PUBLISHED
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
FREDERICK E. BOUCHAT,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
THE BON-TON DEPARTMENT STORES,
INCORPORATED; BURLINGTON COAT
FACTORY WAREHOUSE OF MARYLAND,
INCORPORATED; BURLINGTON COAT
FACTORY WAREHOUSE OF ANNAPOLIS,
INCORPORATED; BURLINGTON COAT
FACTORY OF GAITHERSBURG,
INCORPORATED; BURLINGTON COAT
FACTORY WAREHOUSE OF SECURITY,
INCORPORATED; BURLINGTON COAT
FACTORY WAREHOUSE OF BALTIMORE, No. 03-2173
INCORPORATED; BURLINGTON COAT
FACTORY WAREHOUSE OF
REISTERTOWN, INCORPORATED;
BURLINGTON COAT FACTORY
WAREHOUSE OF COLUMBIA,
INCORPORATED; BURLINGTON COAT
FACTORY WAREHOUSE OF GREENBELT,
INCORPORATED; BURLINGTON COAT
FACTORY WAREHOUSE OF GLEN
BURNIE, INCORPORATED; BURLINGTON
COAT FACTORY WAREHOUSE OF
FREDERICK, INCORPORATED;
BURLINGTON COAT FACTORY
WAREHOUSE OF JESSUP,
2 BOUCHAT v. BON-TON DEPARTMENT STORES
INCORPORATED; BURLINGTON COAT
FACTORY WAREHOUSE OF WALDORF,
INCORPORATED; BURLINGTON COAT
FACTORY WAREHOUSE OF TOWSON,
INCORPORATED; BURLINGTON COAT
FACTORY WAREHOUSE OF CITY PLACE,
INCORPORATED; BURLINGTON COAT
FACTORY WAREHOUSE OF HUNT
VALLEY, INCORPORATED; COLLECTORS
EDGE OF TENNESSEE, INCORPORATED;
ESPN, INCORPORATED; FOTOBALL
USA, INCORPORATED; FRANK
SUSSMAN, COMPANY; GIANT FOOD
INCORPORATED; HOME BOX OFFICE OF
WARNER BROTHERS AND TIME
WARNER, INCORPORATED; NISSAN
MOTOR ACCEPTANCE CORPORATION;
STARWOOD OPERATING, INCORPORATED,
a/k/a Starwood Asset Services,
Incorporated, t/a Sheraton Hotels;
STARWOOD HOTELS & RESORTS, t/a
Sheraton Hotels; THE SPORTS
AUTHORITY, INCORPORATED; VALUE
CITY DEPARTMENT STORE; AMERICAN
GREETINGS-ACG, INCORPORATED;
STARWOOD HOTELS & RESORTS
WORLDWIDE, INCORPORATED, t/a
Sheraton Hotels,
Defendants-Appellees,
and
BOUCHAT v. BON-TON DEPARTMENT STORES 3
K-MART CORPORATION; BALFOUR
COMPANY; BORDERS GROUP;
COPELAND’S SPORT STORES; CVS;
WAL-MART ASSOCIATES,
INCORPORATED; WAL-MART STORES,
INCORPORATED; WAL-MART STORES
EAST, INCORPORATED; WAL-MART
REALTY COMPANY; TRIPP
DISTRIBUTORS, INCORPORATED; DELTA
APPAREL INCORPORATED; EASTPORT
CORPORATION; ESPN INTERNET
VENTURES, a/k/a ESPN Network,
a/k/a ESPN Internet Group; FOGDOG,
INCORPORATED; GROUP W TELEVISION,
INCORPORATED; THE MAY
DEPARTMENT STORES COMPANY, t/a
The Hecht Company; KW TEXTILES,
INCORPORATED; MAJOR LEAGUE
VACATIONS; NASCAR BANNER PLUS;
NFL SHOP; NFL STORE, a/k/a The
Best NFL Store; R. KAUFMAN
JEWELERS; NFL JEWELRY; NISSAN
AUTO RECEIVABLES CORPORATION, II;
NISSAN NORTH AMERICA,
INCORPORATED; ONEITA INDUSTRIES,
INCORPORATED; PROTEAM COM,
