In this dispute over ownership of the renewal term copyrights in certain musical compositions and sound records, we vacated the district court's grant of Defendants' motion under Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6) to dismiss for untimeliness and remanded for further proceedings. Wilson v. Dynatone ,
Recordation of a document in the Copyright Office gives all persons constructive notice of the facts stated in the recorded document, but only if-(1) the document, or material attached to it, specifically identifies the work to which it pertains ... and (2) registration has been made for the work.
We reject Defendants' argument that, at least in the circumstances of this case, registration, without more, triggers accrual of an ownership claim. Their interpretation of § 205(c) would mean that after authoring a work, an author would need to constantly monitor the Copyright Office registry to be sure that no one has registered a spurious claim of authorship, on pain of losing their ownership of the copyright three years after the spurious registration. Defendants' interpretation would thus impose on authors an intolerable and unrealistic burden, and would open fertile opportunities for thieves to steal copyrights by simply filing baseless registrations for previously created works.
A number of our sister circuits have considered and rejected Defendants' argument that copyright registration triggers the accrual of a claim. In Gaiman v. McFarlane ,
We recognize that not all courts have reached the same conclusion. In Saenger Org. v. Nationwide Licensing Assoc. ,
Section 205 does not state that ownership claims filed more than three years after an adverse registration are untimely, nor that a claim of ownership accrues upon an adverse registration. The discovery rule for determining when a claim accrues is itself entirely a common law development. Chicago Bldg. Design, P.C. v. Mongolian House, Inc. ,
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, the petition for rehearing is denied.
Notes
Gaiman relied for this proposition on In re World Auxiliary Power Co. ,
