JULIE E. CARNES, Chief Judge.
This case is before the Court on defendant MRA Holding, LLC and defendant Mantra Films, Inc.'s (the "defendants") Motion for Summary Judgment [179]. For the reasons that follow, defendants' Motion for Summary Judgment [179] is
This case arose from the defendants' use of plaintiff Lindsey Bullard' s videotaped image in one of the infamous Girls Gone Wild videos,
In April of 2000, plaintiff, who was then 14 years old,
One evening during that vacation, plaintiff was walking with two of the girls down Thomas Drive, which is known, unfacetiously, as "The Strip." (Id. at 7, 15-16.) Two men approached the girls with a video camera and asked them to step off of the strip into a parking lot and show them their "boobs." (Id. at 16-19.) Neither of the men identified themselves, nor were they wearing any clothing identifying them as affiliated with Girls Gone Wild. (Id. at 17.) Plaintiff showed them her breasts and one of the men recorded the act with his video camera. (Id. at 19.) The only thing plaintiff received from the two men was a beaded necklace. (Bullard Dep. [38] at 20.)
Defendants purchased plaintiff's recorded indiscretion from another entity and incorporated her clip into a videotape produced and sold by defendants, entitled Girls Gone Wild, College Girls Exposed, Volumes 1 and 2. (Francis Dep. [47] at 12-14; Guttman Dep. [51] at 40.) A photograph of plaintiff exposing her breasts also appears prominently on the cover of this videotape box. (Video Cover, attached to Pl.'s Resp. to Defs.' Mot. for Summ. J. [180] at Ex. 1.) Unlike the recording itself, however, plaintiff's otherwise exposed breasts are blocked out with the imperative, "Get Educated!" (Id.) This image also appeared in television commercials and on internet advertisements that promote defendants' products, including television commercials during the Howard Stern Show. (Screen Capture from TV advertisement, id. at Ex. 11; Guttman Dep. [51] at 56-7.)
Defendants have advertised and shipped this tape throughout the continental United States. (Guttman Dep. [51] at 82, 102-3.) Plaintiff did not consent to the use of her image in a Girls Gone Wild video nor to the distribution of that video. (Bullard Aff. [180] at ¶¶ 4-5.)
As a result of the widespread advertising and distribution of the Girls Gone Wild video containing her image, plaintiff suffered great humiliation. She was harassed by faculty and students at school.
Rule 56 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provides that a motion for summary judgment shall be granted "if the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law." FED. R. CIV. P. 56(a). Where the nonmovant bears the burden of proof, the moving party need only show the absence of evidence to support the nonmovant's case, or affirmative evidence demonstrating that the nonmovant will be unable to prove their case at trial. Fitzpatrick v. City of Atlanta, 2 F.3d 1112, 1115-1116 (1993). An issue is material if, "under the applicable substantive law, it might affect the outcome of the case." LeBlanc v. Unifund CCR Partners, 601 F.3d 1185, 1189 (11th Cir.2010). An issue is genuine when the evidence is such that a reasonable jury could return a verdict for the non-moving party. See Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 249-50, 106 S.Ct. 2505, 91 L.Ed.2d 202 (1986).
The court must view all evidence and draw all reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to the non-moving party. See Patton v. Triad Guar. Ins. Corp., 277 F.3d 1294, 1296 (11th Cir.2002). Nonetheless, "[w]here the record taken as a whole could not lead a rational trier of fact to find for the non-moving party," there is no genuine issue for trial. Allen v. Tyson Foods, Inc., 121 F.3d 642, 646 (11th Cir. 1997).
