Gamma v. Ean-Chea ( 1994 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion









    January 5, 1994 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

    ____________

    Nos. 92-2016
    92-2132
    93-1504
    93-1518

    GAMMA AUDIO & VIDEO, INC., ET AL.,


    Plaintiffs, Appellees, Cross-Appellants,

    v.

    EAN-CHEA D/B/A OVERSEAS VIDEO, ET AL.,


    Defendant, Appellant, Cross-Appellees.


    ____________


    ERRATA SHEET


    The opinion of this court issued on December 22, 1993, is

    amended as follows:

    Page 10, lines 6 and 13: Change "work" to "works."


































    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________

    Nos. 92-2016
    92-2132
    93-1504
    93-1518

    GAMMA AUDIO & VIDEO, INC., ET AL.,

    Plaintiffs, Appellees, Cross-Appellants,

    v.

    EAN-CHEA D/B/A OVERSEAS VIDEO, ET AL.,

    Defendant, Appellant, Cross-Appellees.

    ____________________


    APPEALS FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

    [Hon. Rya W. Zobel, U.S. District Judge]
    ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Torruella, Circuit Judge,
    _____________
    Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge,
    ____________________
    and Cyr, Circuit Judge.
    _____________

    ____________________

    William F. Spallina on brief for defendant appellant/cross-
    ___________________
    appellee Ean-Chea, d/b/a Overseas Video.
    Philip S. Shaw, with whom Rafferty, Polich & Shaw was on
    _______________ ________________________
    brief for plaintiffs appellees/cross-appellants Taing Tao, Meng
    I. Ung and Chen V. Ung and Marvin Feldman and Tetel & Feldman,
    ______________ _________________
    P.C. on brief for plaintiff appellee/cross-appellant Gamma Audio
    ____
    & Video, Inc.


    ____________________
    December 22, 1993
    ____________________



















    BOWNES, Senior Circuit Judge. These cross-appeals
    BOWNES, Senior Circuit Judge.
    _____________________

    involve claims of copyright infringement under the Copyright

    Act of 1976, 17 U.S.C. 101, et seq. After a bench trial,
    __ ___

    judgment was entered in favor of plaintiffs, Gamma Audio &

    Video, Inc., Taing Tao, Meng I. Ung and Cheng K. Ung

    (collectively "Gamma"), on their claim that defendant, Ean-

    Chea, unlawfully distributed two videotapes containing four

    episodes of the Cambodian language version of Jade Fox, a
    _________

    popular Chinese language soap opera. In addition to

    obtaining a permanent injunction against Ean-Chea, Gamma was

    awarded $2,500 in statutory damages, as well as costs and

    attorney's fees. Both parties appeal from various aspects of

    the final judgment entered below and seek to recover

    appellate attorney's fees. We affirm the district court on

    all issues except one; we reverse the district court's

    finding that the four episodes of Jade Fox constitute one
    ________

    "work" for purposes of computing statutory damages. Because

    we hold that four works were infringed, we vacate the

    district court's judgment ordering Ean-Chea to pay Gamma

    $2,500 for the infringement of only one work, and remand for

    a redetermination of damages.

    I.
    I.

    BACKGROUND
    BACKGROUND
    __________

    Television Broadcasts Ltd. ("TVB") is a producer of

    Chinese language television programs and videotapes of those



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    programs. The two programs at issue are Jade Fox and Hunters
    ________ _______

    Prey. They consist, respectively, of twenty-four and twenty
    ____

    one-hour episodes. Both are Chinese language "Kung Fu"-type

    serials created by TVB in Hong Kong and originally broadcast

    there. Although considerably more violent, the programs are

    of the same genre as American soap operas. It is unclear

    whether the episodes were originally broadcast daily or

    weekly. TVB holds a valid United States copyright in each of

    the programs.

    Through a series of four recorded licensing

    agreements, Gamma obtained three exclusive rights with

    respect to TVB's programs. Gamma obtained the right to dub

    TVB videotapes into Cambodian, to duplicate the dubbed

    versions, and to distribute by rental the Cambodian versions

    in thirty-seven states including Massachusetts. Gamma

    assigned all copyrights in the dubbed works to its licensor,

    Telefeature, Inc. At the time this action was commenced,

    neither Gamma nor anyone else had registered the copyrights

    in the derivative works created by Gamma.

    Shortly thereafter, Gamma entered into an exclusive

    licensing agreement with Taing Tao and his partners, the

    other individual plaintiffs. The agreement gave them the

    exclusive right to distribute, by rental to the public, the

    Cambodian language videotapes created by Gamma, in six states

    including Massachusetts. Ean-Chea owns and operates two



    -3-
    3















    video rental stores in Lowell, Massachusetts. The stores are

    named Overseas Video and Overseas Video II. Ean-Chea was the

    authorized distributor of the Cambodian versions of TVB's

    programs in Massachusetts for Gamma's predecessor.

    On February 9, 1991, Chea Sokhoeun, acting on

    Gamma's behalf, went to Overseas Video and rented tapes four

    through eleven of the Cambodian Jade Fox series. Because
    _________

    each tape contained two episodes, the rented tapes covered

    episodes seven through twenty-two.

    On June 13, 1991 Gamma commenced this action in the

    United States District Court for the District of

    Massachusetts. The complaint contained six causes of action.

    Gamma alleged violations of the Copyright Act of 1976, 17

    U.S.C. 101, et seq. (the "Copyright Act") and the Lanham
    __ ___

    Act, 15 U.S.C. 1051 et seq. It also alleged four state-law
    __ ___

    claims: unfair competition, conversion, tortious

    interference with advantageous business relations and a

    constructive trust. Gamma alleged that Ean-Chea was behind a

    massive pirating scheme, and requested millions of dollars in

    relief.

    Together with the complaint, Gamma submitted a one

    page document entitled "Motion For Seizure and Impoundment."

