Donna Corbello v. Frankie Valli ( 2020 )


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  •                 FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    DONNA CORBELLO,                           No. 17-16337
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    D.C. No.
    v.                       2:08-cv-00867-
    RCJ-PAL
    FRANKIE VALLI; ROBERT J. GAUDIO;
    MARSHALL BRICKMAN; ERIC S.
    ELICE; DES MCANUFF; DSHT, INC.,             OPINION
    FKA Dodger State Holding
    Theatricals, Inc.; DODGER
    THEATRICALS, LTD.; JB VIVA VEGAS,
    LP; MICHAEL S. DAVID; JERSEY
    BOYS BROADWAY LIMITED
    PARTNERSHIP; JERSEY BOYS
    RECORDS LIMITED PARTNERSHIP;
    SKUNK, INC.; GETTING HOME, INC.,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of Nevada
    Robert Clive Jones, District Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted June 11, 2019
    Anchorage, Alaska
    Filed September 8, 2020
    2                      CORBELLO V. VALLI
    Before: A. Wallace Tashima, William A. Fletcher, and
    Marsha S. Berzon, Circuit Judges.
    Opinion by Judge Berzon
    SUMMARY *
    Copyright
    Affirming the district court’s judgment after a jury trial
    in favor of defendants, the panel held that the musical Jersey
    Boys did not infringe plaintiff’s copyright in an
    autobiography of Tommy DeVito, a member of the band the
    Four Seasons.
    The musical depicted the history of the Four Seasons.
    The district court granted judgment as a matter of law on the
    basis that much of the alleged infringement concerned
    unprotected elements of the work, and that any infringement
    of protected elements was fair use. The panel affirmed on
    the sole ground that the musical did not infringe the
    autobiography, and did not reach fair use.
    The panel held that facts cannot form the basis for a
    copyright claim. On close examination, each of the alleged
    similarities between the musical and the autobiography were
    based on historical facts, common phrases, and scenes-a-
    faire, or elements that were treated as facts in the
    autobiography and were thus unprotected by copyright, even
    *
    This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It
    has been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
    CORBELLO V. VALLI                        3
    though now challenged as fictional. Adopting an “asserted
    truths” doctrine, the panel held that an author who holds their
    work out as nonfiction cannot later claim, in litigation, that
    aspects of the work were actually made up and thus entitled
    to full copyright protection. Because the musical did not
    copy any protected elements of the autobiography, the panel
    concluded, there was no copyright infringement.
    COUNSEL
    Gregory H. Guillot (argued), Gregory H. Guillot P.C.,
    Dallas, Texas, for Plaintiff-Appellant.
    Daniel M. Mayeda (argued), Leopold Petrich & Smith P.C.,
    Los Angeles, California; David S. Korzenik (argued) and
    Terence P. Keegan, Miller Korzenik Sommers Rayman LLP,
    New York, New York; Maximiliano D. Couvillier III and
    Todd Kennedy, Kennedy & Couvillier PLLC, Las Vegas,
    Nevada; for Defendants-Appellees.
    David H. Friedlander, David H. Friedlander P.C., Mount
    Kisco, New York, for Amicus Curiae Dramatists Legal
    Defense Fund.
    OPINION
    BERZON, Circuit Judge:
    The musical Jersey Boys depicts the history of a popular
    musical quartet, the Four Seasons (“the Band”), from its
    origins in Belleville, New Jersey, in the 1950s, to the Band’s
    induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1990. Four
    Seasons hits such as “Walk Like a Man,” “Big Girls Don’t
    4                   CORBELLO V. VALLI
    Cry,” and “Sherry” accompany the play’s dialogue,
    recreating the Band’s musical legacy on stage. Jersey Boys
    (“the Play”) debuted on Broadway in 2005 and ran for over
    ten years, toured the country repeatedly, and was adapted as
    a movie in 2014.
    In the late 1980s, Band member Tommy DeVito
    partnered with Rex Woodard to write a book telling “the
    whole story” of The Four Seasons. The result of this
    partnership was an autobiography of DeVito (“the Work”),
    ghostwritten by Woodard and completed before the Play was
    developed.
    Our question is whether Four Seasons front man Frankie
    Valli and other defendants associated with Jersey Boys
    infringed Woodard’s copyright in the autobiography, now
    owned by Donna Corbello, Woodard’s surviving wife. After
    many years of litigation, including several summary
    judgment orders, one previous appeal, and a trial, the district
    court granted judgment as a matter of law (“JMOL”) on the
    basis that much of the alleged infringement concerned
    unprotected elements of the Work, and that any infringement
    of protected elements was fair use. We affirm on the sole
    ground that Jersey Boys did not infringe DeVito’s
    biography, and so do not reach the district court’s fair use
    rationale.
    Our decision rests primarily on “the unremarkable
    proposition that facts, in and of themselves, may not be form
    [sic] the basis for a copyright claim.” 1 Nimmer on
    Copyright § 2.11(A). Although books generally contain the
    author’s creative expression, protectable by copyright, a
    nonfiction biography like the work in this case is necessarily
    structured around historical facts and events, not themselves
    copyrightable. See Harper & Row, Publishers, Inc. v. Nation
    Enters., 
    471 U.S. 539
    , 547 (1985).
    CORBELLO V. VALLI                      5
    On close examination, each of the alleged similarities
    between the Play and the Work are based on historical facts,
    common phrases and scenes-a-faire (scenes that are
    “indispensable, or at least standard, in the treatment of a
    given idea,” Apple Computer, Inc. v. Microsoft Corp., 
    35 F.3d 1435
    , 1444 (9th Cir. 1994) (internal alteration and
    quotation marks omitted)), or elements that were treated as
    facts in the Work and are thus unprotected by copyright,
    even though now challenged as fictional. Neither Valli nor
    the other defendants violated Corbello’s copyright by
    depicting in the Play events in their own lives that are also
    documented in the Work. Because the Play did not copy any
    protected elements of the Work, we conclude, there was no
    copyright infringement.
    I. Background
    A. Factual History
    Rex Woodard was an attorney, a writer, and a devoted
    Four Seasons fan. In 1988, Woodard agreed to ghostwrite
    the autobiography of Tommy DeVito, one of the original
    members of the Four Seasons, and to share equally in any
    profits arising from the book. Woodard completed the
    autobiography in early 1991, but he and DeVito were unable
    to find a publisher before Woodard’s death that same year.
    Woodard’s widow, Donna Corbello, is the successor to
    Woodard’s interest in the Work. Corbello and Woodard’s
    sister Cindy Ceen continued the search for a publisher after
    Woodard’s death, still without success.
    The Work reads as a straightforward historical account
    and is presented as an autobiography, with DeVito listed as
    a co-author. At the outset of the Work, the first-person
    narrator, whom the reader understands is DeVito, describes
    the book as the “complete and truthful chronicle of the Four
    6                  CORBELLO V. VALLI
    Seasons.” The narrator contrasts the Work with assertedly
    inaccurate accounts that others had published, and notes his
    own “candor.” In addition, Woodard and Corbello both
    emphasized in letters to potential publishers that the Work
    provided a behind-the-scenes factual look at the Four
    Seasons.
    Ceen contacted DeVito in September 2005 to discuss her
    family’s continuing interest in publishing the Work. She
    noted that she and Corbello were considering self-publishing
    the Work if they could not “attract a recognized publishing
    company.” A few months later, DeVito’s attorney told Ceen
    that DeVito had concluded that the Work was “not saleable.”
    The musical Jersey Boys debuted soon after. A smash
    hit, it garnered four Tony Awards. Hopeful that the show
    could renew interest in the Band, Corbello and Ceen sought
    to confirm the registration of Woodard’s and DeVito’s
    copyright in the Work.
    The U.S. Copyright Office’s records, it turned out,
    indicated that shortly before Woodard’s death in 1991,
    DeVito had registered the Work solely under his own name.
    The copy deposited with DeVito’s copyright application was
    identical to the Work written by Woodard with two
    exceptions: the title page now excluded Woodard and
    changed the title, and a single page in Chapter 41 was
    missing. Corbello was eventually able, without DeVito’s
    cooperation, to secure recognition of Woodard as a co-
    author and co-claimant of the copyrighted Work; Corbello’s
    copyright of the work was registered in 2007.
    Around the same time, Corbello learned through news
    accounts that writers of the Play had had access to the Work
    while creating the production and that DeVito was profiting
    from the Play’s success. DeVito confirmed that he had
    CORBELLO V. VALLI                         7
    provided a copy of the Work to individuals who were
    involved with developing the Play to use in their research.
    B. Procedural History
    In 2007, Corbello sued DeVito for breach of contract and
    an equitable accounting, among other claims. The operative
    third amended complaint listed fourteen defendants—band
    members DeVito, Frankie Valli, and Bob Gaudio, as well as
    writers, directors, and producers of the Play (and related
    entities)—and twenty causes of action, including various
    forms of copyright infringement. DeVito subsequently
    settled with Corbello and is not a party to this appeal.
    The district court issued summary judgment orders that,
    taken together, adjudicated most of the claims. The court
    first declared that the Work was a joint work, that Woodard
    was a co-owner, and that Corbello, as successor-in-interest
    to her husband, had a 50 percent interest in the Work. But
    the court then entered summary judgment in favor of all
    defendants other than DeVito and one producer of the Play
    based on its interpretation of a contract between DeVito,
    Valli, and Gaudio.
    A panel of this court reversed in part. Corbello v. DeVito,
    