Federal courts sitting in diversity cases apply the forum state's choice-of-law rules. Boardman Petroleum, Inc. v. Federated Mut. Ins. Co., 135 F.3d 750, 752 (11th Cir.1998). Georgia is the forum state here. In tort cases, Georgia follows the traditional doctrine of lex loci delicti. Dowis v. Mud Slingers, Inc., 279 Ga. 808, 816, 621 S.E.2d 413 (2005). Under this rule, a tort action is governed by the substantive law of the state where the tort was committed. Id. at 809, 621 S.E.2d 413. The place of the wrong is the "place where the injury sustained was suffered rather than the place where the act was committed, or, as it is sometimes more generally put, it is the place where the last event necessary to make an actor liable for an alleged tort takes place." Risdon Enter., Inc. v. Colemill Enter., Inc., 172 Ga.App. 902, 903, 324 S.E.2d 738 (1984).
Georgia courts have not been called on to decide how to apply choice-of-law principles in a case involving the appropriation of one's likeness through distribution of materials in multiple states. Determining what choice-of-law principles a Georgia court would apply in such a situation is therefore a very uncertain undertaking. See Allison v. Vintage Sports Plaques, 136 F.3d 1443, 1446 n. 6 (11th Cir.1998) (discussing difficulties in application of lex loci delicti in commercial misappropriation case, but ultimately deciding that the law of the forum, Alabama, should apply).
To the extent that the "advertising value" of plaintiff's image constitutes the proper measure of damages, this "injury" was presumably suffered at the place of plaintiff's domicile, which is also in Georgia. At any rate, whether the injury is measured according to the emotional damage or financial damage that ensued, plaintiff was not injured by the act of being videotaped in Florida, which act was not even performed by defendants. She was injured because defendants advertised and disseminated, nationwide, her image as the cover model for the video. Defendants have therefore not shown that Florida would have a greater connection with that injury than would Georgia.
Accordingly, because defendants distributed merchandise containing plaintiff's image throughout the United States, not just in Florida, and because plaintiff resided in Georgia at the time the appropriation occurred, the Court will assume that Georgia law controls.
Count I of plaintiff's complaint is a series of factual allegations that do not expressly designate the violation of a statute or duty. Count II, titled "Exploitation of Children," simply alleges that "defendants knowingly distributed obscene materials,... a child in a state of partial nudity, a product specifically designed for sexual arousal and sexual stimulation." (Compl. [1] at ¶ 31.) Defendants correctly note that Count I states no cause of action. As to Count II, defendants further argue that a cause of action for criminal behavior that exploits children is unavailable as a private right of action under Georgia law and, even if it were, plaintiff has not produced evidence that defendants knew she was a minor or that her behavior amounted to sexually explicit conduct. The Court agrees with defendants.
In her effort to reap civil liability from criminal statutes, plaintiff cites to two statutes: O.C.G.A. § 16-6-5,
Plaintiff does not identify, and the Court does not find, any indication from the language of O.C.G.A. § 16-6-5 that the state legislature intended to create a private right of action in addition to criminal penalties. Cf. Chisolm v. Tippens, 289 Ga.App. 757, 761, 658 S.E.2d 147 (2008) (declining to find implied private right of action for cruelty to children under O.C.G.A. § 16-5-70).
Likewise, absent a clear indication from Congress, courts should not infer a civil cause of action from a federal criminal statute. See Love v. Delta Air Lines, 310 F.3d 1347, 1352-53 (11th Cir.2002) ("statutory language customarily found in criminal statutes ... provides far less reason to infer a private remedy in favor of individual persons"). Chapter 110 of Title 18 makes criminal the sexual exploitation and other abuse of children. 18 U.S.C. § 2255
Because plaintiff has alleged no viable cause of action for the violation of a penal statute, her claims on this count must rest on the applicable tort law of Georgia. See Smith v. Chemtura Corp., 297 Ga.App. 287, 295, 676 S.E.2d 756 (2009) (where criminal statute does not provide private right of action, civil liability "must be determined under the applicable provisions of the tort laws of [the state]"). In her response, plaintiff now contends that her claim against defendants, set forth in Counts I and II of her complaint, actually lies in negligence. According to plaintiff, defendants have acknowledged the violation of a federal law, 18 U.S.C. § 2257(f)(4), which imposes record-keeping requirements on entities like defendants. (Pl.'s Resp. Br. [182] at 28.) If defendants had complied with this law, plaintiff says, her image would not have appeared in the video or advertisements, and she would not have been injured. Further, plaintiff argues that defendants have committed negligence per se because they violated O.C.G.A. § 16-6-5, which prohibits enticement of children for indecent purposes.
