Forward v. Thorogood ( 1993 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion









    April 15, 1993
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    _____

    No. 91-1415


    JOHN FORWARD
    Plaintiff, Appellant

    v.

    GEORGE THOROGOOD, et al.,
    Defendants, Appellees.


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    ERRATA SHEET

    The opinion of this Court issued on January 29, 1993, is
    amended as follows:

    On page 4, footnote 1, line 1: delete the comma between
    "Nimmer on Copyright" and the " " sign.
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    On page 5, line 3: delete the comma between "Nimmer" and
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    the " " sign.

    On page 9, line 5: delete the comma between "Nimmer" and
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    the " " sign.



































    January 29, 1993
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________

    No. 91-1415

    JOHN FORWARD,

    Plaintiff-Appellant,

    v.

    GEORGE THOROGOOD, et al.,

    Defendants-Appellees.


    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

    [Hon. Joseph L. Tauro, U.S. District Judge]
    ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Cyr and Boudin, Circuit Judges,
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    and Hornby,* District Judge.
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    ____________________

    Richard J. Shea with whom Kenneth M. Goldberg was on brief for
    _______________ ____________________
    appellant.
    Gordon P. Katz with whom Kim E. Perry and Jay M. Fialkov were on
    ______________ ____________ ______________
    brief for appellee.


    ____________________


    ____________________

    * of the District of Maine, sitting by designation.






















    BOUDIN, Circuit Judge. This is an appeal from a final
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    judgment determining the copyright ownership of certain

    unpublished tape recordings of the musical group George

    Thorogood and the Destroyers (the "Band"). The district

    court ruled that the Band held the copyright to the tapes and

    enjoined appellant John Forward from making commercial use of

    the recordings. We affirm.

    The basic facts can be briefly stated. Forward is a

    music aficionado and record collector with a special interest

    in blues and country music. In 1975, Forward was working as

    a bus driver when he first met Thorogood at a Boston

    nightclub where the Band was performing. Forward was

    immediately taken with the Band's act and struck up a

    friendship with Thorogood. Thorogood and his fellow band

    members, a drummer and a guitar player, had been playing

    together at East Coast colleges and clubs since 1973.

    Upon learning that the Band had yet to release its first

    album, Forward began a campaign to persuade his friends at

    Rounder Records to sign the Band to a recording contract.

    Rounder Records is a small, Boston-based record company

    specializing in blues and folk music. As part of this

    effort, Forward arranged and paid for two recording sessions

    for the Band in 1976. The purpose of the sessions was to

    create a "demo" tape that would capture Rounder Records'

    interest. At Forward's invitation, one of the principals of



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    Rounder Records attended the Band's second recording session.

    Other than requesting specific songs to be recorded,

    Forward's contribution to the sessions was limited to

    arranging and paying for them.

    Rounder Records was impressed by what it heard; the day

    after the second session, it arranged to sign the Band to a

    contract. The Band agreed that Forward could keep the tapes

    for his own enjoyment, and they have remained in his

    possession ever since. In 1977, the Band's first album was

    released under the Rounder Records label. Forward was

    singled out for "special thanks" in the album's

    acknowledgements. Since then, Thorogood and the Destroyers

    have released a number of records and gone on to achieve

    success as a blues/rock band.

    The dispute between the parties arose in early 1988,

    when Forward told the Band that he intended to sell the 1976

    tapes to a record company for commercial release. The Band

    objected, fearing that release of the tapes would harm its

    reputation; they were, the district court found, of

    "relatively primitive quality" compared to the Band's

    published work. On July 5, 1988, Forward filed suit in the

    district court, seeking a declaratory judgment that he held

    the common law copyright to the tapes. Determination of

    copyright ownership is governed by the common law of

    copyright because the tapes are unpublished and were recorded



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    in 1976, prior to the January 1, 1978, effective date of the

    Copyright Act of 1976, 17 U.S.C. 101 et seq.1 The Band
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    responded with a counterclaim for declaratory and injunctive

    relief.