    By this motion, Gamma sought an ex parte order allowing it
    __ _____

    "to seize and impound any and all video tapes which are owned

    or under the control of the defendants and which are



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    Cambodian language versions of the TVB programs, produced

    under the authority of plaintiff Gamma Audio & Video, Inc.

    including any and all such videotapes on the premises of the

    respective stores of defendants." Simultaneously, Gamma

    moved for a temporary restraining order and preliminary

    injunction enjoining Ean-Chea from further acts of

    infringement and from disposing any potentially

    "incriminating" materials such as business records and

    advertising materials. This motion also asked that Ean-Chea

    deliver up ... to be impounded during the
    pendency of this action, all copies of
    the Gamma TVB Programs and all negatives,
    prints, matrices, master tapes, all
    business records relating to the sale
    and/or rental of video tapes of the Gamma
    TVB Programs, and all other materials
    including video recorders, automatic
    video tape rewinders, and television
    monitors (collectively "machines") used
    in the making of such infringing copies
    and all advertising and materials used in
    the promotion thereof.

    Gamma was authorized to visit Ean-Chea's video stores, in the

    company of a U.S. Marshal or Deputy Sheriff, "for the

    purposes of inspection, inventorying, and photographing

    materials alleged to infringe," and to carry out the

    impoundment.

    District Judge Mazzone granted the motion for

    seizure and impoundment and a T.R.O. and ordered Gamma to

    post a bond in the amount of $2,500. On June 24, 1991,

    District Judge Zobel, to whom the case was assigned, heard



    -5-
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    argument on Gamma's motion for a preliminary injunction and

    granted it.

    In the meantime, on June 14, the individual

    plaintiffs and their attorneys, accompanied by a local deputy

    sheriff, went to Overseas Video to carry out the seizure and

    impoundment. The raid yielded nine videotapes containing

    episodes three through twenty of Hunters Prey, which were
    _____________

    found in a cardboard box behind the front counter, three

    high-speed commercial videotape duplicating machines, and a

    notebook containing business records of Overseas Video that

    reflected the shipment to Montreal of an unauthorized copy of

    a program called Serpentine Romance.
    __________________

    Six months later, on December 13, 1991, Ean-Chea

    moved for an order compelling Gamma to return the impounded

    video equipment and tapes. On January 13, 1992, Judge Zobel

    granted the motion, to which no opposition had been

    submitted. On January 17, however, Gamma moved for

    reconsideration; and on February 26 Judge Zobel granted

    Gamma's motion for reconsideration and then denied Ean-Chea's

    motion for return of the impounded material.

    On April 28, Gamma elected to recover statutory as

    opposed to actual damages, on its claim of copyright

    infringement. The next day it voluntarily dismissed counts

    two through six of its complaint, leaving only the copyright

    claim to be tried. By this time, Gamma realized that the



    -6-
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    copyrights in all but four episodes of Jade Fox, numbers
    _________

    thirteen through sixteen, as well as the copyright in

    Serpentine Romance had not been registered prior to the
    ___________________

    commencement of the lawsuit, and therefore could not support

    an action seeking statutory damages. These episodes

    therefore dropped out of the case, leaving only the four

    episodes of Jade Fox and the seized videotapes of Hunters
    ________ _______

    Prey, as subjects of this litigation.
    ____

    On May 11, 1992, at the close of a four-day bench

    trial, the trial judge stated her findings of fact. In sum,

    the court found that Gamma had established infringement with

    respect to episodes thirteen through sixteen of Jade Fox, but
    ________

    had failed to carry its burden of proving infringement with

    respect to the seized Hunters Prey tapes.
    ____________

    The court then requested additional submissions by

    counsel for both parties on two issues. First, whether Ean-

    Chea's unauthorized distribution of the Cambodian version of

    four episodes of Jade Fox could support a judgment for
    ________

    statutory damages. Second, whether each of the four

    infringed episodes entitled Gamma to a separate award of

    statutory damages. The court held that Ean-Chea had wilfully

    infringed upon Gamma's exclusive right to distribute the

    video images of the Chinese language version of Jade Fox in
    ________

    Massachusetts, and that Gamma could therefore recover





    -7-
    7















    statutory damages. It then found that Gamma could recover

    only one award of statutory damages for the infringement.

    Meanwhile, on June 8, 1992, Ean-Chea had moved for

    the return of its high-speed duplicating machines and

    notebook, and for payment of the $2,500 bond posted by Gamma.

    On July 3 the court ordered that the materials be returned,

    but declined to order payment of the bond.1 On July 15

    Gamma moved for costs under the Copyright Act, including

    attorney's fees, and on December 12, 1992, Ean-Chea cross-

    moved for attorney's fees.

    In an opinion dated April 2, 1993, the district

    court ruled upon Gamma's motion for costs and attorney's

    fees, and Ean-Chea's cross-motion for attorney's fees. The

    court awarded Gamma its costs and determined that Gamma, as

    the "prevailing party," was eligible for an award of

    attorney's fees. It also found that Gamma was entitled to a

    fee award because Ean-Chea was a willful infringer. The

    court denied Ean-Chea's cross-motion for fees. These appeals

    ensued.

    II.
    II.

    DISCUSSION
    DISCUSSION
    __________

    On their respective appeals each party makes

    several arguments. Ean-Chea maintains that: (1) as a matter



    ____________________

    1. The articles are still in Gamma's possession pursuant to
    an order of attachment.

    -8-
    8















    of law, Gamma could not obtain a judgment for statutory

    damages because the copyrights in the Cambodian language

    episodes of Jade Fox were not registered; (2) Gamma violated
    ________

    Ean-Chea's rights guaranteed by the Fourth Amendment in its

    search of the premises of Overseas Video; (3) there was a

    lack of statutory authority for seizing the duplicating

    machines and notebook; and (4) the district court erred in

    finding Gamma to be the "prevailing party" under the

    Copyright Act, and that Ean-Chea was in fact the prevailing

    party.

    On its cross-appeal, Gamma contends that: (1) the

    district court erred in finding that Ean-Chea had not

    unlawfully copied the Hunters Prey videotapes; (2) the
    ____________

    district court erred in limiting Gamma to a single award of

    statutory damages; and (3) the district court abused its

    discretion in determining Gamma's attorney's fees award.

    We review the district court's findings of fact for

    clear error, and its conclusions of law de novo. See Lenn v.
    __ ____ ___ ____

    Portland Sch. Comm., 998 F.2d 1083, 1087 (1st Cir. 1993).
    ____________________

    Mixed questions of law and fact are also reviewed under a

    clearly erroneous standard. I.C.C. v. Holmes Transp., Inc.,
    ______ ____________________

    983 F.2d 1122, 1128 (1st Cir. 1993).









    -9-
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    A.
    A.

