BRIAN M. COGAN, District Judge.
Before me is defendants' motion for partial summary judgment. Of the six claims in plaintiffs' amended complaint, only the following three remain:
Defendants' partial summary judgment motion seeks: (1) dismissal of Glass Star's claim for copyright infringement for lack of standing; (2) to limit plaintiff Jacino's potential recovery on the copyright infringement claim to 50% of the amount of statutory damages that would be awarded because Gerald Jacino, the co-owner of the copyrights, has not joined in this action; (3) to limit consideration of the `938 Copyright on plaintiff Jacino's infringement claim to only the original material because the `938 Copyright is a derivative work that encompasses elements of another copyrighted work that plaintiffs have not asserted in this case; and (4) dismissal of plaintiffs' federal and state unfair competition claims as preempted by the Copyright Act.
With one exception, plaintiffs' arguments in opposition are without merit and defendant's motion is therefore granted in part and denied in part.
Defendants argue that Glass Star does not have standing to assert a copyright infringement claim against them because Glass Star is neither the owner nor the exclusive licensee of either of the two copyrights asserted in this action. It is undisputed that plaintiff Anthony Jacino and non-party Gerald Jacino each hold 50% ownership interest in both the `858 Copyright and the `938 Copyright, and that plaintiff Jacino's company, Glass Star, and Gerald Jacino's company, Blue Star, both have permission to use the copyrights. Because both Glass Star and Blue Star have permission to use the subject copyrights, Glass Star cannot be an exclusive licensee, and therefore, defendants contend, it cannot assert a claim for copyright infringement.
Plaintiffs, seemingly conceding that Glass Star is not an exclusive licensee,
Although they did not include this fact in their responsive Rule 56.1 statement, plaintiffs argue that it is evident that Glass Star and Anthony Jacino have a trust relationship because Glass Star is the only entity to which Anthony Jacino has granted a non-exclusive license. But that does not place Glass Star in a different position than any other non-exclusive licensee, and it is well established that non-exclusive licensees do not have standing to sue for infringement.
Moreover, the two cases on which plaintiffs rely,
Plaintiff Jacino is only seeking statutory damages, as opposed to actual damages, on his copyright infringement claim. Defendants argue that if Jacino prevails on his infringement claim, he should be limited to recovering only 50% of the total amount of statutory damages in proportion to his percentage of ownership interest in the two subject copyrights. Plaintiffs contend that plaintiff Jacino should be permitted to recover 100% of the statutory damages because if Gerald Jacino decides that he wants to recover his share, he may pursue a claim against plaintiff Jacino. I agree with defendants that plaintiff Jacino is only permitted to recover his share of any potential damages.
Over seventy years ago, the Second Circuit in
Plaintiffs argue that this well-settled principle should not be applied in this case because co-owner Gerald Jacino testified at his deposition that he has no financial interest in this litigation and that "no matter what happens with this litigation [he is] not going to make one more dollar." Therefore, plaintiffs claim, plaintiff Jacino should able to recover 100% of damages as there is little risk that defendants will be exposed to double liability or subject to inconsistent obligations. Plaintiffs also argue that if defendants' liability is limited in this case, defendants will be unjustly enriched. Neither of these arguments are persuasive.
First, that non-party Gerald Jacino has no financial interest in this litigation is irrelevant. Of course Gerald Jacino has no financial stake in this litigation; he is not a party. What matters is that Gerald Jacino has not disclaimed any rights that he has to recover his share of statutory damages if he commences a separate lawsuit for infringement against defendants. Moreover, even if one broadly read Gerald Jacino's deposition as indicating a present intent not to pursue defendants, that testimony is far from a legally binding release. He is perfectly free to change his mind at any time. Because plaintiff Jacino cannot extinguish Gerald Jacino's rights as a co-owner of the copyrights, if plaintiff Jacino were allowed to recover 100% of statutory damages in this case, defendants could be subject to multiple liability in the event that Gerald Jacino decides to pursue his own infringement claim. Second, limiting plaintiff Jacino's damages based on his ownership interest will not unjustly enrich defendants. To the contrary, it is plaintiff Jacino who would be unjustly enriched if he were permitted to recover a greater amount of damages than that to which he is entitled. I will thus limit plaintiff Jacino's statutory damages to his 50% share if he prevails on the copyright claim.
As a third basis for limiting the copyright infringement claim, defendants request that the Court narrow the scope of the protected material in the `938 Copyright because it is a derivative work of material registered under Copyright Registration No. TX 4-910-936 (the "`936 Copyright"), which is also jointly owned by plaintiff Jacino and Gerald Jacino. Because plaintiffs did not assert the `936 Copyright in this action, defendants argue that any material from the `936 Copyright incorporated into the `938 Copyright should not be considered when evaluating defendants' alleged infringement of the `938 Copyright. Plaintiffs have failed to respond to this argument.
A derivative work is a one that is "based upon one or more preexisting works" and "recast[s], transform[s], or adapt[s]" the original work. 17 U.S.C. § 101. A derivative work consists of "editorial revisions, annotations, elaborations, or other modifications which, as a whole, represent an original work of authorship . . . . "
Defendants have submitted the Copyright Registration for both the `936 Copyright, titled the "Clear Star Winshield[sic] Saver II — Stock #777 Blister Card," and the `938 Copyright, titled "Clear Star Windshield Saver II Brochure." It is clear that Windshield Saver II Brochure, the subject of the `938 Copyright, incorporates the exact material that comprises the Stock #777 Blister Card, the subject of the `936, within its larger work.
