Digital Drilling Data Systems v. Petrolink Service ( 2020 )


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  •      Case: 19-20116    Document: 00515476674      Page: 1    Date Filed: 07/02/2020
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
    United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    No. 19-20116                        July 2, 2020
    Lyle W. Cayce
    DIGITAL DRILLING DATA SYSTEMS, L.L.C.,                                   Clerk
    Plaintiff - Appellant Cross-Appellee
    v.
    PETROLINK SERVICES, INCORPORATED,
    Defendant - Appellee Cross-Appellant
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Texas
    Before BARKSDALE, HIGGINSON, and DUNCAN, Circuit Judges.
    STUART KYLE DUNCAN, Circuit Judge:
    Digital Drilling Data Systems, L.L.C. (“Digidrill”), a company that
    provides software used in oil drilling operations, sued its competitor, Petrolink
    Services, Inc. (“Petrolink”), alleging Petrolink hacked into its software at
    various oil drilling sites in order to “scrape” valuable drilling data in real time.
    The district court granted Petrolink’s motion for summary judgment on
    Digidrill’s copyright claims, but allowed Digidrill’s unjust enrichment claim to
    proceed to trial, where a jury ultimately returned a verdict in Digidrill’s favor.
    Both parties appealed. We affirm in part, vacate in part, and remand for
    further proceedings.
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    No. 19-20116
    I.
    A.
    When oil and gas exploration companies (“operators”) drill below the
    Earth’s surface, they often engage directional drilling companies to steer drill
    bits into specific targets deep underground—a process known as “geosteering.”
    To assist with this process, the directional drillers in turn hire “measurement
    while drilling” (“MWD”) companies who attach specialized tools near the end
    of the drill pipe just above the drill bit. These MWD tools send “downhole” data
    up to the surface, including raw data about the location and orientation of the
    drill bit and about the characteristics of the surrounding geological formation.
    MWD companies then rely on other companies who furnish data logging and
    visualization services—hardware and software packages at the surface that
    collect and store the data from the MWD tools, and also display the data on
    computer screens in real-time to assist with the geosteering process.
    Digidrill is one such data logging and visualization service provider.
    Digidrill’s initial commercial product, a software program called “DataLogger,”
    was designed to be installed on an MWD company’s computer to collect raw
    data from downhole instruments, filter and correct the raw data (based partly
    on calibration inputs provided by the MWD company), and then log both the
    raw and corrected data to a database. To prevent unauthorized use of
    DataLogger, Digidrill designed the program to run only when a USB security
    dongle is plugged into the laptop.
    At the filtering and correction stage, DataLogger applies certain
    algorithms and scaling factors to account for the context of the raw data. For
    example, DataLogger applies a formula to raw gamma data received from the
    downhole gamma ray sensor, scaling and correcting for factors such as gamma
    ray absorption by drill components located near the sensor. DataLogger
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    similarly corrects the raw depth measurement values received from the drill
    bit.
    At the logging stage, the data—both raw and corrected—is written to a
    computer database consisting of 27 interrelated data tables encompassing a
    total of 433 columns worth of data. For instance, the corrected gamma data is
    written in a field called “API” in a table called “GAMMA.” Although Digidrill
    designed the relational structure of the database—i.e., its “schema”—Digidrill
    did not write the database program itself. Instead, Digidrill developed
    DataLogger to incorporate an open source database application called Firebird,
    allowing users to use off-the-shelf programs to access and query the database. 1
    But Digidrill did change the file extension for the database files created by
    DataLogger from “.fdb” (the default extension for Firebird database files) to
    “.ddb” (for “Digidrill Database”). Digidrill also ensured that the database was
    protected by an internal password, but left the username and password set to
    the publicly available Firebird defaults. 2
    1Digidrill asserts that users can only access and query data from the DataLogger
    database by going through the program’s own “Interface Process,” which requires the
    presence of the USB dongle. But this assertion is contradicted by language regarding
    DataLogger that appeared on Digidrill’s website, which stated: “All data generated by the
    Digidrill system is stored in an open database file to give the user the ability to query the
    data using off-the-shelf software products.” At the summary judgment stage, the district
    court acknowledged this by concluding “it was established and known that the DataLogger
    data files were stored in the Firebird shared library which could be accessed independently
    from the DataLogger software.” Thus, although Digidrill may have intended for
    unsophisticated users to access and query the database only through DataLogger’s Interface
    Process, the company left open—and acknowledged—the possibility that sophisticated users
    could access the data directly by other means. Indeed, Digidrill acknowledges that only after
    it discovered Petrolink’s “hack” did the company implement an additional measure “to kill
    third-party connections to the DataLogger Application.”
    2DataLogger users never enter the username and password themselves—the
    credentials are internal to the program. Whenever DataLogger itself queries its own
    database, DataLogger is programed to send the proper credentials to the Firebird database
    server.
    3
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    Meanwhile, in addition to writing to the database, DataLogger forwards
    the continuous stream of raw MWD data—but not the corrected data—to the
    drilling rig’s electronic data recorder (“EDR”) in a standardized feed called
    Wellsite Information Transfer Specification (“WITS”) for use by other entities
    at the site.
    The DataLogger program itself does not offer real-time visualization of
    the data it collects or manipulates, although it does allow the data to be
    exported—after the fact or at intervals—in a standardized report format
    (“.las”) or as PDF files. To provide real-time visualization, Digidrill developed
    a second product called LiveLog. LiveLog provides real-time, off-site
    visualization of filtered and corrected data transmitted out of DataLogger. The
    corrected data is pushed out from DataLogger to the internet in a proprietary
    format developed by Digidrill and can then be viewed using the company’s
    CommandCenter application.
    B.
    Petrolink competes with Digidrill as, among other things, a visualization
    services provider. Petrolink developed a program called “PowerCollect” to take
    raw MWD data, such as that forwarded from DataLogger to the EDR, filter the
    raw data to some extent, and transmit the filtered data to another Petrolink
    program        called   “PetroVault”   for        real-time   visualization.   However,
    PowerCollect’s reliance on raw data and its inability to provide corrected data
    in real time resulted in unreliable visualizations, to the frustration of some
    operators using the program.
    When Petrolink learned that one of its largest customers, EOG
    Resources (“EOG”), might switch over to Digidrill’s visualization service,
    Petrolink took action. Instead of paying Digidrill for access to the corrected
    drilling data via LiveLog, Petrolink obtained a laptop running DataLogger—
    along with the corresponding USB security dongle—and then, after realizing
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    DataLogger used an open source Firebird database, managed to gain access to
    the database by using Firebird’s default administrator username and
    password. Armed with this access, Petrolink developed a program named “RIG
    WITSML” (dubbed “the scraper” or “the hack”) that could be installed on an
    MWD company’s computer running DataLogger in order to—in real time—
    query corrected drilling data from the DataLogger database and transfer that
    information to PetroVault for visualization. Petrolink then began installing
    this RIG WITSML program on MWD computers running DataLogger at more
    than 300 well sites. The parties agree that Petrolink never sought permission
    from Digidrill to copy the data or the database schema from the DataLogger
    databases.
    To be sure, RIG WITSML did not scrape all the data from the
    DataLogger database. Out of 433 columns across 27 tables, RIG WITSML read
    data from 22 columns across 5 tables, and selected data from an even smaller
    subset: 17 columns across 4 tables. With respect to these portions of the
    database, however, the RIG WITSML program not only scraped data from the
    database, it also copied the relevant portions of the database schema, e.g., the
    table names and the names of certain columns within those tables. These
    portions of the database schema were copied into the host computer’s RAM and
    RIG WITSML’s own memory each time the program queried the DataLogger
    database (at ten second intervals), and were also copied in the RIG WITSML
    source code itself. 3
    3 It is true that the schema of Petrolink’s own database, into which the scraped data
    was ultimately copied, was completely different from the schema of DataLogger’s database.
    However, the district court correctly noted that this does not undermine the fact that
    Petrolink copied DataLogger’s database schema in the source code for RIG WITSML and in
    the program’s memory each time RIG WITSML ran a query.
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    C.
    After learning about RIG WITSML, Digidrill sued Petrolink and its
    president, Lee Geiser, asserting claims of copyright infringement, violation of
    the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (“DMCA”), unfair competition, unjust
    enrichment, and various other claims for computer fraud and trademark
    dilution. Although Digidrill averred that Petrolink’s conduct violated the terms
    of DataLogger’s license agreement, which prohibits unauthorized linking of
    third-party devices to computers running DataLogger, Digidrill did not sue the
    DataLogger licensees themselves (the MWD companies using the software). 4
    Early in the litigation, Petrolink agreed to a preliminary injunction and
    stopped using RIG WITSML. Digidrill subsequently abandoned all but its
    claims for copyright infringement, violations of the DMCA, and unjust
    enrichment. The parties then cross-moved for summary judgment.
    The district court granted summary judgment for Petrolink on Digidrill’s
    copyright infringement and DMCA claims, but allowed Digidrill’s unjust
    enrichment claim to proceed to trial. As to copyright infringement, the court
    first concluded that while the corrected data values generated by DataLogger
    and written to its database were “mere facts” and therefore not copyrightable,
    the schema of the database itself—its creative arrangement of tables and
    columns—was covered by the DataLogger copyright as a non-literal element of
    DataLogger’s source code. However, the district court held that no copyright
    infringement occurred because even though Petrolink directly and identically
    copied aspects of DataLogger’s database schema, Digidrill failed to meet its
    burden to show substantial similarity between the original work and the copied
    4  The DataLogger license agreement prohibits licensees from linking “any Customer
    Machine using [DataLogger] with a Machine that is not a Customer Machine” without “prior
    written consent of [Digidrill.]”
    6
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    work. As to the DMCA claim, the court ruled that the “Interface Process” and
    the USB security dongle were not measures that effectively controlled access
    to the DataLogger database and, further, that although an internal password
    was in place to guard access to the database, Petrolink did not “circumvent”
    that measure when it gained access via the publicly available default Firebird
    password.
    As for Digidrill’s state law unjust enrichment claim, the district court
    rejected Petrolink’s contentions that the claim was preempted by federal
    copyright law and that, as a matter of law, the claim could not be proven. The
    court found no preemption because “the data at issue is factual” and therefore
    “does not fall within the subject matter of copyright.” Finding that a genuine
    dispute of material fact remained as to whether unjust enrichment occurred,
    the court denied Petrolink’s motion for summary judgment on the issue.
    Before trial, Digidrill settled with Mr. Geiser, leaving Petrolink as the
    sole defendant. During the ensuing trial, the jury was presented with evidence
    that EOG was one of Petrolink’s biggest customers, that Petrolink received
    $2.4 million in revenues from EOG during the time RIG WITSML was being
    used at various EOG well sites, that Petrolink attributed $414,940 of that
    revenue to RIG WITSML, and that—at the time of trial—Digidrill, not
    Petrolink, was providing visualization services to EOG San Antonio. Although
    Petrolink produced a list showing RIG WITSML had been installed at 307 well
    sites (270 of which belonged to EOG), Digidrill countered with evidence
    suggesting that number was underinclusive.
    At trial, Petrolink twice moved for judgment as a matter of law (JMOL)
    under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 50(a), arguing once again that Digidrill’s
    unjust enrichment claim was preempted by copyright law and that Digidrill
    had presented insufficient evidence to support liability for unjust enrichment
    or monetary recovery. The district court orally denied Petrolink’s motions. The
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    jury then awarded Digidrill $414,940—the exact amount of EOG revenue
    Petrolink attributed to its RIG WITSML program. After the jury returned its
    verdict, Petrolink moved for JMOL a third time, which the court summarily
    denied. The court also denied Petrolink’s motion for $1,001,385 in attorneys’
    fees and costs as the prevailing party under the Copyright Act and DMCA,
    explaining only that “costs and fees will not be assessed against either party
    as both prevailed on different issues.”
    Digidrill and Petrolink each filed timely notices of appeal. Digidrill
    appeals the district court’s grant of Petrolink’s motion for summary judgment
    as to the copyright infringement and DMCA claims. Petrolink cross-appeals
    the district court’s denial of its motions for JMOL and for attorneys’ fees.
    II.
    “We review a grant of summary judgment de novo, applying the same
    standard as the district court.” Alliance for Good Gov’t v. Coalition for Better
    Gov’t, 
    901 F.3d 498
    , 504 (5th Cir. 2018). “Summary judgment is proper where
    the pleadings and record materials show no genuine dispute as to any material
    fact, entitling the movant to judgment as a matter of law.”
    Id. (citing FED.
    R.
    CIV. P. 56(a)). “We must view the evidence in the light most favorable to the
    non-moving party, drawing all justifiable inferences in the non-movant’s
    favor.”
    Id. at 505.
          “We review de novo the district court’s denial of a motion for judgment
    as a matter of law, applying the same standards as the district court.”
    Abraham v. Alpha Chi Omega, 
    708 F.3d 614
    , 620 (5th Cir. 2013). “Judgment
    as a matter of law is proper if a party has been fully heard on an issue during
    a jury trial and a reasonable jury would not have a legally sufficient
    evidentiary basis to find for the party on that issue.” Williams v. Manitowoc
    Cranes, L.L.C., 
    898 F.3d 607
    , 614 (5th Cir. 2018) (cleaned up) (quoting FED. R.
    CIV. P. 50(a)). This court “cannot reverse a denial of a motion for judgment as
    8
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    a matter of law unless the jury’s factual findings are not supported by
    substantial evidence, or if the legal conclusions implied from the jury’s verdict
    cannot in law be supported by those findings.”
    Id. (quoting OneBeacon
    Ins. Co.
    v. T. Wade Welch & Assocs., 
    841 F.3d 669
    , 676 (5th Cir. 2016)). “Although our
    review is de novo, after a jury trial, the standard of review is especially
    deferential.”
    Id. (cleaned up)
    (quoting 
    Abraham, 708 F.3d at 620
    ).
    “This court reviews a district court’s refusal to award attorney’s fees in
    a copyright infringement case for an abuse of discretion.” Virgin Records Am.,
    Inc. v. Thompson, 
    512 F.3d 724
    , 725 (5th Cir. 2008) (per curiam). “A trial court
    abuses its discretion in awarding or refusing to award attorney’s fees when its
    ruling is based on an erroneous view of the law or a clearly erroneous
    assessment of the evidence.”
    Id. (citation omitted).
                                                III.
    A.
    We begin with Digidrill’s claim that the district court erred in granting
    Petrolink’s motion for summary judgment as to copyright infringement. “To
    prove copyright infringement, a plaintiff must establish (1) ownership of a
    valid copyright; (2) factual copying; and (3) substantial similarity.” Nola Spice
    Designs, L.L.C. v. Haydel Enters., Inc., 
    783 F.3d 527
    , 549 (5th Cir. 2015)
    (quoting Armour v. Knowles, 
    512 F.3d 147
    , 152 (5th Cir. 2007) (per curiam)).
    The parties do not dispute the first two elements, i.e., that Digidrill
    owned a valid copyright in the DataLogger program, including its database
    schema, and that Petrolink copied portions of that schema in its RIG WITSML
    program. Instead, the dispute centers on the “substantial similarity” prong. 5
    Digidrill argues that the district court erred in granting summary judgment
    5On appeal, Digidrill does not challenge the district court’s holding that the drilling
    data scraped from DataLogger’s database constituted uncopyrightable facts.
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    because fact issues remained as to the substantial similarity between
    DataLogger’s schema and Petrolink’s copies of that schema. Specifically,
    Digidrill contends that even though Petrolink copied only 5% of DataLogger’s
    copyrighted schema, a reasonable trier of fact might nevertheless have found
    substantial similarity due to the “qualitative importance” of that small copied
    portion. Petrolink argues that Digidrill waived this “qualitative importance”
    argument by not raising it until Digidrill’s motion for reconsideration, filed
    after the district court granted summary judgment. Digidrill responds that the
    argument is not waived because it relates to an issue the district court decided
    sua sponte. According to Digidrill, Petrolink moved for summary judgment
    based on the lack of substantial similarity between the DataLogger database
    schema and Petrolink’s own PetroVault database schema, but the court
    instead addressed the similarity between the DataLogger schema and the RIG
    WITSML program.
    We hold that Digidrill likely waived its “qualitative importance”
    argument but, even if not, the argument fails on the merits. “[W]e generally do
    not consider an issue or a new argument raised for the first time in a motion
    for reconsideration in the district court.” Davidson v. Fairchild Controls Corp.,
    
