KIMBA M. WOOD, District Judge:
On May 11, 2010, this Court granted summary judgment in favor of Plaintiffs on their claims against Defendants LimeWire LLC ("LW"), Lime Group LLC ("Lime Group"), and Mark Gorton (collectively, "Defendants") for secondary copyright infringement.
Plaintiffs have identified approximately 11,000 sound recordings that they allege have been infringed through the LimeWire system. For the over 9,500 post-1972 sound recordings, Plaintiffs have elected to seek statutory damages under Section 504(c)(1) of the Copyright Act (hereinafter "Section 504"). See 17 U.S.C. § 504(c)(1) (providing that a "copyright owner may elect" to seek "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 individually, or for which any two or more infringers are liable jointly and severally").
Squarely before the Court is a threshold dispute regarding Plaintiffs' entitlement to statutory damage awards against Defendants: Where, as here, Defendants have been found liable for inducing numerous individual LimeWire users to infringe Plaintiffs' copyrights, may Plaintiffs recover from Defendants a separate statutory award for each individual's infringement of a work as to which Defendants are jointly and severally liable? Or, rather, are Plaintiffs limited to one statutory damage award per work from Defendants, regardless of the number of direct infringers of that work with whom Defendants are jointly and severally liable?
Plaintiffs contend that they may recover from Defendants a separate statutory damage award with respect to each individual infringer of the same work, because LimeWire is jointly and severally liable with each individual direct infringer. (See Pl. Mem. at 7.) See also Pl. Reply Mem. at 2 ("[Section] 504(c)(1) authorizes separate statutory awards for each infringement for which Defendants are separately liable.").
Defendants, however, contend that Plaintiffs are entitled to a single statutory damage award per work infringed, regardless of how many individual LimeWire users directly infringed that particular work. Defendants assert that, "because the only alleged liability between Lime Wire and its users is joint and several, the statute mandates a single statutory award per work infringed." (Def. Op. at 3-4.)
To the best of this Court's knowledge, the issue of whether a plaintiff should be able to recover from a secondarily liable defendant multiple awards per work based on the number of direct infringers of that work has never been addressed in a context where the secondarily liable defendant has enabled hundreds, if not thousands, of individuals to infringe one work's copyright, as occurred here, in the online peer-to-peer file sharing program run by Lime-Wire. Consequently, there is a considerable lack of guidance on this precise issue.
However, for the reasons that follow, the Court finds that Plaintiffs are entitled to a single statutory damage award from Defendants per work infringed.
The present dispute stems from the parties' conflicting interpretations of the language contained in Section 504(c)(1) of the Copyright Act. In relevant part, Section 504 provides that a copyright owner may elect:
17 U.S.C. § 504(c)(1) (emphasis added).
Focusing on the language of Section 504, Defendants contend that, because Section 504(c)(1) refers to "an award" (in the singular) where "any two or more infringers are jointly and severally liable," Plaintiffs cannot obtain more than "an award" for any given work, if there are "any two or more jointly and severally liable" infringers of that work, as there are in the instant case. Defendants argue that, because the only liability alleged in the instant lawsuit against LimeWire and its users is joint and several (there are no allegations against any individually liable infringers in this lawsuit), the statute mandates a single statutory award per work infringed. (Def. Mem. at 3-4.)
Plaintiffs, however, note that the term "an award" applies to: (A) any one work "for which any one infringer is liable individually"; or (B) any one work "for which any two or more infringers are jointly and severally liable." With regard to the "A" clause, there is no dispute that a plaintiff may recover a separate statutory damage award from each individually liable infringer with respect to the same work.
The Court recognizes that this precise task of statutory interpretation presents an especially close question. However, for the reasons outlined below, the Court is confident that Congress intended for the Copyright Act to treat jointly and severally liable infringers the same way that the statute treats individually liable infringers. For any individually liable infringer, a plaintiff is entitled to one statutory damage award per work. For any two or more jointly and severally liable infringers, a plaintiff is entitled to one statutory damage award per work. Multiple factors support this conclusion.
At the outset, the Court notes that, in analyzing where to set Plaintiffs' statutory damage awards within the wide range of permissible dollar amounts, the fact-finder may take into account the number of direct infringers who infringed each of Plaintiffs' copyrighted works through the LimeWire system.
