Monthly Archives: October 2009

Friday fun: IP questions from the Philippines Bar Exam

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Filed under Meta

One of the disappointments for U.S. law students who specialize in intellectual property is that there isn’t room on the bar exam for copyright or trademark questions; what with the need to cover 19th Century criminal and property law. This is apparently not the case in the Philippines. LAWPHiL has posted the questions from the Mercantile Law September 2009 Bar Exam, which featured a couple of fun IP questions.

You’re more than welcome to answer the questions in the comments. The winner will be openly ridiculed. The decision of the judges is final.

I

TRUE or FALSE. Answer TRUE if the statement is true, or FALSE if the statement is false. Explain your answer in not more than two (2) sentences. (5%)

  1. The Denicola Test in intellectual property law states that if design elements of an article reflect a merger of aesthetic and functional considerations, the artistic aspects of the work cannot be conceptually separable from the utilitarian aspects; thus, the article cannot be copyrighted.

XV

After disposing of his last opponent in only two rounds in Las Vegas, the renowned Filipino boxer Sonny Bachao arrived at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport met by thousands of hero-worshipping fans and hundreds of media photographers. The following day, a colored photograph of Sonny wearing a black polo shirt embroidered with the 2-inch Lacoste crocodile logo appeared on the front page of every Philippine newspaper.

Lacoste International, the French firm that manufactures Lacoste apparel and owns the Lacoste trademark, decided to cash in on the universal popularity of the boxing icon. It reprinted the photographs, with the permission of the newspaper publishers, and went on a world-wide blitz of print commercials in which Sonny is shown wearing a Lacoste shirt alongside the phrase “Sonny Bachao just loves Lacoste.”

When Sonny sees the Lacoste advertisements, he hires you as lawyer and asks you to sue Lacoste International before a Philippine court:

  1. For trademark infringement in the Philippines because Lacoste International used his image without his permission; (2%)
  2. For copyright infringement because of the unauthorized use of the published photographs; (2%) and
  3. For injunction in order to stop Lacoste International from featuring him in their commercials. (2%)
  4. Will these actions prosper? Explain.

  5. Can Lacoste International validly invoke the defense that it is not a Philippine company and, therefore, Philippine courts have no jurisdiction? Explain. (2%)

International Copyright Representation

Supreme Court hears oral arguments in Reed Elsevier

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Filed under Jurisdiction, Supreme Court

Reed Elsevier v. Muchnick, Oral Arguments (Oct. 7, 2009).

The Supreme Court heard oral arguments in Read Elsevier v. Muchnick yesterday. There were some questions, by Chief Justice Roberts in particular, on the overall merits of whether 411(a) is a jurisdictional requirement or merely a case processing rule. But a large portion of the arguments, if not the lion’s share, centered on the more narrow question of whether to frame 411(a) as a strict rule (which courts could raise sua sponte, and could not be waived by a defendant), or a common defense (which courts cannot raise sua sponte, and which could be waived by litigants).

Justice Ginsberg played a large role in the questioning to the extent that I would be somewhat surprised if she isn’t the author of the opinion. Many of Justice Ginsburg’s questions seemed to probe particulars on how to frame a decision, and not the broad questions of the dispute. As a side note, Justice Sotomayor, who was as an intellectual property practitioner before being appointed to the Southern District of New York, did not ask a question during the arguments. [Edit: SCOTUSBLOG brings word that Justice Sotomayor recused herself from the appeal. Justice Sotomayor presided over N.Y. Times v. Tasini, the dispute underlying Reed Elseveier v. Muchnick, when it was heard in the S.D.N.Y.]

Justice Ginsburg early on raised questions about the advantages and disadvantages of a hard-line case processing rule:

JUSTICE GINSBURG: Do you agree with the –with the government that it’s mandatory for the district court but prohibited to the court of appeals? The government has this hybrid where, because of the public purposes served by registration, not only can but the district court should raise the failure to register on its own, but then the government says once you have a final judgment in district court, it’s no longer open for the court of appeals to raise it on its own.

Do you agree with that or do you say it’s for the defendants to raise, and if they don’t raise it, too bad?

MR. SIMS [Ed: Mr. Sims represented the petitioner, arguing that 411(a) is a case-processing rule]: Justice Ginsburg, we certainly agree with the government with respect to the court of appeals. With respect to the district court, on the one hand, my clients don’t — are satisfied with the government’s position. On the other hand, as Justice Scalia’s decision, I think, in Day v. McDonough pointed out, the traditional default rule really is that defenses are up to defendants to raise.

