SOUTHERN CREDENTIALING SUPPORT SERVICES, L.L.C., Plaintiff – Appellee Cross-Appellant v. HAMMOND SURGICAL HOSPITAL, L.L.C., doing business as Cypress Pointe Surgical Hospital; HAMMOND SURGICAL HOSPITAL MANAGEMENT COMPANY, L.L.C., Defendants – Appellants Cross-Appellees
No. 18-31160
United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
January 9, 2020
Lyle W. Cayce Clerk
Appeals from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana
Before OWEN, Chief Judge, and HAYNES and COSTA, Circuit Judges.
A plaintiff must usually prove damages to recover in a lawsuit. But to encourage compliance, some laws provide automatic damages. The Copyright Act of 1976 is an example. It has a provision allowing a copyright holder to elect statutory damages—in an amount the court sets between $750 and $30,000 per infringed work, rising to a possibility of $150,000 per work for willful infringement—instead of actual damages. See
Statutory damages are not available, however, in all copyright cases. A plaintiff cannot recover statutory damages, and sometimes more importantly, attorney‘s fees, for “any infringement” a defendant commences before the plaintiff registered the copyright.
We have interpreted section 412 to bar statutory damages even for a defendant‘s postregistration copying of a plaintiff‘s map if copying also occurred before registration. Id. The question this case poses is whether that bar also applies when the defendant engages in a different type of infringement after registration. For example, what if a defendant distributes the work after registration rather than continuing with the earlier copying?
I.
In 2010, Southern Credentialing Support Services began providing health care credentialing services to Hammond Surgical Hospital. Credentialing is a
Some companies, like Southern Credentialing, try to obtain a competitive advantage by designing custom forms for their clients. Southern Credentialing created two packets of forms for Hammond: an initial credentialing application packet and a recredentialing packet. The initial packet was 83 pages long, which included 8 base documents common to all credentialing applications, several forms required by law, and 33 specialty-specific delineations. The recredentialing packet was 113 pages long, consisting of an original reapplication packet, the 8 base documents, and the 33 specialty-specific delineations.
In 2013, Southern Credentialing stopped providing credentialing services to Hammond. Hammond soon contracted with another company for credentialing services. The forms that the new provider used contained fifty pages that were identical to Southern Credentialing‘s forms. From 2013 until 2017, doctors would register on the new provider‘s website and access the application through a password-protected portal. By 2017, the new provider had posted the documents in a way that enabled anyone who knew where to look for the forms on its website to access them without a password.
When it was working with Hammond, Southern Credentialing had not registered any copyrights in its application packets. On learning that Hammond was still using its forms after the companies had parted ways, Southern Credentialing registered a copyright for the original packet in February 2014 and the recredentialing packet in July 2014.
A few days after registering the second copyright, Southern Credentialing sent an
So Southern Credentialing filed this suit. It claimed that Hammond infringed its copyrights over the initial and reapplication packets. Southern Credentialing sought summary judgment, which the district court granted as to the existence of the copyrights and infringement.
To determine damages, the district court held a bench trial. During the trial, Southern Credentialing elected statutory damages. The court held that it could award statutory damages despite section 412‘s bar because the defendant‘s post-2017 internet distribution of the packets was “different in kind” from its pre-2017 infringing activity. After determining that Hammond‘s infringement was not willful, it awarded Southern Credentialing $5,000 ($2,500 for each packet). The court also ruled that Southern Credentialing was entitled to attorney‘s fees and costs, though it has not yet determined the amount. Finally, the court issued a permanent injunction barring Hammond from infringing Southern Credentialing‘s copyrights.
Hammond appeals, arguing that
II.
We first address whether Southern Credentialing possessed valid copyrights in its credentialing packets. Copyright protection “subsists . . . in original works of authorship fixed in any tangible medium of expression.”
A work is original if it exhibits a minimal degree of creativity. Feist Publ‘ns., Inc. v. Rural Tel. Serv. Co., 499 U.S. 340, 345 (1991). Facts are not original, so they are not eligible for protection. Id. at 345–46;
Southern Credentialing‘s forms meet the low bar for originality. Southern Credentialing selected and arranged information in an efficient way. Among other things, the forms eliminate unnecessary questions that appear on competitors’ forms. Indeed, Hammond admits that Southern Credentialing‘s forms enabled Southern Credentialing to process applications at a much faster than average rate. Presumably the efficiency of Southern Credentialing‘s forms is why Hammond continued to use them with the new credentialing
Although laws and hospital policies dictate the contents of the credentialing forms, Southern Credentialing‘s unique selection and arrangement of information exhibit creative expression. That distinctive arrangement distinguishes the credentialing applications from the once-ubiquitous white pages that the Supreme Court held lacked originality because market forces required alphabetical phone directories. Feist, 499 U.S. at 363–64. In contrast to the uniform arrangement used in the phone directory business, competing health care credentialing servicers use forms that are compiled and arranged in different ways. Such differentiation within the industry demonstrates originality. See Eng‘g Dynamics, Inc., 26 F.3d at 1346 (holding that a computer program that simulated engineering problems was original because its algorithm differed from its competitors’ algorithm that achieved the same output).
Southern Credentialing has valid copyrights protecting the selection and arrangement of information in its credentialing forms.
III.