    777 F.3d 1058
    , 1066 (9th Cir. 2015). Corbello held that a
    material issue of fact remained regarding the construction of
    DeVito’s contract with Valli and Gaudio. 
    Id. at 1064, 1066
    .
    Concurring, Judge Sack noted that “it would vastly simplify
    matters . . . if [on remand] the district court first decided the
    defendants’ summary judgment motion arguing that Jersey
    Boys does not infringe the Work as a matter of law in any
    event, an issue which it previously avoided by granting
    summary judgment on contract grounds. That might be the
    end of the matter as far as ‘Jersey Boys’ Valli and Gaudio
    are concerned irrespective of the difficult issues that the
    8                   CORBELLO V. VALLI
    majority and we address here.” Corbello, 777 F.3d at 1073
    (Sack, J., concurring) (citations omitted).
    On remand, the district court granted summary judgment
    in part, holding that, while there was substantial similarity
    sufficient to avoid summary judgment at least with respect
    to “thin” copyright protection, most of the similarities were
    based on historical fact or ordinary phrases, and the
    similarities based on protectable material were insufficient
    to entitle the work to regular “thick” protection as a matter
    of law. That ruling had large impact on the scope of the trial
    and on the jury instructions, as explained later, infra p. 11–
    12.
    The case proceeded to trial. The jury found for Corbello
    on the contract issue, and, on the infringement claim, found
    that the Play infringed the Work, use of the Work was not
    fair use, and 10% of the success of the Play was attributable
    to infringement of the Work. The jury was not asked to
    calculate or award damages.
    After the verdict, the district court granted the
    Defendant’s motion for JMOL as to fair use, denied
    Defendant’s motion for JMOL on other grounds, and granted
    a motion for a new trial on apportionment. This appeal
    followed.
    We review the grant of judgment as matter of law de
    novo, Spencer v. Peters, 
    857 F.3d 789
    , 797 (9th Cir. 2017),
    viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the non-
    moving party, Reeves v. Sanderson Plumbing Prods., Inc.,
    
    530 U.S. 133
    , 150 (2000); Torres v. City of Los Angeles,
    
    548 F.3d 1197
    , 1205–06 (9th Cir. 2008). Grant of new trial
    under Rule 59 is reviewed for abuse of discretion. Kode v.
    Carlson, 
    596 F.3d 608
    , 612–13 (9th Cir. 2010).
    CORBELLO V. VALLI                        9
    II. Discussion
    Some basic precepts of copyright law are at play in this
    case, so we begin with fundamentals.
    “To qualify for copyright protection, a work must be
    original to the author.” Feist Publ’ns, Inc. v. Rural Tel. Serv.
    Co., 
    499 U.S. 340
    , 345 (1991) (citing Harper & Row,
    
    471 U.S. at
    547–49). A work is original if it is created by the
    author with “at least some minimal degree of creativity.” 
    Id.
    Although the “[c]reation of a nonfiction work, even a
    compilation of pure fact, entails originality,” Harper & Row,
    
    471 U.S. at 547
    , “[n]o author may copyright his ideas or the
    facts he narrates,” 
    id. at 556
    . Copyright law, in other words,
    protects authors’ original expression in their work but does
    not protect ideas and facts. 
    Id. at 547
    .
    This division as to the copyright protection accorded
    creative expression on the one hand and the lack of such
    protection for facts and ideas on the other often leads to the
    need to delineate, with respect to the copyright protection
    accorded a particular work, whether the particular claim of
    infringement concerns the protected or the unprotected
    aspects of the work. “The mere fact that a work is
    copyrighted does not mean that every element of the work
    may be protected. Originality remains the sine qua non of
    copyright; accordingly, copyright protection may extend
    only to those components of a work that are original to the
    author.” Feist Publ’ns., 
    499 U.S. at 348
    . As a result,
    “copyright does not prevent subsequent users from copying
    from a prior author’s work those constituent elements that
    are not original—for example, . . . facts.” Harper & Row,
    