But if the Court felt that the provision was important enough so that it wanted to impose on district courts the obligation of strict policing, I think it could. But as I say, I have been practicing copyright law for 25 years; I’ve never seen a defendant who either missed a defense or chose not to raise it.

In this particular kind of situation where there is no reason at all, I think, to suspect that defense counsel will not raise 411 whenever — none of the cases that Ms. Merritt raises for example, involve situations of waiver, where the issues weren’t raised until the court of appeals — I think that the Court can rely, frankly, on defendants and on the ability of district judges to nudge defense counsel when they need nudging.

Justice Ginsberg also pressed the advocate from the Solicitor General’s Office on whether a court should be able to raise registration sua sponte:

Ms. Anders: [411(a)] is not jurisdictional, but it should not be fully waivable. The provision does not speak to the power of the courts to decide cases and therefore it does not limit the court’s jurisdiction to adjudicate infringement suits.

But, because of this phrase and mandatory language, the requirement should be strictly enforced whenever the defendant asserts it, and because the requirement serves important public interest that are independent of the concerns of the parties to any individual suit –

JUSTICE GINSBURG: So your position is that the district court really should have dismissed this case at the outset?

MS. ANDERS: I think that, in the ordinary case, the district court should — when — when the defendant waives the requirement, which would be the rare case, when the defendant doesn’t assert it. When the defendant waives the requirement, the district court should consider whether accepting that waiver would undermine the public interest behind 411.

Now, in this particular case, it may not have been an abuse of discretion for the district court to consider those interests and decide that here it would have been acceptable to accept the defendant’s waiver and permit the resolution to go forward because, in this case, the periodicals that — that are involved — the works at issue were primarily already in the possession of the Library of Congress, because they had been registered as — the periodicals themselves had been registered.

So the Library’s interest is not as strongly implicated here. In addition, this is a case in which there was going to be settlement, so the Court wasn’t going to need to adjudicate the copyright claims and therefore the opportunity for the register’s views to be taken into account was less important.

More questioning from Justice Ginsburg on the topic:

JUSTICE GINSBURG: You were candid to say that this is in a hybrid category, that the government was taking an intermediate position. Do you know of any other provision where the district court has an obligation to raise the question on its own motion that is yet not jurisdictional?

MS. ANDERS: I believe this Court has recognized that waiver doctrines in general are discretionary, and so, particularly in the area of res judicata, the Court has recognized in the Plaut v. Spendthrift Farm and Arizona v. California that the Court has some discretion to enforce res judicata on its own motion.

JUSTICE GINSBURG: Very, very limited. I think Arizona didn’t say any time there’s — there’s a preclusion plea, the Court can raise it on its own.

MS. ANDERS: That’s correct. I think also the plain error rule presupposes that there are some errors that the district court has a responsibility to correct on its own, even though neither party has brought the error to its attention. So in other words, the district court has the obligation to issue a legal ruling that neither party has asked for, and I think that kind of regime is appropriate here because the public interest at issue, the Library’s interest and the interest in the public record of copyright, those don’t depend on the defendant’s litigation decisions — they shouldn’t depend on the defendant’s particular strategic decisions within a particular case.

Justice Scalia delivered a pithy line, evincing some reticence towards framing 411(a) as a rule that courts could raise sua sponte:

JUSTICE SCALIA: But how — how would we get to hold what — what you say is the law? It seems, to me, once we decide it’s not jurisdictional and once we agree with you, that it doesn’t — at least in this case — didn’t have to be raised sua sponte by the district court.

That’s the end of the case, and so why do we have to engage in the further discussion, well, ordinarily, the district court must raise it on its own and — you know, and, if it doesn’t ordinarily –you know, the appellate court should.

Why do we have to get into that?

MS. ANDERS: I don’t think you have to get into it, Justice Scalia. I think –

JUSTICE SCALIA: Which means we shouldn’t.
(Laughter.)

Justice Ginsburg also raised Perfect 10, inc. v. Amazon.com, inc, 508 F.3d 1146 (9th Cir. 2006), and similar cases, where courts have found that they have jurisdiction to issue an injunction even if a plaintiff has not registered her work:

JUSTICE GINSBURG: Do they — if they are just suing, not for money but for an injunction, do they have to register before bringing an injunction suit?