    882 F.3d 180
    , 185 (5th Cir. 2018) (internal quotation marks and citation
    omitted). Digidrill is mistaken when it states the district court addressed the
    similarity between DataLogger’s schema and RIG WITSML sua sponte, since
    it was Digidrill itself that directed the court to make that comparison both in
    Digidrill’s own motion for summary judgment on copyright infringement and
    in its response to Petrolink’s cross-motion. And yet, despite directing the
    court’s focus to these two works, Digidrill only argued that the works were
    substantially similar because “Petrolink’s hack made exact copies of the
    DataLogger schema.” Thus, we are inclined to agree with Petrolink that
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    Digidrill waived its argument that the two works were substantially similar
    because of the qualitative importance of the copied schema.
    Even so, we need not rely on waiver because Digidrill’s qualitative
    importance argument fails on the merits insofar as Digidrill points to no
    summary judgment evidence establishing the importance of the copied schema
    to the DataLogger program as a whole. “While the question of substantial
    similarity typically should be left to the factfinder, summary judgment may be
    appropriate if the court can conclude . . . that no reasonable juror could find
    substantial similarity.” Nola 
    Spice, 783 F.3d at 550
    (internal quotation marks
    and citation omitted). In determining substantial similarity, we consider, inter
    alia, “the qualitative and quantitative importance of the copied material to the
    plaintiff’s work as a whole.”
    Id. at 552
    (emphasis added). The summary
    judgment evidence to which Digidrill points shows, at most, that (1) the copied
    data were important for effective geosteering and (2) copying certain portions
    of DataLogger’s schema was essential to RIG WITSML’s effectiveness at
    obtaining that data. What the evidence does not show is how the copied
    portions of the schema were qualitatively important to Digidrill’s work itself,
    i.e., to DataLogger. 6 Digidrill conflates the importance of the database schema
    with the importance of the corrected data stored in the database, but the
    importance of the corrected data is beside the point, since that data is
    unprotected by copyright law. As for the schema itself, the district court
    correctly observed that DataLogger’s tables and fields could have been
    arranged in countless different ways.
    6 Digidrill argues that “without the schema at issue, DataLogger could not populate
    its databases with the information ultimately used by the MWD companies and operators to
    geosteer their wells.” But this claim is unsupported by any evidence—Digidrill never shows
    why the DataLogger database required the particular relational structure at issue, as opposed
    to countless other conceivable arrangements of the MWD data into tables and fields.
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    At oral argument, counsel for Digidrill attempted to describe
    DataLogger’s schema as a “living roadmap” to the database, but that further
    reveals Digidrill’s miscomprehension of the issue. DataLogger’s schema
    consists of the relationships between the various tables and fields in the
    database, not the “roadmap” of that relational structure. While an accurate
    roadmap is essential for querying any database, it has nothing to do with the
    qualitative importance of the underlying relational structure itself. For
    example, in order to successfully query data from DataLogger’s API field, one
    needs to know the API field is found in DataLogger’s GAMMA table rather
    than in DataLogger’s DRILLSTREAM table. But that hardly explains, let
    alone even addresses, the qualitative importance of the API field being in the
    GAMMA table in the first place, as opposed to some other table. Digidrill fails
    to show that its chosen relational structure for DataLogger was anything more
    than arbitrary, let alone qualitatively important.
    In sum, we affirm the district court’s ruling on copyright infringement
    because, even if Digidrill’s qualitative importance argument is not waived, no
    reasonable jury could find substantial similarity based on the qualitative
    importance of the copied schema to DataLogger as a whole.
    B.
    Next, we consider Digidrill’s claim that the district court erred in
    granting Petrolink’s motion for summary judgment as to the alleged DMCA
    violations. The DMCA provides: “No person shall circumvent a technological
    measure that effectively controls access to a work protected under this title.”
    17 U.S.C. § 1201(a)(1)(A). “[T]o ‘circumvent a technological measure’ means to
    descramble a scrambled work, to decrypt an encrypted work, or otherwise to
    avoid, bypass, remove, deactivate, or impair a technological measure, without
    the authority of the copyright owner.”
    Id. § 1201(a)(3)(A).
    “A technological
    measure ‘effectively controls access to a work’ if the measure, in the ordinary
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    course of its operation, requires the application of information, or a process or
    a treatment, with the authority of the copyright owner, to gain access to the
    work.”
    Id. § 1201(a)(3)(B).
          Digidrill argues that the district court committed reversible error by
    concluding that DataLogger’s USB dongle and Interface Process did not
    “effectively control” access to DataLogger’s protected work. Digidrill relies
    chiefly on Universal City Studios, Inc. v. Reimerdes, 
    111 F. Supp. 2d 294
    (S.D.N.Y. 2000), aff’d sub nom. Universal City Studios, Inc. v. Corley, 
    273 F.3d 429
    (2d Cir. 2001), for the proposition that what matters is whether a
    technological measure functions to prevent access to the copyrighted work, not
    whether it provides a strong means of protection. According to Digidrill, the
    fact that Petrolink was able to access DataLogger’s database directly, without
    using the USB dongle or Interface Process, merely shows that an alternative
    means of access existed, and the existence of an alternative means of access
    does not render a technological measure ineffective. 7 Petrolink responds that
    the USB dongle and Interface Process did not effectively control access to the
    protected database schema because access to the database itself was available
    via third party programs without ever encountering those measures and, in
    any event, Petrolink did not circumvent those measures. Borrowing from a
    Sixth Circuit opinion, Petrolink likens this to a house with a lock on the back
    door but none on the front. Cf. Lexmark Int’l, Inc. v. Static Control Components,
    Inc., 
    387 F.3d 522
    , 547 (6th Cir. 2004).
    We agree with Petrolink—and the district court—that no DMCA
    violation occurred. While the USB dongle and Interface Process may have
    7  Notably, Digidrill does not appeal the district court’s conclusion that even if
    Datalogger’s internal-facing database password was a technological measure that controlled
    access to the protected work, Petrolink did not circumvent that measure when it entered the
    commonly-known Firebird default credentials.
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    effectively restricted certain unauthorized uses of the DataLogger software—
    for example, by preventing MWD companies from duplicating and running the
    program on laptops at other drilling sites without purchasing additional
    licenses—these security measures did not effectively control and indeed were
    not designed to control access to the protected database schema, as evidenced
    by Digidrill’s public acknowledgement that the data was stored in an open
    database file to allow users to query the database using off-the-shelf products.
    The database—including its schema—was protected only by an internal-facing
    password, and Digidrill does not appeal the district court’s holding that
    Petrolink did not circumvent that measure when Petrolink employed the
    commonly-known Firebird default credentials.
    Digidrill’s reliance on Reimerdes is misplaced. In Reimerdes, hackers
    wrote a computer program “solely for the purpose of decrypting CSS”—a 40-bit
    encryption technology designed to prevent would-be infringers from
    duplicating motion picture 
    DVDs. 111 F. Supp. 2d at 317
    –19 (quoted portion
    at 319). The hacker program at issue in Reimerdes—dubbed “DeCSS”—was
    developed by “reverse engineer[ing] a licensed DVD player and discover[ing]
    the CSS encryption algorithm and keys.”
    Id. at 311.
    The defendants argued
    that CSS, insofar as it was “based on a 40-bit encryption key” was “a weak
    cipher that d[id] not ‘effectively control’ access to plaintiffs’ copyrighted works.”
    Id. at 317.
    The district court rejected that argument, holding that because CSS
    prevented access to the protected work on a DVD without the required
    decryption keys, and because those keys could not be lawfully obtained in the
    absence of a license, “CSS ‘effectively controls access’ to copyrighted DVD
    movies.”
    Id. at 317–18.
          At most, the portion of Reimerdes relied on by Digidrill stands for the
    rule that a technological measure need not be impenetrable in order to be
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    “effective” under the DMCA. 8 See 
    Corley, 273 F.3d at 441
    –42. But here the
    issue is not whether the USB dongle and Interface Process were effective; it is
    whether they controlled access to the database schema at all. On this point, the
    Sixth Circuit’s reasoning in Lexmark is instructive. In that case, Lexmark
    argued that its “authentication sequence” effectively controlled access to its
    Printer Engine Program—a copyrighted work installed on Lexmark printers—
    because the measure controlled consumers’ ability to make use of the program.
    See 
    Lexmark, 387 F.3d at 546
    . The Sixth Circuit disagreed, holding that
    although the measure restricted users’ ability to make use of the Printer
    Engine Program, it did not restrict access to the program itself, i.e., to its
    source code.
    Id. (“Anyone who
    buys a Lexmark printer may read the literal
    code of the Printer Engine Program directly from the printer memory, with or
    without the benefit of the authentication sequence . . . .”). 9 Precisely the same
    is true here: Although the USB dongle and Interface Process limited MWD
    companies’ ability to make use of DataLogger, these measures did not control
    access to program’s database itself, including its protected schema.
    Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s disposition of Digidrill’s DMCA
    claim. Because we affirm on the basis that the USB dongle and Interface
    Process did not effectively control access to the database schema, we need not
    address whether Petrolink circumvented those technological measures.
    8  Such a rule is little more than a tautology anyway, since there could never be a
    DMCA violation for circumventing a technological measure if the only “effective”
    technological measures recognized by the DMCA were those that could never be
    circumvented. Cf. 
    Lexmark, 387 F.3d at 549
    (recognizing that if “a precondition for DMCA
    liability is . . . the creation of an impervious shield to the copyrighted work . . . the DMCA
    would apply only when it is not needed”).