INCORPORATED, a/k/a Proteam.com
2000; PUMA NORTH AMERICA; RAND
MCNALLY COMPANY, a/k/a Rand
McNally & Company; ROCKY
MOUNTAIN SPORT; RITE AID
4 BOUCHAT v. BON-TON DEPARTMENT STORES
CORPORATION; ROYAL VENDORS,
INCORPORATED; SHOP AT HOME,
INCORPORATED; SONY CORPORATION;
TARGET CORPORATION; TICKET
WAREHOUSE; TKO MARKETING; TV
GUIDE, INCORPORATED; SKYMALL,
INCORPORATED; WALDEN BOOK
COMPANY, INCORPORATED; WEST
COAST NOVELTY CORPORATION;
HASBORO PROMOTIONS AND DIRECT,
INCORPORATED, t/a Starting Lineup
Collector Club; INFINITY
BROADCASTING CORPORATION, t/a
WJFK Radio, t/a WLIF Radio, a/k/a
Infinity Broadcast Corporation of
Maryland, a/k/a Infinity
Broadcasting Corporation of
Washington, D.C., a/k/a Infinity
Broadcast Corporation of
Chesapeake; RHODE ISLAND
NOVELTY; SUNTRUST BANK, a/k/a
Crestar Bank, N.A.; ONLINE SPORTS,
a/k/a OnlineSports.com;
SPORTSLINE.COM, INCORPORATED, a/k/a
Sportsline & Sportsline.com, a/k/a
Sportsline USA, Incorporated,
Defendants.
BOUCHAT v. BON-TON DEPARTMENT STORES 5
FREDERICK E. BOUCHAT,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
CHAMPION PRODUCTS, INCORPORATED;
AA WORLD CLASS EMBROIDERY
EMBELLISHMENT; ABBACUS,
INCORPORATED; ABC, INCORPORATED;
ABC SPORTS, INCORPORATED; A.D.
SUTTONS & SONS; ACCESSORY
NETWORK; ACCLAIM ENTERTAINMENT;
ACCOLADE, INCORPORATED;
ACCUDART; ADIDAS AMERICA; AERIAL
SPORTS PHOTOGRAPHY, INCORPORATED;
AMA INTERNATIONAL GROUP;
AMERICAN NEEDLE & NOVELTY,
INCORPORATED; AMINCO
INTERNATIONAL INCORPORATED;
ANDREW NOCH & ASSOCIATES; ANGEL No. 03-2174
LAKE MULTIMEDIA, INCORPORATED;
ANHEUSER-BUSCH COMPANIES, INC.;
ANSA KIDS, INCORPORATED; THE
ANTIGUA GROUP, INCORPORATED;
ANTONE’S GOURMET GIFTS; AQUARIUS
LIMITED; ATHLETIC SUPPLY OF
DALLAS; AUDREY CREATIVE TABLE
LINEN; AUTOGRAPHED BALL
COMPANY; BABY FAIR, d/b/a
BabyFair, Incorporated; BARRELL
SPORTSWEAR; BELDING SPORTS; BELL
ATLANTIC MOBILE, INCORPORATED, t/a
Bell Atlantic Corporation; BERNIE
KOSAR GREETING CARD COMPANY;
BEST COMPANY, INCORPORATED, a/k/a
Treat Entertainment; BEST
EQUIPMENT;
6 BOUCHAT v. BON-TON DEPARTMENT STORES
BEST PERSONALIZED BOOKS; BETRAS
PLASTICS; BIC CORPORATION; BIG
LEAGUE PROMOTIONS; BIKE ATHLETIC
COMPANY; BNOX, INCORPORATED;
BOND DISTRIBUTING COMPANY;
BOTTOM LINE IMAGES; BRANDON
APPAREL GROUP, INCORPORATED;
BUFFALO GAMES, INCORPORATED;
BULOVA CORPORATION; CBS
CORPORATION GROUP, d/b/a CBS
Corporation; C & I LEASING
INCORPORATED; CABLE NEWS
NETWORK, INCORPORATED; CAMBRIDGE
FOOTWEAR GROUP, LIMITED;
CAMPBELL SOUP COMPANY; CANNON
USA, INCORPORATED; CARRETTA
