Thomas M. Gilbert Architects, P.C. v. Accent Builders & Developers, LLC , 377 F. App'x 303 ( 2010 )


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  •                              UNPUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 08-2103
    THOMAS M. GILBERT ARCHITECTS, P.C.,
    Plaintiff - Appellee,
    v.
    ACCENT BUILDERS AND DEVELOPERS, LLC, a Virginia limited
    liability company; DESIGN CUSTOM BUILDERS, INCORPORATED, a
    Virginia corporation; MICHAEL TUMMILLO,
    Defendants - Appellants.
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern
    District of Virginia, at Richmond.   James R. Spencer, Chief
    District Judge. (3:07-cv-00699-JRS)
    Argued:   October 28, 2009                    Decided:   May 6, 2010
    Before MICHAEL, Circuit Judge, HAMILTON, Senior Circuit Judge,
    and Jane R. ROTH, Senior Circuit Judge of the United States
    Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, sitting by designation.
    Affirmed by unpublished per curiam opinion.
    ARGUED: James Edward Moore, CHRISTIAN & BARTON, LLP, Richmond,
    Virginia, for Appellants.    Christopher E. Gatewood, HIRSCHLER
    FLEISCHER, PC, Richmond, Virginia, for Appellee.      ON BRIEF:
    David B. Lacy, CHRISTIAN & BARTON, LLP, Richmond, Virginia, for
    Appellants.   R. Webb Moore, HIRSCHLER FLEISCHER, PC, Richmond,
    Virginia, for Appellee.
    Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.
    2
    PER CURIAM:
    Thomas       M.    Gilbert       Architects,     P.C.     (Gilbert)     sued
    Accent    Builders      and     Developers,        LLC    (Accent),    Design     Custom
    Builders, Inc., and Michael Tummillo alleging infringement of a
    copyright in certain architectural plans (Plans).                        The district
    court granted summary judgment to Gilbert on liability.                          After a
    bench    trial    on    damages,       the    district      court    awarded     Gilbert
    $5,300 in actual damages, $224,894 in profits, and a permanent
    injunction enjoining defendants’ further use of the Plans.                             On
    appeal    defendants          argue    that    the    district      court   improperly
    granted    summary       judgment       on    their      affirmative    defenses       and
    improperly refused to subtract their operating expenses when it
    awarded damages for profits.                  We reject defendants’ arguments
    and affirm.
    I.
    The    Plans        were    originally        created     pursuant    to     a
    written agreement between a third party, Aspect Properties, LLC
    (Aspect), and Gilbert.            The agreement, entered into on July 26,
    2002, required Gilbert to provide the Plans to Aspect in two
    stages for the purpose of constructing 42 townhouses.                            In the
    first stage Gilbert would provide schematic drawings for three
    model townhouses for a fee of $7,500.                         In the second phase
    Gilbert    would       provide    any    remaining        architectural     documents
    3
    necessary      for    construction,      including      floor    plans,     front    and
    rear elevations, and three foundation plans, all for a fee of
    $17,700.       The agreement specified that all documents comprising
    the Plans “remain the property of Thomas M. Gilbert, Architect,
    P.C.”    J.A. 316.      It also specified that “[t]he fee for reuse of
    the documents will be two hundred fifty dollars (250.00) per
    unit and any changes requested will be on an hourly basis.”
    J.A.    315.         Gilbert    delivered      the      Plans    pursuant     to     the
    agreement,      and    Aspect   paid     Gilbert     in   full.       The   documents
    Aspect received contained the following copyright notice:
    THOMAS M. GILBERT, ARCHITECT, P.C. EXPRESSLY RESERVES
    ITS COMMON LAW COPYRIGHT OR OTHER PROPERTY RIGHTS IN
    THESE PLANS.   THESE PLANS ARE NOT TO BE REPRODUCED,
    CHANGED, OR COPIED IN ANY FORM OR MANNER WHATSOEVER,
    NOR ARE THEY TO BE ASSIGNED TO ANY THIRD PARTY,
    WITHOUT FIRST OBTAINING THE EXPRESS WRITTEN PERMISSION
    AND CONSENT OF THOMAS M. GILBERT, ARCHITECT, P.C.