    9The Sixth Circuit added: “[O]ur reasoning does not turn on the degree to which a
    measure controls access to a work. It turns on the textual requirement that the challenged
    circumvention device must indeed circumvent something, which did not happen with the
    Printer Engine Program.”
    Id. at 549.
                                                 15
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    C.
    Turning to Petrolink’s cross-appeal, we first consider Petrolink’s claim
    that the district court erred by denying Petrolink’s motions for JMOL.
    Specifically, Petrolink argues that the Copyright Act preempts Digidrill’s state
    law unjust enrichment claim and, even if not, Digidrill’s claim must fail
    because (1) there is no legally sufficient evidence to support liability for unjust
    enrichment and (2) there is no legally sufficient evidence to value the benefit
    Petrolink allegedly received from Digidrill. We consider each aspect of
    Petrolink’s argument in turn, beginning with preemption.
    1.
    “Section 301 of the Copyright Act preempts state law claims that fall
    within the general scope of federal copyright law.” Ultraflo Corp. v. Pelican
    Tank Parts, Inc., 
    845 F.3d 652
    , 655 (5th Cir. 2017). Consistent with the text of
    the statute, we employ a two-prong test to determine whether the Act preempts
    a state law cause of action. 10
    Id. First, we
    examine the state claim “to
    determine whether it falls ‘within the subject matter of copyright’ as defined
    by 17 U.S.C. § 102.” Spear Mktg., Inc. v. BancorpSouth Bank, 
    791 F.3d 586
    ,
    594 (5th Cir. 2015). If so, we then consider the state cause of action “to
    determine if it protects rights that are ‘equivalent’ to any of the exclusive rights
    of a federal copyright, as defined in 17 U.S.C. § 106.”
    Id. We ask,
    “[i]n other
    words, is state law protecting the same rights that the Copyright Act seeks to
    10   17 U.S.C. § 301(a) reads:
    On and after January 1, 1978, all legal or equitable rights that are equivalent
    to any of the exclusive rights within the general scope of copyright as specified
    by section 106 in works of authorship that are fixed in a tangible medium of
    expression and come within the subject matter of copyright as specified by
    sections 102 and 103, whether created before or after that date and whether
    published or unpublished, are governed exclusively by this title. Thereafter, no
    person is entitled to any such right or equivalent right in any such work under
    the common law or statutes of any State.
    16
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    vindicate, or is it protecting against different types of interference?”
    GlobeRanger Corp. v. Software AG United States of Am., Inc., 
    836 F.3d 477
    ,
    484 (5th Cir. 2016). We evaluate the equivalency of the protected rights by
    applying the “extra element” test: Preemption does not occur if the state law
    claim requires “one or more qualitatively different elements.” Alcatel USA, Inc.
    v. DGI Techs., Inc., 
    166 F.3d 772
    , 787 (5th Cir. 1999). The party arguing
    against preemption must show “the presence of any element that renders
    different in kind its rights under state and federal law.”
    Id. at 789.
          The district court, when it denied Petrolink’s motions for JMOL, did not
    give reasons why it rejected Petrolink’s preemption argument. At the summary
    judgment stage, however, the court denied Petrolink’s motion on the basis of
    the first prong of the preemption test, holding that the drilling data at issue,
    being factual, did not fall within the subject matter of copyright. Petrolink
    disagrees, maintaining that even though the drilling data is not entitled to
    copyright protection, the data nevertheless falls within the subject matter of
    copyright. Cf. Feist Publ’ns, Inc. v. Rural Tel. Serv. Co., 
    499 U.S. 340
    , 345, 359
    (1991) (holding “it is beyond dispute that compilations of facts are within the
    subject matter of copyright” even though “copyright protects only the author’s
    original contributions—not the facts or information conveyed”). Indeed, we
    have recognized that “the Copyright Act preempts more than it protects” and
    “can preempt a state law claim even if the intellectual property lands in one of
    § 102(b)’s exclusions.” Motion Medical Techs., L.L.C. v. Thermotek, Inc., 
    875 F.3d 765
    , 773 (5th Cir. 2017) (citations omitted). This is because “Congress
    intended the Copyright Act to protect some expressions but not others, and it
    wrote § 301(a) to ensure that the states did not undo this decision.” 
    Spear, 791 F.3d at 596
    . In any event, Digidrill does not attempt to defend the district
    court’s reasoning as to prong one, presumably because to argue the drilling
    data is not within the subject matter of copyright would undermine Digidrill’s
    17
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    Copyright Act and DMCA claims. Accordingly, for purposes of this appeal, we
    assume without deciding that prong one is satisfied, and proceed to prong two.
    Our court has not previously decided whether an unjust enrichment
    claim under Texas law satisfies the extra element test. Petrolink argues
    Digidrill’s unjust enrichment claim is preempted by copyright law because the
    conduct at issue centers on wrongful copying, which is within the scope of
    copyright law. Digidrill responds that its unjust enrichment claim is not
    preempted because the extra element test is satisfied: To prevail on a Texas
    unjust enrichment claim requires showing that one party has obtained a
    benefit by fraud, duress, or the taking of an undue advantage.
    Before addressing the parties’ dispute, we pause to summarize our recent
    cases applying the extra element test to other Texas tort claims. Four years
    ago in GlobeRanger, we held the Copyright Act did not preempt a Texas
    misappropriation-of-trade-secrets 
    claim. 836 F.3d at 488
    . GlobeRanger, a
    software maker, alleged that a competitor had accessed its data, manuals, and
    software while working on a project for GlobeRanger’s former client, the U.S.
    Navy.
    Id. at 482.
    We explained that prong two of the preemption test “is met
    when the conduct for which the plaintiff is seeking protection under state law
    amounts to the copying that copyright law also proscribes.”
    Id. at 484.
    We
    added that “[w]hether a claim is equivalent requires looking to the actual
    alleged misconduct and not merely the elements of the state cause of action.”
    Id. at 485
    (citing 
    Alcatel, 166 F.3d at 788
    ). After carefully considering the
    allegations, we found them to “go beyond . . . copying, communicating, and
    transmitting.”
    Id. at 486.
    In particular, we highlighted allegations that the
    defendant induced a former GlobeRanger employee to violate his nondisclosure
    agreement and, further, that the defendant knew from technical manuals it
    obtained that end user agreements prohibited disclosure of their contents.
    Id. Moreover, we
    emphasized that a Texas misappropriation-of-trade-secrets
    18
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    claim requires establishing “that the protected information was taken via
    improper means or breach of a confidential relationship.”
    Id. at 488.
    Accordingly, we concluded that “the state tort provides substantially different
    protection than copyright law” and “is not preempted.” Id.; accord Computer
    Mgmt. Assistance Co. v. Robert F. DeCastro, Inc., 
    220 F.3d 396
    , 404 (5th Cir.
    2000) (holding state law claim not preempted “[b]ecause a cause of action under
    the Louisiana Unfair Trade Practices Act requires proof of fraud,
    misrepresentation or other unethical conduct”).
    Shortly after GlobeRanger, we decided Motion Medical, where a different
    Texas business tort was at issue: unfair competition by 
    misappropriation. 875 F.3d at 772
    –73. In finding the plaintiff’s state law claim preempted by the
    Copyright Act, we focused on the required elements of the tort, which, as the
    parties conceded, did not include an “improper means” element.
    Id. at 775.
    Similarly, we observed that “the jury instruction never mentioned ‘improper
    means,’ nor did it condition liability on a defendant’s ‘wrongful conduct beyond
    mere reproduction.’”
    Id. (quoting GlobeRanger,
    836 F.3d at 488). The plaintiff
    attempted to avoid preemption by arguing that even though wrongful conduct
    was not an element of the asserted unfair competition claim, the “discrete
    facts” of the case showed wrongful conduct.
    Id. at 776.
    We rejected that
    argument as self-defeating, clarifying that a litigant “cannot escape copyright’s
    clutches” merely by asserting misconduct above and beyond that required by
    the cause of action the litigant chose to assert.
    Id. Applying these
    cases to Digidrill’s unjust enrichment claim, we hold
    Digidrill’s claim is not preempted by copyright because—like the claim in
    GlobeRanger—it requires establishing that Petrolink engaged in wrongful
    conduct beyond mere reproduction: namely, the taking of an undue advantage.
    Under Texas law an unjust enrichment claim requires showing that one party
    “has obtained a benefit from another by fraud, duress, or the taking of an
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    undue advantage.” 11 Heldenfels Bros., Inc. v. City of Corpus Christi, 
    832 S.W.2d 39
    , 41 (Tex. 1992) (citing Pope v. Garrett, 
    147 Tex. 18
    , 21, 24 (Tex. 1948)).
    Digidrill does not allege fraud or duress, but instead contends Petrolink
    obtained a benefit by taking undue advantage when it surreptitiously installed
    RIG WITSML on various MWD companies’ laptop computers, causing those
    MWD companies to violate the terms of their DataLogger licenses. This is the
    claim Digidrill put to the jury. Like the alleged misappropriation-of-trade-
    secrets claim in GlobeRanger, which required establishing improper means or
    breach of a confidential relationship, Digidrill’s alleged unjust enrichment
    claim requires establishing wrongful conduct—i.e., inducing the MWD
    companies to violate the express terms of their DataLogger licenses—that goes
    beyond mere copying.
    To be sure, some Texas courts have stated that “recovery under unjust
    enrichment is an equitable right and is not dependent on the existence of a
    wrong” and “[u]njust enrichment occurs when the person sought to be charged
    has wrongfully secured a benefit or has passively received one which it would
    be unconscionable to retain.” Villarreal v. Grant Geophysical, Inc., 
    136 S.W.3d 265
    , 270 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 2004, pet. denied) (cleaned up) (emphasis
    added). Faced with this language, some observers—including Petrolink—have
    suggested Texas law actually recognizes two theories or species of unjust
    enrichment: one for passive receipt of a benefit that would be unconscionable
    11  There is some tension in the Texas courts as to whether unjust enrichment is a
    cause of action or merely a theory of recovery. Compare Mowbray v. Avery, 
    76 S.W.3d 663
    ,
    679 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi 2002, pet. denied) (“[U]njust enrichment is not a distinct
    independent cause of action but simply a theory of recovery.”), with HECI Expl. Co. v. Neel,
    