SPORT INCORPORATED; CASABLANCA
FAN COMPANY; CASEWORKS
INTERNATIONAL; CASTROL NORTH
AMERICA, INCORPORATED; CHAMPION
GLOVE; CHESTNUT HILL MARKET;
CHICAGOLAND PROCESSING
CORPORATION; CINCINNATI BENGALS,
INCORPORATED; CLASSIC BALLOON
CORPORATION; CLEO, INCORPORATED;
THE COCA-COLA COMPANY; COLGATE
PALMOLIVE COMPANY; COLLECTOR’S
EDGE L.P.; COLLEGE CONCEPTS;
COLOR-CLINGS, INCORPORATED, d/b/a
The Paper Magic Group,
Incorporated; COLORES
INTERNATIONAL, INCORPORATED, t/a
Division of Wincraft Incorporated;
COLUMBIA TEL-COM; COLUMBIA
TELECOMMUNICATIONS; COOPERSTOWN
BEARS LIMITED;
BOUCHAT v. BON-TON DEPARTMENT STORES 7
COORDINATED STRATEGIC ALLIANCES
INCORPORATED; CORINTHIAN,
INCORPORATED; COSTACOS BROTHERS
SPORTS; CROWN OIL & GAS
COMPANY; CROWNMARK; CSS
INDUSTRIES, INCORPORATED; CUI,
INCORPORATED, (Metallic Images);
CUSTOM CRIBBAGE, INCORPORATED;
CYBRCARD; D. GLASGOW & SONS,
INCORPORATED; DALLAS COWBOYS;
DANBY PRODUCTS, INCORPORATED;
DAY DREAM PUBLISHING; DERIVATIVE
WORKS, INCORPORATED; DICK’S
CLOTHING & SPORTING GOODS,
INCORPORATED; DIRECT IMPULSE
DESIGN; DISNEY PRESS/HYPERION
BOOKS; DIXIE SEAL & STAMP
COMPANY, INCORPORATED; DOUBLE
TREE HOTEL CORPORATION; DSJ &
ASSOCIATES; DUCK HOUSE; DYNASTY
APPAREL INDUSTRIES; E & J GALLO
WINERY; EASTMAN KODAK COMPANY;
EASTON SPORTS, INCORPORATED;
ELLER MEDIA COMPANY; EMERSON
USA; EQUITY SPORTS, d/b/a Equity
Marketing Incorporated; ERTL
COMPANY, INCORPORATED; ESPN,
INCORPORATED; ESSEX
MANUFACTURING COMPANY;
EXCLUSIVE PRO SPORTS; FABRIC
TRADITIONS, d/b/a N.T.T.,
Incorporated; FANTASMA; FIBERLOK,
INCORPORATED; FINE HOST
CORPORATION; FIT FOR SPORTS; FLEER
CORPORATION; FOOT-TEC INDUSTRIES;
8 BOUCHAT v. BON-TON DEPARTMENT STORES
FORD MOTOR COMPANY; FOSSIL,
INCORPORATED; FOSTER INDUSTRIES,
INCORPORATED; FOX ENTERTAINMENT
GROUP, INCORPORATED; FRANCO
APPAREL GROUP, INCORPORATED;
FRANKLIN SPORTS INDUSTRIES,
INCORPORATED; FREMONT DIE
CONSUMER PRODUCTS, INCORPORATED;
FRONT PAGES COMPANY; FSC
WALLCOVERINGS; GALOOB TOYS,
INCORPORATED; GARAN INCORPORATED;
GENERAL MILLS, INCORPORATED;
GENESIS DIRECT, INCORPORATED; GFG
INCORPORATED; GILL APPAREL
GROUP/CARL BANKS; GOOD STUFF
CORPORATION; GREAT AMERICAN
PRODUCTS, INCORPORATED; GRIDIRON
GOLF; GRIDIRON GROUP; GROSSMAN
CAP COMPANY INCORPORATED; H & H
FURNITURE MANUFACTURING,
INCORPORATED; HADDAD APPAREL
GROUP LIMITED; HALLMARK EMBLEMS,
INCORPORATED; HALLMARK LICENSING;
HASBRO, INCORPORATED; HASBRO TOY
COMPANY; HASBRO TOY GROUP;
HEAD GAMES; HELENE CURTIS,
INCORPORATED; HERSHEY FOOD
CORPORATION; HIGHGATE PRODUCTS
LLC; HIGHLAND MINT; HOME
