Independent Producers Group v. CRB ( 2020 )


Menu:
  •  United States Court of Appeals
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT
    Argued April 22, 2020                   Decided July 21, 2020
    No. 18-1337
    INDEPENDENT PRODUCERS G ROUP,
    APPELLANT
    v.
    COPYRIGHT ROYALTY BOARD AND LIBRARIAN OF CONGRESS,
    APPELLEES
    AMAZING FACTS, INC., ET AL.,
    INTERVENORS
    Consolidated with 19-1116
    On Appeals from the Copyright Royalty Judges
    Brian D. Boydston argued the cause and filed the briefs for
    appellant.
    Martin V. Totaro, Attorney, U.S. Department of Justice,
    argued the cause for appellees. With him on the brief was
    Daniel Tenny, Attorney. Mark R. Freeman, Attorney, entered
    an appearance.
    2
    Matthew J. MacLean, Jessica T. Nyman, Michael A.
    Warley, Gregory O. Olaniran, Lucy Holmes Plovnick, Daniel
    A. Cantor, R. Stanton Jones, Michael Kientzle, Philip R.
    Hochberg, and Jeremy W. Dutra were on the brief for
    intervenors in support of appellees.
    Before: GRIFFITH and PILLARD , Circuit Judges, and
    SILBERMAN , Senior Circuit Judge.
    Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge PILLARD.
    PILLARD , Circuit Judge: Under the Copyright Act, when
    a cable or satellite company retransmits programs initially aired
    on broadcast stations, the Register of Copyrights collects
    royalty fees under a compulsory licensing scheme and later
    redistributes the fees to the appropriate copyright owners. The
    Copyright Royalty Judges (the Judges) preside over royalty
    distribution proceedings and settle disputes among royalty fee
    claimants. Appellant Worldwide Subsidy Group LLC dba
    Independent Producers Group (IPG), an agent for royalty
    claimants in these proceedings, challenges a series of decisions
    by the Copyright Royalty Judges denying most of its clients’
    royalty fee claims for programming in the devotional and
    program suppliers’ categories that was retransmitted by cable
    for 2004-2009 and by satellite for 1999-2009. IPG lost the
    right to pursue many of its clients’ claims as a result of a
    discovery sanction and because, after the Judges held that IPG
    was not entitled to a “presumption of validity” for either its
    representative role or the validity of the royalty claims it
    proffered, IPG failed to establish for certain claims that it was
    a duly appointed agent pressing valid claims. IPG challenges
    the factual grounds for those determinations and contends they
    are so disproportionately harsh as to be an abuse of discretion.
    It also challenges as arbitrary the Judges’ final distribution
    3
    methodologies for allocating the royalties to all eligible
    claimants.
    We affirm the Copyright Royalty Judges on all three
    challenges: the revocation of the presumption of validity, the
    imposition of discovery sanctions, and the final distribution of
    royalties.
    I.   Background
    A. Statutory Structure
    Congress has prescribed a centralized clearinghouse
    system for collecting royalty fees from anyone who retransmits
    a copyrighted television program and for distributing the fees
    to the program’s copyright holder. The Copyright Act allows
    cable and satellite operators to retransmit copyrighted
    programs without permission, requiring only that the operators
    deposit a statutorily prescribed royalty fee with the Register of
    Copyrights every six months for programs retransmitted during
    that period. See 17 U.S.C. § 111(c), (d) (cable);
    id. § 119(a),
    (b) (satellite). The Copyright Royalty Judges annually decide
    how to distribute the resulting pool of funds to the relevant
    copyright holders.
    Id. § 801(b)(3).
    Every July, copyright owners (or their agents) who assert
    entitlement to certain royalties for transmission of their
    programming during the preceding year file claims with the
    Judges.
    Id. § 111(d)(4)(A);
    37 C.F.R. § 360.3. Each filing
    entity must certify that it is authorized to file the claim. See
    U.S. Copyright Royalty Judges, In re Distribution of 2004,
    2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, & 2009 Cable Royalty Funds, In re
    Distribution of 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005,
    2006, 2007, 2008, & 2009 Satellite Royalty Funds, Nos. 2012-
    6 CRB CD 2004-09 (Phase II); 2012-7 CRB SD 1999-2009
    4
    (Phase II), Memorandum Opinion and Ruling on Validity and
    Categorization of Claims 5 (Mar. 13, 2015) (Claims Ruling).
    Absent any challenge to that certification, the Judges afford the
    filed claim a “presumption of validity,” meaning they treat the
    claim as facially valid and the filer as duly authorized.
    Id. The Judges
    review these claims and “determine whether there exists
    a controversy concerning the distribution of royalty fees.” 17
    U.S.C. § 111(d)(4)(B). If there are no disputed claims, the
    Judges authorize the Librarian of Congress to distribute the
    fees to the claimants on a proportional basis.