    471 U.S. at 548
    .
    It is thus a feature of copyright law, not a bug or
    anomaly, that an author who deals in fact rather than fiction
    10                    CORBELLO V. VALLI
    receives incomplete copyright protection for the results of
    his labor. “The primary objective of copyright is not to
    reward the labor of authors, but ‘to promote the Progress of
    Science and useful Arts.’” Feist Publ’ns., 
    499 U.S. at 349
    (alteration omitted) (quoting U.S. Const. Art. I, § 8, cl. 8).
    “To this end, copyright assures authors the right to their
    original expression, but encourages others to build freely
    upon the ideas and information conveyed by a work.” Id. at
    349–50 (citation omitted).
    It is against this backdrop that we must evaluate
    Corbello’s claims alleging infringement of the Work, a
    nonfiction autobiography. “Proof of copyright infringement
    requires [a plaintiff] to show: (1) that he owns a valid
    copyright . . . ; 1 and (2) that [the defendant] copied protected
    aspects of the work.” Skidmore v. Led Zeppelin, 
    952 F.3d 1051
    , 1064 (9th Cir. 2020) (en banc) (citing Rentmeester v.
    Nike, Inc., 
    883 F.3d 1111
    , 1116–17 (9th Cir. 2018)).
    Only the second element is here at issue. “The second
    prong of the infringement analysis contains two separate
    components: ‘copying’ and ‘unlawful appropriation.’” 
    Id.
    (quoting Rentmeester, 883 F.3d at 1117). Copying can be
    demonstrated either through direct evidence or “by showing
    that the defendant had access to the plaintiff’s work and that
    the two works share similarities probative of copying,” while
    “the hallmark of ‘unlawful appropriation’ is that the works
    share substantial similarities.” Id.
    Similarity only as to unprotected aspects of a work does
    not result in liability for copyright infringement. See id.; see
    also Harper House, Inc. v. Thomas Nelson, Inc., 
    889 F.2d 1
    Defendants do not dispute that Corbello is a joint owner of the
    Work.
    CORBELLO V. VALLI                       11
    197, 207–08 (9th Cir. 1989). So, “[t]o determine whether
    similarities result from unprotectable expression, analytic
    dissection of similarities may be performed. If this
    demonstrates that all similarities in expression arise from use
    of common ideas, then no substantial similarity can be
    found.” Data E. USA, Inc. v. Epyx, Inc., 
    862 F.2d 204
    , 208
    (9th Cir. 1988) (citing Aliotti v. R. Dakin & Co., 
    831 F.2d 898
    , 901 (9th Cir. 1987)).
    The parties’ central disagreements in this case are
    whether the Play is substantially similar to the Work and
    whether the defendants copied any protectable portions of
    the Work. “The substantial-similarity test contains an
    extrinsic and intrinsic component.” Funky Films, Inc. v.
    Time Warner Ent. Co., L.P., 
    462 F.3d 1072
    , 1077 (9th Cir.
    2006), overruled on other grounds by Skidmore, 
    952 F.3d 1051
    . The extrinsic test requires a three-step analysis: (1) the
    plaintiff identifies similarities between the copyrighted work
    and the accused work; (2) of those similarities, the court
    disregards any that are based on unprotectable material or
    authorized use; and (3) the court must determine the scope
    of protection (“thick” or “thin”) to which the remainder is
    entitled “as a whole.” Apple Computer, 
    35 F.3d at 1443
    (referring to what we here call “thick” protection as “broad”
    protection). Only if the extrinsic analysis succeeds does the
    so-called “intrinsic” analysis takes place. See Funky Films,
    