    J.A. 566-76.
    Sometime      in    2002    Tummillo     partnered     with     Aspect    to
    pursue the townhouse project.              On May 29, 2003, Aspect’s owners
    formed Accent as a vehicle to complete the project, and Tummillo
    acquired an ownership interest in Accent the same year.                       In 2004
    Tummillo acquired complete ownership of Accent and the project.
    By   that   time      Gilbert    had    already      delivered    the     Plans,     and
    Aspect’s    owners      required       Tummillo    to     pay   the   balance       owed
    Gilbert and to reimburse them for the amounts already paid.
    4
    Tummillo later asked Gilbert to make certain changes
    to the Plans.           The changes consisted mainly of moving the rear
    wall    of   the    townhouses          back   three       feet    and    relocating     the
    fireplace from the corner to the rear wall.                             Gilbert had known
    of Tummillo’s association with the project for some time prior
    to the request, but it was not until Tummillo made the request
    for changes that he became aware that Tummillo had acquired full
    ownership.         On September 11, 2006, Gilbert sent a proposal to
    Tummillo offering to make the requested changes and conduct a
    building     code    review       for    $14,000.          Gilbert       included   a    code
    review in his offer because, in his opinion, the original Plans
    could    not    have      been    used    because      of    recent      changes    to    the
    building code.           Tummillo believed that Gilbert’s price was too
    high and made the changes himself by hand without further input
    from Gilbert.           When Tummillo submitted the Plans for approval
    with the County, he removed all references to Gilbert on the
    Plans, including the copyright notice.
    After the County approved the Plans, defendants began
    construction        of      the     townhouses.              Over        the    course     of
    construction, defendants made copies of the Plans for various
    suppliers and contractors.                 In June 2007 Gilbert learned that
    construction        had    commenced       using       the    modified         Plans.     He
    registered his original plans with the United States Copyright
    Office    and,     on     September      14,       2007,    sent    a    cease-and-desist
    5
    letter to defendants.             After Gilbert was unable to resolve the
    dispute, he filed this lawsuit for copyright infringement on
    November 9, 2007.
    The district court granted Gilbert summary judgment on
    infringement,        rejecting      defendants’         affirmative        defenses    of
    implied license, fair use, and copyright misuse.                          In the summary
    judgment      order     the     district        court      excluded       the    proposed
    testimony      of     defendants’       architect-expert,           who     would     have
    testified     that      Gilbert    made     an       excessive     fee     proposal   for
    modifying     the     Plans.      The     parties      stipulated        that    Gilbert’s
    actual damages were $5,300 and agreed to a bench trial on the
    remaining     issues     pertaining       to     relief.      At    trial       defendants
    introduced       testimony      from    Kevin     Perlowski,       their     accountant.
    Although    42      townhouse     units    were      planned,      only    one    six-unit
    building had been completed and only two of those units had been
    sold.   Perlowski testified that defendants had incurred $181,659
    in direct costs and $8,795 in closing costs for the first unit,
    which sold for $328,000.                Similarly, defendants had incurred
    $189,620 in direct costs and $22,982 in closing costs for the
    second unit, which sold for $299,950.                      If profit is calculated
    by   simply      subtracting      direct       and    closing      costs     from   gross
    revenues, defendants’ profit on the two units would be $224,894.
    Defendants       also     incurred        significant         operating          expenses,
    however, during construction.              Perlowski testified that pursuant
    6
    to generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) the entirety
    of   these     operating     expenses,    along   with      direct    and   closing
    costs,    must    be   subtracted       from   gross    revenue      to   calculate
    profit.      After subtracting these operating expenses, defendants’
    profits    on    the   two   units   is    reduced     to   zero,    according   to
    Perlowski.