    Ean-Chea's Appeal
    Ean-Chea's Appeal
    _________________

    As its first ground on appeal Ean-Chea argues that

    Gamma could not obtain a judgment for statutory damages with

    respect to the unlawful distribution of episodes thirteen

    through sixteen of the Cambodian language version of Jade Fox
    ________

    because the copyrights in those episodes were not registered.

    Gamma argues that Ean-Chea infringed upon the registered

    copyrights in the registered Chinese language version of

    those episodes, and that it could enforce those copyrights.

    The questions before this court are twofold: (1) did Ean-

    Chea infringe upon rights that flow from the copyrights in

    the Chinese language version of Jade Fox; and (2) could Gamma
    ________

    enforce those rights.

    As the district court recognized, two sets of

    copyrights are at issue in this litigation, those in the

    underlying works - the Chinese language episodes of Jade Fox,
    ________

    and those in the derivative works2 created by Gamma - the

    Cambodian language episodes of Jade Fox. See 17 U.S.C.
    ________ ___

    102(a) ("[c]opyright protection subsists ... in original


    ____________________

    2. "A `derivative work' is a work based upon one or more
    preexisting works, such as a translation, musical
    arrangement, dramatization, fictionalization, motion picture
    version, sound recording, art reproduction, abridgement,
    condensation, or any other form in which a work may be
    recast, transformed or adapted. A work consisting of
    editorial revisions, annotations, elaborations, or other
    modifications which, as a whole, represent an original work
    of authorship, is a `derivative work'." 17 U.S.C. 101.

    -10-
    10















    works ... fixed in any tangible medium of expression ...

    from which they can be reproduced"); 17 U.S.C. 103(b)

    (derivative works are separately copyrightable).

    Gamma owns the copyrights in the derivative works,

    and TVB owns the copyrights in the underlying works. Any of

    the exclusive rights comprised in a copyright may be

    transferred in whole or in part. See 17 U.S.C. 201(d)(1).
    ___

    By virtue of the licensing agreements, Gamma obtained certain

    exclusive rights emanating from the copyrights in the

    underlying works. Thus, Gamma owns exclusive rights flowing

    from both sets of copyrights.

    It is undisputed, however, that the copyrights in

    Gamma's derivative works are unregistered. Accordingly,

    Gamma cannot recover statutory damages, the only remedy it

    sought, for the infringement of its exclusive rights arising

    under these unregistered copyrights.3 Instead, Gamma may

    only recover statutory damages if Ean-Chea's unauthorized

    rental of the Jade Fox videotapes infringed upon exclusive
    _________

    rights held by Gamma pursuant to the registered copyrights in

    the underlying works.






    ____________________

    3. To maintain an action for statutory damages, the
    copyrights in the infringed works must be registered. 17
    U.S.C. 412; Melville B. Nimmer and David Nimmer, 3 Nimmer
    ______
    on Copyright, 14.04[E], at 14-59 (1993) (hereinafter
    _____________
    "Nimmer").

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    Ean-Chea maintains that it only infringed upon

    rights held by Gamma arising out of the unregistered

    copyrights in the derivative works. We disagree.

    Although a derivative work may be separately

    copyrighted, that copyright does not affect the copyright in

    the underlying work. The statute provides that

    [t]he copyright in a ... derivative work
    extends only to the material contributed
    by the author of such work, as
    distinguished from the preexisting
    material employed in the work, and does
    not imply any exclusive right in the
    preexisting material. The copyright in
    _________________
    such a work is independent of, and does
    _________________________________________
    not affect ... any copyright protection
    _________________________________________
    in the preexisting material.
    ___________________________

    17 U.S.C. 103(b) (emphasis added); see 1 Nimmer,
    ___ ______

    3.04[A], at 3-17 to -18 (1993). Thus the copyright in a

    derivative work only protects the original elements

    contributed by the author of the derivative work, in this

    case the Cambodian language soundtrack created by Gamma. Any

    elements that the author of the derivative work borrowed from

    the underlying work, such as the video images in the Chinese

    language episodes of Jade Fox, remain protected by the
    _________

    copyrights in the underlying work. We are led inexorably to

    the conclusion that Ean-Chea infringed upon copyrights in the

    underlying works by renting out episodes of the Cambodian

    version of Jade Fox which contained video images protected by
    ________

    the registered copyrights in the Chinese version of Jade Fox.
    ________




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    Next we determine whether Gamma may recover for this

    infringement.

    Under the Copyright Act, the copyright owner of a

    derivative work "has a cause of action for infringement by

    reason of the substantial copying from the derivative work of

    material which originally appeared in the underlying work."

    1 Nimmer 3.05, at 3-30. This means that, if the copyright
    ______

    owner in a derivative work is the exclusive licensee of

    certain rights in the underlying work, it becomes the

    copyright owner of the underlying work for the purpose of

    exercising those rights. Id.; 17 U.S.C. 201(d)(2)
    ___

    (transferee of any exclusive right is entitled "to all of the

    protection and remedies accorded to the copyright owner").

    In the present case, Gamma is the exclusive

    licensee of the right to distribute, in Massachusetts, the

    video images of the Chinese production of Jade Fox, in
    _________

    conjunction with a Cambodian language soundtrack. See 17
    ___

    U.S.C. 106 (exclusive rights include rights to copy the

    work, prepare derivative works, and distribute the work to

    the public by rental, sale or lease). Accordingly, Gamma may

    recover for Ean-Chea's infringement. 17 U.S.C. 501(b)

    ("[t]he legal or beneficial owner of an exclusive right under

    a copyright is entitled ... to institute an action for any

    infringement of that particular right committed while he or

    she is the owner of it"). It is irrelevant that what was



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    actually distributed by Ean-Chea was the derivative and not

    the underlying work. See 1 Nimmer 3.05, at 3-31; see also
    ___ ______ ___ ____

    G. Ricordi & Co. v. Paramount Pictures, Inc., 189 F.2d 469
    _________________ ________________________

    (2d Cir.), cert. denied, 342 U.S. 849 (1957) (performance of
    _____ ______

    play in which copyright registration had expired constituted

    infringement of the registered copyright in the underlying

    story from which play was derived); Grove Press, Inc. v.
    __________________

    Greenleaf Publishing Co., 247 F. Supp. 518 (E.D.N.Y. 1965)
    _________________________

    (copying of unregistered English language translation of

    French language novel infringed upon the registered copyright

    in the underlying French language story).