    462 F.3d at 1077
    . The intrinsic test “examines an ordinary
    person’s subjective impressions of the similarities between
    two works,” and involves questions of fact determined by
    the jury under instructions as to the level of protection
    applicable. Funky Films, 
    462 F.3d at
    1077 (citing Shaw v.
    Lindheim, 
    919 F.2d 1353
    , 1360–61 (9th Cir. 1990)).
    Applying this framework, the district court, before trial,
    conducted the extrinsic analysis and granted partial
    12                       CORBELLO V. VALLI
    summary judgment for the defendants, concluding that much
    of the alleged infringement in this case involved either
    elements original to the Play or similarities between the Play
    and unprotected elements of the Work, such as “historical
    fact[s] or ordinary phrases.” Twelve alleged similarities
    between the Work and the Play survived this initial review
    and went to the jury. 2
    In its post-trial order granting JMOL for Defendants, the
    district court concluded that most of the twelve remaining
    similarities were aspects of the Work not protectable by
    copyright. The court undertook this analysis as part of its
    2
    Corbello argues that the district court improperly limited the jury’s
    consideration to twelve potentially protectable similarities, because she
    should have been able to seek protection for the original selection and
    arrangement of otherwise unprotectable elements. “We have extended
    copyright protection to ‘a combination of unprotectable elements . . .
    only if those elements are numerous enough and their selection and
    arrangement original enough that their combination constitutes an
    original work of authorship.’” Skidmore, 952 F.3d at 1074 (alteration in
    original) (quoting Satava v. Lowry, 
    323 F.3d 805
    , 811 (9th Cir. 2003)).
    “Put another way, what a selection and arrangement copyright protects
    is the particular way in which the artistic elements form a coherent
    pattern, synthesis, or design.” 
    Id.
    There is no viable arrangement and selection argument here, both
    because the unprotectable elements that appear in both the Play and the
    Work are not “numerous enough” and because, even if there were an
    original “synthesis” of those elements in the Work, it is not present in
    the Play. See 
    id.
     The selection of the true stories behind the Band’s most
    popular songs and the arrangement of those stories in roughly
    chronological order is not original, and so not protectable by copyright.
    The Work and the Play depict those historical events from different
    perspectives, with different characterizations of the people involved, in
    different media, and communicating a different overall message.
    “Without [a particular, original] arrangement, there is no liability for
    taking ‘ideas and concepts’ from the plaintiff's work, ‘even in
    combination.’” Id. at 1075 (quoting Rentmeester, 883 F.3d at 1122–23).
    CORBELLO V. VALLI                              13
    conclusion that any infringement was fair use and did not
    explicitly frame its conclusions as rulings on infringement.
    We conclude that all twelve similarities the jury
    considered were not infringing, some under an analysis
    similar to that used in the district court’s order and others
    under what some courts have referred to as the doctrine of
    copyright estoppel. 3 We discuss each category in turn.
    A. Application of the Extrinsic Test to Elements of
    the Work that Are Undisputedly Factual
    We first carefully examine whether the alleged copying
    or similarities are based on protectable elements of the
    copyrighted work. The extrinsic test for substantial
    similarity lays out a useful framework for this inquiry.
    “Extrinsic analysis is objective in nature,” and examines
    “articulable similarities between the plot, themes, dialogue,
    mood, setting, pace, characters, and sequence of events in
    the two works.” Funky Films, 
    462 F.3d at 1077
     (internal
    3
    We may affirm entirely on the ground that the Play did not infringe
    protected aspects of the Work, rather than relying at all on the district
    court’s fair use rationale, even though Defendants did not cross-appeal
    the infringement verdict. “An appellee who does not take a cross-appeal
    may ‘urge in support of a decree any matter appearing in the record,
    although his argument may involve an attack upon the reasoning of the
    lower court.’” Jennings v. Stephens, 
    135 S. Ct. 793
    , 798 (2015) (quoting
    United States v. Am. Ry. Express Co., 
    265 U.S. 425
    , 435 (1924)). The
    appellee must file a cross-appeal only if he is “attack[ing] the decree with
    a view either to enlarging his own rights thereunder or of lessening the
    rights of his adversary.” 
    Id.
     Our decision will neither enlarge
    Defendants’ rights nor lessen Corbello’s. The district court granted
    judgment in favor of Defendants. As a result of our affirmance on
    alternative grounds, it remains true that Defendants are not liable to
    Corbello, so all parties remain in the same position they were as a result
    of the district court’s judgment.
    14                   CORBELLO V. VALLI
    quotation marks omitted). “Protectable expression includes
    the specific details of an author’s rendering of ideas. . . .
    [The court] must take care to inquire only whether the
    protectable elements, standing alone, are substantially
    similar. In so doing, we filter out and disregard the non-
    protectable elements.” 
    Id.
     (citations and internal quotation
    marks omitted). Non-protectable elements include ideas;
    historical facts; common phrases; scenes-a-faire (that is,
    “situations and incidents that flow necessarily or naturally
    from a basic plot premise” or generic plot line) and
    “[f]amiliar stock scenes and themes that are staples of
    literature.” Benay v. Warner Bros. Ent., Inc., 
    607 F.3d 620
    ,
    624–25 (9th Cir. 2010) (citations omitted), overruled on
    other grounds by Skidmore, 
    952 F.3d 1051
    ; see also Narell
    v. Freeman, 
    872 F.2d 907
    , 910–11 (9th Cir. 1989).
    As the district court correctly summarized,
    [t]he Work is a work of historical fact, as
    recounted by DeVito with the assistance of
    Woodard’s writing skills. The creative
    aspects of the Work do not generally concern
    things like character, plot, and setting, but
    rather writing style and presentation. Neither
    DeVito nor Woodard created or even claimed
    to have created any characters, plot lines,
    settings, etc.
    Though the creative expression that is in the Work—the
    “writing style and presentation”—is protected by copyright,
    the assertedly historical elements are not.
    Each of the six similarities between the Play and the
    Work discussed below fails the extrinsic test for substantial
    similarity because each involves only non-protectable
    elements of the Work.
    CORBELLO V. VALLI                        15
    1. Tommy DeVito’s Introduction
    Chapter One of the Work introduces Tommy DeVito
    “hanging out on a Jersey Street Corner” with his friends,
    “puff[ing] on cigarettes and dar[ing] anyone to mess with
    [them,] . . . cool beyond belief.” At the outset of the Play, the
    DeVito character addresses the audience, his cool demeanor
    on display. Corbello alleged that this description of DeVito
    is substantially similar to the one in the Play and so
    infringing. But DeVito is not a fictional character whose
    personality was created in the Work. This depiction of
    DeVito—as Corbello’s expert put it, his “voice, cool
    demeanor, and braggadocio”—is not original to the Work,
    and so not a protectable element. See Benay, 
    607 F.3d at 627
    .
    A character based on a historical figure is not protected for
    copyright purposes. Id.
    2. Introduction of the Song “Sherry”
    Both the Play and the Work depict Bob Gaudio arriving
    late to a rehearsal excited about a new song he just wrote,
    “Sherry,” which—no surprise—became a major hit. In the
    Work, DeVito recalls that he liked the song but “didn’t think
    [they] could get away with it,” because it was “clearly
    intended for someone younger than us.” In the Play, DeVito
    says it was a “fuckin’ insult” that Gaudio arrived late “with
    some bullshit song he wrote fifteen minutes ago.” As the
    district court concluded, “[t]he dialogue is completely
    different, as is DeVito’s initial reaction to the song.” The
    only similarities are unprotectable historical facts: Gaudio
    wrote the song at the last minute, he was late to rehearsal,
    and the song was ultimately successful. See Narell, 
    872 F.2d at 912
    .
    16                     CORBELLO V. VALLI
    3. Introduction of the Song “Big Girls Don’t
    Cry”
    The Work recounts that Bob Crewe, a producer and
    songwriter who worked with the Four Seasons, was inspired
    to write the song “Big Girls Don’t Cry” after watching a
    movie in which a female character dramatically says exactly
    that—“big girls don’t cry.” In the Play, Gaudio tells the
    audience a transformed version of this story—Gaudio was
    the person who saw the movie, it was a John Payne movie,
    and Rhonda Fleming was the actress who delivered the line.
    Both the Play and the Work report that Crewe and Gaudio
    co-wrote the song. As the district court correctly concluded,
    the “only similarity is the unprotectable historical fact that
    the song was inspired by the Rhonda Fleming line.” That
    similarity does not include any protectable element of the
    Work. 4 See Narell, 
    872 F.2d at 912
    .
    4. Comparisons between the Four Seasons and
    the Beatles
    The Work states that “[i]n the Beatles we are not just
    competing against another band; the Beatles come to
    represent a whole social movement. [The Four Seasons]
    never aspire to be more than entertainers.” In the Play, the
    Gaudio character describes the competition between the
    Band and the Beatles, telling the audience,
    4
    In writing the Work, Woodard relied on notebooks he had
    assembled containing research and articles about the Four Seasons. His
    research notebooks included an article that quoted Gaudio telling this
    story. Just as Woodard, writing the Work, was able to recount historical
    events documented in another author’s work, it is not infringement for
    the writers of the Play to use the Work as a source for this historical
    event.
    CORBELLO V. VALLI                     17
    We weren’t a social movement like the
    Beatles. Our fans didn’t put flowers in their
    hair and try to levitate the Pentagon. Maybe
    they should have. Our people were the guys
    who shipped overseas . . . and their
    sweethearts. They were the factory workers,
    the truck drivers. The kids pumping gas,
    flipping burgers. The pretty girl with circles
    under her eyes behind the counter at the
    diner. They’re the ones who really got us,
    who pushed us over the top.
    The similarities between the Work’s allusions to the
    Beatles and the longer, more detailed and more evocative
    comparison in the Play are the words “social movement” and
    the unprotectable historical fact that the two music groups
    competed for record sales and chart placements. See Harper
    & Row, 
    471 U.S. at 556
    . Even if the Work was the first to
    describe the Beatles as representing a “social movement”—
    which is neither proven nor disproven in the record—this
    concept is an idea unprotectable by copyright. See 
    id.
     The
    expression of that idea could be protected if it was original
    to the Work, but use of the phrase “social movement” is all
    but inevitable in the presentation of that idea. The words
    “social movement” thus form an unprotectable common
    phrase describing an idea. “Ordinary phrases are not entitled
    to copyright protection.” Narell, 
    872 F.2d at 911
    . Grosso v.
    Miramax Film Corp., 
    383 F.3d 965
     (9th Cir.2004), for
    example, held that there was no substantial similarity where
    “the only similarities in dialogue between the two works
    come from the use of common, unprotectable poker jargon,”
    