    982 S.W.2d 881
    , 891 (Tex. 1998) (treating unjust enrichment as a cause of action). We have
    noted this tension before but have held—as we do again here—that “a party may still recover
    under the unjust enrichment theory . . . as long as it proves that [the opposing party] obtained
    a benefit . . . by fraud, duress, or the taking of an undue advantage.” Midwestern Cattle Mktg.,
    L.L.C. v. Legend Bank, N. A., 800 F. App’x 239, 245 n.14 (5th Cir. 2020) (per curiam) (cleaned
    up).
    20
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    to retain, and another for wrongfully securing a benefit. See George P. Roach,
    Unjust Enrichment in Texas: Is It a Floor Wax or a Dessert Topping?, 65
    BAYLOR L. REV. 153, 226–28 (2013). But whatever species of unjust enrichment
    claims might theoretically be available in Texas, the proper object of our extra
    element test is the unjust enrichment claim actually alleged. See 
    Alcatel, 166 F.3d at 787
    ; see also RDG Ltd. P’ship v. Gexa Corp., No. 14-04-00679-CV, 
    2005 WL 949171
    , at *4 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] Apr. 26, 2005, no pet.)
    (identifying the wrongful conduct and passive receipt theories of unjust
    enrichment, but holding “they are fully compatible, and any determination on
    unjust enrichment will necessarily depend upon the evidence presented in the
    case”). Here, there is no dispute that the claim Digidrill put to the jury required
    Digidrill to establish active unjust enrichment by means of wrongful conduct,
    i.e., that Petrolink took an undue advantage when it caused Digidrill’s MWD
    customers to violate their DataLogger license agreements.
    Focusing the extra element test on the state law claim as actually alleged
    also helps explain why courts sometimes reach different results about
    copyright preemption for state-law claims of the same name. See 1 NIMMER ON
    COPYRIGHT § 1.15 (2020) [hereinafter NIMMER] (“The label by which a state
    statute or common law accords rights is not determinative.”). Indeed, several
    of our sister circuits have held various unjust enrichment claims preempted by
    the Copyright Act where the elements of the unjust enrichment claim at issue
    differed from the elements under Texas law. See, e.g., Briarpatch Ltd., L.P. v.
    Phoenix Pictures, Inc., 
    373 F.3d 296
    , 306 (2d Cir. 2004) (New York unjust
    enrichment claim preempted); Del Madera Props. v. Rhodes & Gardner, Inc.,
    