    In the district court, Forward advanced a number of

    theories in support of his claim to copyright ownership.

    After a five-day bench trial, the district court filed its

    findings of fact and conclusions of law, ruling that Forward

    did not hold the copyright under any of the theories he

    advanced. Forward v. Thorogood, 758 F. Supp. 782 (D. Mass.
    _______ _________

    1991). The court entered judgment for the Band, declaring

    Thorogood and other Band members to be the copyright owners

    and permanently enjoining Forward from commercially

    exploiting the tapes. Forward now appeals.

    On this appeal, Forward's first theory in support of his

    claim of copyright ownership is based on his ownership and

    possession of the tapes. According to Forward, ownership of

    a copyrightable work carries with it ownership of the

    copyright. Alternatively, he argues that the evidence

    mandated a finding that the copyright was implicitly




    ____________________

    1See M. Nimmer & D. Nimmer, 1 Nimmer on Copyright
    ___ ____________________
    2.10[A] n.18, at 2-147 (1992) ("Nimmer"). See also Roth v.
    ______ ________ ____
    Pritikin, 710 F.2d 934, 938 (2d Cir.) (1976 Act, which
    ________
    preempts the common law of copyright as of January 1, 1978,
    determines the rights but not the identity of the copyright
    owners of works created prior to that date), cert. denied,
    ____________
    464 U.S. 961 (1983).

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    transferred to him along with the demo tapes. We find no

    merit in either claim.

    The creator of a work is, at least presumptively, its

    author and the owner of the copyright, Community for Creative
    ______________________

    Non-Violence v. Reid, 490 U.S. 730, 737 (1989). The
    ____________ ____

    performer of a musical work is the author, as it were, of the

    performance. 1 Nimmer 2.10[A](2)(a), at 2-149. The
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    courts, in applying the common law of copyright, did in a

    number of cases infer from an unconditional sale of a

    manuscript or painting an intent to transfer the copyright.

    3 Nimmer 10.09[B], at 10-76.1. This doctrine, often
    ______

    criticized and subject to various judicial and statutory

    exclusions, id., is the source of Forward's principal claim.
    __

    The difficulty for Forward is that even under the doctrine

    this physical transfer merely created a presumption and the

    ultimate question was one of intent. Id.
    __

    In this case, the district court found that "[n]either

    the band nor any of its members ever conveyed, or agreed to

    convey, their copyright interest in the tapes to Forward."

    758 F. Supp. at 784. Rather the Band allowed Forward to keep

    the tapes solely for his personal enjoyment. Id. Forward's
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    disregard of this central finding is premised on a highly

    artificial attempt to claim "constructive possession" of the

    tapes from the outset and then to argue that any reservation

    by the Band at the end of the sessions was an invalid attempt



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    to reconvey or qualify his copyright. The reality is that

    the Band never surrendered the copyright in the first place

    and the transfer of the tapes' ownership to Forward was not a

    sharply defined event distinct from the reservation of the

    Band's rights.

    Forward argues that the district court's finding is

    mistaken, pointing in particular to a 1979 check for $500

    made out to him from Rounder Records on behalf of the Band.

    A notation indicates that the check was for an "advance

    option" on the tapes, and Forward argues that the check

    constitutes an "unambiguous admission" that he owned the

    copyright. The Band counters that, shortly before Forward

    was given the check, another demo tape made by the Band had

    been sold by a third party to a record company. The Band

    claims that, to prevent another such misadventure, it sought

    an option on the physical tapes held by Forward. Although

    Forward contests this explanation, the district court heard

    the evidence, chose reasonably between conflicting inferences

    as to the import of the check, and that is the end of the

    matter. See Anderson v. City of Bessemer City, 470 U.S. 564,
    ___ ________ _____________________

    573-74 (1985); Fed. R. Civ. P. 52(a).