    Taking a somewhat scattershot approach to brief

    writing, Ean-Chea identifies a host of infirmities with

    respect to the seizure and impoundment order obtained and

    executed by Gamma at the outset of this litigation. Ean-Chea

    appears to argue that: (1) in executing the orders signed by

    Judge Mazzone, Gamma violated Ean-Chea's Fourth Amendment

    right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures;

    (2) 503(a) of the Copyright Act does not authorize the

    seizure of videotape duplicating machines; (3) 509 does

    not authorize the seizure of books and records (i.e., Ean-
    ____

    Chea's notebook); and (4) although 509 authorizes the

    seizure of videotape duplicating machines, Gamma failed to

    follow the procedures set forth therein.





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    Ean-Chea has, generously speaking, provided a

    superficial briefing of the above issues, often dedicating no

    more then three or four conclusory sentences to a topic

    before moving on. For this and other reasons we reject all

    of the above contentions.

    First we confront Ean-Chea's constitutional claim

    arising under the Fourth Amendment. While there appears to

    be some support for the substance of this argument, see
    ___

    Paramount Pictures Corp. v. Doe, 821 F. Supp. 82, 90-91
    __________________________ ___

    (E.D.N.Y. 1993) (proposed seizure and impoundment order in

    copyright case must specify with particularity the premises

    to be searched and the articles to be seized or run afoul of

    Fourth Amendment), Ean-Chea failed to present this argument

    to the district court and is thus precluded from raising it

    on appeal. See McCoy v. Massachusetts Institute of
    ___ _____ _____________________________

    Technology, 950 F.2d 13, 22 (1st Cir. 1991), cert. denied,
    __________ _____ ______

    112 S. Ct. 1939 (1992) ("theories not raised squarely in the

    district court cannot be surfaced for the first time on

    appeal").

    The next argument raised by Ean-Chea, which

    implicates the scope of 503(a)4, was not presented at oral


    ____________________

    4. Section 503(a) provides as follows:
    At any time while an action under this
    title is pending, the court may order the
    impounding, on such terms as it may deem
    reasonable, of all copies or phonorecords
    claimed to have been made or used in
    violation of the copyright owner's

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    argument, takes up a mere handful of sentences in its brief,

    and is wholly unaccompanied by any developed argumentation.

    We have consistently admonished litigants that they cannot

    simply present this court with a shopping list of arguments

    and then expect us to both develop and address each one.

    Ean-Chea's argument with respect to 503(a) is presented in

    such a cursory and mechanical fashion as to render it

    unpreserved on appeal. See, e.g., Cohen v. Brown Univ., 991
    ___ ____ _____ ___________

    F.2d 888, 903 (1st Cir. 1993) ("Litigants cannot preserve an

    issue for appeal by raising a pennant and then moving on to

    another subject"); Ryan v. Royal Ins. Co. of America, 916
    ____ ___________________________

    F.2d 731, 734 (1st Cir. 1990) ("issues adverted to on appeal

    in a perfunctory manner, unaccompanied by some developed

    argumentation, are deemed to have been abandoned").

    Ean-Chea's argument premised upon 509 is off

    base. Although he spends a considerable amount of space on

    this point, Ean-Chea fails to realize that 509 has no

    bearing on the matter before us. Section 509(a) provides a

    list of articles that may be seized and forfeited to the

    United States in criminal prosecutions brought to enforce
    ________



    ____________________

    exclusive rights, and of all plates,
    molds, matrices, masters, tapes, film
    negatives, or other articles by means of
    which such copies or phonorecords may be
    reproduced.
    17 U.S.C. 503(a). This provision establishes a
    discretionary power to order impoundment. Midway Mfg. Co. v.
    _______________
    Omni Video Games, Inc., 668 F.2d 70, 72 (1st Cir. 1981).
    ______________________

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    violations of the Copyright Act. The procedures referred to

    by Ean-Chea, set forth in 509(b), apply only to seizures

    and forfeitures described by subsection (a) of 509. See 17
    ___

    U.S.C. 509(b). Because 509 is limited to criminal

    actions, it is of no use to Ean-Chea in the present case.

    Next, Ean-Chea appeals the attorney's fees

    component of the district court's judgment. The focus of

    Ean-Chea's discontent with the fee allowance in the present

    case is that the district court determined that Gamma and not

    he was the "prevailing party" below.

    Section 505 of the Copyright Act provides as

    follows:

    In any civil action under this title, the
    court in its discretion may allow the
    recovery of full costs by or against any
    party .... [T]he court may also award a
    reasonable attorney's fee to the
    prevailing party as part of the costs.

    17 U.S.C. 505. "Under the Copyright Act, the `prevailing

    party is one who succeeds on a significant issue in the

    litigation that achieves some of the benefits the party

    sought in bringing the suit.'" Video Views, Inc. v. Studio
    __________________ ______

    21, Ltd., 925 F.2d 1010, 1022 (7th Cir.), cert. denied, 112
    ________ _____ ______

    S. Ct. 181 (1991) (quoting Warner Bros., Inc. v. Dae Rim
    ___________________ _______

    Trading, Inc., 877 F.2d 1120, 1126 (2d Cir. 1989) (citation
    _____________

    omitted)).

    We review de novo the district court's
    __ ____

    determination that Gamma met the "prevailing party" test.


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    Domegan v. Ponte, 972 F.2d 401, 406 (1st Cir. 1992), vacated
    _______ _____ _______

    on other grounds, 113 S. Ct. 1378 (1993) (citing cases).
    _________________

    Although prevailing party determinations are often reviewed

    under an abuse of discretion standard, see McDonald v.
    ___ ________

    Secretary of Health and Human Services, 884 F.2d 1468, 1474
    ________________________________________

    (1st Cir. 1989), such is not the case where, as here, no

    facts are in dispute and application of the "prevailing

    party" test presents a pure question of law warranting

    plenary review. Domegan, 972 F.2d at 406-07 n.8.
    _______

    Ean-Chea argues that Gamma did not "prevail"

    because, prior to trial, it voluntarily dismissed the five

    non-copyright claims contained in the complaint, conceded

    that it was not entitled to statutory damages on twelve

    episodes of Jade Fox whose copyrights had not been registered
    ________

    prior to the commencement of this action, and failed to prove

    infringement with respect to the Hunters Prey videotapes.
    _____________

    Although all of this is true, Gamma did succeed on its

    infringement claim with respect to episodes thirteen through

    sixteen of Jade Fox. While we recognize that Gamma
    _________

    downscaled its case as the litigation proceeded, in light of

    its victory vis- -vis the four episodes of Jade Fox, we have
    ________

    little trouble in concluding that Gamma succeeded on a

    "significant issue in the litigation." See Langton v.
    ___ _______

    Johnston, 928 F.2d 1206, 1226 (1st Cir. 1991) (significance
    ________





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    must be viewed in light of "the scope and tenor of the

    litigation as a whole").