    id. at 967
    .
    18                  CORBELLO V. VALLI
    5. Introduction of the Song “Dawn”
    The Work recounts that the Beatles had “hit the public
    consciousness like a load of bricks” when the Four Seasons
    song “Dawn” was ready for release. The Work then goes on
    to describe competition between the two bands in the
    Billboard charts, noting that “Dawn” charted third,
    “sandwiched in by the Beatles at number one, number two,
    number four and number five!”
    In the Play, Gaudio says, “Around this time, there’s a
    little dust-up called the British Invasion. Britannia is ruling
    the airwaves. So we start our own American Revolution. The
    battle begins on a Sunday night at eight o’clock, and the
    whole world is watching.” The scene shifts to historical
    footage of Ed Sullivan introducing the Band, which then
    performs “Dawn.”
    Again, it is an unprotectable historical fact that the
    Beatles and the Four Seasons generally competed for chart
    placement. That “Dawn” charted against songs by the
    Beatles is similarly an unprotectable historical fact. See
    Narell, 
    872 F.2d at 912
    . No protectable elements of the
    Work share any similarity with the “American Revolution”
    scene in the Play.
    6. Description of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
    Induction Ceremony
    Both the Play and the Work depict the Four Season’s
    induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1990. The
    Band’s members reunited at the induction ceremony and
    performed for the first time in many years. These historical
    events are not protectable by copyright. See Harper & Row,
    
    471 U.S. at 556
    ; Narell, 
    872 F.2d at 912
    .
    CORBELLO V. VALLI                       19
    In the Work, DeVito describes “reunit[ing] with Frankie
    Valli, Bob Gaudio, Nick Massi and Bob Crewe for the first
    time since 1965. I felt like I was stepping from a time
    machine.” In the play, as the Band performs, DeVito asks,
    “Is this like being in a fuckin’ time machine, or what?” The
    idea that band members performing together after many
    years apart would evoke the feeling of a time machine flows
    naturally from the plot premise of a band reuniting and is
    classic scenes-a-faire. See Cavalier v. Random House, Inc.,
    
    297 F.3d 815
    , 823 (9th Cir. 2002). And as the district court
    correctly ruled, the words “time machine” constitute an
    ordinary phrase and so is not protectable. See Narell,
    
    872 F.2d at 911
    ; Grosso, 
    383 F.3d at 967
    .
    B. Application of the Extrinsic Test to Claimed
    Fictions Represented to be Facts—So-Called
    “Copyright Estoppel”
    Other circuits, and district courts in this circuit, have
    employed a doctrine of copyright law sometimes called
    “copyright estoppel.” Under the doctrine, elements of a work
    presented as fact are treated as fact, even if the party
    claiming infringement contends that the elements are
    actually fictional. An author who holds their work out as
    nonfiction thus cannot later claim, in litigation, that aspects
    of the work were actually made up and so are entitled to full
    copyright protection. See Nash v. CBS, Inc., 
    899 F.2d 1537
    ,
    1541 (7th Cir. 1990); Hoehling v. Universal City Studios,
    Inc., 
    618 F.2d 972
    , 979 (2nd Cir. 1980); Idema v.
    Dreamworks Inc., 
    162 F. Supp. 2d 1129
    , 1183 (C.D. Cal.
    2001); Houts v. Universal City Studios, Inc., 
    603 F. Supp. 26
    , 30–31 (C.D. Cal. 1984); Lake v. Columbia Broad. Sys.,
    
    140 F. Supp. 707
    , 708–09 (S.D. Cal. 1965); Oliver v. Saint
    Germain Found., 
    41 F. Supp. 296
    , 299 (S.D. Cal. 1941).
    “Given an express representation that the work is factual, the
    20                  CORBELLO V. VALLI
    case law indicates that the author will be estopped from
    claiming fictionalization, even if most readers would not
    believe the representation.” 1 Nimmer on Copyright § 2.11.
    Claimed fictions that have been treated as facts for copyright
    purposes under this approach include a novel hypothesis
    about the cause of the Hindenburg explosion, Hoehling, 
    618 F.2d at
    978–79; a theory that John Dillinger was not killed
    by law enforcement and instead retired to the West Coast,
    Nash, 
    899 F.2d at 1538, 1541
    ; a “true crime” book with
    fantastical stories, Houts, 
    603 F. Supp. at 30
    ; and
    representations that the author was the scribe of a spiritual
    power, Oliver, 
    41 F. Supp. at 297
    .
    In legal parlance, “estoppel” encompasses various
    equitable doctrines that ordinarily include as an element
    detrimental reliance. See, e.g., Barnes v. Yahoo!, Inc.,
    