    820 F.2d 973
    , 977 (9th Cir. 1987) (California unjust enrichment claim
    preempted), overruled on other grounds by Fogerty v. Fantasy, Inc., 
    510 U.S. 517
    (1994); Ehat v. Tanner, 
    780 F.2d 876
    , 878 (10th Cir. 1985) (Utah unjust
    enrichment claim preempted). Unlike the present case, the unjust enrichment
    21
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    claims in these cases did not turn on active wrongful conduct such as fraud,
    duress, or the taking of an undue advantage. 12
    In Del Madera, for example, plaintiffs claimed that a real estate
    developer was unjustly enriched when it violated an implied promise not to use
    plaintiffs’ copyrighted map to develop a new 
    subdivision. 820 F.2d at 975
    . The
    Ninth Circuit held this claim preempted because “an implied promise not to
    use or copy materials within the subject matter of copyright is equivalent to
    the protection provided by section 106 of the Copyright Act.”
    Id. at 977.
    No
    element in the plaintiffs’ California unjust enrichment claim required wrongful
    conduct beyond unauthorized reproduction.
    Several years later, however, the Ninth Circuit held a different unjust
    enrichment claim not preempted by copyright. In G.S. Rasmussen &
    Associates, Inc. v. Kalitta Flying Service, Inc., 
    958 F.2d 896
    (9th Cir. 1992), an
    aeronautical engineer claimed that a cargo carrier was unjustly enriched by
    “free-riding” on his effort to obtain a “Supplemental Type Certificate” (“STC”)
    for a particular airplane.
    Id. at 899–900.
    The engineer alleged that the carrier
    declined to license the STC and instead submitted a copy of the unlicensed STC
    with the carrier’s application for an airworthiness certificate.
    Id. at 899–901.
    In reversing the district court’s finding of preemption, the Ninth Circuit
    12 Similarly, some courts have held Texas unjust enrichment claims preempted by the
    Copyright Act, but only where the plaintiffs’ allegations were premised solely on wrongful
    copying and use. See, e.g., BHL Boresight, Inc. v. Geo-Steering Sols., Inc., No. 4:15-CV-00627,
    