Under this revised theory of recovery, plaintiff's injury is necessarily physiological, emotional, and mental, as opposed to an injury to her proprietary interests. (Compl. [1] at ¶ 42.) Thus, she is actually claiming that defendants negligently inflicted emotional distress. Unfortunately for plaintiff, a claim for negligent infliction of emotional distress is subject to Georgia's impact rule, which requires, among other things, a physical injury to plaintiff before emotional distress damages are permitted. See Lee v. State Farm Mut. Ins. Co., 272 Ga. 583, 584, 533 S.E.2d 82 (2000) ("In a claim concerning negligent conduct, a recovery for emotional distress is allowed only where there is some impact on the plaintiff, and that impact must be a physical injury."). Because defendants never caused plaintiff any physical injury, a negligent infliction of emotional distress
Plaintiff is a private citizen who, when 14 years old and while walking down a main thoroughfare during spring break in Panama City, Florida, bared her breasts to two men whom she had just met and who had asked to see her "boobs." With plaintiff's knowledge, one of the men made a video recording of this exposure. In doing so, plaintiff joined in what has apparently become a spring break tradition among some young women. They bare their breasts or otherwise expose themselves to a male onlooker, who is often armed with a video camera, and who, in return, hands the girls some inexpensive, plastic beads.
Defendants later used the videoed and photographic image of plaintiff in its videos: Girls Gone Wild, College Girls Exposed, Volumes 1 and 2. Plaintiff's baring of her breasts was shown in an approximately 5-second clip on the video. Her still-image was also put on the cover of the video box, with her breasts blocked out by the inscription, "Get Educated!" Given her cover status on the video box, plaintiff's image was broadcast numerous times on television advertisements, as well as on the internet. From these widespread advertisements, plaintiff was recognized by students and teachers at her school, as well as other members of her community. She suffered great humiliation and distress at this extensive airing of her indiscretion.
That plaintiff behaved foolishly and recklessly by baring herself to a stranger with a camera is an obvious fact. Yet, fourteen-year old middle schoolers sometimes do stupid things, with little thought for future consequences. Defendants exploited that momentary foolishness for their own commercial gain, with no concern for the humiliation that could befall plaintiff when her image was placed on the cover of their video. Moreover, while defendants presumably made a great deal of money off the venture, plaintiff received no compensation. If nothing else, defendants have acted churlishly in their stingy refusal to share some of the vast revenue they gained from selling a video for which the plaintiff was the cover girl.
One might reasonably expect that there would be a civil remedy for a 14-year old against a defendant who, without the consent of the young woman or her parents, has plastered the girl's semi-nude image on a video cover and then paraded that image on nationwide television advertisements. Yet, the type of conduct engaged in by Joe Francis and his companies is of rather recent vintage, and it is not at all clear that the law has caught up with this kind of vulgar exploitation of a young girl. The question therefore is whether Georgia law has, in fact, expressed condemnation of defendants' conduct by the creation of a cause of action for a plaintiff who has been so ill used.
The parties have indicated that there is no Georgia statutory law governing this type of claim. Plaintiff instead makes a claim under Georgia common law for invasion of privacy, arguing that defendant's use of the above-described photo on the cover of the video box, which image was distributed through numerous advertisements, constituted "misappropriation of likeness for commercial use" and "breached
With no statute governing the particular claim being made by plaintiff and with only scant Georgia caselaw on this general type of claim, it is difficult to discern what the elements of such a cause of action might be. Because it is not clear what the parameters of an appropriation claim might be under Georgia law, the question whether the facts of this case give rise to such a claim is a very uncertain one.