    Id. Only if
    there
    is a controversy must the Judges conduct a proceeding to
    resolve disputes regarding the appropriate distribution.
    Id. A copyright
    royalty distribution proceeding has two
    phases. During Phase I, the claimants group themselves into
    categories based on the type of retransmitted broadcasting. See
    37 C.F.R. § 351.1(b)(2)(i)(B);
    id. § 351.1(b)(ii)(C).
    The two
    categories relevant here are “program suppliers” and
    “devotional” programming. Claims Ruling at 1. The Judges
    then calculate the total market value of all programming in each
    category during the relevant year and, based on its relative
    value, assign each category a percentage of the annual pool of
    royalty fees. See
    id. § 351.1(b)(2)(i)(B).
    During Phase II, at
    issue here, the Judges subdivide the fees due to a particular
    category among the individual claimants in that category.
    Id. Each phase
    follows the same set of procedures, designed
    to promote expeditious and amicable resolution among the
    claimants. After the Judges announce the commencement of
    distribution proceedings in the Federal Register, 17 U.S.C.
    § 803(b)(1)(A)(i), claimants petition to participate, see
    id. § 803(b)(1).
    A claimant may file an individual petition or join
    with other claimants and share representation. 37 C.F.R.
    § 351.1(b)(2). The Act imposes a three-month “voluntary
    negotiation period” during which participating claimants must
    5
    attempt to reach agreement on their relative shares. 17 U.S.C.
    § 803(b)(3).
    As to disputes the claimants are unable to resolve through
    negotiation, the Judges accept written submissions, oversee a
    period for discovery, and order a post-discovery settlement
    period. See
    id. § 803(b)(6)(C);
    37 C.F.R. §§ 351.4-351.7. For
    Phase I, discovery usually involves expert testimony
    categorizing programs and their market shares. For Phase II,
    discovery involves both proof that individual claimants in fact
    represent the copyright holders and expert testimony proposing
    methodologies for subdividing fees among claimants in
    specific program categories.         After the post-discovery
    settlement period, the Judges hear any remaining disputes and
    issue final determinations on the merits. See 17 U.S.C.
    § 803(c)(1); 37 C.F.R. §§ 351.8-351.12. The Librarian of
    Congress publishes those determinations in the Federal
    Register and distributes the royalty fees accordingly. 17 U.S.C.
    § 803(c)(6).
    B. Procedural History
    As noted at the outset, at issue here are royalty fees for
    retransmission of programming in the devotional and program
    suppliers categories by cable providers during 2004-2009 and
    by satellite providers during 1999-2009. There are three repeat
    players who claim to represent the copyright holders of
    programs retransmitted via both cable and satellite in these
    categories: Appellant IPG, claiming royalties for programs in
    both categories; Intervenors Settling Devotional Claimants
    (SDC), claiming only for devotional programming; and
    6
    Intervenors Motion Picture Association (MPA), 1 claiming only
    in the program suppliers category.
    1. The claims validity hearings
    IPG, the SDC, and MPA did not participate in the Phase I
    proceedings but successfully petitioned to participate in Phase
    II. See 78 Fed. Reg. 50,113, 50,114 (Aug. 16, 2013) (cable
    retransmissions); 78 Fed. Reg. 50,114, 50,115 (Aug. 16, 2013)
    (satellite retransmissions). On December 8, 2014, the
    Copyright Royalty Judges held a five-day evidentiary hearing
    to resolve disputes over the validity and categorization of
    claims. They heard live testimony from five witnesses and
    admitted 180 exhibits.
    a. Presumption of validity
    The SDC argued that IPG should be disqualified from
    participating, or at least denied the presumption of validity,
    because one of the claims advanced by IPG was a fraudulent
    one on behalf of “Tracee Productions,” a fictitious entity. IPG
    had purported to represent Tracee Productions in an earlier
    proceeding and the Copyright Royalty Judges denied IPG’s
    proffered claims the presumption of validity. In response to the
    fraudulent Tracee Productions claim in the proceeding at issue
    here, the Judges stopped short of debarring IPG from
    representing claimants, instead again denying a presumption of
    validity to IPG’s certification of its authority to represent
    claimants. The Judges based that decision on two grounds:
    IPG’s failure to purge its filing of false claims and the Judges’
    1
    The Motion Picture Association was formerly the “Motion Picture
    Association of America,” or MPAA. The Judges and other parties
    commonly refer to it this way, although the correct term now seems
    to be “MPA.” See Intervenors’ Br. i.
    7
    sua sponte conclusion that Raul Galaz, IPG’s principal witness,
    gave false testimony concerning a document IPG produced in
    discovery.