    570 F.3d 1096
    , 1099 (9th Cir. 2009), as amended (Sept. 28,
    2009); see also Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 90
    (1981). “Estoppel” is not, in our view, an apt descriptor for
    the doctrine at work here. For one thing, as the court
    correctly observed in Houts, detrimental reliance is not an
    element of this doctrine, as “the [so-called] estoppel [is]
    created solely by plaintiff’s affirmative action and
    representation that the work was factual.” 
    603 F. Supp. at 31
    .
    For another, application of estoppel concepts often suggests
    that the party against whom estoppel is applied is in some
    way culpable. See, e.g., Santa Maria v. Pac. Bell, 
    202 F.3d 1170
    , 1176 (9th Cir. 2000) (equitable estoppel looks to
    “evidence of improper purpose on the part of the
    defendant”); Russell v. Rolfs, 
    893 F.2d 1033
    , 1037 (9th Cir.
    1990) (judicial estoppel “protect[s] against a litigant playing
    ‘fast and loose with the courts’” (quoting Religious Tech.
    Ctr. v. Scott, 
    869 F.2d 1306
    , 1311 (9th Cir. 1989) (Hall, J.,
    dissenting))).
    CORBELLO V. VALLI                       21
    There are core concerns of copyright law, not equitable
    or estoppel principles, that, in our view, animate the
    misnamed “copyright estoppel” analysis. “[C]opyright . . .
    encourages others to build freely upon the ideas and
    information conveyed by a work,” Feist, 
    499 U.S. at
    349–
    50, “‘[t]o promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts,’”
    