It is clear from Georgia law that an appropriation claim emanates from a tort protecting the right to privacy. In fact, Georgia was purportedly the first state to recognize a "right to privacy" tort
While the Pavesich decision offered relief to the plaintiff based on the particular facts of his case, it did not set out the elements of this new tort and therefore is of no help in determining whether plaintiff has stated a claim in this case. Since the Pavesich decision over a century ago, the Court has found only two Georgia cases that even remotely bear on the issues found in the present case. These two cases, unfortunately, are very dissimilar factually to the present case.
In Cabaniss v. Hipsley, 114 Ga.App. 367, 151 S.E.2d 496 (1966), the plaintiff was an "exotic dancer," who had allowed her photograph to be used for the purpose of advertising herself and her act at various nightclubs throughout the United States. Id. at 368, 151 S.E.2d 496. In the words of the opinion, this photograph showed plaintiff to be a "luscious, lithesome, bosomy brunette clad only in two tantalizing, titillating tassels and a scanty G-string." Id. at 369, 151 S.E.2d 496.
Unbeknownst to plaintiff, and without her consent, the Atlanta Playboy Club had obtained a copy of this photograph and had used it in magazine advertisements for its club. Billing plaintiff under a name that she had never used, the ad gave the impression that patrons of the Playboy Club would be able to enjoy a display of plaintiff's talents. In fact, plaintiff had never appeared at the Playboy Club. Id.
In reaching its decision in favor of the plaintiff, the Georgia Court of Appeals' decision set out the four types of common law torts that are subsumed under a broader tort covering the invasion of privacy.
Setting out the basic elements of an appropriation claim, the Cabaniss court noted that an appropriation claim did not require a showing of intrusion, invasion of the plaintiff's privacy, or a false representation concerning the plaintiff. Instead, this claim "consists of the appropriation, for the defendant's benefit, use or advantage, of the plaintiff's name or likeness." Cabaniss, supra, at 377, 151 S.E.2d 496. Moreover, borrowing from terminology used in a United States Second Circuit Court of Appeals decision,
The Georgia Court of Appeals concluded that the plaintiff had alleged facts from which a jury could conclude that her photograph had been appropriated for commercial exploitation without her consent. Id. at 379, 151 S.E.2d 496. Yet, if found that the plaintiff had alleged the wrong kind of damages. Specifically, the plaintiff had alleged general damages based on injuries to her "feelings, sensibilities [and] reputation." Id. at 378, 151 S.E.2d 496. While recovery based on such injuries can be made in a case alleging one of the other three privacy torts, recovery for an appropriation or publicity claim must allege and prove "the value of the use of the appropriated publicity." Id. Accordingly, the Court remanded for a new trial at which the plaintiff would have to prove "[the] advertising value [of the unauthorized use of the photograph] for the time and manner in which it was appropriated": that is, actual damages. Id. 386-387, 151 S.E.2d 496.
The second case that offers discussion that is somewhat relevant to the issues present in this case is McQueen v. Wilson, 117 Ga.App. 488, 161 S.E.2d 63 (1968). In that case, the actress Butterfly McQueen, who had some years before played the role of "Prissie" in the movie Gone With The Wind, had agreed to appear in a "home movie" sponsored by the Stone Mountain Plantation Corporation and defendant Wilson. Ms. McQueen was to adopt a Prissie-like persona in this movie, in return for which the defendants would pay her the reasonable value of her services as an actress. Plaintiff McQueen was to have the right to sell postcards from the pictures and defendants would sell nothing until a formal contract was finalized. As it turned out, defendants never paid plaintiff for anything and they used the movie and stills to sell postcards, movie slides, home movies, and a souvenir booklet.