    The fraudulent “Tracee Productions” claim has a history
    in which Galaz played a prominent role. Galaz in 2002 was
    criminally convicted of defrauding the Copyright Office in
    order to obtain cable retransmission royalties belonging to
    others, and among the criminal acts to which he admitted was
    fraudulent filing in several proceedings on behalf of the
    nonexistent “Tracee Productions.” See U.S. Copyright Royalty
    Judges, In re Distribution of 1998 and 1999 Cable Royalty
    Funds, No. 2008-1 CRB CD 98-99 (Phase II), Ruling and
    Order Regarding Claims 3 (June 18, 2014) (2014 Claims
    Ruling); Judgment and Commitment, United States v. Galaz,
    No. 02-cr-230 (HHK) (D.D.C. Dec. 23, 2002). Before that
    fraud came to light, Galaz had filed a fraudulent claim on
    behalf of Tracee Productions as part of his claims to the 1999
    cable royalty funds for devotional programming. 2014 Claims
    Ruling at 3. The fraudulent 1999 filing was not part of his
    criminal conviction but, by the time the Phase II proceedings
    for the 1998 and 1999 cable royalty funds for devotional
    programming commenced in 2008, the facts surrounding
    Galaz’s conviction were available to the Copyright Royalty
    Judges and IPG had not withdrawn the fraudulent Tracee
    Productions filing. The Judges therefore denied IPG the
    presumption of validity in the 1998 and 1999 proceedings
    because of its failure to withdraw its 1999 fraudulent Tracee
    Productions claim before or during those proceedings.
    Id. at 5-
    11. In the instant proceedings, the Judges found especially
    troubling IPG’s proffer of a Tracee Productions claim in its
    1999 satellite retransmission filing because the 1998 and 1999
    proceedings put it on notice that it must purge Tracee
    Productions from its claim submissions.
    8
    The Judges’ second ground for denying the presumption
    of validity was Galaz’s false testimony about IPG’s 2008
    satellite claims filing. IPG filed separate lists of claims for
    satellite retransmissions and cable retransmissions. It argued
    that both lists of claims were identical. But while IPG
    produced in discovery a copy of its cable claim with
    consecutive numbers of 1 to 10, it produced a copy of its
    satellite claim that appeared incomplete, as indicated by pages
    numbered 1 to 3 and 6 to 8. Noting the missing pages, MPA
    and the SDC had moved to dismiss the claims of the 39
    claimants listed on the cable claims filing but not included in
    the satellite claims filing. When questioned at the claims
    hearing, Galaz sought to blame the Copyright Royalty Board
    (CRB or the Board) 2 for the missing pages. He testified that he
    personally had gone to the Board’s records office to obtain a
    copy of the claims filing and received from the Board in its
    incomplete condition the version that IPG produced in
    discovery. See Claims Hrg. Tr. vol. 2, 104:18-105:16. Galaz
    testified that he was “certain” IPG had originally filed a
    complete version with the Board, and that it was the Board that
    had lost the missing pages after IPG filed its claims but before
    Galaz retrieved the copy from the Board that (Galaz testified)
    IPG then produced in discovery in the Phase II proceeding.
    Id. vol. 5,
    201:8.
    The Judges concluded that Galaz testified falsely because
    the evidence showed that the incomplete copy he claimed to
    have received from the Board and that IPG submitted in
    discovery could not in fact have come from the Board. The
    Copyright Royalty Board inscribes a sequential number on the
    first page of any received claims filing. MPA obtained a
    2
    The Copyright Royalty Board is the institutional entity in the
    Library of Congress that houses the Copyright Royalty Judges and
    their staff. 37 C.F.R. § 301.1.
    9
    certified copy of the claims filing from the Board and produced
    it in discovery. The copy submitted by IPG in discovery and
    the certified copy obtained by MPA from the Board, both
    lacking pages 4 and 5, differed in only one respect: MPA’s
    Board-certified copy contained a handwritten “193” on the first
    page, whereas the copy IPG produced did not. Claims Ruling
    at 8. The Judges therefore concluded that Galaz could not have
    received the incomplete version submitted by IPG from the
    Board’s files, because a true copy would have included the
    Board’s handwritten number, as shown by the certified copy
    obtained by MPA. Instead, the Judges concluded, Galaz must
    have received it elsewhere, “most likely IPG’s own records.”
    Id. On that
    basis, the Judges concluded that IPG had failed to
    submit claims on which it later sought to recover, and that
    Galaz testified falsely to the contrary.