Accordingly, the dollar amount of each statutory damage award that Plaintiffs ultimately receives can account for the number of direct infringers Defendants induced to infringe through the LimeWire system. Thus, Plaintiffs are not actually being deprived of an award that takes into account the number of direct infringers per work.
Plaintiffs' position on statutory damages also offends the "canon that we should avoid endorsing statutory interpretations that would lead to absurd results." Torraco v. Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, 615 F.3d 129, 145 (2d Cir.2010) (citing Corley v. United States, 556 U.S. 303, 129 S.Ct. 1558, 1568 n. 6, 173 L.Ed.2d 443 (2009)).
As it stands now, Defendants face a damage award that "could be in the hundreds of millions of dollars (if not over a billion dollars)." (Pl. Mem. Of Law in Support of Prelim. Inj., at 8 (Dkt. Entry No. 243).) Indeed, if one multiplies the maximum statutory damage award ($150,000) by approximately 10,000 post-1972 works, Defendants face a potential award of over a billion dollars in statutory damages alone. If Plaintiffs were able to pursue a statutory damage theory predicated on the number of direct infringers per work, Defendants' damages could reach into the trillions. See Dkt. Entry No. 461 ("Thousands (or even millions) of uploads and downloads occurred across disparate users.")
Although there is some authority supporting Plaintiffs' position on statutory damage awards, the Court finds that the authority supporting Defendants' position and the Court's own reading of Section 504 is far more persuasive.
To support their position, Plaintiffs cite to a decision by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, Columbia Pictures Television v. Krypton Broad. of Birmingham, Inc., 106 F.3d 284 (9th Cir.1997), rev'd on other
Id. at 294 n. 7. Accordingly, defendant was forced to pay three separate statutory damage awards for each work infringed, to account for each separately liable infringer. Id.
Plaintiffs also cite a hypothetical example contained in Professor Nimmer's copyright treatise to support their position on damages:
4 NIMMER ON COPYRIGHT § 14.04[E][2][d] (2002) (hereinafter the "Nimmer hypothetical").
Although the Nimmer hypothetical and the Ninth Circuit's decision in Columbia Pictures support Plaintiffs' position, subsequent decisions have rejected outright both the Columbia Pictures decision and the Nimmer hypothetical, finding them inapplicable to situations involving large numbers of infringements. The Court finds these subsequent decisions more persuasive.
In McClatchey v. Associated Press, 2007 WL 1630261, at *4, the Associated Press (the "AP") took a photograph of the plaintiff's copyrighted photograph of the September 11, 2001 plane crash in Shanksville, Pennsylvania. The AP distributed plaintiff's photograph to AOL without authorization. Other downstream users subsequently published plaintiff's image. Id. at *1. The plaintiff sued only AP. Citing to the Nimmer hypothetical, plaintiff claimed that she was entitled to multiple, separate statutory damage awards because AP was "jointly and severally liable with multiple parties who are not jointly and severally liable with each other." Id. at *3. Nevertheless, the court held that plaintiff was limited to a single statutory damage award for infringement against AP with respect to the work at issue:
Id. at *4 (emphasis added). The court was clear that it is "not necessary for the court to reject the Nimmer hypothetical in all circumstances." Id. However, the court held that, "where the only Defendant is jointly and severally liable with all other alleged downstream infringers, Plaintiff is entitled to only a single statutory damages award." Id.
To support its holding, the McClatchey court relied on the "quite analogous" facts presented in Bouchat v. Champion Prods., Inc., 327 F.Supp.2d 537, 552 (D.Md.2003), aff'd on other grounds, 506 F.3d 315, 332 (4th Cir.2007). In Bouchat, the merchandising division of the National Football League, the NFLP, used the plaintiff's drawing to create a logo for the Baltimore Ravens, and then licensed the logo to more than 350 business entities that subsequently used the logo in their businesses. Id. at 539-40. The plaintiff argued that he was "entitled to a separate statutory damages award with respect to each" of the 350 infringers. Id. at 547. The court rejected plaintiff's argument, and held that:
Id. at 553 (emphasis added). The court also rejected the plaintiff's reliance on Columbia Pictures, stating that "[t]his holding does not persuade the Court that the absence of joint liability among the Downstream Defendants themselves entitles Bouchat to multiple statutory damage awards where each infringement was a joint infringement with NFLP." Id. at 553. In sum, the Bouchat court "flatly rejected the Nimmer hypothetical, at least in the context of coordinated mass marketing operations, characterizing the result as absurd."