    2017 WL 2730739
    , at *12 (S.D. Tex. June 26, 2017) (claim preempted where allegations were
    “expressly based on [d]efendants ‘access, possession, and use’ of [plaintiff’s] software and
    data”); McArdle v. Mattel Inc., 
    456 F. Supp. 2d 769
    , 755, 779 (E.D. Tex. 2006) (claim
    preempted where author alleged Mattel copied author’s concepts and ideas in Barbie product
    line); Tavormina v. Evening Star Prods., Inc., 
    10 F. Supp. 2d 729
    , 734 (S.D. Tex. 1998) (claim
    preempted where homeowners alleged movie studio replicated their house without
    permission or compensation); Butler v. Cont’l Airlines, Inc., 
    31 S.W.3d 642
    , 651 (Tex. App.—
    Houston [1st Dist.] 2000, pet. denied) (claim preempted where programmer alleged employer
    adopted and copied his macro computer programs without compensation).
    22
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    explained that the engineer was not claiming an exclusive right to copy the
    STC, but rather a “right to use the STC as a basis for obtaining an
    airworthiness certificate.”
    Id. at 904.
    The court held that because “violation of
    the state right is predicated upon an act incorporating elements beyond mere
    reproduction or the like, there is no preemption.”
    Id. (citation omitted).
           What matters, then, is the nature of the unjust enrichment claim
    actually alleged. Cf. 1 NIMMER § 1.15[F][4] (“As always . . . it is the underlying
    reality, rather than the label, that is decisive.”). 13 Returning to the present
    case, Digidrill’s unjust enrichment claim is more like the claim in G.S.
    Rasmussen than like the one in Del Madera. Had Digidrill merely alleged that
    Petrolink obtained a benefit at Digidrill’s expense by engaging in unauthorized
    copying, Digidrill’s claim might well have been preempted by copyright law.
    But instead, Digidrill premised its unjust enrichment claim on a further
    element: that Petrolink’s benefit was obtained by “the taking of an undue
    advantage,” i.e., by causing Digidrill’s MWD customers to violate the terms of
    their DataLogger licenses. Because Digidrill’s unjust enrichment claim, as
    alleged, incorporates an element beyond mere unauthorized copying, the claim
    is not preempted.
    The upshot is that our holding on the issue of copyright preemption is
    limited to the particular state-law allegations presented in this case. We leave
    open the possibility that other unjust enrichment claims—even those brought
    13 We recognize the Nimmer treatise teaches that, generally speaking, “a state-law
    cause of action for unjust enrichment or quasi contract should be regarded as an ‘equivalent
    right’ and, hence, preempted insofar as it applies to copyright subject matter.” 1 NIMMER
    § 1.15[G]. The treatise properly critiques courts that have regarded a defendant’s “accepting”
    the benefit of copying a protected work as sufficient to constitute the extra element necessary
    to avoid preemption.
    Id. Yet the
    treatise acknowledges that some unjust enrichment claims,
    such as those premised on deception, may not be preempted.
    Id. The same
    can be said for a
    Texas unjust enrichment claim premised on “fraud, duress, or the taking of an undue
    advantage,” like Digidrill’s claim sub judice.
    23
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    under Texas law—might indeed be preempted by the Copyright Act. Digidrill’s,
    though, is not.
    2.
    Having determined that Digidrill’s unjust enrichment claim is not
    preempted by the Copyright Act, we next consider Petrolink’s assertion that
    Digidrill’s claim fails as a matter of state law. Petrolink argues that under
    Texas law there can be no “taking of an undue advantage” against a competitor
    where the defendant acts within its legal rights, as Petrolink claims to have
    done here. Petrolink relies chiefly on our holding in Harris County Texas v.
    MERSCORP Inc., 
    791 F.3d 545
    (5th Cir. 2015), which Petrolink interprets as
    saying that compliance with the law is “dispositive” against an unjust
    enrichment claim. In response, Digidrill submits that the taking of an undue
    advantage does not require the violation of a law or legal duty. Digidrill, for its
    part, attempts to walk a fine line in its briefing. On the one hand, Digidrill
    unequivocally asserts a theory of unjust enrichment that requires wrongful
    conduct, i.e., “fraud, duress, or the taking of an undue advantage,” because
    without such an element Digidrill’s state law claim is almost certainly
    preempted. On the other hand, Digidrill is committed to the view that an
    unjust enrichment claim does not require the violation of a law or legal duty,
    since to say otherwise would sink Digidrill on the issue of liability.
    We hold that the available Texas authorities do not foreclose the
    possibility that a litigant may show the taking of an undue advantage without
    showing the violation of a law or legal duty; therefore, the district court did not
    err in denying Petrolink’s motions for JMOL. To be sure, the phrase “taking of
    an undue advantage” is not well-defined in Texas law. Courts have found an
    undue advantage where the offending party took advantage of a position of
    trust. See, e.g., Chesapeake La., L.P. v. Buffco Prod., Inc., No. 2:10-CV-359
    (JRG), 
    2012 WL 2505574
    , at *5 (E.D. Tex. June 28, 2012), aff’d in part, vacated
    24
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    in part, 564 F. App’x 751 (5th Cir. 2014). Courts have also found “undue
    advantage” where the offending party did not pay for delivered goods and
    services. See, e.g., Team Healthcare/Diagnostic Corp. v. Blue Cross & Blue
    Shield of Tex., No. 3:10-CV-1441-BH, 
    2012 WL 1617087
    , at *7 (N.D. Tex. May
    7, 2012). More to the point, some courts appear to have denied recovery under
    an unjust enrichment theory just because the defendant did not violate a law
    or legal duty. See, e.g., 
    MERSCORP, 791 F.3d at 561
    ; Shin v. Sharif, No. 2-08-
    347-CV, 
    2009 WL 1565028
    , at *7 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2009, no pet.);
    
