Edwards v. Red Farm Studio, Co.

      UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                            UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

          FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
                                FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

                               

No. 96-2192

             MARTHA EDWARDS,

           Plaintiff, Appellee,

                    v.

           RED FARM STUDIO CO.,

          Defendant, Appellant.

                               

APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

     FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND

[Hon. Ernest C. Torres, U.S. District Judge]
                                                                

                               

                  Before

           Lynch, Circuit Judge,
                                                     

Aldrich and Bownes, Senior Circuit Judges.
                                                               

                               

John D. Deacon, Jr. for appellant.
                               
Michael T.  Eskey with whom Lauren  E. Jones  and Jones Associates
                                                                              
were on brief for appellee.

                               

              March 28, 1997
                               


ALDRICH, Senior  Circuit Judge.  This  is an appeal
                                                    

by Red Farm Studio Co., a successful defendant in a copyright

infringement  case, from  the  court's denial  of  attorney's

fees.    Concededly,  fees  are  discretionary,  the  statute

reading as follows,

     In  any  civil  action   under  this
title,  the court  in its  discretion may
allow the  recovery of  full costs  by or
against any  party other than  the United
States or an officer thereof.   Except as
otherwise  provided  by  this title,  the
court   may   also  award   a  reasonable
attorney's fee to the prevailing party as
part of the costs.

17 U.S.C.    505.   The  court  did award  defendant  partial

costs.

Defendant  has  assumed  a heavy  burden,  but  not

without justification.  We reverse.

A nationwide difference  of views  on this  subject

led to the  case of Fogerty v.  Fantasy, Inc., 510  U.S. 517,
                                                         

534  (1994), where  the Court  rejected the  so-called "dual"

standard  rule.   "[P]revailing  plaintiffs [were]  generally

awarded  attorney's  fees  as   a  matter  of  course,  while

prevailing defendants  must show  that the original  suit was

frivolous  or brought in bad faith."  510 U.S. at pp. 520-21.

Rather, defendants are entitled to consideration "evenhandly"

with plaintiffs.

The Court particularly criticized Breffort v. The I
                                                                         

Had a Ball Co., 271 F. Supp. 623 (S.D.N.Y. 1967), saying, 
                          

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     That   court  concluded   that  "the
considerations prompting an award of fees
to   a   successful  plaintiff   must  of
necessity  differ from  those determining
whether   a   prevailing   defendant   is
entitled  to such  an award."   Breffort,
                                                              
271 F.  Supp., at  627.  As  support, the
court stated:   "The purpose of an  award
of  counsel  fees  to a  plaintiff  is to
deter  copyright infringement. . . .   In
the  case  of  a   prevailing  defendant,
however,  prevention  of infringement  is
obviously not  a factor; and if  an award
is  to be  made at  all, it  represents a
penalty  imposed  upon the  plaintiff for
institution of a baseless,  frivolous, or
unreasonable suit, or  one instituted  in
bad faith."   Ibid.   As we  have already
                                         
explained,  supra,  at 527,  such  is too
                                       
narrow  a view  of  the  purposes of  the
Copyright   Act   because  it   fails  to
adequately  consider  the important  role
played by copyright defendants.

510 U.S. at 532 n.18.

The  district  court  ruling  that   Fogerty  found
                                                                  

improper  was  that  the  defendant could  not  recover  fees

because  it  had  not   "demonstrated  that  the  action  was

frivolous  or was  instituted and  prosecuted in  bad faith."

Fantasy,  Inc. v.  Fogerty,  984 F.2d  1524,  1532 (9th  Cir.
                                      

1993).  The  Supreme Court  condensed this  to "frivolous  or

brought in bad faith."

In  the case  at  bar1 there  were three  pertinent

court proceedings.  On November 16, 1995, the court delivered

an oral  opinion denying plaintiff Martha  Edwards' claims of

          
                                

1.  The plaintiff also brought claims for breach of contract,
violations of the Lanham Act and unfair competition.  None of
these claims concerns us here.

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copyright  infringement  on  six out  of  eight  works.2   On

September  9, 1996, it  conducted a hearing  on cross motions

for attorneys'  fees and  sanctions.  Except  for defendant's

stating that it  was cited  in its memorandum,  there was  no

mention of  Fogerty; both  counsel argued exclusively  on the
                               

question of  unreasonableness.  The court  reserved decision.

