a preliminary injunction. After reviewing a great deal of evidence, the district court determined that Ontario’s licenses did not authorize its use of the Subject Works and enjoined Ontario from “copying, recording, manufacturing, advertising, distributing, selling, offering for sale, transmitting or otherwise exploiting or causing to be used in any manner in the United States ... the musical compositions owned and/or administrated by [Publishers].” Ontario appeals.
II.
A district court may grant a preliminary injunction if the movant shows a substantial likelihood of success on the merits, that the movant will suffer irreparable harm absent relief, that the balance of equities weighs in the movant’s favor, and that the injunction serves the public interest. See Obama for Am. v. Husted,
We review the decision to grant a preliminary injunction for abuse of discretion. Six Clinics Holding Corp., II v. Cafcomp Sys., Inc.,
A. Substantial Likelihood of Success on the Merits
To prevail on their copyright infringement claim, Publishers must demonstrate (1) ownership of the Subject Works, and (2) that Ontario infringed that ownership. See Fogerty v. MGM Grp. Holdings Corp.,
1. Ownership
Ontario argues that Publishers insufficiently demonstrated a substantial likelihood of establishing ownership of the Subject Works. Yet both Sony/ATVs Senior Vice President of Business and Legal Affairs as well as its Vice President of Global Copyright Administration offered sworn declarations regarding Publishers’ ownership. Business records, including certificates of registration and financial split sheets, reflecting Publishers’ interest in the Subject Works, bolstered these declarations.
While Ontario contests the declarants’ personal knowledge and asserts that the business records are incomplete or inconclusive, it forgets that Publishers need not prove their case in full at this stage. See Univ. of Tex. v. Camenisch,
2. Infringement
Ontario next maintains that four sources license its business: (a) the Harry Fox Agency (HFA); (b) the Mechanical-Copyright Protection Society/Performing Rights Society (MCPS/PRS); (c) the Karaoke Labels; and (d) Publishers and co-publishers of the Subject Works. A valid license is an affirmative defense to copyright infringement. See Sony Corp. of Am. v. Universal City Studios, Inc.,
a. HFA License
Ontario defends against Publishers’ infringement claim by maintaining that its HFA license authorizes its exploitation of the Subject Works. But Ontario’s HFA license clearly states:
[Ontario] agree[s] that [it] [is] not granted any so-called “karaoke” or “singalong” rights to Lyrics.... [Ontario] agreefs] not to assign, transfer or transmit any Lyrics to any third party.
Moreover, the HFA license is a standard compulsory license limited to distribution of phonorecords and incorporates the statutory definition of that term, which excludes “audiovisual work[s].” See 17 U.S.C. § 101. Karaoke recordings are audiovisual works in that they “consist of a series of related images” — in this case the lyrics— “which are intrinsically intended to be shown by the use of machines or devices ... together with accompanying sounds.” Id.
Ontario gives two answers. First, it denies distributing karaoke recordings, claiming instead to sell MP3 + G files, which consist of a sound recording file
Pivoting, Ontario avers that it negotiated a unique karaoke distribution agreement with the HFA. The HFA representative with whom Ontario dealt, however, declared that although they discussed karaoke, the parties reached no special agreement. In any event, the HFA contract includes an integration clause precluding prior negotiations from altering its plain meaning.
b. MCPS/PRS License
Ontario next claims that the district court mistakenly concluded that no MCPS/ PRS license authorized Ontario’s use of the Subject Work. Specifically, it argues that the district court erred in finding that the license expired, limited exploitation to the United Kingdom, and prohibited offering physical products for distribution by mail. The MCPS/PRS license’s plain language belies these purported errors.
First, Ontario’s MCPS/PRS license lapsed by its own terms on June 30, 2014. Ontario retorts that the license automatically renewed for want of written termination notice on June 30, 2014, and again on June 30, 2015, and therefore remains in effect. But Publishers submitted an email MCPS/PRS sent Ontario on February 17, 2015, refusing to renew the contract because Ontario abused the license by relying on it to distribute works in the United States.
Second, even if MCPS/PRS license were still in effect, it explicitly limited exploitation to the United Kingdom. A sworn declaration from the Senior Lawyer for Legal and Business Affairs and Head of Litigation, Enforcement, and Anti-Piracy at MCPS/PRS confirmed that no part of Ontario’s license permitted distribution of the Subject Works in the United States. And Ontario’s claim that it may lawfully maintain the Subject Works on computer servers in Canada is of no consequence to these territorial restrictions on distribution.