    Furthermore, by virtue of its success, Gamma was

    awarded $2,500 in statutory damages, and Ean-Chea was

    permanently enjoined from further acts of infringement. This

    restriction on Ean-Chea's future behavior marks a clear

    change in the legal relationship between the parties enuring

    to Gamma's benefit. In addition, the monetary judgment

    recovered by Gamma on the merits of its claim is more than

    sufficient to qualify it as a "prevailing party." See, e.g.,
    ___ ____

    Farrar v. Hobby, ____ U.S. ____, ____, 113 S. Ct. 566, 573
    ______ _____

    (1992) (civil rights plaintiff who won only nominal damages

    of one dollar still "prevailing party" and thus eligible for

    attorney's fee award).

    Ean-Chea points to the poor winning percentage

    posted by Gamma and concludes that Gamma cannot possibly be a

    "prevailing party." We disagree. In the first place, the

    voluntarily dismissed claims were not copyright claims and

    thus not germane to the determination of whether Gamma was a

    "prevailing party" under the Copyright Act. More importantly,

    this court has firmly rejected a "mathematical approach" to

    the "prevailing party" determination. See Domegan, 972 F.2d
    ___ _______

    at 407 n.9. In any event, it is well settled that "the

    degree of the plaintiff's overall success goes to the

    reasonableness" and not the allowability of an attorney's fee



    -19-
    19















    award. Farrar, ____ U.S. at ____, 113 S. Ct. at 574 (quoting
    ______

    Texas State Teachers Assn. v. Garland Independent School
    ____________________________ ___________________________

    Dist., 489 U.S. 782, 793 (1989)). We affirm the district
    _____

    court's determination that Gamma was the "prevailing party,"

    and hence eligible for a fee award.

    We have considered Ean-Chea's remaining arguments

    and find them to be without merit.

    B.
    B.

    Gamma's Cross-Appeal
    Gamma's Cross-Appeal
    ____________________

    As its first ground for appeal Gamma argues that

    the district court clearly erred by finding that it failed to

    prove that Ean-Chea had either reproduced or distributed the

    videotapes of Hunters Prey.
    ____________

    We start with the proposition that the plaintiff in

    a copyright action carries the burden of proof. Concrete
    ________

    Machinery Co. v. Classic Lawn Ornaments, Inc., 843 F.2d 600,
    _____________ ____________________________

    605 (1st Cir. 1988); Motta v. Samuel Weiser, Inc., 768 F.2d
    _____ ____________________

    481, 483 (1st Cir.), cert. denied, 474 U.S. 1033 (1985). To
    _____ ______

    carry this burden a plaintiff must prove each of the elements

    of copyright infringement: (1) ownership of the copyright;

    and (2) copying by the defendant. Id. It is undisputed that
    ___

    Gamma satisfied the first prong of this test, and Gamma

    argues that it met the second through circumstantial evidence

    presented at trial.

    We have recognized that, in a copyright action,



    -20-
    20















    proof by direct evidence of copying is
    generally not possible since the actual
    act of copying is rarely witnessed or
    recorded. Normally, there is no physical
    proof of copying other than the offending
    object itself. Copying therefore is
    generally established by showing that the
    defendant had access to the copyrighted
    work and that the offending and
    copyrighted articles are "substantially
    similar."

    Concrete Machinery Co., 843 F.2d at 605. "Copying is
    ________________________

    demonstrated when someone who has access to a copyrighted

    work uses material substantially similar to the copyrighted

    work in a manner which interferes with a right protected by

    17 U.S.C. 106." Ford Motor Co. v. Summit Motor Products,
    ______________ _______________________

    Inc., 930 F.2d 277, 291 (3d Cir. 1991) (footnote omitted).
    ____

    Among the rights protected by 106 are the rights to copy

    and distribute the copyrighted work.

    Both access and substantial similarity are

    undisputed in the present case, and there was no question

    that the videotapes of Hunters Prey found in Ean-Chea's store
    ____________

    were piratical copies.5 Ean-Chea, however, disclaimed any

    knowledge of the Hunters Prey tapes found at his store, and
    ____________

    denied that he had ever copied or distributed tapes of

    Hunters Prey. Ean-Chea testified that a customer must have
    ____________

    rented the tapes at another video store and accidentally

    returned them to Overseas Video.


    ____________________

    5. "Piratical" copies are copies made without authorization
    of the copyright owner. H.R. Rep. No. 1476, 94th Cong., 2d
    Sess. 162, reprinted in 1976 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5659, 5785.
    _________ __

    -21-
    21















    The function of the district court acting as fact-

    finder was to determine, by weighing all of the evidence, if

    Gamma had met its ultimate burden of persuasion. The court

    concluded that it had not. The court found that "[t]he only

    direct evidence with respect to Hunters Prey is that at the
    ____________

    time of the raid there were ... 10 or 11 tapes, in a box near

    the counter." Viewing this evidence along with the

    circumstantial evidence, which consisted primarily of the

    fact that videotape copy machines were found at Ean-Chea's

    store, the district court found that either of two

    conclusions were possible: either (1) appellant had copied

    tapes of Hunters Prey and/or held them out for distribution;
    ____________

    or (2) the tapes belonged to another store and some customer

    erroneously returned them to Ean-Chea's store. According to

    the district court, the latter "is an equally believable

    version on the basis of the evidence ...." Id.
    ___

    Taken as a whole the court found that the evidence

    was ambiguous to the extent that it was "not prepared to draw

    the inference" that Gamma wished it to draw, namely, that

    Ean-Chea either copied or distributed videotapes of Hunters
    _______

    Prey.
    ____

    Although the evidence could have supported a

    finding of infringement, the district court credited a

    plausible, lawful explanation for the presence of the tapes

    at Ean-Chea's store. It is established beyond cavil that the



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    trial judge is in the best position to assess the credibility

    of witnesses, see Wainwright v. Witt, 469 U.S. 412, 428
    ___ __________ ____

    (1985) (assessing the credibility of witnesses is peculiarly

    within the trial judge's province), and great deference must

    be given to a trial court's findings based on credibility

    determinations. Rodriguez-Morales v. The Veterans
    _________________ ______________

    Administration, 931 F.2d 980, 982 (1st Cir. 1991). "Where
    ______________

    there are two permissible views of the evidence, the

    interpretation assigned by the fact-finder must be adopted."