    id. at 349
     (quoting U.S. Const. Art. I, § 8, cl. 8). It would
    hinder, not “promote the progress of science and useful arts”
    to allow a copyright owner to spring an infringement suit on
    subsequent authors who “buil[t] freely” on a work held out
    as factual, contending after the completion of the
    copyrighted work, and against the work’s own averments,
    that the purported truths were actually fictions. Id. at 350.
    Copyright protects the creative labor of authors; it does not
    protect authors’ post-completion representations about the
    lack of veracity of their own avowedly truthful work.
    We find this copyright-grounded rationale for this
    principle compelling and so adopt the doctrine. Rather than
    “copyright estoppel,” we will refer to this rule of copyright
    law as the “asserted truths” doctrine, because it is the
    author’s assertions within and concerning the work that the
    account contained in the book is truthful that trigger its
    application.
    Here, the text of the Work explicitly represents its
    account as historically accurate, not historical fiction. In the
    Work’s early pages, the DeVito narrator describes the Work
    as the “complete and truthful chronicle of the Four Seasons.”
    He promises not to allow “bitterness to taint the true story,”
    and notes his “candor.” Both Corbello’s husband and she
    herself sent potential publishers cover letters emphasizing
    that the Work provided a behind-the-scenes factual look at
    the Band, promising “disclosure[]” of “the truth about”
    several events, including the “secret past that these
    22                      CORBELLO V. VALLI
    performers successfully hid for almost three decades.”
    Consistent with those promises of truthfulness, the Work
    reads as a straightforward historical account and is presented
    as an autobiography, with DeVito listed as a co-author. So
    the Work was expressly and repeatedly held out as a factual
    account. 5
    Corbello argues strenuously that the asserted truths
    doctrine cannot apply in this case because the Work was
    never published. She argues that only representations of
    truth made to the public trigger the asserted truths doctrine,
    and that there was no representation to the public because
    the Work was unpublished.
    This suggested limitation of the asserted truths doctrine
    to published works has no basis in either the case law or the
    doctrine’s copyright law foundations. As to the case law,
    Corbello does not point to any case supporting the limitation,
    and we are not aware of any. One district court, in an
    unpublished opinion, characterized the doctrine as
    “normally applied to . . . a plaintiff who represented to the
    public that his work was factual.” Garman v. Sterling Pub.
    Co., No. C-91-0882 SBA (ENE), 
    1992 WL 12561293
    , at *3
    (N.D. Cal. Nov. 5, 1992) (emphasis added). Aside from the
    nonbinding nature of its source, this passing reference to “the
    public,” does not suggest that publication is a prerequisite to
    the application of the asserted truths doctrine; “the public”
    5
    We note that the asserted truths doctrine would not cover fictional
    works that use claims to truthfulness as a literary device, like the Orson
    Welles radio broadcast of “War of the Worlds.” See Terror by Radio,
    N.Y. Times, Nov. 1, 1938, at A22. We are not required, in this case, to
    decide what the outer limits should be of the test for whether a work’s
    representations for truthfulness are sufficient to support the application
    of this rule. We hold only that the representations here are definitely
    sufficient.
    CORBELLO V. VALLI                      23
    could include actual or intended readers of work, including
    works not mass produced for sale.
    As to the copyright origins of the doctrine, the suggested
    publication limitation appears to rest on the detrimental
    reliance and culpability concepts connected to the “estoppel”
    locution. But we have rejected both the terminology and its
    related implications as not pertinent to the asserted truths
    copyright principle as we understand it.
    Rather than treat prior publication as dispositive, we
    examine the representations made by a work, whether made
    only to a few actual readers, to future intended readers, or,
    upon publication, to the general public. In this case, again,
    the Work made unequivocal representations of truthfulness.
    The Work’s emphatic and express representations of
    truthfulness were made both to potential publishers and to
    readers of the unpublished manuscript, as well as to future
    readers of the Work if published. Those representations
    were, as described earlier, central to the manuscript’s claim
    to readers’ attention and appreciation. And the
    representations applied to the book as a whole, a
    consideration emphasized in the case law. In Houts, for
    example, the district court stressed that the book had been
    held out as completely factual, because its jacket described
    the book as containing “real life detective stories,” the book
    had the notation “N-F” for nonfiction on its spine, and the
    first page proclaimed that the book “shows that truth can be
    more brutal than fiction.” 
    603 F. Supp. at
    28–29 (emphasis
    in original). Similarly, Lake held that a plaintiff could not
    claim copyright protections for portions of a book about
    Wyatt Earp as fictionalized because the book’s preface
    promised “an accurate historical biography based on a
    factual account of Wyatt Earp’s career [that was] ‘in no part
    a mythic tale.’” 140 F. Supp. at 708.
    24                   CORBELLO V. VALLI
    Just as the court in Houts determined that “[g]iven these
    broad and inclusive representations [that the book is factual],
    the reader is compelled to conclude that the entire book is
    true,” 
    603 F. Supp. at 29
    , here the Work presents itself to the
    reader as a reliable source of factual information about the
    Four Seasons. So, when DeVito, an owner and co-author of
    the book, gave it to the Play’s writers as they researched the
    history of the Four Seasons, they had reason to view it as a
    factual source, even better than newspaper or magazine
    articles, because it was co-written by a participant in the
    events described. Whether a Work is published may inform
    how its readers perceive and evaluate any claims of
    truthfulness—for example, a reader may discount such
    claims made in an unpublished work that appears to be an
    unfinished draft, or find assertions that a book is nonfiction
    particularly compelling if the publisher has a strong
    reputation for fact-checking its publications. But publication
    alone is not dispositive of whether this doctrine applies.
    Relatedly, the asserted truths doctrine applies not only to
    the narrative but also to dialogue reproduced in a historical
    nonfiction work represented to be entirely truthful. As
    detailed above, even dubious assertions of truthfulness can
    prevent an author from later claiming that part of a work is
    fiction. See, e.g., Oliver, 
    41 F. Supp. at 297, 299
    . The
    asserted truths doctrine thus includes dialogue that an author
    has explicitly represented as being fully accurate, even if the
    author was unlikely to have recalled or been able to report
    the quotations exactly. Courts have applied the doctrine to,
    for example, dialogue surrounding the death of Pope John
    Paul, see Crane v. Poetic Prods. Ltd., 
    593 F. Supp. 2d 585
    ,
    595 (S.D.N.Y.), aff’d, 351 F. App’x 516 (2d Cir. 2009), and
    to other purportedly accurate conversations, even where the
    author “could not possibly have been present to experience”
    them, Houts, 
    603 F. Supp. at 30
    .
    CORBELLO V. VALLI                      25
    As the court observed in Houts, this dialogue corollary
    follows from “the very nature of biographical works that
    involve any historical perspective. All historical renditions
    would be deemed fictionalized under [a contrary] theory
    merely because the author was not there personally.” 
    Id.
    Requiring readers of purported nonfiction to investigate the
    accuracy of each quoted statement in a work that presents
    itself as completely true and accurate nonfiction would
    frustrate the pro-creation goals of copyright law. “To avoid
    a chilling effect on authors who contemplate tackling an
    historical issue or event, broad latitude must be granted to
    subsequent authors who make use of historical subject
    matter.” Hoehling, 
    618 F.2d at 978
    .
    There may be instances in which extensive dialogue—
    for instance, dialogue in a biography of an ancient
    politician—necessarily indicates that a work is partially
    fictional. But this is indubitably not such a case. Here, the
    Work purports to accurately document conversations in
    which its co-author, DeVito, actually participated. Because
    of the autobiographical representation that is central to the
    Work, the assertions of accuracy carry extra force, and the
    asserted truths doctrine applies to the dialogue as well as to
    the narrative.
    Each of the six similarities between the Play and the
    Work we next discuss fail the extrinsic test for substantial
    similarity because, whether or not actually factual, they
    involve—sometimes in combination with other non-
    protected features—elements of the work held out as facts
    and so not protectable.
    26                   CORBELLO V. VALLI
    1. DeVito’s Introduction of Valli to Mary and
    Mary’s Characterization
    In the Work, Valli first sees Mary Mandel, a friend of
    DeVito’s current girlfriend, while hanging out with DeVito
    at a “hotdog joint.” Valli asks DeVito about her; DeVito
    reports that Mary is several years older than Valli, has a
    daughter, and “comes from a rotten family; her two brothers
    are junkies and a lot of her people are in prison. She talks
    kind of rough herself, but she seems nice.”
    In the Play, Valli notices Mary Delgado—a composite
    character of two of Valli’s ex-wives—at a show, and DeVito
    warns him away but ultimately introduces them. Valli then
    takes Mary on a date. No dialogue is alleged to have been
    copied. The only similarity between the two accounts is the
    fact that Valli asked DeVito about a woman named Mary.
    The Work and the Play characterize Mary and her
    relationship with Valli very differently. The Work depicts
    Mary Mandel as “mean spirit[ed]” and highly critical of
    Valli, causing him to become more reserved and “quenching
