Veronica Vincent wrote Smart Foreclosure Buying and has registered her copyright in that work, which the Chicago Association of REALTORS® published through its educational arm the Real Estate Education Company. (The Real Estate Education Company has since been consolidated with the Chicago REALTORS® Real Estate School; for simplicity we use “the Association” to refer to the Chicago Association of REALTORS® and all of its affiliates.) The Association promised to pay Vincent 15% of the book’s selling price. Vincent used the book as the text in a class she taught at the City Colleges of Chicago. The course title was the same as the book’s.
In 1995 Vincent stopped teaching this class. The City Colleges continued to offer a course with the same title, taught by Ezekiel Morris — -though a prospective student might have thought that Vincent was the instructor, as her initials appeared next to the course description in the college catalog. In 2001 Vincent told the Association by phone, fax, and letter to stop publishing her book. The Association promptly stopped paying her royalties, but it did not stop printing and selling copies of the book. Vincent also asked the City Colleges to stop offering any course using her book, or at least to cease using the book’s title as the name of the course. When Vincent discovered that the Association was continuing to print the book for use not only in the college courses but also in a self-directed educational program it offers for real estate brokers, she demanded that the Association pay her a portion of the revenue from these endeavors; it refused but did remit several years’ back royalties.
According to Vincent’s complaint, from which this narration has been drawn, the Association, the City Colleges, and Morris have violated the federal copyright and trademark laws. Vincent’s complaint named “Harold Washington College” and “Wilbur Wright College” as defendants, but these are just parts of the City Colleges’ operations. One could not sue Harvard College, as opposed to the larger
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institution (Harvard University) of which it is a component. Cf.
Schiavone v. Fortune,
The district court dismissed most of the complaint under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6). The complaint is fatally deficient, the judge wrote, because it does not plead facts that show an entitlement to relief.
The district judge faulted Vincent for failing to demonstrate beyond peradventure that the Association had received written notice. But why must notice be in writing? The license to print the book was oral; an oral contract may be modified or terminated orally. Nothing in the Copyright Act requires all transactions to be written&emdash;if it did, then the Association would not have had authority to publish the book in the first place! Because there are no distinctive federal rules for how parties reach contracts concerning copyrights, see
T.B. Harms Co. v. Eliscu,
A dispute about whether the Association received written notice would preclude summary judgment even if a writing were essential. Vincent provided evidence that she mailed the Association a letter of termination. The Association denies receiving this letter, which was sent to its old offices: the Association had moved without notifying Vincent. But the Postal Service forwards letters for one year after a move and should have forwarded this one. (The Association moved in September 2001; Vincent maintains that she mailed her letter that December; the Association does not contend that it failed to provide the Postal Service with a forwarding address.) Vincent maintains that the letter did not come back to her, as it should have done if the Postal Service could not deliver it. Maybe the letter arrived but was misfiled, or maybe someone at the Association threw it away because it did not correspond to a written contract in the Association’s files.
Evidence of mailing is evidence of delivery. See
Hagner v. United States,
That’s not all. Vincent testified by deposition that she sent the Association a termination notice by fax. The Association asserts that its old fax machine had been disconnected as part of the move, but that just sets up another factual dispute. Vincent testified that the fax went through (senders can tell the difference between reaching a fax machine and reaching a disconnected line). Fax and phone numbers usually are changed at the same time, or not at all, when a business moves. A new machine at the old number would have received the fax. The Association kept its old numbers for voice lines (the move of about five city blocks did not affect the area code), and Vincent was able to leave a termination message on its voice-mail system; a trier of fact could conclude that the fax number carried over too. Proof from the phone company’s records that the fax number was out of service could be deemed incontrovertible, but all the Association offered was its say-so.
Summary judgment on the copyright claim was proper, however, with respect to Morris and the CityjColleges. Vincent appears to believe that a copyright entitles the author to determine how a work is used and thus to prevent the book’s adoption as a teaching text.'' Not at all. An author has the exclusive right to control
copying,
but once a given copy has been sold its owner may do with it as he pleases (provided that he does not create another copy or a derivative work). See
Quality King Distributors, Inc. v. L’anza Research International, Inc.,
As for the rest of the case: a judicial order dismissing a complaint because the plaintiff did not plead facts has a short half-life. “Any decision declaring ‘this complaint is deficient because it does not allege X’ is a candidate for summary reversal, unless X is on the list in Fed. R.Civ.P. 9(b).”
Kolupa v. Roselle Park District,
Facts that substantiate the claim ultimately must be put into evidence, but the rule “plaintiff needs to prove Fact Y” does not imply “plaintiff must allege Fact Y at
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the outset.” That’s the difference between fact pleading (which the courts of Illinois use) and claim pleading under Rule 8. See, e.g.,
Christensen v. Boone County,
Rule 8 was adopted in 1938, and
Conley v. Gibson,
“Any district judge (for that matter, any defendant) tempted to write ‘this complaint is deficient because it does not contain ... ’ should stop and think: What rule of law
requires
a complaint to contain that allegation?”
Doe v. Smith,
What’s more, trade and service marks are protected whether or not they are registered. See
Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Samara Bros., Inc.,
Vincent’s remaining claims stem from the initials “V.V.” that the City Colleges continued to append to the course description after Vincent was no longer the instructor. She characterizes this as false advertising, fraud, a deceptive business practice, and other state-law theories. Because each of these theories entails deceit, there is at least some potential for invoking the specificity requirement of Fed. R.Civ.P. 9(b). Neither the district court nor defendants relies on that rule, however, likely because the complaint alleges precisely the statement&emdash;the use of plaintiffs initials&emdash;that is asserted to be false, and the exact reason'&emdash;that no one answering to the initials “V.V.” taught the class after plaintiff stopped doing so&emdash;why the statement was false. The complaint does not go into detail about the intent with which the defendants applied these initials, but Rule 9(b) provides that states of mind may be alleged generally. The complaint is sufficient.
None of the defendants maintains that students are the only persons injured by this falsehood. Just about all the defendants say in this court is that one particular theory, which relies on the Illinois version of the Uniform Deceptive Trade Practices Act, 815 ILCS 510/2, is no longer tenable because that statute authorizes only prospective relief, and none of the defendants today offers or teaches a class under the name “Smart Foreclosure Buying” or the initials “V.V.” This must be an argument that a claim for prospective relief is moot, although the defendants do not use that word. No matter what the argument is called, however, it is not a sufficient reason to dismiss the complaint. Voluntary cessation of unlawful activity does not moot every request for prospective relief; the court must decide whether the complained-of conduct may be resumed. See
United States v. W.T. Grant Co.,
The order dismissing the City of Chicago for lack of service (and thus absence of *926 personal jurisdiction) is affirmed. The judgment with respect to the other defendants is affirmed to the extent that Morris and the City Colleges prevailed on the copyright claim. The remainder of the judgment is reversed, and the case is remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
This court has issued at least 12 opinions or orders during the last year alone reversing decisions that had dismissed complaints for failure to plead facts.
Christensen v. Boone County,