The next question is whether Hammond infringed those copyrights. Copying protected material is infringement.
Hammond copied Southern Credentialing‘s packets. Large portions of Hammond‘s new application are taken verbatim from Southern Credentialing‘s packets—approximately 50% of Southern Credentialing‘s materials are included in the new forms. Although the copyright in factual compilations is necessarily thin, wholesale duplication of half of a protected work necessarily incorporates its protected elements. See Feist, 499 U.S. at 348 (“Others may copy the underlying facts from the publication, but not the precise words used to present them.“).
The district court correctly concluded that Hammond infringed valid copyrights of Southern Credentialing. We thus affirm the permanent injunction it entered barring future infringement.
IV.
That brings us to the novel issue this appeal poses: whether section 412 bars Southern Credentialing from recovering statutory damages. As mentioned at the outset, the Copyright Act prohibits the recovery of statutory damages and attorney‘s fees for “any infringement of copyright in an unpublished work commenced before the effective date of its registration. . . .”1
Mason resolved that ambiguity. We held that section 412(2) bars statutory damages when the same defendant infringed the same work in the same fashion before and after registration.2 Id. at 143–44. The plaintiff had published 233 maps from 1967 to 1980, registering one map in 1968 and the remaining 232 in 1987. Id. at 144. The defendant copied each map repeatedly from 1982 to 1989. Id. at 137. We held the defendant could not be liable for statutory damages under section 412 except for its infringement of the single map that was registered in 1968 prior to any copying of that work. Id. at 144.
For the other 232 maps, the preregistration infringement of those maps barred any statutory damages even for the additional infringements that postdated the 1987 registration.
In reaching that conclusion, we emphasized the need for the limit on statutory damages to be read consistently with the provision authorizing those damages in the first place. Id. at 143–44. That statute, section 504, authorizes “an award of statutory damages for all infringements involved in the action, with respect to any one work, for which any one infringer is liable. . . .”
The single-award-per-infringed-work rule for statutory damages supports reading section 412 bar‘s on statutory damages broadly to prohibit statutory damages for both pre- and postregistration infringements. Id. at 143–44. That is because the narrow reading of section 412 would bar statutory damages for one infringement of a work (the infringement occurring preregistration) yet allow them for a different infringement of the same work (one occurring postregistration). That interpretation is at odds with section 504‘s rule that there be an award for all infringements of the same work. In other words, it would be incongruent to separate infringements of the same work when considering whether the section 412 bar applies when the provision allowing statutory damages requires treating those infringements together. Id. at 144. Siloing infringements when applying the bar on statutory damages would also allow a plaintiff to recover actual damages for preregistration infringements (when statutory damages are unavailable) and then statutory damages for later infringements of the same work. Id. That is also at odds with the statute‘s allowing a
Mason also relied on the Copyright Act‘s purpose in limiting statutory damages when infringement occurs before registration: to encourage early registration, thus allowing potential infringers to determine whether a work is protected. Permitting a plaintiff to register, then collect statutory damages for new infringements of the same work by the same defendant that occur after registration, would dull that incentive. Id.
Although recognizing Mason‘s general rule, the district court concluded that it did not apply because Hammond‘s postregistration infringements were “different in kind” from its preregistration infringements. That difference in kind exists, according to Southern Credentialing, if the preregistration infringement and the postregistration infringement violate different exclusive rights of a copyright holder. The district court found that to be the case here because Hammond‘s preregistration infringement reproduced the copyrighted forms (violating
No court has previously applied Southern Credentialing‘s approach3 and one district court in this circuit has persuasively rejected it. Qualey v. Caring Ctr. of Slidell, 942 F. Supp. 1074, 1076–77 (E.D. La. 1996). In Qualey, a city had prepared derivative works of an engineer‘s floor plans before the plaintiff registered them (a violation of
1075. The court reasoned that Mason‘s rationales applied with equal force when infringement occurring before and after registration violates different rights protected by copyright law.
We agree that section 412 bars statutory damage awards when a defendant violates one of the six exclusive rights of a copyright holder preregistration and violates a different right in the same work after registration.4 Any other conclusion would be inconsistent with the Copyright Act, which does not distinguish between “different” infringements. See Qualey, 942 F. Supp. at 1076–77; 2 NIMMER ON COPYRIGHT §7.16(c) (2019) (“The bar on awarding heightened damages applies . . . even if the sole defendant, after registration, engaged in a different type of infringement from its pre-registration conduct.“). Under Southern Credentialing‘s theory, statutory
infringements occurring after registration are more worthy of punishment because they are “different in kind” from those occurring earlier.
Harmonizing the Copyright Act provisions authorizing and limiting statutory damages as we did in Mason, it remains the case that Congress prohibited statutory damages when “any infringement” precedes registration. Maintaining this rule even when the infringements are “different in kind” promotes the incentive for early registration that Congress created. Qualey, 942 F. Supp. at 1077.
The unavailability of statutory damages in this situation does not mean there is nothing to deter postregistration infringements. Actual damages are available when a plaintiff can prove them. Although Southern Credentialing was unable to do so, it obtained another remedy that protects against future infringement: an injunction.
* * *
The judgment is AFFIRMED IN PART and REVERSED IN PART. The case is REMANDED for entry of an amended judgment without statutory damages or attorney‘s fees.
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