INNOVATIONS; HOST APPAREL; HOT
SAUCE HARRY’S; HPI; HUNTER
MANUFACTURING GROUP; HUNTER
MEDIA; HUTCH SPORTS USA;
ICHAUWAY MILLS INCORPORATED;
IDENTITY, INCORPORATED; IDEAL RUBBER
BOUCHAT v. BON-TON DEPARTMENT STORES 9
PRODUCTS COMPANY; ILLINOY TOY,
(Candy Cargo); IMC PRODUCTS
CORPORATION; IMPRINTED PRODUCTS
CORPORATION; INDIANAPOLIS COLTS;
INNOVO GROUP INCORPORATED;
INVENTURE DISK; IRON
KNIGHTS/CHININ USA INCORPORATED;
ITS ACADEMIC; JACKSONVILLE
JAGUARS, t/a Jacksonville Jaguars,
Limited; J.D. HEALY SPECIALTIES,
INCORPORATED; J.F. SPORTS COMPANY;
J.W. ENVISIONS, d/b/a Ultimate
Vision; JAY FRANCO AND SONS,
INCORPORATED; JEFF HAMILTON;
JESTER COMPANY; JOHN F. TURNER &
COMPANY, INCORPORATED; JOHN H.
HARLAND COMPANY; JOY ATHLETIC;
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS, t/a Kansas City
Chiefs Football Club, Incorporated,
FOOTBALL CLUB, INCORPORATED;
KELLY RUSSELL STUDIOS,
INCORPORATED; KEN NORTON JR.’S
STARS & LEGENDS; KENNER
PRODUCTS; KOOL SPORT; KOOLER
KRAFT; KRAFT FOODS, INCORPORATED;
KURT S. ADLER; LA RUE
INTERNATIONAL; LEGENDS ATHLETIC;
LIGHTFOOT PHOTOGRAPHY; LIMITED
TREASURES, INCORPORATED; LOGO
ATHLETIC, INCORPORATED; LUMATEC
INDUSTRIAL; MAJESTIC ATHLETIC
WEAR, LIMITED; MBI, INCORPORATED;
MBNA AMERICA, a/k/a MBNA
Marketing Systems, Incorporated,
a/k/a MBNA Corporation, a/k/a
MBNA America Bank, NA;
10 BOUCHAT v. BON-TON DEPARTMENT STORES
MCARTHUR TOWELS, INCORPORATED;
MCKIMSON PRODUCTIONS,
INCORPORATED; THE MEAD
CORPORATION; MELTZER INDUSTRIES;
MGI USA INCORPORATED; MGWHIZ,
INCORPORATED; MIAMI DOLPHINS, t/a
Miami Dolphins, Limited; MICHAEL
ANTHONY JEWELERS, INCORPORATED;
MICROSOFT CORPORATION; MID-
ATLANTIC BOTTLING, LIMITED;
MIDWAY GAMES, INCORPORATED;
MIDWEST SWISS EMBROIDERIES
COMPANY, INCORPORATED; MIGGLE
TOYS, INCORPORATED; MILLER
BREWING COMPANY; MIND POWER;
MINE SAFETY APPLIANCES COMPANY;
MINNESOTA VIKINGS; MIRAGE,
Division of Elliot Kastle,
Incorporated; HENRY MODELL &
COMPANY, INCORPORATED, a/k/a
Modell’s Maryland, Incorporated,
a/k/a Modell’s, Incorporated;
MORETZ MILLS, INCORPORATED;
MOTION VISION; MOTOROLA,
INCORPORATED; MOUNTED MEMORIES,
INCORPORATED; MUSEUMS EDITIONS,
LIMITED; NANCO, Nancy Sales
Company; NARDI ENTERPRISES,
INCORPORATED; NATIONAL
BROADCASTING COMPANY,
INCORPORATED; NATIONAL DESIGN
CORPORATION; NATIONAL
EMBROIDERED EMBLEM, a/k/a
National Emblem, Incorporated;
BOUCHAT v. BON-TON DEPARTMENT STORES 11
NATIONAL MAT; NEW ENGLAND
PATRIOTS, t/a New England Patriots
L.P.; NEW ERA CAP COMPANY,
INCORPORATED; NEW LIFE ART,
INCORPORATED; NEW ORLEANS SAINTS,