As to plaintiff's claim based on an invasion of the plaintiff's privacy in the "traditional sense," the court concluded that there was no claim. Id. at 490, 161 S.E.2d 63. Plaintiff was not seeking privacy;
Clearly, the above two cases differ greatly from the facts of the present case. They are similar in that the plaintiffs in those cases and the plaintiff in this case consented to being photographed. In Cabaniss, the plaintiff had not consented to the use by the defendant Playboy Club of the photograph that the club had obtained without plaintiff's consent, albeit plaintiff was content to have the photo publicized by others with her permission. In McQueen, the plaintiff had likewise consented to being filmed, but her consent included a promise by the defendants that they would pay her for her work and not sell the movie or any stills without compensating the plaintiff. Indeed, McQueen seems to be as akin to a breach of contract or quantum meruit claim as it is to an appropriation claim.
In both Cabaniss and McQueen, the plaintiffs were not shy and were more than happy for the public to see their images, as long as the distributor obtained their permission and as long as plaintiffs were paid for the value of that viewing. Here, it is obvious that plaintiff never wanted the world at large to see her unclothed and certainly did not want the public exposure that her cover-girl status on the video package brought. The plaintiff "agreed" to be briefly videotaped, as she raised her top while a man holding a video camera taped her. The interaction between plaintiff and these two men was apparently of very short duration, and there was no request by plaintiff that she be compensated for her momentary lapse of common sense. So, defendants clearly breached no explicit agreement between plaintiff and the two men who taped her.
On the other hand, while plaintiff may have agreed to be videotaped, she did not agree for the defendants to plaster her image on the cover of a video box containing film of other half-naked girls and then advertise that image, nationwide, on television. Stated another way, if a 14-year old girl agrees to be filmed in a semi-nude state, has she also agreed to have her image used on the cover of a video box to advertise a video product that she did not even know was going to be created? If her conduct did constitute agreement to this broader use, does the fact that she was underage when she was filmed destroy an inference of consent?
Unfortunately, the two cited cases do not hint at whether the plaintiff has an appropriation claim based on these facts, nor have the parties cited, or the Court discovered, any other Georgia authority that would help to answer this question.
Given the dearth of Georgia authority on the tort alleged by plaintiff, the parties have cited to authority from other states. Some of those other states, however, have enacted statutes that set out the parameters of the tort. Georgia has not done so, and therefore reliance on these states' statutes does not help in deciding what Georgia law might say about the facts of this case. Indeed, the scant Georgia caselaw touching on this type of claim makes it very difficult, if not impossible, to predict what a Georgia appellate court would hold the elements and parameters of such a Georgia claim to be. To add to the confusion,
At least two federal courts sitting in Florida have had to determine, on facts similar to those present here, whether Florida law creates a cause of action. In Gritzke v. M.R.A. Holding, LLC, No. 4:01CV495-RH, 2002 WL 32107540 (N.D.Fla. Mar. 15, 2002) (Hinkle, J.), the plaintiff, a college student who was in a crowd at a Louisiana Mardi Gras celebration, had been videotaped while exposing her breasts. Defendant M.R.A., who is also the defendant in this case, included plaintiff's video clip, along with many others, in one of its volumes of Girls Gone Wild. The defendant further used plaintiff's photograph, with her breasts exposed, "on the videotape package and in widely disseminated advertisements, as well as on defendant's web site, all without plaintiff's permission." Id. at *1.
Plaintiff raised two statutory and one common law cause of action. She claimed a violation of FLA. STAT. § 540.08,
Plaintiff also raised two common law invasion of privacy claims, alleging that defendant had misappropriated her likeness by commercial exploitation of her photograph without her consent and that defendant had portrayed plaintiff in a false light, by falsely suggesting that plaintiff had willingly participated in and endorsed defendant's videotape. The district court found that the alleged facts stated a claim under each of the above causes of action. Id. at *2.
In short, the takeaway from Gritzke is that a plaintiff whose photo has been placed on the cover of a video box and used in advertisements of a Girls Gone Wild videotape has stated a cause of action under a common law invasion of privacy claim that appears similar to Georgia's, as well as under the Florida statutory counterpart of that common law tort.