On  September 18, it delivered  an oral decision on copyright

fees, Lanham Act fees, and Fed. R. Civ. P. 11 sanctions.

On  copyright,  our  only  issue,  the  court  gave

reasonableness little attention.  It said,

     The  Supreme  Court  in the  Fogerty
                                                               
case  identified some of the factors that
the   Court   ought   to    consider   in
determining   whether  to   exercise  its
discretion and award counsel fees.  Those
[sic], basically, there  are two  factors
that Fogerty identified.  One  is whether
                                  
the  claim  could  be   characterized  as
frivolous    and    second,   what    the
Plaintiff's motive was, whether the claim
was brought in bad faith.

This seems singular emphasis,  since Fogerty's point was that
                                                        

these  extremes  were  no  longer  the  sole  factors  to  be

considered.  510 U.S. at 534 n.19.3  The court proceeded,

          
                                

2.  Defendant,  with apologies,  conceded an  inadvertence on
the other two.  The court noted that "those claims turned out
to be a pittance."

3.  The Court listed  non-exclusive factors to  be considered
by courts in making awards of attorney's fees including,

     [F]rivolousness,         motivation,
objective  unreasonableness (both  in the
factual and legal components of the case)
and the need in  particular circumstances

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     Here  the  Defendant  relies on  the
twenty year course of dealing between the
parties to establish  that the  Defendant
acted  properly  and  that the  Plaintiff
acted unreasonably and/or in bad faith in
bringing the copyright claims.

The  district  court  then   described  plaintiff's

asserted   justification   for    bringing   suit,    namely,

ambiguities.   Ambiguities  did not  win  the case,  but they

defeated frivolousness and bad faith.

     So   in   light  of   those  things,
although [I] found  for the Defendant for
a   variety   of   reasons,    I   cannot
characterize  the  Plaintiff's  copyright
claims as  being frivolous or  brought in
bad faith.

     Therefore,  I  will  not  award  any
attorney's fees to the Defendant  for the
copyright claims.

Faced with this positive language,  plaintiff urges

us to interpret liberally, arguing that,

     Viewed  in  its proper  context, the
record  elsewhere   additionally  reveals
that while the court may have principally
articulated its conclusions at the moment
of    its    decision    in   terms    of
frivolousness,   it    used   that   term
interchangeably       with      objective
unreasonableness.

The "elsewhere,"  except in the  earlier hearing on

September 9, is not conspicuous.   Plaintiff would have  been

more   accurate   had   she   said  that   the   court   read

          
                                

to advance considerations of compensation
and deterrence.

510 U.S. at 534 n.19 (citations omitted).

                   -5-


unreasonableness in terms of frivolousness.4   But manifestly

Fogerty did not reject the dual rule in order to add a clone.
                   

We  say this  particularly  because the  court held

that an obligation  for fees was  not sparked by  plaintiff's

unilaterally  rejecting a  practice between  the  parties, as

artist  and publisher,  that plaintiff  had accepted  for two

decades; the more  especially when her rejection was based on

ambiguities  which,  in its  decision denying  liability, the

court had said  she could not rely on because  it was she who

had  created them.   This,  it seems  to us,  was inescapably

highly unreasonable, if not  frivolous.  The court overlooked

not only the  tenor of  the Fogerty opinion,  but its  above-
                                               

quoted  footnote recognizing  "the important  role played  by

copyright  defendants," --  preventing copyright  owners from

restricting  rightful publications.    It used  too strict  a

requirement,    acknowledged,     and    then    disregarded,

unreasonableness, and reached a wrong result.

          
                                

4.  For  good measure we note the  court's repetition of this
equivalency when considering plaintiff's obligation  for fees
for the Lanham Act claims (which the court granted, plaintiff
having introduced no evidence),

     The  factors  to  be considered  are
similar  to  those  applicable under  the
Copyright  Act  whether  the claims  were
frivolous or brought in bad faith.   What
it boils down to is whether the Plaintiff
acted   reasonably   in  bringing   these
claims.

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Ordinarily  we  would now  remand for  defendant to

start over.  However,  plaintiff's claim was so poor  that we

consider  it would  be an  abuse of  discretion not  to award

fees; the only question should be the amount.  We reverse and

remand  for that  purpose, cf.  Diamond Star  Bldg. Corp.  v.
                                                                     

Freed,  30 F.2d  503, 506  (4th Cir.  1994), to  the original
                 

judge.

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