    Forward's second theory of copyright ownership involves

    the "works for hire" doctrine. Under this doctrine, a

    judicially developed notion later codified in the Copyright

    Act of 1909, 17 U.S.C. 1 et seq., an employer is deemed the
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    "author" and copyright holder of a work created by an

    employee acting within the scope of employment. Although

    initially confined to the traditional employer-employee

    relationship, the doctrine has been expanded to include

    commissioned works created by independent contractors, with

    courts treating the contractor as an employee and creating a

    presumption of copyright ownership in the commissioning party

    at whose "instance and expense" the work was done. See,
    ____

    e.g., Murray v. Gelderman, 566 F.2d. 1307, 1310 (5th Cir.
    ___ ______ _________

    1978); Brattleboro Publishing Co. v. Winmill Publishing
    ____________________________ ___________________

    Corp., 369 F.2d 565, 567-68 (2d Cir. 1966).2 Forward
    _____

    maintains that the tapes, created at his "instance and

    expense," are commissioned works to which he holds the

    copyright.

    The district court rejected this claim, finding that the

    evidence did not support it. The court said that, although

    Forward booked and paid for the studio time, he neither

    employed nor commissioned the band members nor did he

    compensate or agree to compensate them. 758 F. Supp. at 784.

    While the lack of compensation may not be decisive, see,
    ____

    e.g., Community for Creative Non-Violence, 490 U.S. at 734
    ___ _____________________________________


    ____________________

    2 The Copyright Act of 1976 altered the works for
    hire doctrine so that only certain types of commissioned
    works qualify as works for hire, and then only if the parties
    have agreed in writing to treat it as such. See Community
    ___ _________
    for Creative Non-Violence, 490 U.S. at 738. The Act's
    __________________________
    provisions on works for hire operate prospectively and do not
    govern this case.

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    (donated commissioned work), the evidence as a whole amply

    supports the trial judge's conclusion. Nothing suggests that

    the tapes were prepared for the use and benefit of Forward.

    Rather, the purpose was to provide demo tapes to entice a

    recording company. Forward was a fan and friend who fostered

    this effort, not the Archbishop of Saltzburg commissioning

    works by Mozart.

    Finally, Forward argues that he is at least a co-owner

    of the copyright as a "joint author" of the tape recordings.

    The doctrine of joint authorship, recognized at common law,

    is incorporated in the current Copyright Act of 1976. 17

    U.S.C. 201(a). In appraising this claim, our concern is

    with Forward's musical or artistic contribution rather than

    his encouragement to the Band or his logistical support.

    The district court found that "Forward made no musical

    or artistic contribution" to the tapes, explaining that

    Forward did not serve as the engineer at the sessions or

    direct the manner in which the songs were played or sung.

    758 F. Supp. at 784. The trial judge noted that Forward did

    request that certain songs be played but "the band then

    played those songs in precisely the same manner that it

    always played them." Id. The district court's concise and
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    unqualified findings are fully supported by the evidence

    Forward has only one legal prop for his contrary claim

    and it is a weak one. In the House Report on the Copyright



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    Act of 1976, the committee observed that the copyright in

    sound recordings "will usually, though not always, involve

    ``authorship' both . . . [by the artist and by] the record

    producer responsible for setting up the recording session,

    capturing and electronically processing the sounds, and

    compiling and editing them to make the final sound

    recording." H. Rep. No. 94-1476, 94th Cong., 2d Sess. 56

    (1976). It is apparent from this passage that the "producer"

    envisaged by the committee is one who engages in artistically

    supervising and editing the production. See generally 1
    _____________

    Nimmer 2.10[A](2)(b), at 2-150 to 2-151. That is exactly
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    what Forward did not do in this case.

    The Band has sought an award of attorney's fees expended

    in this court, arguing that Forward's appeal is frivolous.

    We think that the appeal comes very close to the line but

    does not quite step over it and therefore deny the motion.

    Affirmed.
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