    IPG filed a motion for modification to contest the Judges’
    conclusion that Galaz gave false testimony by submitting
    Copyright Royalty Board records that contained certain
    irregularities. The Judges rejected the motion, noting that
    IPG’s new evidence showed that the Board placed numbers on
    each of 237 satellite claim filings from 2008, so did “nothing
    more than prove the point: the CRB numbers every claim that
    it accepts for filing.” U.S. Copyright Royalty Judges, In re
    Distribution of 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, & 2009 Cable
    Royalty Funds, In re Distribution of 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002,
    2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, & 2009 Satellite Royalty
    Funds, Nos. 2012-6 CRB CD 2004-09 (Phase II); 2012-7 CRB
    SD 1999-2009 (Phase II), Order on IPG Motions for
    Modification 2 (Apr. 9, 2015) (Modification Ruling I).
    b. Discovery sanction
    The SDC also argued that IPG’s royalty claims on behalf
    of Creflo Dollar Ministries (Creflo Dollar), Benny Hinn
    10
    Ministries (Benny Hinn), and Eagle Mountain International
    Church, dba Kenneth Copeland Ministries (Eagle Mountain),
    should be struck as a discovery sanction for IPG’s failure to
    produce to the SDC a particular email responsive to an SDC
    discovery request. The SDC sought correspondence between
    IPG and devotional programming claimants relating to
    representation agreements. The withheld 2005 email, from a
    lawyer named David Joe to an IPG representative, concerns
    representation agreements between Joe’s “clients” and IPG. E-
    mail from David R. Joe, Brewer Anthony & Middlebrook PC,
    to Annie Lutzker, et al. (Nov. 23, 2005) (J.A. 2037).
    The parties dispute whether Joe is in fact an agent of any
    relevant “clients,” but whether or not these producers are
    accurately described as Joe’s “clients,” this email appears to
    refer to agreements between IPG and Benny Hinn, Creflo
    Dollar, and Eagle Mountain. In the email itself Joe described
    the “matter at hand” as “the 1999 cable distribution,” and
    identified the agreements that were “the subject of this
    discussion” as “the sole agreement with Hinn and Creflo, and
    the second of two agreements with Copeland.”
    Id. Joe wrote
    that “I could easily support the position that these agreements
    are not in effect because they have been breached, if you think
    they have not been unequivocally terminated,” and noted that
    any plan on IPG’s part to represent these clients at the
    distribution proceeding “needs to be put to rest immediately,
    and after it is, you should, in all candor, expect that the
    termination provisions will be invoked.”
    Id. The SDC
    claimed that the email was responsive to its
    discovery request. The Judges agreed, finding that IPG had
    failed to produce discovery “relating to claimants’ attempted
    termination(s) of IPG’s agency,” and disallowed IPG’s claims
    on behalf of the mentioned claimants, Creflo, Benny Hinn, and
    Eagle Mountain. Claims Ruling at 39. In contrast to the denial
    11
    of the presumption of validity, which was not a sanction but a
    refusal to afford IPG a presumption that its conduct suggested
    it did not deserve, the Judges dismissed these claims as a
    sanction for IPG’s discovery violation.
    IPG twice moved to modify the discovery sanction,
    arguing that the email was irrelevant and the sanction too harsh.
    The Judges twice denied IPG’s motions, bolstering their
    decision by identifying additional discovery requests to which
    the email was responsive, yet was never produced.
    2. Distribution methodologies hearings
    From April 13 to 17, 2015, the Judges held another hearing
    in which they received evidence and expert testimony
    regarding appropriate distribution methodologies for the
    royalties in the program suppliers and devotional programming
    categories. MPA offered a methodology for computing
    relative royalty shares in the program suppliers category, the
    SDC offered one for the devotional programming category, and
    IPG submitted a methodology that it contended should be used
    for both categories. The Judges faulted MPA and the SDC’s
    methodologies as supported by insufficient data, and faulted
    IPG’s methodology for “its reliance on volume, time of day,
    fees paid and number of subscribers as measurements of value”
    U.S. Copyright Royalty Judges, In re Distribution of 2004,
    2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, & 2009 Cable Royalty Funds, In re
    Distribution of 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005,
    2006, 2007, 2008, & 2009 Satellite Royalty Funds, Nos. 2012-
    6 CRB CD 2004-09 (Phase II); 2012-7 CRB SD 1999-2009
    (Phase II), Order Reopening Record and Scheduling Further
    Proceedings 6 (May 4, 2016) (Order Reopening Record). The
    Judges declined to adopt any of the offered methodologies and
    directed that the record be reopened.
    Id. at 8.
    The Judges “set
    aside” all submissions, evidence, and testimony from the April
    12
    2015 hearing and ordered the parties to submit new evidence
    for a new hearing.