While Gritzke favors the position of plaintiff Bullard in this case, another Florida federal court decision goes the other way. In Lane v. MRA Holdings, LLC, 242 F.Supp.2d 1205 (M.D.Fla.2002) (Conway, J.), the plaintiff was driving her car in Panama City Beach, when she was approached by persons with a video camera who asked that she and her companion expose themselves to the camera in exchange for beaded necklaces. Plaintiff did so, and her video clip found its way into a Girls Gone Wild video. Although there is no indication that plaintiff Lane's photograph was placed on the video box containing her video clip, defendant did air television commercials containing two and
Addressing defendant's summary judgment motion, the district court focused on the elements for the statutory claim. Concluding that the elements of a Florida common law claim for commercial misappropriation of likeness are the same as the elements for a statutory claim of unauthorized publication of likeness in violation of FLA. STAT. § 540.08, the court's resolution of that statutory claim became its resolution for the common law claim, as well. Id. at 1220-21.
As to the court's analysis, it held that the Florida commercial misappropriation statute (§ 540.08) prohibited use of a person's likeness to directly promote a commercial product, unless the person has consented to that use. Id. at 1212-13. It concluded, however, that plaintiff Lane's image had not been used to directly promote the Girls Gone Wild video. That is, while Lane's image was used to sell copies of the videotape in which she appeared, her likeness was "never associated with a product ... unrelated to that work." Id. at 1213. The Court noted that Lane was "never shown endorsing or promoting a product, but rather, as part of an expressive work in which she voluntarily participated."
The Lane court acknowledged the Gritzke holding and noted its belief that the latter case was the only case in which FLA. STAT. § 540.08 has been applied to an expressive work, which the court concluded a Girls Gone Wild video to be. The Court distinguished the facts in Gritzke, noting that in the latter case the plaintiff's image was placed on the outside cover of the videotape package and was doctored. Id. at 1215. Lane's image, in contrast, was a truthful, accurate depiction of her voluntarily exposing her breast, with no doctoring of the clip or any advertising use that suggested she was endorsing or promoting the videotape.
Lane also addressed the plaintiff's argument that, as a minor (17 years old), she was incapable of giving consent to the use of her image in the video, itself. After an exhaustive search of Florida statutes and caselaw, the court concluded that plaintiff's minor status did not vitiate her consent to being photographed as she exposed her breasts. Id. at 1215-1219. Plaintiff Lane also argued that even if she was capable of giving consent to being videotaped, she had not consented to the tape being distributed or to her clip being used in advertisements. The district court concluded, however, that based on the undisputed facts, no reasonable jury could conclude that Lane's consent was limited to having only those persons present view the videotape.
Courts in other jurisdictions have addressed the type of scenario present in this case, but no consistent theme or reasoning emerges. In Capdeboscq v. Francis, No. Civ.A. 03-0556, 2004 WL 463316 (E.D.La. Mar. 10, 2004), the plaintiff had attended a Mardi Gras party hosted by the Girls Gone Wild creator, Joe Francis, and while standing next to rap star, Snoop Dog, the plaintiff lifted her "Snoop Dog" t-shirt to expose her breasts. A photograph of this gesture ended up on the cover of the video, "Girls Gone Wild Doggy Style."
Plaintiff sued, raising a common law claim under Louisiana law for invasion of her right to privacy. She argued that Joe Francis had repeatedly requested that she so pose for a photograph and had assured her that the photograph would not be included in any Girls Gone Wild videotape. The district court denied summary judgment, noting that there were disputed issues of fact as to whether the party was a public party or a private party. Id. at *2. Presumably, if at a public party, the plaintiff would have no expectation of privacy.