    Id. Given the restricted nature of our review of the
    ___

    district court's findings of fact, we cannot say that it

    clearly erred in finding that Gamma failed to carry its

    burden of proving that Ean-Chea had either made unauthorized

    copies or unauthorized rentals of videotapes of Hunters Prey.
    ____________

    Gamma argues that it is entitled to four awards of

    statutory damages for Ean-Chea's willful infringement of

    episodes thirteen through sixteen of Jade Fox. Under the
    ________

    Copyright Act a party may seek an award of statutory damages

    "in lieu" of actual damages. 17 U.S.C. 504(c). Section

    504(c) provides for an award of statutory damages "for all

    infringements involved in the action, with respect to any one
    _______________________

    work," and further provides that for "purposes of this
    ____

    subsection, all the parts of a compilation or derivative work







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    constitute one work." 17 U.S.C. 504(c)(1) (emphasis

    added).

    The district court gave Gamma a single award of

    statutory damages. Although Ean-Chea was found to have

    infringed upon the copyrights in four separate episodes of

    Jade Fox, the court found that these episodes constituted one
    ________

    "work" for purposes of computing statutory damages. Since

    the district court's findings on this issue were

    substantially influenced by its choice of a different legal

    standard than we apply, its determination on this mixed

    question of law and fact is entitled to less deference on

    review than would be accorded a pure finding of fact. See
    ___

    United States v. Howard, 996 F.2d 1320, 1327 (1st Cir. 1993);
    _____________ ______

    see also Picture Music, Inc. v. Bourne, Inc., 457 F.2d 1213,
    ___ ____ ___________________ ____________

    1215 n.5 (2d Cir. 1972) (rejecting "clearly erroneous"

    standard when reviewing whether work was created "for hire"

    under 24 of Copyright Act).

    Our discussion is guided by the Second Circuit's

    recent decision in Twin Peaks Productions v. Publications
    ________________________ ____________

    Intern., 996 F.2d 1366 (2d Cir. 1993). The issue in Twin
    _______ ____

    Peaks was whether eight separately written teleplays (or
    _____

    videotapes of eight televised episodes)6 of the television

    program Twin Peaks constituted eight works or a single work
    __________


    ____________________

    6. The court indicated that its holding applied whether
    written teleplays or videotaped television episodes were at
    issue. Twin Peaks, 996 F.2d at 1381.
    __________

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    24















    under 504(c). The district court found that the

    infringement of each episode warranted its own award of

    statutory damages, and the court of appeals affirmed.

    The eight Twin Peaks episodes, as the Second
    ___________

    Circuit explained, "represent a current television genre in

    which one or more plots continue from one episode to

    another." Id. at 1381. In fact, Twin Peaks carried the
    ___ ___________

    point of the basic plot - who killed Laura Palmer -

    throughout its first season. On the issue of statutory

    damages, the court stated:

    The author of eight scripts for eight
    television episodes is not limited to one
    award of statutory damages just because
    he or she can continue the plot line from
    one episode to the next and hold the
    viewers' interest without furnishing a
    resolution. We might well have a
    different situation if a book written as
    a single work was then adapted for
    television as a group of episodes, for
    example, the six-part television
    adaptations of John LeCarre's "Tinker,
    Tailor, Soldier, Spy" and "Smiley's
    People." Even in such circumstances,
    though there would be but one book
    infringed, there might be separate awards
    for infringement of each televised
    episode.

    Id. The Second Circuit found that Twin Peaks was an easy
    ___ ___________

    case, and that the eight teleplays or televised episodes

    clearly constituted eight separate works. While our case

    strongly resembles Twin Peaks, we pause here to assay some
    __________

    differences.




    -25-
    25















    First, the copyrights in episodes thirteen through

    sixteen of Jade Fox were registered on a single registration
    ________

    form, while the eight episodes of Twin Peaks were "separately
    __________

    copyrighted." Id. Second, there was no evidence submitted as
    ___

    to whether the scripts for episodes thirteen through sixteen

    of Jade Fox were separately written, whereas the eight
    ________

    episodes of Twin Peaks were based upon separately written
    __________

    teleplays. Id.
    ___

    We take a step back, at this juncture, to discuss

    some background concerning statutory damages in copyright

    actions. Unlike the Copyright Act of 1909, under which

    statutory damages were available for "each infringement that

    was separate," Robert Stigwood Group, Ltd. v. O'Reilly, 530
    ____________________________ ________

    F.2d 1096, 1102 (2d Cir. 1976), the present Copyright Act

    "shifts the unit of damages inquiry from number of

    infringements to number of works." Twin Peaks, 996 F.2d at
    __________

    1381. The House Report concerning 504(C)(1) makes it clear

    that,

    although the minimum and maximum amounts
    [of statutory damage awards] are to be
    multiplied where multiple "works" are
    involved in the suit, the same is not
    true with respect to multiple copyrights,
    multiple owners, multiple exclusive
    rights, or multiple registrations.

    H.R. Rep. No. 1476, 94th Cong., 2d Sess. 162, reprinted in
    _________ __

    1976 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5659, 5778.





    -26-
    26















    The term "work," is undefined under the Copyright

    Act. Although the Twin Peaks court did not undertake the
    __________

    task of supplying a definition, one court of appeals has

    posited that "separate copyrights are not distinct works

    unless they can `live their own copyright life.'" Walt
    ____

    Disney Co. v. Powell, 897 F.2d 565, 569 (D.C. Cir. 1990)
    ___________ ______

    (quoting Stigwood 530 F.2d at 1105).7 The test set forth in
    ________

    Walt Disney is a functional one, with the focus on whether
    ___________

    each expression (or in our case, television episode) has an

    independent economic value and is, in itself, viable. See
    ___

    Walt Disney, 897 F.2d at 569; see also 3 Nimmer 14.04[E],
    ___________ ___ ____ ______

    at 14-64.