MS. JONES MERRITT [Ed. Professor Merritt was appointed by the Court to represent the Second Circuit's judgment]: Yes, Your Honor, they do. In order to bring any action — if the injunction is based on infringement. So we’re — if the plaintiff brings an action for infringement and the remedy they seek is an injunction, then the copyright must be registered first.

There are some cases in the lower courts in which we have a plaintiff who has a longstanding pattern of infringements that a particular defendant has been engaged in against that plaintiff. The Owen Mills case is an example. A local photography studio was upset because a photo duplicating shop kept copying their copyrighted photographs. They entered an action for infringement, had registered several of the photographs.

The Court issued an injunction that covered future works as well, but those were all works within the same judicial controversy. So an injunction could reach further than a single registered work as long as we are talking about one single controversy.

In this case we don’t have an injunction, we have damages, and we have thousands of different controversies. As the Court knows the class action rules do not change the substantive law or the rules of — of jurisdiction. We have here thousands of different controversies that have been aggregated for convenience under rule 23(b)(3), but the court must have jurisdiction over each of those controversies. Or if we take the alternative route of Hallstrom, the hybrid approach, and we say that this is a mandatory requirement. Congress has been quite clear about this mandatory requirement, and that mandate must be satisfied with respect to every controversy in this class action.

publishing attorneys

BrightTalk IP Litigation Summit tomorrow

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Filed under News

BrightTalk is hosting an IP Litigation Summit tomorrow afternoon.  You can register for the streaming presentations free of charge at: http://www.brighttalk.com/summit/iplitigation:

  • “Appealing Beyond the Supreme Court: Patent Reform Legislation”

Jon W. Dudas, Partner at Foley & Lardner LLP and Former Director of the United States Patent & Trademark Office

  • “Abusive Domain Names: Enforcement Options & ICANN Policy Update”

Mike Rodenbaugh, Principal Attorney at Rodenbaugh Law

  • “Preventing Licensing Discussions from Escalating to Litigation”

Anthony Sebro, Partner at PCT Companies

  • “Developing a Winning IP Litigation Strategy in Challenging Times”

Thomas Fleming, Partner at Kaye Scholar LLP

  • “Six Steps for Managing IP Litigation Costs”

R. David Donoghue, Partner at Holland and Knight [Ed: Of the Chicago IP Litigation Blog]

  • “Does the Sun Shine on Inventive Process? In re Bilski, S.Ct.2009

Mike Molano, Partner at Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & Hampton LLP

copyright litigation attorneys

Newly founded Harvard Journal of Sports & Entertainment Law is soliciting submissions

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Filed under Academia

Ashwin Krishnan, the Editor-in-Chief of the Harvard Journal of Sports & Entertainment Law, sends word that the Journal is ramping up its operations in preparation for its first issue. The Journal is actively soliciting submissions if any of you are sitting on a work. Congratulations and best wishes go out to the students at the JSEL who have no doubt worked hard on the launch:

September 29, 2009

On behalf of the editorial board, it is my distinct pleasure to announce the formation of the Harvard Journal of Sports and Entertainment Law (JSEL).  JSEL will provide the academic community, the sports and entertainment industries, and the broader legal profession with scholarly analysis and research related to the legal aspects of the sports and entertainment communities.

JSEL, published under the auspices of Harvard Law School, is accepting articles, essays, book reviews, notes, and comments regarding legal and/or public policy issues from academics and legal practitioners for its upcoming inaugural issue in Spring 2010.  JSEL is one of the few journals in the United States that focuses exclusively on legal topics related to sports and entertainment.

As you are probably aware, legal topics that affect sports and entertainment include antitrust law, civil procedure, constitutional law, contract law, corporate law, copyright law, labor law, and real estate law.  In addition, there are many other legal topics that have an impact on the sports and entertainment industries, or otherwise have an application to sports and entertainment.

Submissions are being accepted on a rolling basis.  To be considered for our first issue, due to be published in Spring 2010, please send completed submissions no later than November 15, 2009.  An indication of your interest before that date would also be greatly appreciated.

All submissions must be sent to Josh Podoll, Submissions Editor, as an attached Microsoft Word document via email to jselsubmissions@gmail.com.  Please visit our website for further details regarding the submissions process at www.HarvardJSEL.com.  Also, please feel free to contact Josh regarding any questions you may have concerning citation format, topic, or other issues involving the submissions process.  If you know of other scholars, practitioners, or students whose work seems appropriate for our journal, please encourage them to submit their work to JSEL.