    the sparkle in his eye.” The Play does not portray Mary
    Delgado negatively, although it does depict an argument
    between Valli and Mary before the couple divorces. Gaudio
    reports to the audience that Valli told the other band
    members his divorce was “for the best,” but they knew “that
    wasn’t the whole story”; Valli’s character then sings a love
    song, indicating he had loved Mary and was sad about the
    divorce.
    As the district court correctly concluded, “the Play
    copied no creative expression from the Work in relation to
    Valli’s introduction to or relationship with Mary. The Play
    used its own creative expression in telling the story of Valli’s
    interest in Mary, DeVito having warned him away, and any
    CORBELLO V. VALLI                       27
    conflict between Valli and Mary. The historical facts of these
    events are not protectable by copyright.”
    At his deposition, Valli testified that DeVito did not in
    fact introduce him to Mary Mandel, and that he couldn’t
    remember whether DeVito helped set them up. Whether
    Valli’s recollection is correct or not does not affect whether
    the Work’s version is protectable as an original creation of
    the writers. DeVito may have remembered events differently
    than Valli did, or he may have reported his memory to
    Woodard inaccurately, or he or Woodard may have invented
    the story that he introduced Valli and Mary. Any such
    inconsistency, inaccuracy, or invention does not transform
    what was represented in the Work as a completely truthful
    account into creative fiction protectable by copyright. Facts
    presented in a historical work, “whether correct or
    incorrect,” may be used by subsequent authors without
    infringing. Hoehling, 
    618 F.2d at 979
    ; see also Idema, 
    162 F. Supp. 2d at 1183
    . As the Work holds it out as true that
    DeVito talked to Valli about Mary, that asserted fact is
    unprotectable under copyright law.
    2. DeVito’s Intercession After Valli’s Arrest
    Both the Play and the Work relay a story about DeVito
    helping Valli after he was arrested. In the Work, DeVito says
    that “Frankie Valli and a kid named Lamonica get arrested
    for stealing. [Valli’s mother] calls me very worried, so I tell
    her I’ll look into it. She’s terrified Frankie will get sent
    away.” DeVito knows the probation officer writing Valli’s
    presentence report and convinces him to recommend
    probation. In the Play, DeVito promises Valli’s mother he
    will watch out for him, then pressures Valli to join DeVito
    in robbing a jewelry store. After they are caught, DeVito tells
    the judge, “Your Honor. Please. The kid didn’t know what
    28                   CORBELLO V. VALLI
    he was doing. I conned him into it.” Valli gets probation and
    DeVito goes to prison.
    The only similarities are the unprotectable historical fact
    of intervention by DeVito on Valli’s behalf and Valli’s
    probation sentence. That Valli testified at his deposition that
    neither story is accurate does not change this analysis.
    Again, if DeVito’s memory of events differs from Valli’s,
    then the account in the Work is either inconsistent with
    Valli’s, but accurate, or it is inaccurate. Either way, it is not
    protectable creative fiction. See Hoehling, 
    618 F.2d at
    978–
    79. As the Work holds it out as true that DeVito helped Valli,
    that asserted fact is not copyright protectable.
    3. The “Roman Orgy” Scene
    Both the Work and the Play depict a party the record
    label threw for the Band during their first nationwide tour.
    At the party, DeVito encourages a shy Gaudio to approach a
    girl. The Work compares the party to “a Roman orgy,” and
    describes a naïve and embarrassed Gaudio sitting on the
    ground “look[ing] like he is going to throw up.” DeVito asks,
    “‘What’re you doing? Grab a girl and have a good time.’ . . .
    [Gaudio] eventually gets up and leaves with one of the girls.
    He reminds me of a condemned man leaving for his last
    meal. I didn’t know whether it was from his youth or
    shyness, but Gaudio is definitely not in a party mood.”
    The Play takes a more graphic approach. The party scene
    is set to the song “December, 1963 (Oh, What a Night).”
    DeVito tells Gaudio to “grab some Christmas cheer,” and
    Gaudio is approached by a girl and eventually loses his
    virginity off stage, with DeVito and Massi reporting his
    progress to the audience using space travel metaphors.
    CORBELLO V. VALLI                       29
    As the district court correctly noted, that the party took
    place is an unprotectable historical event. That is also true of
    the account that Gaudio left the party with a girl. The only
    similar dialogue in the two accounts are the “grab a
    girl”/“grab some Christmas cheer” lines, which share only
    the word “grab.” This loose similarity does not involve any
    protectable elements of the Work, both because the Work
    represents as historical fact that DeVito told Gaudio to “grab
    a girl,” and because “grab a girl”—actually, “grab”—is an
    unprotectable ordinary phrase. See Narell, 
    872 F.2d at 911
    .
    4. Fake Murder in Valli’s Car
    The Work and the Play both depict an incident in which
    some men attempt to extort money from Valli after staging
    a fake murder in his car. In the Work, Valli’s car is being
    driven by a friend, and Valli and two other people are
    passengers. An argument between the two men in the front
    seat ends when the passenger says, “Well, asshole, what do
    you plan to do about it?” and the driver shoots him. A few
    days later, the driver and the other passenger ask Valli for
    money in exchange for their silence. Valli turns to DeVito,
    who contacts Ray DeCarlo, a mobster. DeCarlo says he
    knows the men, assures Valli it was a scam and that the man
    was not really killed, and arranges for Valli’s car to be
    returned to him unharmed two days later. The Play recounts
    a version of the same story, and the “victim” similarly says,
    “Yeah, asshole, what’re you gonna do about it?” before
    being shot.
    The incident itself is an unprotectable historical event,
    see Narell, 
    872 F.2d at 912
    , and Valli himself has told the
    story many times, including to the writers of the Play. The
    only similar expression is the “asshole” line. That line alone
    is unprotected by copyright because the Work holds it out as
    historically accurate dialogue. The Play may have “taken
    30                   CORBELLO V. VALLI
    facts and ordinary phrases from [the Work], but [it] has not
    taken protected expression.” Id.
    5. and 6. The Dialogue Surrounding the Song
    Title and Subject Matter of the Song
    “Walk Like a Man”
    The Work and the Play feature a similar portrayal of the
    origin of the title of the song “Walk Like a Man,” written by
    Gaudio. The Work describes the Band kidding Gaudio about
    the title but does not attribute the teasing to a specific person:
    “‘Walk Like A Man?’. As opposed to what
    — like a woman?”
    “No, no,” explains Gaudio defensively, “the
    song is directed to teenage boys who need to
    walk and talk like men.”
    “In other words, instead of like girls.”
    “No! Instead of like boys. This song is going
    to serve as an anthem for every teenage boy
    who has let some girl twist him around her
    little finger!”
    The Play features similar dialogue, but portrays DeVito as
    mocking Gaudio rather than playfully teasing him:
    TOMMY: I don’t get it.
    BOB: What don’t you get, Tommy?
    TOMMY: The title, Walk like a man. . . . As
    opposed to what — a woman?
    CORBELLO V. VALLI                      31
    BOB: It’s for boys, Tommy. Teenage boys.
    We’re telling them to act like men.
    TOMMY: Instead of like girls.
    BOB: Instead of like boys. Why are you
    doing this?
    CREWE: Look, Miss Congeniality — it’s a
    metaphor. This is an anthem for every guy
    who’s ever been twisted around a girl’s little
    finger!
    The parties do not dispute that this conversation actually
    happened, so the event itself is not protectable. They do
    dispute whether the particular language used in the Work
    was original expression, rather than a report of what was
    actually said. Corbello claims that the dialogue was
    “Woodard’s invented banter,” and thus protected
    expression. DeVito testified that he did not remember
    supplying Woodard the words “anthem” or “twisted around
    a girl’s finger.” Gaudio testified that the dialogue does
    reflect the substance and language of the actual
    conversation, and that he described the argument using these
    phrases to the writers of the Play.
    We need not resolve this factual dispute. Whether the
    dialogue accurately represents what was actually said does
    not change our analysis. The dialogue is held out by the
    Work as a historically accurate depiction of a real
    conversation. The asserted facts do not become protectable
    by copyright even if, as Corbello now claims, all or part of
    the dialogue was made up.
    32                      CORBELLO V. VALLI
    III.       Conclusion
    Given the Work’s emphatic representation that it is a
    nonfiction autobiography, the Play did not infringe on any of
    the protected expressive elements of the Work, even if the
    writers of the Play “appropriated [Woodard’s] historical
    research.” Narell, 
    872 F.2d at 911
    . As the similarities
    between the Play and the Work involve only elements of the
    Work not protected by copyright, we affirm the district
    court’s grant of JMOL. 6
    AFFIRMED.
    6
    Because we affirm, we do not reach the questions whether the
    district court erred in granting JMOL that Valli and Gaudio had not
    committed infringement, whether the district court abused its discretion
    in ordering a new trial, or whether this case should be reassigned to
    another district judge.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 17-16337

Filed Date: 9/8/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/8/2020

Authorities (25)

A. A. Hoehling v. Universal City Studios, Inc., and Michael ... , 618 F.2d 972 ( 1980 )

Jay Robert Nash v. Cbs, Inc. , 899 F.2d 1537 ( 1990 )

Kode v. Carlson , 596 F.3d 608 ( 2010 )

funky-films-inc-a-california-corporation-gwen-odonnell-v-time-warner , 462 F.3d 1072 ( 2006 )

Louis Eugene Russell v. Tom Rolfs, Superintendent , 893 F.2d 1033 ( 1990 )

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Lou Shaw Eastborne Productions, Inc. v. Richard Lindheim ... , 919 F.2d 1353 ( 1990 )

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