    The district court's determination that all four

    episodes of Jade Fox were one "work" for the purpose of
    _________

    statutory damages was based on two facts: that Gamma sells

    or rents only complete sets of the Jade Fox series to video
    ________

    stores, and the copyrights in the four episodes at issue were

    registered on one form. The former fact, according to the

    district court, "suggests plaintiffs view the Jade Fox
    _________

    episodes as one work for economic purposes notwithstanding



    ____________________

    7. Walt Disney arose under the Copyright Act of 1976 and
    ____________
    involved the infringement of six copyrights, each protecting
    a distinct pose of either Mickey or Minnie Mouse. The court
    held that the defendant had only infringed upon two works,
    Mickey and Minnie, for purposes of assessing statutory
    damages. See Walt Disney, 897 F.2d at 570 ("Mickey is still
    ___ ___________
    Mickey whether he is smiling or frowning, running or walking,
    waving his left hand or his right.").

    -27-
    27















    the rental by consumers of only a few episodes at a time or

    its production in separate episodes[,]" while the latter

    fact "indicates [that] TVB [the author of Jade Fox]
    _________

    considered at least these four episodes to be one work." We

    do not find the district court's reasoning compelling.

    Starting with the district court's second point, we

    find that there is simply no authority for drawing such an

    inference. Under regulations promulgated by the Copyright

    Office, the copyrights in multiple works may be registered on

    a single form, and thus considered one work for the purposes
    ________________

    of registration, see 37 C.F.R. 202.3(b)(3)(A), while still
    ________________ ___

    qualifying as separate "works" for purposes of awarding

    statutory damages.8 We are unable to find any language in


    ____________________

    8. The regulation states in pertinent part:
    For the purpose of registration on a
    single application and upon payment of a
    single registration fee, the following
    shall be considered a single work: (A)
    In the case of published works: All
    copyrightable elements that are otherwise
    copyrightable as self-contained works,
    that are included in a single unit of
    publication, and in which the copyright
    claimant is the same ....
    37 C.F.R. 202.3(b)(3)(A). Although we question whether the
    four episodes of Jade Fox at issue here were "included in a
    _________
    single unit of publication," since episodes thirteen through
    sixteen of Jade Fox are contained on two videotapes, this
    _________
    goes to the issue of TVB's compliance with the copyright
    regulations, not whether Gamma is entitled to multiple awards
    of statutory damages. As the legislative history to
    504(c)(1) makes clear, the number of copyright registrations
    is not the unit of reference for determining the number of
    awards of statutory damages. Moreover, we note that the Twin
    ____
    Peaks court did not rely on the number of copyright
    _____
    registrations in reaching its result. See Twin Peaks, 996
    ___ __________

    -28-
    28















    either the statute or the corresponding regulations that

    precludes a copyright owner from registering the copyrights

    in multiple works on a single registration form while still

    collecting an award of statutory damages for the infringement

    of each work's copyright.

    With regard to the district court's first point,

    that Gamma sells or rents only complete Jade Fox sets to
    ________

    video stores, we do not find this fact persuasive in the

    present inquiry. A distributor's decision to sell or rent

    complete sets of a series to video stores in no way indicates

    that each episode in the series is unable to stand alone.9

    More significant for present purposes is the fact that (1)

    viewers who rent the tapes from their local video stores may

    rent as few or as many tapes as they want, may view one, two,

    or twenty episodes in a single sitting, and may never watch

    or rent all of the episodes; and (2) each episode in the Jade
    ____

    Fox series was separately produced.
    ___





    ____________________

    F.2d at 1381.

    9. If the distributor of the Rocky series of motion pictures
    _____
    required video stores to purchase all five of the movies, or
    alternatively, packaged the movies as a boxed set for resale,
    the five movies would not suddenly become one "work" for the
    purpose of damages. See, e.g., Cormack v. Sunshine Food
    ___ ____ _______ _____________
    Stores, Inc., 675 F. Supp. 374, 377 (E.D. Mich. 1987)
    _____________
    (written tests designed to detect honesty and emotional
    status, respectively in the workplace are not one "work" for
    the purpose of statutory damages just because they are
    packaged and sold together).

    -29-
    29















    While our case arguably falls somewhere between the

    Twin Peaks and the hypothetical novel turned television mini-
    __________

    series scenario presented therein, 996 F.2d at 1381, it more

    closely resembles Twin Peaks than the hypothetical. Each
    __________

    episode of Jade Fox was produced independently from the other
    ________

    episodes, and each episode of Jade Fox was aired on
    _________

    television independently from the preceding and subsequent

    episodes.10 In addition, unlike the "Tinker, Tailor,

    Soldier, Spy" hypothetical in Twin Peaks, our case does not
    __________

    involve the infringement of a single book, but rather, much

    like Twin Peaks, involves the infringement of four
    ___________

    separately-produced television episodes prepared as part of a

    weekly (or perhaps daily) series. We conclude that Gamma is

    entitled to four awards of statutory damages for Ean-Chea's

    infringement of four separate "works."

    As its final argument on its cross-appeal, Gamma

    contests the district court's attorney's fee award. The fee

    application requested a total of $80,198.62 and costs in the

    amount of $7,608.87. The district court awarded all of the

    requested costs, but substantially reduced Gamma's fee

    request, awarding $12,500. This reduction was based on a

    multitude of factors.




    ____________________

    10. Because no English translation of the episodes was
    provided below, the district court was unable to study the
    episodes' plots to gauge their relation to each other.

    -30-
    30















    Generally speaking, the district court found that

    Gamma had "over-prosecuted this case, pursued infringement

    actions on works that were not registered, and achieved very

    limited success." More specifically, the court found that

    plaintiffs had originally "filed a six-count complaint

    alleging a massive scheme of wrongdoing, ... seeking millions

    of dollars in damages," and then, armed with a court order,

    raided Ean-Chea's store ... apparently
    expecting to uncover a huge cache of
    infringing materials. Instead, what they
    found was a single set of pirated
    `Hunters Prey' tapes located under some
    trash in a cardboard box by the counter,
    some high speed video copying equipment,
    and a business record that reflected the
    shipment of one unauthorized copy of a
    program entitled `Serpentine Romance' to
    Montreal.

    The court further noted that, as trial neared, Gamma

    dismissed the five non-copyright claims, "and conceded that

    because [the copyrights in] Serpentine Romance and twelve

    episodes of Jade Fox had not been registered prior to the
    ________

    filing of the lawsuit, they too fell out of the case."