Third, the MCPS/PRS license expressly “[did] not authorise the manufacture or distribution of physical products containing [licensed works], such as ... the ordering of compact discs.” Ontario claims compliance with this clause, suggesting it merely solicits online orders, which it sends to international partners who independently manufacture and mail CDs to the United States. Yet these discs bear only Ontario’s name and list only Ontario’s return mailing address. The district court did not clearly err in finding these acts unlicensed.
c. Karaoke Labels
Pushing on, Ontario asserts that the district court misinterpreted its licensing and distribution agreements with its international partners, the Karaoke Labels. It explains that the Karaoke Labels possess their'own MCPS/PRS licenses that specifically authorize the manufacture of karaoke recordings, and that Ontario simply dis
d. Publishers and Co-publishers
Finally, Ontario purports to possess licenses directly from Publishers and co-publishers of the Subject Works. Ontario conceded, however, that any licenses from Publishers expired in 2014. Similarly, Ontario’s co-publisher licenses expired due to lapse of time.
B. Irreparable Harm to Publishers
Moving to the next factor, Ontario submits that Publishers will not suffer irreparable harm absent an injunction. In a copyright-infringement action a plaintiff establishes a rebuttable presumption of irreparable harm by demonstrating a likelihood of success on the merits. Lexmark Int’l, Inc. v. Static Control Components, Inc.,
C. Balance of Equities
Ontario maintains that the district court inaccurately assessed the equitable factors because the preliminary injunction causes Ontario to suffer business, brand, trademark, and reputational losses. Yet the district court considered and balanced these concerns, concluding that Ontario’s business investment was of secondary concern. See Apple Computer, Inc. v. Franklin Computer Corp.,
D.Preliminary Injunction is Overly Broad
Even if equitable relief is warranted, Ontario submits, the preliminary injunction is overly broad because it provides insufficient notice, extends retroactively, prohibits Ontario from advertising and offering for sale the Subject Works, and restricts third parties. A preliminary injunction must be no more burdensome than necessary to provide a plaintiff complete relief, and a district court abuses its discretion in ordering an overly broad injunction. See Califano v. Yamasaki,
First, Ontario insists that the injunction provides insufficient notice because the order applies to all musical compositions owned' or administrated by Publishers, not just-the over six thousand Subject Works already identified. But Ontario overlooks the order’s other features. Indeed, the district court constructed a robust compliance mechanism to identify other potentially infringing works, specifically dictating:
*488 In order to facilitate compliance with this Order, Defendants shall disclose to Plaintiffs, in writing within 21 days of the entry of this Order, all karaoke recordings that Defendants have advertised, made available for sale, distributed and/or sold since the inception of its internet sales operations, whenever the inception may have occurred, until the present time. Plaintiffs shall review and notify the Defendants within 21 days thereafter of any additional musical compositions owned or controlled by Plaintiffs that Defendants have exploited and that Plaintiffs believe are not licensed. Within 21 days thereafter, and in the event Defendants cannot verify that the additional karaoke recordings are actually licensed, this Preliminary Injunction shall be modified to include the additional unlicensed karaoke recordings and the notifications and time for performance by Defendants, as set forth below, shall apply equally to such additional karaoke recordings.
The order also establishes a notice-and-cure period to protect Ontario from unwitting contempt. In granting equitable relief, district courts enjoy broad discretion to fashion remedies balancing divergent interests. See, e.g., Coal. for Gov’t Procurement v. Fed. Prison Indus., Inc.,
Next, Ontario argues that the preliminary injunction is impermissibly broad because the compliance mechanism requires Ontario to disclose all karaoke recordings “since the inception of its internet sales operations.” Ontario reasons that because it began its business in 2007, the order’s scope exceeds the Copyright statute’s three-year limitations period. See 17 U.S.C. § 507(b). But regardless of any potential limitations defense Ontario may later assert, the injunction is not “retroactive.” Rather, it requires disclosure of Ontario’s past exploitations to help identify the relevant musical compositions and prevent future infringement.
Ontario also challenges the preliminary injunction’s limitations on advertising and offering for sale the enjoined works in the United States, suggesting that these privileges are not among Publishers’ exclusive copyrights. See 17 U.S.C. § 106. Although the parties vigorously dispute whether § 106(3)’s distribution right includes a “making available right,” we offer no comment on this issue because the injunction restricts acts reasonably likely to further copyright infringement. See, e.g., 17 U.S.C. § 502(a) (federal courts may grant “injunctions on such terms as it may deem reasonable to prevent or restrain infringement of a copyright”); United States v. W.T. Grant Co.,
Last, Ontario argues that because the order enjoins works not exclusively owned by Publishers, it impermissibly restricts third parties. See Bridgeport Music, Inc. v. DJ Yella Muzick,
III.
Discerning no abuse of discretion, we AFFIRM the order.
Notes
. After the district court ordered the preliminary injunction, Ontario presented letters suggesting that two of its co-publisher licenses may still be in effect due to ongoing royalty payments. The district court could not have known about these implied licenses and did not clearly err in finding them expired. Ontario may present this evidence in a motion to modify the preliminary injunction.
. For at least four months, Ontario misrepresented its online business practices to the district court. Though Ontario maintained that it had removed all Subject Works from its websites — thereby mooting Publishers’ application for injunctive relief — in fact, Ontario continued to sell and make available for sale the Subject Works in the United States, except for Tennessee, Wyoming, and California.