In Topheavy Studios, Inc. v. Doe, No. 03-05-00022-CV, 2005 WL 1940159 (Tex. App. Aug. 11, 2005, reh'g overruled, Sept. 14, 2005), the plaintiff, a seventeen year-old on spring break in South Padre Island, agreed to take part in the filming of a trivia game on a stage in the public street of the island. The female participants attempted to answer trivia questions and agreed to raise their tops each time they gave a wrong answer. The plaintiff gave three wrong answers, exposing her breasts each time. Later, the defendants used this footage in a video game directed toward males, "The Guy Game," which flipped the rules of the trivia contest to allow the game player to see an image of a topless woman every time he gave a correct answer.
The plaintiff sued under a state common law claim of invasion of privacy and misappropriation of her likeness, arguing that she was never told that the video footage of her would be used for an internet video game. The Texas Court of Appeals, reviewing the issuance of injunctive relief for plaintiff, found that plaintiff had stated a claim, but also found consent on plaintiff's part. Nevertheless, as a minor, plaintiff's consent could be voided under some circumstances. The appellate court set out the standards under Texas law for determining when a minor may void an agreement, and remanded the case to the trial court for proceedings consistent with that ruling.
In Barnhart v. Paisano Publ'ns, LLC, 457 F.Supp.2d 590 (D.Md.2006), the plaintiff attended an outdoor pig roast for motorcycle enthusiasts. During this event, and presumably with the encouragement of the male attendees, some of the women began removing their shirts in return for beads. Plaintiff joined in, at which point her photograph was taken and later published in a magazine catering to motorcycle enthusiasts.
Plaintiff then sued for invasion of her privacy and appropriation of her likeness under Maryland common law. As to the latter claim, the district court noted that plaintiff had no viable claim, as she was
In Bosley v. Wildwett.com, 310 F.Supp.2d 914 (N.D.Ohio 2004), the plaintiff was a television news reporter in Youngstown, Ohio who, while on vacation with her husband in Florida, participated in a wet t-shirt contest in a local nightclub. Defendants released a video of the contest, promoting the video as including the appearance of the defendant, who was nicknamed the "naked anchor woman." Id. at 917-18. Plaintiff sued under multiple claims, including an Ohio common law and statutory cause of action for misappropriation of likeness for the defendant's advantage, as well as a violation of the plaintiff's right to publicity. Id. at 919. Before the district court on a request to enjoin further distribution of the video, the court concluded that plaintiff had shown a likelihood of success. Moreover, the Court rejected the defendants' argument that plaintiff had consented to distribution of the video under either Ohio or Florida law. Id. at 931-32. The Sixth Circuit stayed the issuance of the injunction as a prior restraint on speech, but did not address the district court's discussion of the merits of plaintiff's claim. Bosley v. WildWetT.com, No. 04-3428, 2004 WL 1093037 (6th Cir. Apr. 21, 2004).
For the reasons explained above, it is uncertain whether the plaintiff can state a claim for commercial appropriation of her likeness. Certainly, there could be a path to recovery for her. Even if the tort were limited to use of the plaintiff's likeness for purposes of advertising a product, one could argue that defendants did use her likeness for that purpose, as defendants put plaintiff's doctored photo on the cover of the video package and added words purportedly spoken by her, which arguably suggested that she had voluntarily participated in the production of the video and was encouraging the public to purchase the video. Further, ads containing the above were aired on television and the internet.
Nevertheless, even under the above argument, two potential obstacles to recovery for plaintiff remain. First, if Georgia law is like Florida law, as articulated in the Lane and Tyne decisions, the above use of plaintiff's image could be deemed to be incidental to the expressive work (the video) being promoted and in which the plaintiff appeared, and therefore not covered by the common law tort.
Second, how does one value the "advertising" worth of plaintiff's likeness? In a claim for appropriation, the apparent measure of damages is the "advertising value of the use of the material in the manner and for the time it was appropriated." Whisper Wear, Inc. v. Morgan, 277 Ga.App. 607, 610, 627 S.E.2d 178 (2006). Defendant relies on the Restatement (Second) of Torts to argue that a claim for the appropriation of likeness requires the plaintiff to have had some preexisting commercial value in her likeness prior to its use by defendants. See RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF TORTS § 652C, Comment d.