The `938 Copyright is therefore a derivative work and its protection only extends to original material in the work, not the "Clear Star Windshield Saver II — Stock #777 Blister Card," which is protected by the `936 Copyright. Because plaintiffs have not asserted that the `936 Copyright has been infringed, the "Clear Star Winshield[sic] Saver II — Stock #777 Blister Card," may not be considered when evaluating defendants' alleged infringement of the `938 Copyright.
Plaintiffs have asserted a claim for unfair competition and false designation of origin under the Lanham Act and a claim for unfair competition under New York law. Defendants argue that both the federal and state claims are preempted by the Copyright Act because they are based on the same alleged conduct that constitutes the copyright infringement claim — defendants are selling repair kits with packaging and inserts substantially similar, if not identical, to the works embodied in the copyrights owned by plaintiff Jacino. I agree with defendants that the Copyright Act preempts plaintiffs' state law claim, but it does not preempt plaintiffs' Lanham Act claim.
The following facts are relevant to plaintiffs' unfair competition claims. In 2006, Glass Star and defendant Illinois Tool Works, Inc. ("Illinois Tool Works"), entered into an agreement pursuant to which Glass Star manufactured various products for Illinois Tool Works, including windshield repair kits. At least some of the material in the windshield repair kits that Glass Star produced was protected by the `936 and `938 Copyrights. On the packaging of the windshield repair kit produced for Illinois Tool Works, Glass Star displayed the patent number of a patent entitled "Glass Break Repair Kit Apparatus and Method," which is jointly owned by plaintiff Jacino and Gerald Jacino. Plaintiffs have not identified any other markings that were included on the repair kits made for Illinois Tool Works that indicated that either Glass Star or plaintiff Jacino were involved in the production of the product.
Glass Star continued to make repair kits for Illinois Tool Works until 2015, when Illinois Tool Works terminated the agreement and informed Glass Star that it was no longer going to purchase its repair kits. Plaintiffs allege that since the termination of the agreement, defendants have continued to sell windshield repair kids with packaging and inserts identical to the packaging and inserts that Glass Star produced for Illinois Tool Works.
Plaintiffs' false designation of origin of goods claim under the Lanham Act is based on their allegation that defendants' use of packaging and inserts identical to the packaging and inserts used while Glass Star was manufacturing defendants' repair kits creates the false impression that defendants' products are still being made by Glass Star and approved by plaintiff Jacino. Section 43 of the Lanham Act, 11 U.S.C. § 1125(a)(1)(A), creates a cause of action against an entity that makes a "false designation of origin, false or misleading description of fact, or false or misleading representation of fact, which . . . is likely to cause confusion . . . as to the origin" of its goods.
Defendants argue that the Supreme Court's decision in
I agree with plaintiffs that
Although plaintiffs' Lanham Act claim is not precluded, and therefore survives defendants' motion for summary judgment, I am skeptical that plaintiffs can prevail on this claim. To prove a false designation of origin claim, a plaintiff must demonstrate that there is a likelihood of confusion between the plaintiff's good and the defendant's.
It seems unlikely that plaintiffs will be able to show that there was a likelihood of consumer confusion. Plaintiffs admit that defendants' current repair kits do not contain any Glass Star trademark, and they do not allege that the repair kits made by Glass Star even contained its trademark. Significantly, there is nothing to suggest that even prior to the termination of the parties' agreement, customers were aware that Glass Star was producing Illinois Toil Works' repair kits. The only aspect of the repair kits that showed that Glass Star produced them for Illinois Tool Works was a reference to a patent number owned by plaintiff Jacino and Gerald Jacino on the packaging. But the patent number was not accompanied by a statement listing the owner of the patent or even the title of the patented work.
It seems unreasonable to think that customers associated Illinois Toil Works' repair kits with Glass Star or plaintiff Jacino based on the listing of an obscure patent number on the bottom of the packaging. And if consumers could not reasonably associate Glass Star or Anthony Jacino with defendants' products even when Glass Star was manufacturing them, there is little likelihood that plaintiffs will be able to prove that customers are confused as to whether defendants' current repair kits are still being produced by Glass Star or approved by plaintiff Jacino. Nonetheless, because defendants' only pursued the dismissal of this claim on the basis that it is precluded, which it is not, plaintiffs' Lanham Act claim may proceed.
Plaintiffs' unfair competition claim under New York law rests on the same theory as their Lanham Act claim. "The essence of unfair competition under New York common law is the bad faith misappropriation of the labors and expenditures of another, likely to cause confusion or to deceive purchasers as to the origin of the goods."
Pursuant to Section 301(a) of the Copyright Act, federal copyright law will preempt a state law claim when: (1) the subject matter of the work upon which the state claims are premised falls within the subject matter protected by the Copyright Act; and (2) the rights that are asserted under the state law are equivalent to those protected by the Copyright Act.
At the second step, the Second Circuit employs the "extra element" test to determine whether a state law claim seeks to protect rights equivalent to those protected under the Copyright Act. The extra element test provides that if an "extra element" is "required instead of or in addition to the acts of reproduction, performance, distribution or display, in order to constitute a state-created cause of action, then the right does not lie within the general scope of copyright, and there is no preemption."
Plaintiffs have not even attempted to identify an "extra element," nor is there any. Their New York unfair competition claim is therefore preempted by the Copyright Act.
Defendants' motion for partial summary judgment is granted in part and denied in part. Glass Star's copyright infringement claim and plaintiffs' New York unfair competition claim are dismissed. The only claims that may proceed is Anthony Jacino's claim for copyright infringement and plaintiffs' Lanham Act claim.