    Villarreal, 136 S.W.3d at 270
    . But while MERSCORP, Shin, and Villarreal can
    be read as suggesting that the absence of a violation of law or a legal duty can
    sometimes be fatal to a Texas claim for unjust enrichment, e.g., where the
    violation is the only wrongful conduct alleged, these cases do not stand for a
    rule that “the taking of an undue advantage” always requires a violation of law
    or a legal duty.
    In MERSCORP, several Texas counties alleged that mortgage lenders
    such as Bank of America were unjustly enriched when they avoided certain
    filing fees associated with recording deeds of trust by using MERS, an
    electronic registry enabling member institutions to transfer promissory notes
    without the need for a new deed of 
    trust. 791 F.3d at 561
    . Despite plaintiffs’
    arguments to the contrary, we concluded that Texas law did not impose a duty
    to record assignments of promissory notes or deeds of trust.
    Id. at 556.
    Based
    on that holding, we rejected plaintiffs’ unjust enrichment claim, tied as it was
    to plaintiffs’ view that Texas law imposed a duty to record deeds of trusts and
    assignments.
    Id. at 561.
          In Shin, the buyer of a tire business alleged the seller was unjustly
    enriched when he transferred inventory to his competing tire business and
    deposited checks made out to the buyer in his own account. 
    2009 WL 1565028
    ,
    at *7. The Texas appellate court understood the unjust enrichment claim to
    25
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    “rel[y] on” breach of a “territorial exclusivity agreement” and/or conversion of
    the checks.
    Id. Because the
    court found no valid, enforceable territorial
    agreement and no evidence of conversion by the seller, the court concluded
    there was no evidence of “fraud, duress, or the taking of an undue advantage.”
    Id. Accordingly, the
    court rejected the buyer’s unjust enrichment claim.
    Id. Finally, in
    Villarreal, owners of a mineral estate sued two seismic
    surveyors, claiming the surveyors trespassed on their mineral estate when
    conducting 3-D seismic surveys nearby, and that in doing so the surveyors
    acquired data about the mineral 
    estate. 136 S.W.3d at 267
    . The state court
    held that, because the surveyors did not physically invade the surface estate
    above the mineral estate, there was no geophysical trespass.
    Id. at 270.
    The
    court then rejected the owners’ unjust enrichment claim, stating that “since a
    trespass did not occur under current Texas law, [the surveyors] did not
    wrongfully secure a benefit.”
    Id. Taken together,
    these decisions demonstrate that where a plaintiff’s
    unjust enrichment claim is premised on allegations of illegal conduct, a finding
    that no illegal conduct occurred necessarily dooms the unjust enrichment
    claim. Yet these cases, in which the courts focused on the facts before them
    rather than offering a larger rule about legal violations, do not establish that
    all undue advantage claims must be premised on illegal conduct. These
    authorities leave open the possibility that litigants may elect to premise their
    unjust enrichment claims on conduct that, while not illegal, is nevertheless
    wrongful, unethical, or otherwise unjust. Here, Digidrill did exactly that.
    Digidrill’s unjust enrichment claim turns on its contention that when Petrolink
    installed RIG WITSML on various MWD companies’ computers, it
    wrongfully—but not illegally—induced those companies to violate the terms of
    their DataLogger licenses. Indeed, the district court specifically instructed the
    jury that Digidrill, in its unjust enrichment claim, was not accusing Petrolink
    26
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    of violating any statute or committing any criminal act. In other words, the
    jury was asked to find that Petrolink engaged in wrongful conduct—the taking
    of an undue advantage—even though Petrolink did not violate a law or legal
    duty. Nothing in Petrolink’s cited authorities prohibited the jury from making
    such a finding. Thus, the district court did not err in denying Petrolink’s
    motions for JMOL on the question of liability.
    3.
    That brings us to Petrolink’s further argument that the district court
    nevertheless erred in denying its motions for JMOL because Digidrill
    presented insufficient evidence to support monetary recovery for its unjust
    enrichment claim. In Texas “[a]n action for unjust enrichment is based upon
    the equitable principle that a person receiving benefits which were unjust for
    him to retain ought to make restitution.” Nationscredit Corp. v. CSSI, Support
    Grp., Inc., No. 05-99-01612-CV, 
    2001 WL 200147
    , at *6 (Tex. App.—Dallas
    Mar. 1, 2001, no pet.). As noted, “[a] party may recover under the unjust
    enrichment theory when one person has obtained a benefit from another by
    fraud, duress, or the taking of an undue advantage.” 
    Heldenfels, 832 S.W.2d at 41
    (emphasis added). At trial on Digidrill’s unjust enrichment claim, Question
    3 of the verdict form asked the jury: “What is the value of the benefit, if any,
    you find that Defendant Petrolink obtained from Plaintiff Digital Drilling as a
    result of [the taking of an undue advantage]?” The jury answered:
    “$414,940.00”—the amount of revenue from EOG that Petrolink attributed to
    its RIG WITSML program.
    Petrolink argues that the district court erred in denying Petrolink’s
    motion for JMOL because there was no legally sufficient evidence of the value
    of the benefit Petrolink obtained from Digidrill. According to Petrolink, the
    only benefit it received from Digidrill was the corrected drilling data itself, not
    the revenues for its PetroVault visualization service, which included many
    27
    Case: 19-20116     Document: 00515476674       Page: 28   Date Filed: 07/02/2020
    No. 19-20116
    other features. Moreover, Petrolink claims that Digidrill was required to
    adduce evidence of Petrolink’s profits from PetroVault, not merely its revenues.
    Digidrill responds that while the benefit Petrolink obtained was indeed the
    corrected drilling data, the value of that benefit was the revenue generated by
    PetroVault. Further, Digidrill contends that even if PetroVault included “other
    bells and whistles,” the jury’s choice to ignore such evidence does not merit
    reversal since this court should uphold the jury’s finding if it is supported by
    any legally sufficient evidence.
    We agree with Digidrill that the jury’s damages award should be
    affirmed because it is supported by some evidence. At trial, the jury heard
    testimony that Petrolink installed RIG WITSML at hundreds of well sites
    operated by EOG, one of Petrolink’s biggest customers. Evidence also indicated
    that after Petrolink was enjoined from using RIG WITSML, EOG switched
    over to Digidrill for visualization services. Therefore, the jury was entitled to
    find that the value of the benefit Petrolink received from its taking of an undue
    advantage was equivalent to the revenue Petrolink received from selling its
    PetroVault visualization service during the period when Petrolink was
    installing RIG WITSML at well sites operated by EOG and others. And in any
    event, the $414,940 from which the jury derived its award did not represent
    Petrolink’s total revenue from selling its PetroVault visualization services to
    EOG, but rather the small fraction of that revenue—which totaled some $2.8
    million—Petrolink itself attributed specifically to the RIG WITSML program.
    Petrolink makes much of Digidrill’s failure to adduce evidence of
    Petrolink’s expenses, arguing that a plaintiff has the burden to do so “where
    profits is the measure of damages.” But Petrolink cites no authority
    establishing that, under Texas law, damages for unjust enrichment are to be
    measured in terms of lost profits. To the contrary, the theory of recovery in an
    unjust enrichment claim is not that a defendant interfered with plaintiff’s
    28
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    No. 19-20116
    profits, but that a defendant received a benefit from plaintiff for which the
    defendant ought in good conscience to have paid. See Nationscredit Corp., 
    2001 WL 200147
    , at *6 (“Recovery [on an unjust enrichment claim] is based on
    fundamental principles of justice or equity and good conscience which give rise
    to an implied or quasi-contract to repay the party from which the benefit was
    received.”).
    Moreover, even if the jury should have deducted Petrolink’s expenses in
    calculating unjust enrichment damages, the total award is nevertheless
    supported by at least some evidence. Materials presented at trial suggested
    Petrolink may have underreported the total number of well sites where it
    installed RIG WITSML. And, even on Petrolink’s reported list, 37 of the listed
    well sites were not operated by EOG. In other words, there was some evidence
    that the benefit Petrolink received from taking an undue advantage exceeded
    the EOG revenues Petrolink attributed to its RIG WITSML program. “[T]he
    issue is not how the jury arrived at its exact amount of damages; rather, the
    issue is whether the jury’s amount is supported by some evidence.” Helm v.
    Landry Serv. Co., No. 01-94-00348-CV, 
    1995 WL 319014
    , at *6 (Tex. App.—
    Houston [1st Dist.] May 25, 1995, writ denied) (affirming unjust enrichment
    award equivalent to amount paid for business, even though defendants
    represented only 3 of 12 shareholders, because evidence showed other unjust
    profits before sale).
    In sum, because there is at least some evidence supporting the award of
    $414,940, we affirm the district court’s denial of Petrolink’s JMOL on the issue
    of whether Digidrill adduced sufficient evidence of the benefit Petrolink
    obtained from Digidrill.
    D.
    Finally, we tackle Petrolink’s claim that the district court abused its
    discretion by denying Petrolink’s motion for attorneys’ fees under the
    29
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    No. 19-20116
    Copyright Act and DMCA. The Copyright Act and DMCA give courts discretion
    to award “reasonable” attorneys’ fees to the “prevailing party” in cases brought
    under either Act. 17 U.S.C. §§ 505, 1203(b)(5). Such fee awards encourage the
    types of lawsuits that promote the statutes’ purposes, i.e., “encouraging and
    rewarding authors’ creations while also enabling others to build on that work.”
    Kirtsaeng v. John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 
    136 S. Ct. 1979
    , 1986 (2016).
    The Supreme Court has recognized that § 505 gives “broad leeway” to
    courts, and does so without specifying any “guideposts” to use.
    Id. at 1984–85.
    Nevertheless, the Court has set forth several criteria and principles for courts
    to follow. See
    id. In Fogerty
    v. Fantasy, Inc., 
    510 U.S. 517
    (1994), the Court
    imposed two restrictions on courts’ broad discretion. First, courts must not
    simply award fees to the prevailing party as a matter of course.
    Id. at 533.
    Second, courts must treat prevailing plaintiffs and prevailing defendants alike,
    rather than holding defendants to a more stringent standard.
    Id. at 534
    –35. 
    In
    addition, the Court listed “several nonexclusive factors to guide courts’
    discretion,” including “frivolousness, motivation, objective unreasonableness
    (both in the factual and in the legal components of the case) and the need in
    particular circumstances to advance considerations of compensation and
    deterrence.” 14
    Id. at 534
    n.19 (citation omitted). More recently, the Supreme
    Court counseled that courts “should give substantial weight to the objective
    reasonableness of the losing party’s position.” 
    Kirtsaeng, 136 S. Ct. at 1983
    .
    That said, the Court emphasized that “objective reasonableness can be only an
    important factor in assessing fee applications—not the controlling one.”
    Id. at 14
    Although Fogerty concerned an award of fees under § 505 of the Copyright Act,
    courts have treated Fogerty’s standards as equally relevant to the DMCA. See, e.g., Energy
    Intelligence Grp., Inc. v. Kayne Anderson Capital Advisors, L.P., No. CV H-14-1903, 
    2018 WL 2048896
    , at *12–16 (S.D. Tex. May 2, 2018), vacated on other grounds, 
    948 F.3d 261
    (5th Cir.
    2020).
    30
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    No. 19-20116
    1988; see also
    id. at 1989
    (cautioning against “turning ‘substantial’ into more
    nearly ‘dispositive’ weight”).
    We have not yet had occasion to apply Kirtsaeng. However, even against
    the backdrop of Fogerty’s admonition that fees should not be awarded to
    prevailing parties as a matter of course, we have repeatedly stated that “an
    award of attorney’s fees to the prevailing party in a copyright action is the rule
    rather than the exception and should be awarded routinely.” Virgin 
    Records, 512 F.3d at 726
    (internal quotation marks and citation omitted); see also Hunn
    v. Dan Wilson Homes, Inc., 
    789 F.3d 573
    , 588–89 (5th Cir. 2015).
    Petrolink argues that even though Digidrill prevailed on its unjust
    enrichment claim, “Petrolink won a complete victory on the copyright and
    DMCA claims” and was therefore the “prevailing party” under §§ 505 and
    1203(b). 15 Petrolink submits that whether Digidrill prevailed on any non-
    copyright claim is irrelevant to the prevailing party analysis under the
    Copyright Act and DMCA.
    We agree with Petrolink. In denying Petrolink’s post-trial motion for
    attorneys’ fees, the district court stated only that “costs and fees will not be
    assessed against either party as both prevailed on different issues.” It is
    difficult to make sense of this language in light of the fact that Petrolink only
    sought fees related to Digidrill’s copyright and DMCA claims, on which
    Petrolink clearly and solely prevailed. It matters not whether Digidrill
    ultimately prevailed on its state law unjust enrichment claim. See Balsley v.
    LFP, Inc., 
    691 F.3d 747
    , 772–74 (6th Cir. 2012) (affirming fee award to party
    who prevailed on one copyright claim, agreed to dismiss two other copyright
    15Petrolink did not move for attorneys’ fees related to Digidrill’s other claims, but
    rather only for the work Petrolink did on the copyright and DMCA claims up until the district
    court granted summary judgment.
    31
    Case: 19-20116    Document: 00515476674      Page: 32   Date Filed: 07/02/2020
    No. 19-20116
    claims without prejudice, and lost on four state law claims). The failure of
    Petrolink’s copyright preemption argument does not undermine this result, but
    rather confirms that the sole claim on which Digidrill prevailed—unjust
    enrichment—was not a copyright infringement claim. Cf. Bridgeport Music,
    Inc. v. Diamond Time, Ltd., 
    371 F.3d 883
    , 893 (6th Cir. 2004) (affirming fee
    award because “when a defendant succeeds in having summary judgment
    entered in its favor on the copyright infringement claims asserted against it,
    that defendant can only be described as having ‘prevailed’” regardless of
    separate copyright preemption issue). Besides, a litigant may be a prevailing
    party under § 505 even if the party fails to prevail “in full” on its copyright
    claims. See Thoroughbred Software Int’l, Inc. v. Dice Corp., 
    488 F.3d 352
    , 362
    (6th Cir. 2007); see also 4 NIMMER § 14.10[B][3].
    Not only did the district court erroneously treat Petrolink as though it
    was not the sole prevailing party on the copyright claims, the court also failed
    to apply the correct legal standard set forth in Fogerty. We have on occasion
    affirmed a district court’s refusal to award fees to the prevailing party in a
    copyright case, but only where the district court laid out the Fogerty factors
    and “then applied those factors to the facts of th[e] case and determined that
    they weighed against awarding attorney’s fees.” Virgin 
    Records, 512 F.3d at 726
    ; see also Baisden v. I’m Ready Prods., Inc., 
    693 F.3d 491
    , 510 (5th Cir.
    2012); Positive Black Talk Inc. v. Cash Money Records Inc., 
    394 F.3d 357
    , 381–
    82 (5th Cir. 2004), abrogated on other grounds by Reed Elsevier, Inc. v.
    Muchnick, 
    559 U.S. 154
    (2010); Creations Unltd., Inc. v. McCain, 
    112 F.3d 814
    ,
    817 (5th Cir. 1997) (per curiam). On the other hand, we have vacated and
    remanded a fee award where “[t]he district court did not consider any of the
    four factors set forth in Fogerty.” Galiano v. Harrah’s Operating Co., 
    416 F.3d 411
    , 423 (5th Cir. 2005). Here, as noted, the district court failed to cite or
    acknowledge the correct legal standard announced in Fogerty, let alone apply
    32
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    No. 19-20116
    any of the Fogerty factors to the facts of the case. The district court’s failure to
    identify or apply the correct legal standard—on an issue worth nearly three
    times the value of the jury award—constitutes an abuse of discretion. See
    Virgin 
    Records, 512 F.3d at 725
    .
    Because the district court both failed to treat Petrolink as the prevailing
    party under the statutes and failed to apply the correct legal standard from
    Fogerty, we vacate the district court’s denial of Petrolink’s motion for fees and
    remand for the district court to properly analyze the motion. 16 Although the
    district court may, on remand, exercise its discretion to deny Petrolink’s motion
    for fees, “[t]he district court should provide a Fogerty analysis in its ensuing
    opinion so that its ruling can, if needed, be reviewed on appeal.” 
    Galiano, 416 F.3d at 423
    .
    ***
    For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s summary
    judgment as to Digidrill’s copyright and DMCA claims. We also AFFIRM the
    district court’s denial of Petrolink’s motions for JMOL. However, we VACATE
    the district court’s order denying Petrolink’s motion for attorneys’ fees under
    the Copyright Act and DMCA, and REMAND for the district court to reconsider
    that motion in light of this opinion.
    16 Because we remand for the district court to reconsider Petrolink’s motion for
    attorneys’ fees under the Copyright Act and DMCA, we need not reach Petrolink’s further
    argument that Digidrill’s copyright claims were objectively unreasonable. We express no view
    on that issue.
    33
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 19-20116