    With respect to Gamma's fee request, the court had

    much to say:

    many of the [time-sheet] entries were
    extremely vague, making it virtually
    impossible ... to determine whether
    requested hours were excessive, redundant
    (especially with respect to how New York
    and local counsel divided tasks), or
    otherwise unnecessary, as well as to
    parse out attorney time and expenses
    related to the unsuccessful claims and



    -31-
    31















    [voluntarily] dismissed portion of the
    case.

    The district court then pointed out numerous ambiguities in

    the attorneys' records, as well as instances where telephone

    conversations between counsel were reflected only in the

    records of one of the two attorneys. Finally the court

    provided examples of charges that appeared facially

    excessive, such as billing the client for leaving a telephone

    message when the person telephoned was absent. The court

    settled on a fee award that it believed represented

    reasonable compensation for the nature of the work performed,

    taking into account how much time was actually expended.

    The district court found that the time-sheet

    entries submitted by Gamma's attorney's were so ambiguous

    that it was not clear which claims in the complaint the

    entries related to. For example, the district court noted

    entries that stated merely "Draft documents," "Work on Case,"

    "Review of Discovery," and "study file, legal research re

    Mass. case."

    We review fee awards for abuse of discretion, see
    ___

    Foley v. City of Lowell, Mass., 948 F.2d 10, 18-19 (1st Cir.
    _____ _____________________

    1991), and "'normally prefer to defer to any thoughtful

    rationale and decision developed by a trial court and to

    avoid exhaustive second guessing.'" Domegan, 972 F.2d at 421
    _______

    (quoting Grendel's Den, Inc. v. Larkin, 749 F.2d 945, 950
    ____________________ ______

    (1st Cir. 1984)).


    -32-
    32















    Under the circumstances, the district court clearly

    acted within the broad limits of its discretion by

    substantially discounting Gamma's fee request. Finding no

    abuse, we affirm the district court's fee award.

    Each party contends that, under 17 U.S.C. 505, it

    is entitled to recover its costs, including attorney's fees,

    incurred on this appeal. In addition, Gamma seeks sanctions,

    in the form of attorney's fees, under Fed. R. App. P. 38.

    Rule 38 allows for fees and double costs to be awarded to an

    appellee where the appellant has brought a frivolous appeal.

    While Ean-Chea did not prevail on his appeal, we do not feel

    that this case warrants the imposition of sanctions under

    Rule 38.

    While it is true that, under 505, the Copyright

    Act, this court may make an award of attorney's fees to the

    prevailing party for services rendered on appeal, see Twin
    ___ ____

    Peaks, 996 F.2d at 1383; see also 3 Nimmer 14.10[E], at
    _____ ___ ____ ______

    14-129 ("An award of attorney's fees may be made for services

    rendered on appeal as well as at the trial level"), we

    decline to do so. Because he did not prevail on his appeal

    or the cross-appeal, Ean-Chea is not entitled to an award of

    fees. The appeal, however, was not frivolous, and Gamma only

    achieved limited success on its cross-appeal. Therefore, in

    the exercise of our discretion we decline to award Gamma





    -33-
    33















    appellate fees. Gamma is, of course, entitled to costs on

    appeal.

    III.
    III.

    CONCLUSION
    CONCLUSION
    __________

    On Ean-Chea's appeal, the judgment of the district

    court is affirmed. On Gamma's cross-appeal, the judgment of

    the district court is affirmed except that we reverse its

    finding as to the number of "works" infringed upon by Ean-

    Chea for the purpose of calculating statutory damages. We

    hold that Ean-Chea infringed upon four works, not one. We

    therefore vacate the district court's judgment ordering Ean-

    Chea to pay Gamma $2,500 in statutory damages, and remand to

    the district court for a redetermination of damages based

    upon our holding.

























    -34-
    34







Document Info

Docket Number: 92-2016

Filed Date: 1/5/1994

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/21/2015

Authorities (23)

Midway Manufacturing Company v. Omni Video Games, Inc., ... , 668 F.2d 70 ( 1981 )

In Re Extradition of Curtis Andrew Howard. United States of ... , 996 F.2d 1320 ( 1993 )

Dennis J. Domegan v. Joseph Ponte, (Two Cases) , 972 F.2d 401 ( 1992 )

Grendel's Den, Inc. v. John P. Larkin, Cambridge License ... , 749 F.2d 945 ( 1984 )

Concrete MacHinery Company, Inc. v. Classic Lawn Ornaments, ... , 843 F.2d 600 ( 1988 )

Luz E. RODRIGUEZ-MORALES, Plaintiff, Appellant, v. the ... , 931 F.2d 980 ( 1991 )

twin-peaks-productions-inc-plaintiff-appellee-cross-appellant-v , 996 F.2d 1366 ( 1993 )

Picture Music, Inc. v. Bourne, Inc. , 457 F.2d 1213 ( 1972 )

27 soc.sec.rep.ser. 18, unempl.ins.rep. Cch 14888a Claire ... , 884 F.2d 1468 ( 1989 )

Michael J. Foley v. City of Lowell, Massachusetts, Michael ... , 948 F.2d 10 ( 1991 )

Daniel Lenn, Etc. v. Portland School Committee , 998 F.2d 1083 ( 1993 )

William Langton v. Philip Johnston, John Bruder, John ... , 928 F.2d 1206 ( 1991 )

James L. McCoy Administrator of the Electrical Workers ... , 950 F.2d 13 ( 1991 )

fed-carr-cas-p-83804-interstate-commerce-commission-v-holmes , 983 F.2d 1122 ( 1993 )

Warner Bros. Inc., J. Joseph Bainton, Esquire v. Dae Rim ... , 877 F.2d 1120 ( 1989 )

Walt Disney Company v. Carl Powell , 897 F.2d 565 ( 1990 )

ford-motor-company-and-cross-appellee-v-summit-motor-products-inc-a , 930 F.2d 277 ( 1991 )

Cormack v. Sunshine Food Stores, Inc. , 675 F. Supp. 374 ( 1987 )

Paramount Pictures Corp. v. Doe 1 , 821 F. Supp. 82 ( 1993 )

Grove Press, Inc. v. Greenleaf Publishing Company , 247 F. Supp. 518 ( 1965 )

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