    Id. On motion
    from MPA and the SDC, the Judges excluded
    all of IPG’s evidence from the new hearing for two reasons:
    First, IPG asserted without explanation that its sole witness,
    economic expert Dr. Cowan, could not appear at the hearing
    and so would not be subject to cross-examination. Second, the
    Judges’ rules require that a party wishing to rely on the
    testimony of a witness from a prior proceeding must designate
    the complete testimony of that witness and include a copy of it,
    37 C.F.R. § 351.4(b)(2), but IPG failed to do so. IPG’s only
    evidence aside from Dr. Cowan’s written testimony consisted
    of citations to testimony from witnesses in past distribution
    proceedings. IPG failed to include transcripts of the designated
    testimony, in violation of the Judges’ rules. See Final
    Distribution Determination: Distribution of 2004, 2005, 2006,
    2007, 2008, and 2009 Cable Royalty Funds; Distribution of
    1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008,
    and 2009 Satellite Royalty Funds, 84 Fed. Reg. 16,038, 16,040
    (Apr. 17, 2019) (Final Distribution Determination). The
    Judges nevertheless allowed IPG to use Dr. Cowan’s written
    testimony and IPG’s other exhibits in cross-examining MPA
    and the SDC’s witnesses.
    Id. The Judges
    denied MPA and the
    SDC’s motion for summary disposition, instead conducting a
    hearing with live testimony to afford IPG the opportunity to
    cross-examine the witnesses.
    Id. Following the
    new hearing in the reopened proceeding, the
    Judges concluded that MPA and the SDC had fixed the paucity
    of data identified in the earlier hearing.
    Id. at 16,043,
    16,046.
    The Judges adopted MPA’s methodology and proposed
    percentages for the program suppliers category,
    id. at 16,045,
    and adopted the SDC’s for the devotional category,
    id. at 16,048.
                                   13
    II. Analysis
    A. Standard of Review
    We review decisions of the Copyright Royalty Judges to
    determine whether they are arbitrary, capricious, contrary to
    law or unsupported by substantial evidence. See 17 U.S.C.
    § 803(d)(3) (incorporating by reference 5 U.S.C. § 706). “Our
    review is ‘highly deferential.’”           Settling Devotional
    Claimants v. CRB, 
    797 F.3d 1106
    , 1114 (D.C. Cir. 2015)
    (quoting Intercollegiate Broad. Sys., Inc. v. CRB, 
    571 F.3d 69
    ,
    79 (D.C. Cir. 2009)). Objections to the Judges’ procedural and
    evidentiary orders “merge[] into and [are] reviewable” as part
    of the final determination. Id.. We review the Judges’
    determinations that a claimant violated its discovery
    obligations “with ‘extreme deference’ because the ‘conduct
    and extent of discovery in agency proceedings is a matter
    ordinarily entrusted to the expert agency in the first instance.’”
    Indep. Producers Grp. v. Librarian of Cong., 
    792 F.3d 132
    ,
    138-39 (D.C. Cir. 2015) (quoting Hi-Tech Furnace Sys., Inc. v.
    FCC, 
    224 F.3d 781
    , 789 (D.C. Cir. 2000)). When reviewing
    royalty distribution decisions, including distribution
    methodologies, “we ask only whether the Royalty Judges’
    assigned allocation percentages are ‘within a zone of
    reasonableness.’” Settling Devotional 
    Claimants, 797 F.3d at 1114
    (quoting Christian Broad. Network, Inc. v. Copyright
    Royalty Tribunal, 
    720 F.2d 1295
    , 1304 (D.C. Cir. 1983)).
    B. Presumption of Validity
    IPG does not question the Judges’ authority to determine
    when the presumption of validity applies, but challenges their
    withholding of the presumption here as an abuse of discretion
    for want of substantial evidence that Galaz lied. IPG further
    contends that it received constitutionally inadequate process to
    14
    contest the denial of the presumption that it was an authorized
    representative pressing valid claims.        Neither of these
    arguments has merit.
    IPG produced evidence that the Copyright Royalty Board
    sometimes makes mistakes, but nothing called into question the
    evidence that the Board numbered every satellite filing it
    received for 2008, the IPG filing on record with the Board
    contained such numbering, and the version IPG produced did
    not. IPG identifies a handful of instances in which the Board
    lost an entire filing or failed to number one, and it is certainly
    “not inconceivable over the course of six years for the [Board]
    to have misplaced a handful of pages from a single claim filed
    by IPG.” Appellant’s Br. 46 (emphasis added). But the
    mismatch between the claims number on the Board’s certified
    copy of IPG’s claims and that number’s absence on the copy
    produced by IPG is substantial evidence of the falsity of
    Galaz’s testimony that IPG originally filed a complete copy,
    and only received the incomplete copy in discovery from the
    Board.
    The Judges’ decision to deny IPG the presumption of
    validity based on Galaz’s false testimony and the fraudulent
    Tracee Productions claim was not so severe as to be an abuse
    of discretion. The presumption allows efficient distribution of
    royalties; without it, the Judges would have to verify agent-
    client relationships and make copyright-ownership
    determinations for each filer seeking copyright royalties.