    The district court’s findings of fact and conclusions
    of law included (1) an award to Gilbert of $5,300 in statutory
    damages and $224,894 in infringing profits from defendants’ use
    of the Plans and (2) a permanent injunction against defendants’
    further use of the Plans.            In rejecting defendants’ calculation
    of zero profits, the district court held that defendants had
    failed    to    meet   their   burden     of   establishing     their     operating
    expenses with sufficient precision.             This appeal followed.
    II.
    Defendants argue that they should not be liable for
    infringement because the district court, at the summary judgment
    stage, improperly dismissed their affirmative defenses of (1)
    implied license, (2) fair use, and (3) copyright misuse.                         We
    review de novo the grant of summary judgment dismissing these
    defenses.       Stonehenge Eng’g Corp. v. Employers Ins. of Wausau,
    
    201 F.3d 296
    , 301 (4th Cir. 2000).
    7
    A.
    Defendants’         primary        argument   is        that       “Gilbert
    implicitly granted a nonexclusive license to use, modify, copy
    and distribute the Plans as necessary to complete the Project.”
    Br.     of    Appellants      at    21.       “The     existence       of    an   implied
    nonexclusive license . . . constitutes an affirmative defense to
    an allegation of copyright infringement.”                    Nelson-Salabes, Inc.
    v. Morningside Dev., LLC, 
    284 F.3d 505
    , 514 (4th Cir. 2002).
    The grant of a nonexclusive license is essentially a promise not
    to sue for infringement.             See U.S. Philips Corp. v. Int’l Trade
    Comm’n, 
    424 F.3d 1179
    , 1189 (Fed. Cir. 2005).                               When such a
    promise is implied, courts generally enforce it according to the
    rules    governing     quasi-contract            and   contracts   implied-in-fact.
    See Wrench v. Taco Bell Corp., 
    256 F.3d 446
    , 456-57 (6th Cir.
    2000)        (noting   that    Michigan          law   governs     a    contract      for
    copyrighted material that was implied-in-fact as distinguished
    from one that was implied-in-law); I.A.E., Inc. v. Shaver, 
    74 F.3d 768
    , 776 (7th Cir. 1996).                   In this circuit an implied non-
    exclusive license exists and is enforceable when:
    (1) a person (the licensee) requests the creation of a
    work, (2) the creator (the licensor) makes that
    particular work and delivers it to the licensee who
    requested it, and (3) the licensor intends that the
    licensee copy and distribute his work.
    Nelson-Salabes, 
    Inc., 284 F.3d at 514
    (quoting I.A.E., 
    Inc., 74 F.3d at 776
    ).
    8
    The case law does not make clear whether the source of
    these rules is state or federal law.                Nelson-Salabes is our only
    published decision to address the implied license defense to
    copyright infringement, and it does not trace the rules’ source
    to either body of law.               The absence of citation to state law
    suggests that we assumed federal law applied.                     However, in Foad
    Consulting Group, Inc. v. Azzalino — a case cited in Nelson-
    Salabes and applying the same rule — the Ninth Circuit expressly
    declared     that    state    law     governed     “so     long   as     it    does   not
    conflict with the Copyright Act.”                  
    270 F.3d 821
    , 827 (9th Cir.
    2001).     Judge Kozinski, a member of the panel in Foad, concurred
    in the result, drawing a distinction between contracts implied-
    in-fact    and    those     implied-in-law.          He    believed      that      implied
    licenses generally fell into the latter category as “incident[s]
    of copyright” and therefore should be governed by federal law.
    
    Id. at 832.
    We need not resolve the source-of-law issue to decide
    the case before us.          First and foremost, we see nothing in state
    law   that    conflicts       with    the    three-element        test    adopted         in
    Nelson-Salabes.           In evaluating the test’s third element when a
    written    contract        exists,    we    conclude      the   applicable         rule    —
    whether under Virginia law or federal common law — is that:                            (1)
    quasi-contract principles do not govern, Nedrich v. Jones, 
    429 S.E.2d 201
    ,     207    (Va.   1993);     WRH    Mortgage,     Inc.        v.   S.A.S.