If this is the standard, then plaintiff will gain no recovery, as there was no value to her likeness prior to this incident. On the other hand, it is possible that Georgia law might not define the advertisement value of plaintiff's likeness so narrowly. Defendants obviously wanted to choose the most evocative and winning image to put on the front of their packaging and, thereafter, to advertise on television and the internet. Defendants clearly had lots of images to choose from, and they are certainly the experts as to what sells. That they chose plaintiff's image as the image to put on their video box, over hundreds of others, suggests that they considered the image to be quite valuable. Therefore, insisting that the plaintiff demonstrate some prior success as a model or celebrity arguably constricts unduly the value that defendants, and the public, saw in her image.
Further, even if plaintiff's likeness did not have value when defendants first used it, these videos were advertised over a period of time, and plaintiff's likeness perhaps gained value as it became associated with the popular Girls Gone Wild brand. A Georgia appellate court could conclude that, at some point in this marketing, plaintiff's image did attain value.
Even if plaintiff can hurdle the above obstacles, she still must overcome defendants' claim that her consent to being videotaped defeats any claim for appropriation of her image. There is Georgia case-law indicating that consent vitiates a claim for invasion of privacy. Alonso v. Parfet, 253 Ga. 749, 325 S.E.2d 152 (1985); Tanner-Brice Co. v. Sims, 174 Ga. 13, 161 S.E. 819 (1931); Buchanan v. Foxfire Fund, Inc., 151 Ga.App. 90, 258 S.E.2d 751 (1979). However, the statements to that effect in the above cases are made in a conclusory fashion, and without analysis. The Court is aware of no case addressing whether consent to take one's photo in one context, implies consent to use that image for all purposes the photographer wishes.
As the facts do not appear in dispute on this point, the consent question is a pure question of law.
If consent to be photographed constitutes consent to having one's image later used in an expressive work, was plaintiff's consent here invalidated by the fact that she was only 14 years old when she allowed herself to be videoed while exposing her breasts? The answer to this question will depend on a construction of Georgia law.
Georgia statutory law authorizes certification of state law questions that are "determinative of [a] case" pending in federal district court when there are "no clear controlling precedents" in the decisions of the Georgia Supreme Court. O.C.G.A. § 15-2-9. The Eleventh Circuit has indicated that "[s]ubstantial doubt about a question of state law upon which a particular case turns should be resolved by certifying the question to the state supreme court." Cascade Crossing II, LLC v. Radioshack Corp., 480 F.3d 1228, 1231 (11th Cir.2007) (certifying a question concerning the application of O.C.G.A. § 13-1-11.)
To decide defendants' motion for summary judgment on plaintiff's claim for appropriation of likeness, the Court must decide the questions set out below, which questions the Court certifies to the Georgia Supreme Court. In considering these question, the Supreme Court should assume the following facts:
The Court certifies the following questions to the Georgia Supreme Court:
The above questions solely involve issues of Georgia law that should be decided by the Georgia Supreme Court. In certifying this question, the Court does not intend to restrict the issues considered by the state court or to limit the state court's discretion in choosing how to frame or answer those issues in light of the facts of the case. See Cascade Crossing, 480 F.3d at 1232. To assist the Supreme Court's consideration of this question, the entire record in this case and the briefs of the parties are transmitted herewith.
For the foregoing reasons, defendants' Motion for Summary Judgment [179] is
In earlier briefing, the parties complied with the relevant Local Rule by specifically admitting, denying, or objecting to the other parties' statements of material fact. In this, the last and most important round, they did not do so. This oversight has required the Court to wade through the entire record to try to ascertain which facts are in dispute: an exercise that defeats the purpose for the applicable Local Rule and that wastes the Court's scarcest resource, time.
which does not have affixed thereto, in a manner prescribed as set forth in subsection (e)(1), a statement describing where the records required by this section may be located, but such person shall have no duty to determine [sic] the accuracy of the contents of the statement or the records required to be kept."