    When they are able to rely on the presumption, the Judges need
    only resolve the particular disputes, if any, that parties may
    raise concerning the distribution of royalty fees. The relative
    efficiency of such a system requires the good faith of its
    participants but is seriously threatened by fraud or other abuse
    of the presumption. The system accommodates the Judges’
    excuse of good-faith mistakes, but it certainly does not require
    15
    the Judges to treat every irregularity as a good-faith error. The
    Judges’ denial of the presumption to claims pressed by
    claimants who appear not to have acted in good faith and, in
    the absence of evidence supporting claims bereft of the
    presumption, their grant of royalties only to unquestioned
    claims and claimants is reasonable and non-arbitrary.
    The only effect on IPG of the Judges’ setting aside the
    presumption was to place a burden on IPG to establish its
    authority to represent the copyright holders on whose behalf it
    claimed royalties. “To maintain the viability of this claims
    distribution process, to preserve the reliability of the
    information presented to the Judges and to prevent the abuse of
    asymmetric information by participants, the elimination of the
    presumption of prima facie validity as to the claims IPG
    purports to represent constitutes a measured and proper
    response.” 2014 Claims Ruling at 11. Indeed, the Judges’
    response was mild in view of IPG’s repeat filing of fraudulent
    claims for a “client” previously found to be fictional and
    Galaz’s obfuscatory testimony about IPG’s faulty filing. IPG’s
    loss of a large number of claims is no draconian sanction but
    rather the predictable and reasonable result of IPG’s failure to
    document its authority to represent the copyright holders, its
    failure to file a complete set of claims on their behalf, and
    Galaz’s attempt to cover up the latter failure by blaming the
    Board.
    There is no question here that the process IPG received
    was constitutionally adequate. IPG received notice that the
    presumption might be denied from both the MPA and the
    SDC’s written submissions requesting that relief. IPG had the
    opportunity at a hearing to testify and present evidence in
    support of its position. The Judges further considered IPG’s
    position as urged in its motion for modification. IPG had all
    16
    the process it was due. See Indep. Producers 
    Grp., 792 F.3d at 139
    n.5.
    C. Discovery Sanction
    IPG argues that its failure to produce the David Joe email
    was not a violation of any discovery obligation and that, even
    if it were, the sanction of dismissing the claims of the three
    producers IPG purported to represent was an abuse of
    discretion. It also argues that the Judges could not, consistent
    with due process principles, impose anything other than a
    monetary sanction without prior notice to IPG and a finding of
    prejudice to the SDC. We hold that the sanction, while harsh,
    was not arbitrary and capricious and did not violate due
    process.
    Because the Copyright Royalty Judges are closer to the
    facts at hand and better able to determine what may or may not
    fall within the scope of discovery, we review their
    determinations that a claimant has violated its discovery
    obligations with “extreme deference.” Indep. Producers 
    Grp., 792 F.3d at 142
    (quoting Hi-Tech Furnace 
    Sys., 224 F.3d at 789
    ). Even viewing their ruling without such deference, it is
    plain that the David Joe email is responsive to several of the
    SDC’s discovery requests. For example, the SDC’s Document
    Request Number Six requested “copies of all correspondence
    between IPG and Claimants with respect to the Devotional
    Representation Agreements,” U.S. Copyright Royalty Judges,
    In re Distribution of 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, & 2009
    Cable Royalty Funds, In re Distribution of 1999-2009 Satellite
    Royalty Funds, Nos. 2012-6 CRB CD 2004-09 (Phase II);
    2012-7 CRB SD 1999-2009 (Phase II), Settling Devotional
    Claimants’ Written Rebuttal Statement on Claims Issues Only
    15-16 & n.4 (Oct. 15, 2014) (SDC Written Rebuttal Statement),
    and the SDC’s Follow-Up Request Number Six requested
    17
    documents “relating to termination or attempted termination of
    IPG by any claimant,” Modification Ruling I at 5 n.5. Whether,
    as IPG contends, the David Joe email itself announced no
    termination or attempted termination is beside the point; the
    email is clearly a communication “relating to” IPG’s
    representation agreements and their potential termination. As
    the Judges noted, the very purpose of requesting all documents
    “relating to” a disputed issue is that “[t]he producing party
    does not make a judgment call regarding what evidence might
    be probative, persuasive, or admissible.”
    Id. at 4.
    IPG’s failure
    to produce a plainly responsive document, even accounting for
    IPG’s own reading of the document as ultimately exculpatory,
    was a blatant discovery violation.
    Whether the imposed sanction was reasonable presents a
    closer question. We evaluate the choice of sanction under the
    same standards by which we judge other administrative
    actions, reversing only if—taking account of the nature of their
    authority and the context in which they have exercised it—
    “their decision is arbitrary, capricious, contrary to law, or not
    based on substantial evidence.” Settling Devotional 
    Claimants, 797 F.3d at 1114
    (citation omitted). It is not for us to determine
    whether the Copyright Judges’ choice was the one we also
    would have taken. Just as they are equipped to make the factual
    determination as to whether a discovery violation has occurred,
    the Judges are better positioned to evaluate the appropriate
    severity of a sanction in the context of the discovery violation’s
    impact on the participants and the overall proceeding.