    9
    Assocs., 
    214 F.3d 528
    , 534 (4th Cir. 2000); and (2) the parties’
    intent    “should         be    ascertained,         whenever      possible,     from    the
    language the parties employed in the contract,” Virginia Elec.
    and Power Co. v. Norfolk S. Ry. Co., 
    683 S.E.2d 517
    , 525 (Va.
    2009).    See also United States v. Kimbell Foods, Inc., 
    440 U.S. 715
    , 728 (1979) (“[W]hen there is little need for a nationally
    uniform    body      of    law,    state    law      may     be    incorporated    as    the
    federal rule of decision.”).                We note that in Nelson-Salabes we
    held     that     courts         “should        examine      the     totality     of     the
    circumstances” when determining intent.                           
    Id. at 515.
         But on
    this point Nelson-Salabes is distinguishable because there was
    no written agreement between the parties in that case.                                  While
    the Nelson-Salabes standard for determining intent is eminently
    reasonable      in    the      absence     of    a   written       agreement,    the     same
    cannot be said when one exists, as it did between Gilbert and
    Aspect.
    We      first      examine    whether         Gilbert   granted     Aspect    a
    nonexclusive         license      to     modify      the    Plans    and   use    them    as
    modified.       The parties raise and discuss in varying detail the
    possibility       that,        because    the    original      agreement    was    between
    Gilbert and Aspect, only Aspect could have had such a license.
    If, however, Aspect did not have a license to modify the Plans,
    defendants could not have had one.                          Accordingly, we consider
    whether Aspect had non-exclusive license.
    10
    The parties dispute only the third element of the test
    adopted in Nelson-Salabes:            whether Gilbert intended to grant
    Aspect a nonexclusive license to modify the Plans and use them
    as modified.        As discussed above, the threshold question we must
    answer is whether Gilbert and Aspect’s intent can be ascertained
    from the text of the agreement.               We conclude that it can and
    that Aspect’s license extended only to copying and using the
    original Plans for construction of the townhouses.                   Reading the
    document as a whole, it is clear that Gilbert must have at least
    granted Aspect a limited license to copy and use.                        The Plans
    would be utterly useless to Aspect unless it had permission to
    use the Plans for construction of the townhouses and to make
    copies for its contractors as needed.                See Effects Assocs., Inc.
    v.   Cohen,    
    908 F.2d 555
    ,    558-59    (9th    Cir.   1990)   (finding    an
    implied   license      when   the    absence    of     one   would   render     the
    author’s contribution “of minimal value”).                   Moreover, to read
    the agreement as requiring Aspect to pay $25,200 in fees for
    useless   documents      would     threaten    the     enforceability      of   the
    contract for failure of consideration.                 See Waskey v. Thomas,
    
    235 S.E.2d 346
    , 349 n.2 (Va. 1977).
    The    agreement      does,     however,       expressly     reserve
    ownership of Gilbert’s copyright in the Plans by declaring that
    they “remain the property of Thomas M. Gilbert, Architect, P.C.”
    J.A. 316.       While an express reservation of ownership in the
    11
    Plans’ copyright is not dispositive of the licensing issue, see
    Foad Consulting Group, 
    Inc., 270 F.3d at 830
    , at a minimum it
    evinces an intent to grant, at best, a limited license.                        Indeed,
    the limited nature of the license is evident in the agreement’s
    provision on reuse and changes:                    “The fee for reuse of the
    documents will be two hundred fifty dollars (250.00) per unit
    and any changes requested will be on an hourly basis.”                            J.A.
    315.
    The   reuse     and       changes    provision       clearly      evinces
    Gilbert and Aspect’s intent that Aspect not have permission to
    modify the Plans and use the Plans as modified without Gilbert’s
    involvement.        Were    it    not    intended    to    circumscribe        Aspect’s
    license to use the documents, it would have no meaning.                        If, for
    example,      Gilbert   had      not    intended    to    retain    its    rights     to
    derivative works based on the Plans, it would not have needed to
    include a clause providing for changes.                   Aspect could have hired
    Gilbert to make the changes or not, but the choice would have
    been   left    entirely     with       Aspect.      Similarly,     it     is   hard   to
    imagine that Gilbert would charge a fee for reuse of the Plans —
    as for construction of townhouses besides the original 42 — but
    not expect compensation for modifications.