Filed Date: 7/2/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 7/3/2020

Authorities (25)

Feist Publications, Inc. v. Rural Telephone Service Co. , 111 S. Ct. 1282 ( 1991 )

creations-unlimited-inc-and-tina-marie-sartin-v-robert-mccain-doing , 112 F.3d 814 ( 1997 )

McArdle v. Mattel Inc. , 456 F. Supp. 2d 769 ( 2006 )

Armour v. Knowles , 512 F.3d 147 ( 2007 )

bridgeport-music-inc-westbound-records-inc-southfield-music-inc-nine , 371 F.3d 883 ( 2004 )

Tavormina v. Evening Star Productions, Inc. , 10 F. Supp. 2d 729 ( 1998 )

Galiano v. Harrah's Operating Co. , 416 F.3d 411 ( 2005 )

Andrew F. Ehat v. Jerald Tanner and Sandra Tanner, Dba ... , 780 F.2d 876 ( 1985 )

Alcatel Usa, Inc., Plaintiff-Counter-Defendant-Appellee-... , 166 F.3d 772 ( 1999 )

Thoroughbred Software International, Inc. v. Dice ... , 488 F.3d 352 ( 2007 )

G.S. Rasmussen & Associates, Inc. v. Kalitta Flying Service,... , 958 F.2d 896 ( 1992 )

Butler v. Continental Airlines, Inc. , 31 S.W.3d 642 ( 2000 )

Heldenfels Bros. v. City of Corpus Christi , 832 S.W.2d 39 ( 1992 )

Fogerty v. Fantasy, Inc. , 114 S. Ct. 1023 ( 1994 )

Mowbray v. Avery , 2002 Tex. App. LEXIS 2616 ( 2002 )

Virgin Records America, Inc. v. Thompson , 512 F.3d 724 ( 2008 )

Briarpatch Limited, L.P., Gerard F. Rubin v. Phoenix ... , 373 F.3d 296 ( 2004 )

Universal City Studios, Inc. v. Corley , 273 F.3d 429 ( 2001 )

Pope v. Garrett , 147 Tex. 18 ( 1948 )

Reed Elsevier, Inc. v. Muchnick , 130 S. Ct. 1237 ( 2010 )

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