    IPG submits various inadmissible estimations of the
    proportion of the royalties to which these three producers might
    otherwise have been entitled, but the Copyright Royalty Board
    does not dispute that the dismissal of their claims was a
    substantial loss to IPG. IPG contends that, under the standard
    applicable when a district court dismisses a litigant’s claims as
    18
    a discovery sanction, the Judges’ sanction was invalid. In civil
    litigation in federal court, a sanction of claim dismissal must be
    justified by “(1) prejudice to the other party, (2) prejudice to
    the judicial system requiring the district court ‘to modify its
    own docket and operations to accommodate the delay,’ [or]
    (3) the need ‘to sanction conduct that is disrespectful to the
    court and to deter similar conduct in the future.’” Butera v.
    District of Columbia, 
    235 F.3d 637
    , 661 (D.C. Cir. 2001)
    (quoting Webb v. District of Columbia, 
    146 F.3d 964
    , 971
    (D.C. Cir. 1998)); see also
    id. (noting district
    court authority to
    sanction pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37(b)(2)
    and the court’s inherent power to protect the integrity of the
    judicial process).
    We do not think that standard is applicable here. The
    discovery and sanctions regime in federal district courts is
    materially different from discovery and claim verification in
    distribution proceedings under the Copyright Act. The
    Copyright Royalty Judges do not derive their sanctioning
    power from authorities governing Article III courts; instead,
    Congress empowered these specialist Judges to supervise
    disbursement of broadcast royalties. The Act empowers the
    Judges to “make any necessary procedural or evidentiary
    rulings” in the royalty proceedings. 17 U.S.C. § 801(c). And
    their “plenary grant of adjudicative authority” includes power
    to impose “sanctions when necessary to ensure fairness and
    maintain [the] integrity” of the copyright claims process.
    Indep. Producers 
    Grp., 792 F.3d at 138
    n.4 (citing Atl.
    Richfield Co. v. Dep’t of Energy, 
    769 F.2d 771
    , 775, 795-96
    (D.C. Cir. 1985)). In contrast to litigation in federal court, the
    copyright royalties distribution process is largely clerical,
    designed to enable good-faith participants to recover their
    royalties through a streamlined, amicable, administrative
    procedure. The administrative hearings backstop the clerical
    process, and even they stop short of full adversary trials.
    19
    Rather, where disputes arise over submitted royalty claims, the
    Act provides for a period to further encourage amicable
    settlement and, failing that, discovery and hearings geared
    toward expeditious resolution by the Judges. IPG has cited no
    authority to import discovery-sanction standards designed for
    adversarial adjudication in federal district court into
    proceedings crafted by Congress to suit the specific needs of
    routine royalty disbursement to holders of broadcast
    copyrights.
    The Judges’ choice of sanction in this case, while severe,
    was not unreasonable. IPG withheld an email plainly
    responsive to SDC discovery requests, and the Judges
    responded by dismissing the directly implicated claims—those
    mentioned in the email. The Judges “reasonably responded to
    a blatant discovery violation by IPG,” Indep. Producers 
    Grp., 792 F.3d at 138
    , and so long as the sanction falls within
    reasonable parameters, we must affirm even if a lesser sanction
    might have sufficed to preserve the integrity of distribution
    proceedings. IPG had notice that the Judges might dismiss its
    clients’ claims because the SDC requested that the claims be
    struck. IPG then had the opportunity to argue against dismissal
    at a hearing and in two subsequent motions for modification,
    which satisfies the requirements of due process.
    D. Distribution methodologies
    Finally, IPG objects to the final royalty distribution
    methodologies selected by the Judges, contending that the
    Judges had previously rejected those very methodologies for
    insufficient evidence. It also argues that the exclusion of IPG’s
    expert reports as noncompliant with the Judges’ published rules
    elevated “form over substance” and, because it left IPG’s
    claims fatally unsupported, was an abuse of discretion.
    Appellant’s Br. 70. We hold that the Judges’ distribution
    20
    methodology decisions were well “within a zone of
    reasonableness.” Settling Devotional 
    Claimants, 797 F.3d at 1114
    (quotation marks and citation omitted).
    First, the Judges were within their discretion in holding
    that IPG’s expert reports failed to conform to the Judges’
    published regulations in that IPG failed to attach copies of prior
    testimony that it wished to designate in the new proceeding.
    See 84 Fed. Reg. at 16,040 n.12 (citing 37 C.F.R.