We look forward to receiving your submissions!

Sincerely,

Ashwin Krishnan    Josh Podoll

Editor in Chief     Submissions Editor

copyright attorneys

Supreme Court asks SG to brief Costco v. Omega

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Filed under First Sale, Supreme Court

Well, we didn’t get a cert decision in Costco Wholesale Corporation v. Omega, S.A. but we did get a bombshell.  The Supreme Court has invited the Solicitor General to file a brief  on behalf of the United States.  It’ll be interesting to see where this goes.

For any of you who want to know more about the process through which the Supreme Court “invites” a brief from the S.G., Tony Mauro of the Legal Times wrote a great article on the topic in 2003. Snipits below:

[M]ost of the time, when asked, the solicitor general’s advice carries great weight: In the last three terms, the Court has followed the SG’s invited recommendation 74 percent of the time.
* * * * *
Although there is no written rule, it is believed that the vote of three justices is needed to ask for the solicitor general’s views, one less than is needed to grant review. For that reason, an invitation is sometimes seen as a sign that three justices who want the Court to grant review are looking for a powerful ally to help them win a fourth vote.

And although framed as invitations, CVSGs are included on the list of orders issued by the Court. When the solicitor general files his brief in reply, he uses the odd formulation that it is being “submitted in response to the order of this Court inviting the Solicitor General to express the views of the United States.”

Indeed they are more like orders than invitations: They are not to be declined. But no firm deadline is established, and sometimes the SG’s office takes months to reply.
* * * * *
[D]elay can also occur because an invitation forces the government to study and take a stance on an issue that it would just as soon have avoided. Factions from all parts of the federal government and the private sector are called in, and intense lobbying often ensues.

“There are times when you very much hope to be asked. It can be an opportunity,” says former Reagan administration Solicitor General Charles Fried, now a professor at Harvard Law School. “But sometimes you very much hope you won’t be asked.”

Here are the documents from the Court docket:

copyright litigation attorneys

Copyright at the Supreme Court this week

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Filed under Academia, Complete Preemption, Importation, Jurisdiction, News, Registration, Supreme Court

This is big week for copyright at the Supreme Court. The Court will hear oral arguments in the twenty-year legal saga Reed Elsevier v. Muchnick on Wednesday. On that note, Emily M. Bass, the attorney who represented one of the two plaintiff groups in Tasini, has passed along word about an article she has posted at SSRN. The abstract:

‘Catch 411:’ Does Section 411 of the Copyright Act Restrict the Subject Matter Jurisdiction of Federal Courts Over Copyright Actions?

This commentary examines an issue that will soon be argued before the United States Supreme Court: whether 17 U.S.C. §411′s registration requirement restricts the subject matter jurisdiction of the federal courts over copyright infringement actions. The Second Circuit found that courts lack jurisdiction to adjudicate claims alleging the infringement of unregistered works. The issue of whether courts have jurisdiction over such claims is of tremendous importance: The U.S.’s collective intellectual product is perhaps its greatest asset. Since unregistered works are as susceptible to mass electronic infringement as registered works, and arguably much more numerous, a decision affirming the Second Circuit would deny the country effective means of defending key IP. This commentary examines the statutes involved, arguments that have been made and the Second Circuit Opinion. It poses four solutions to §411′s supposed jurisdictional conundrum and concludes that federal courts unquestionably possess jurisdiction over unregistered claims.

I will post a longer writeup tomorrow that I have been sitting on for the last couple of months. The post will look at how complete preemption should color our view on whether registration is a jurisdictional requirement. I know what all of you (or at least six of you) are thinking: the only way to kick a discussion of obscure jurisdictional issues up to eleven is to talk about complete preemption. It’s like adding bacon.

Today may be the day we hear whether the Supreme Court will grant cert in Omega SA et al v. Costco Wholesale Corporation. The Supreme Court has in the past released cert decisions for cases they consider during their fall long conference on the following Monday. The appeal was scheduled for conference on September 29, so that would put today as the date we would be likely to hear.

Costco filed a supplemental brief on September 28 (that addressed the S.D.N.Y.’s September 25 decision in Pearson Education, Inc. v. Ganghua) so the cert decision could be delayed.

copyright litigation attorneys