    Defendants’ arguments to the contrary rest primarily
    on what the agreement does not say rather than what it does say.
    They rely largely on the factors mentioned in Nelson-Salabes for
    12
    assessing intent in the totality of the circumstances.                     As we
    have     noted,    Nelson-Salabes’s      totality     of   the     circumstances
    analysis does not apply when there is a valid, written agreement
    between the parties.            The only argument that defendants make
    based on the text of the agreement is that it “lack[s] any . . .
    provision    forbidding      Aspect,    or   anyone   else,   from    using   the
    Plans to complete the Project without Gilbert’s involvement or
    express consent.”           Br. of Appellants at 25.             In making this
    argument, defendants appear to assume, wrongly, that a broad
    implied    license     is    presumed   in    contracts    for     architectural
    plans.      No such presumption exists, and even if it did, the
    agreement’s       restrictive    language    concerning    reuse    and   changes
    would overcome it.
    Because Gilbert and Aspect’s intent is clear from the
    language of the agreement, no genuine issue of material fact
    exists.     Aspect did not have a license to modify the Plans and
    use them as modified, and therefore could not have had such a
    license.     Accordingly, we affirm summary judgment on defendants’
    implied license defense.
    B.
    Defendants’ fair use and copyright misuse defenses are
    more easily dispatched.           Long a common law doctrine, fair use
    was codified in the Copyright Act of 1976 under 17 U.S.C. § 107.
    Cambell v. Acuff-Rose Music, 
    510 U.S. 569
    , 577 (1994).                    Section
    13
    107 lists four factors for courts to consider in determining
    whether a particular use is fair use:
    (1) the purpose and character of the use, including
    whether such use is of a commercial nature or is for
    nonprofit educational purposes;
    (2) the nature of the copyrighted work;
    (3) the amount and substantiality of the portion used
    in relation to the copyrighted work as a whole; and
    (4) the effect of the use upon the potential market
    for or value of the copyrighted work.
    17 U.S.C. § 107.        In their briefs defendants make no attempt to
    consider the first three factors, relying exclusively on the
    fourth.      Defendants      argue     that   a     jury   could     have    reasonably
    concluded     that    the    changes    Tummillo      made     to    the    Plans      were
    “minor    field   changes.”           Reply   Br.     of     Appellants      at    14-15.
    Because     Gilbert    admitted        that    it     does     not     expect     to    be
    compensated for minor field changes, defendants contend that a
    jury could have concluded that there was no potential market
    upon which Tummillo’s changes could have had an effect.                             Based
    on this factor alone, defendants argue that the district court
    erred.
    We reject this argument and adopt the district court’s
    more careful analysis.           We agree with the district court that
    the   first    three        factors    weigh      against       fair       use    because
    defendants’ use of the Plans was entirely commercial, because
    architectural plans are generally regarded as creative works,
    14
    and   because      defendants’      use    of     the       Plans    was     admittedly
    substantial.        As   for    defendants’       argument        that   there     was   no
    potential market for the changes Tummillo made, defendants point
    to no evidence that these changes were in fact “minor field
    changes.”         Bald   characterizations         are      not     evidence.         What
    evidence does exist suggests that Gilbert regularly charged for
    the kind     of    changes     Tummillo    made    and      that    Tummillo     himself
    described them as “structural changes” for which he could be
    held liable if something went wrong.                J.A. 225.        Accordingly, we
    affirm     the    district     court’s     grant       of     summary      judgment      on
    defendants’ fair use defense.
    Defendants’        copyright       misuse    argument        amounts    to    a
    claim that Gilbert demanded too high a price for the changes
    Tummillo    requested.         Defendants       cite     no    authority      for     this
    proposition apart from a passage, taken out of context, from the
    Ninth Circuit’s decision in Foad.                   Nowhere in Foad does the
    Ninth Circuit discuss the defense of copyright misuse, and we
    have found no precedent lending support to defendants’ argument.
    Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary
    judgment on defendants’ copyright misuse defense. *
    *
    We note that defendants’ copyright misuse defense would
    fail regardless of the testimony of their expert J. Baxter
    Bailey because the defense is legally incoherent in these
    circumstances.  Because Bailey’s testimony was relevant only to
    (Continued)
    15
    III.
    The sole issue that the parties dispute with regard to
    damages    is   whether   the    district     court    should      have    deducted
    defendants’       operating     expenses      from     gross       revenue       when
    calculating the award for infringing profits.                     Section 504 of
    the Copyright Act provides that
    In establishing the infringer’s profits, the copyright
    owner is required to present proof only of the
    infringer’s gross revenue, and the infringer is
    required to prove his or her deductible expenses and
    the elements of profit attributable to factors other
    than the copyrighted work.
    17 U.S.C. § 504(b).       We have previously held that § 504 “creates
    an   initial    presumption     that    the   infringer’s        profits     .    .   .
    attributable to the infringement are equal to the infringer’s
    gross    revenue.”     Bouchat    v.    Baltimore      Ravens     Football       Club,
    Inc., 
    346 F.3d 514
    , 520 (4th Cir. 2003) (internal quotations and
    citations omitted).       “Once the copyright owner has established
    the amount of the infringer’s gross revenues, the burden shifts
    to the infringer to prove either that part or all of those
    revenues    are   deductible     expenses     .    .   .   .”      
    Id. (internal quotations
    and citations omitted).                If the infringer wishes to
    establish that its operating expenses are deductible expenses,
    defendants’ copyright misuse defense, we                        also   affirm     the
    district court’s exclusion of his testimony.
    16
    it has the “burden of proving that each item of general expense
    contributed to the production of the infringing items, and of
    further offering a fair and acceptable formula for allocating a
    given portion of overhead to the particular infringing items in
    issue.”     In Design v. K-Mart Apparel Corp., 
    13 F.3d 559
    , 565-66
    (2d Cir. 1994) (quoting 3 Melville B. Nimmer & David Nimmer,
    Nimmer on Copyright § 14.03[B] (1993)).
    We     agree         with    the   district      court   that    defendants
    simply failed to carry their burden of allocating that portion
    of their operating expenses attributable to the two units that
    were sold.        In fact, Perlowski specifically admitted that he
    made “no attempt to allocate operating expenses to a particular
    unit.”     J.A. 469.             Defendants respond that Perlowski was merely
    following       GAAP        in     deducting        the   entirety   of     defendants’
    operating expenses from their revenues on the two units sold.
    GAAP, however, is not the law here.                       There are likely many good
    reasons why the GAAP rules are as they are, but those reasons do
    not necessarily coincide with the reasons bearing on assessing
    damages     for    copyright            violations.         As   Gilbert    notes,     for
    example,    some       of    defendants’       operating      expenses     went   towards
    developing the land on which the 42 townhouses were to be built
    and have no relation to defendants’ infringing acts.                              Because
    each     item     of    deductible          expense       must   contribute       to   the
    17
    infringing    products,      at   least   some   of    defendants’      operating
    expenses as calculated cannot be deducted from gross revenues.
    Finally,     we    reject      defendants’       argument    that     the
    district   court   should     have    assumed    the    burden   of    allocation
    itself.      Section   504    is     clear   that     the   burden     of   proving
    deductible expenses lies with defendants.                   Despite defendants’
    assertions, the Second Circuit’s decision in In Design does not
    hold otherwise.        In that case, the infringers did provide a
    formula for allocating overhead, and the Second Circuit affirmed
    the district court’s acceptance of that formula.                 In 
    Design, 13 F.3d at 566
    .     While we do not go so far as to hold that it would
    have been error for the district court to have allocated on its
    own initiative, we cannot say that failing to do so was error.
    Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s award of infringing
    profits in the amount of $224,894.
    IV.
    For   the   reasons     stated    above,     the   judgment      of   the
    district court is
    AFFIRMED.
    18