Similarly, in Arista Records LLC v. Usenet.com, Inc., the court found that the defendant, an online file distribution service that made music available for download, was directly and secondarily liable for "massive amounts of infringement" by consumers who downloaded the copyrighted music owned by the record labels. 633 F.Supp.2d 124, 152 (S.D.N.Y.2009). At the damage stage of the ligation, some of the same plaintiffs as the plaintiffs in the instant case asked the court to calculate statutory damages by multiplying the number of works infringed by the maximum amount of statutory damages. See Arista Records LLC v. Usenet.com, Inc., No. 07 Civ. 8822, 2010 WL 3629587, at *1 (S.D.N.Y. Sept. 16, 2010) ("Plaintiffs had sought statutory damages of $131,700,000. They arrived at this number by multiplying the number of works alleged to have been infringed (878) by the maximum amount of statutory damages allowed for willful infringement ($150,000 per infringement[)]."). The Court endorsed Plaintiff's proposal of how to calculate damages, and found defendants jointly and severally liable for $6,585,000, based on multiplying the number of works at issue (878) by a per work statutory damage award of $7,500. Id. at *7.
In sum, recent decisions have categorically rejected the Nimmer hypothetical and Columbia Pictures in the context of large numbers of infringers. The Court agrees that allowing Plaintiffs to recover multiple awards per work based on the numbers of direct infringers is untenable. The Court thus finds that Plaintiffs are entitled to a single statutory damage award from Defendants per work infringed, regardless of how many individual users directly infringed that particular work.
Plaintiffs asserted over four years ago that they would be seeking one statutory damage award per work infringed. In their amended complaint, Plaintiffs stated that they would be seeking "$150,000 with respect to each timely-registered work that was infringed." (First Am. Compl. at ¶¶ 74, 87, 99 (Dkt. Entry No 45).) Plaintiffs' prayer for relief requests "$150,000 per work with respect to each and every timely registered sound recording owned by Plaintiffs that was willfully infringed." (Id. at 33.) That remained Plaintiffs' position until as recently as June of 2010, when they again stated that they are seeking statutory damage awards "[f]or each work for which Lime Wire owes Plaintiffs a statutory award within a Congressionally prescribed range." (Pl. Mem. of Law in Support of Mot. for Permanent Injunction, at 10 (Dkt. Entry No. 235).) Notwithstanding their previously consistent position on statutory damage awards, just months ago, Plaintiffs began to assert that they are "seek[ing] a separate statutory damage for each act of direct infringement for which Defendants are jointly and severally liable with separate infringing actors." (Pl. Letter, September 23, 2010.)
Plaintiffs contend that they have been clear from the beginning of this lawsuit that they are seeking "separate statutory awards for the direct infringements of the same copyrighted sound recording by different Lime Wire users under 17 U.S.C.S. § 504(c)." (Pl. Letter, February 22, 2011.) However, based on a review of the record, the Court disagrees, and finds that the first time that Plaintiffs stated unambiguously that they are seeking multiple awards for each work infringed was on September 23, 2010, when Plaintiffs' new counsel, Munger, Tolles & Olson LLP, wrote to the court, stating that Plaintiffs "intend to seek a separate statutory damage for each act of direct infringement for which Defendants are jointly and severally liable with separate infringing actors."
The Court need not address directly the issue of waiver (and potential prejudice to Defendants), because the Court rejects Plaintiffs' position on damages for all of the reasons outlined in this opinion.
For the foregoing reasons, the Court finds that the most plausible interpretation of Section 504(c) is one that authorizes only a single statutory damage award per work against a secondarily liable defendant, particularly in the context of the mass infringement found in the context of online peer-to-peer file sharing. Accordingly, the Court holds that Plaintiffs are entitled to a single statutory damage award from Defendants per work infringed, regardless of how many individual users directly infringed that particular work.
SO ORDERED.