    § 351.4(b)(2)). The Judges fairly allowed IPG to use the
    reports in cross-examining the SDC and MPA’s experts, but
    IPG failed to undermine the experts. When the Judges faulted
    IPG for lacking evidence or expert analysis to rebut the SDC
    and MPA’s experts, they were not automatically ruling against
    IPG for its want of an expert, but legitimately noting that
    “[c]riticism by IPG’s counsel is not a substitute for expert
    rebuttal testimony.”
    Id. at 16,046
    .
    
    Second, the Judges reasonably adopted the SDC and
    MPA’s methodologies once they both fixed the evidentiary
    problems the Judges had initially identified. The Judges must
    apportion royalties among rightsholders for specific programs
    in each program-category pool. To do so, they must determine
    the relative marketplace value of those programs—a
    calculation highly dependent on viewership. See Indep.
    Producers 
    Grp., 792 F.3d at 142
    . For cable and satellite
    retransmission royalties, the relevant viewership data quantify
    distant viewership, as the royalties are for retransmissions
    elsewhere of locally aired programs. The Judges initially
    faulted MPA and the SDC for lacking data showing a
    correlation between local ratings and distant viewership
    sufficient to justify quantifying distant viewership as a function
    of local ratings. See Order Reopening Record at 2-5.
    21
    MPA’s methodology apportioned royalties in the program
    suppliers category based on the respective number of hours that
    cable and satellite subscribers viewed MPA-represented and
    IPG-represented programs. 84 Fed. Reg. at 16,042. Because
    obtaining distant viewership data for every year was
    prohibitively expensive, MPA’s expert initially used local
    viewing data from 2000 to 2009 and distant viewing data from
    2000 to 2003 to calculate the relationship between them and
    used that formula to predict distant viewership for the years
    such data were unavailable. See Order Reopening Record at 3.
    The Judges held that there were too many reasons the
    relationship between known local and distant viewing data
    from 2000-2003 would not validly project unknown distant
    viewership based on known local viewership data for the 2004-
    2009 period. They found the evidence inadequate without
    either (1) more contemporaneous data from which to derive a
    relationship or (2) other evidence that could persuade the
    Judges such data were not needed for the methodology to be
    reliable.
    Id. at 4.
    In the new hearing, MPA supplied distant
    viewership data from 2008-2009, 84 Fed. Reg. at 16,042, and
    its expert relied on the new and previously submitted data to
    explain that the relationship between local and distant data
    observed from 2000 to 2003 did not change significantly for
    the period from 2008 to 2009, see
    id. at 16,043.
    The Judges
    reasonably held that the additional two years of distant viewing
    data beyond what was submitted in the initial hearing satisfied
    their first concern, and the similarity of the relationship
    rendered reliable the expert’s extrapolation regarding the years
    for which data remained unavailable. See
    id. The Judges
    reasonably accepted the new evidence as remedying their
    earlier evidentiary concerns and adopted the methodology.
    The Judges had initially faulted the SDC’s methodology
    for similar problems, as its expert, extrapolating from local data
    from the periods in question, relied on distant viewing data
    22
    limited to February 1999 for what the expert claimed was a
    statistically significant correlation between local and distant
    viewership. Order Reopening Record at 5. The Judges
    concluded that the SDC’s methodology suffered from a
    “critical lack of data,” both because there was no evidentiary
    basis to conclude that a correlation “in the 1999 data continues
    unchanged throughout the entire succeeding decade” and
    because, even for the local data, the SDC’s expert had relied on
    evidence from a single month in each year from 1999 to 2003.
    Id. As it
    had with MPA’s data, the Judges held the SDC’s
    methodology faulty absent more contemporaneous distant
    viewing data and more local ratings data, or grounds to
    conclude such data were not necessary.
    Id. In the
    reopened proceeding, the SDC remedied both those
    evidentiary deficiencies to the Judges’ satisfaction. The SDC’s
    expert added distant viewership data from 1999 through 2003
    at four different times during in each year. 84 Fed. Reg. at
    16,045. And he gathered complete local data for the years 2004
    to 2009 and used the data to demonstrate that program ratings
    from a single month (i.e., February) were representative of
    ratings throughout the year.
    The Judges held that the SDC and MPA’s additional data
    “presented a quantum of persuasive evidence and analysis
    demonstrating a positive correlation between local ratings and
    distant viewing that is consistent over time.”
    Id. at 16,046
    (emphasis added). IPG has offered no evidence or argument
    that calls into question the reasonableness of the Judges’
    conclusion, other than to raise a broadside objection to any
    viewership-based methodology in Phase II proceedings—an
    objection that we have repeatedly rejected. See, e.g., Settling
    Devotional Claimants v. CRB, Nos. 15-1084, 15-1093, 
    2017 WL 1483329
    , at *1 (D.C. Cir. Feb. 10, 2017); Indep. Producers
    
    Grp., 792 F.3d at 142
    .
    23
    ***
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the final
    determination of the Copyright Royalty Judges and the
    underlying orders challenged on appeal.
    So ordered.