t/a New Orleans Louisiana Saints
Limited Partnership; NEW YORK
GIANTS, t/a New York Football
Giants, Inc.; NEW YORK JETS, t/a
New York Jets Football Club,
Incorporated; NFL ENTERPRISES LP,
a/k/a NFL Enterprises Incorporated;
NFL, INCORPORATED, a/k/a National
Football League, Incorporated;
NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE,
INCORPORATED FILMS, a/k/a NFL
Films, Incorporated; NICHOLAS
SIMON COMPANY; NIKE, COMPANY;
NIKE, INCORPORATED; NORMAN JAMES
COMPANY, LIMITED, a/k/a Norman
James International Corporation;
NORTH AMERICAN BOOT COMPANY;
NTN COMMUNICATIONS,
INCORPORATED; NUTMEG MILLS, VF
Corporation; OAKLAND RAIDERS,
a/k/a The Oakland Raiders; OAKLEY,
INCORPORATED; ORANGE PRODUCTS,
INCORPORATED; OUTERSTUFF
CORPORATION, d/b/a Outerstuff,
Limited; OVERTIME SPORTS,
INCORPORATED; OXBORO OUTDOORS;
P&K PRODUCTS COMPANY,
INCORPORATED, a/k/a PK Products
Company; PACIFIC TRADING CARDS,
INCORPORATED; PAPEL/FREELANCE INC;
PAUL ARPIN VAN LINES,
INCORPORATED; PENQUIN
12 BOUCHAT v. BON-TON DEPARTMENT STORES
PRODUCTS, INCORPORATED;
PENNINSULA VENDING, INCORPORATED;
PENTAGRAM, INCORPORATED, Best
Bets; PENTECH INTERNATIONAL,
INCORPORATED; PEPSICO,
INCORPORATED; PEPSI-COLA
OPERATING COMPANY OF CHESAPEAKE
& INDIANAPOLIS; PETER DAVID,
INCORPORATED; PHILADELPHIA EAGLES,
t/a The Philadelphia Eagles Football
Club, Inc.; PHOTO FILE
INCORPORATED; PICTURE ME BOOKS;
PINE HOSIERY MILLS, INCORPORATED;
PINNACLE BRANDS, INCORPORATED;
PITTSBURGH STEELERS, t/a Pittsburgh
Steelers Sports, Incorporated; PIQUE
EMBROIDERY; PLAYOFF CORPORATION;
PLYMOUTH, INCORPORATED, d/b/a P.A.
Plymouth, Incorporated; POSITIVE
IMAGE BRACING SYSTEM; PREMIER
CONCEPTS INCORPORATED; PRO CUBE,
INCORPORATED; PRO ELITE,
INCORPORATED; PRO LOOK,
INCORPORATED; PRO MOVES
INTERNATIONAL, INCORPORATED; PRO
STARR LLC; PRO-PELLER DIV/IMC
PRODUCTS; PROCTOR & GAMBLE;
PROGRESSIVE INSURANCE, d/b/a
Progressive Casualty Insurance
Company; PROVIDENT BANK OF
MARYLAND; PSINET, d/b/a PSINet,
Incorporated; PYRAMID,
INCORPORATED, d/b/a Pyramid
Accessories, Incorporated; QUAKER
BOUCHAT v. BON-TON DEPARTMENT STORES 13
OATS COMPANY, a/k/a The Quaker
Oats Company; RACING CHAMPIONS,
INCORPORATED; RALPH MARLIN &
COMPANY, INCORPORATED; RCA
CONSUMER ELECTRONICS; REEBOK
INTERNATIONAL LIMITED; REGAL
WARE, INCORPORATED; RENAISSANCE
EDITIONS; RHODE ISLAND NOVELTY,
a/k/a Rhode Island Novelty,
Incorporated; RICO INDUSTRIES,
INCORPORATED; RIDELL INCORPORATED;
RIVAL COMPANY; ROSSMOR
INDUSTRIES; ROXBURY INDUSTRIES,
d/b/a Roxbury Industries
Corporation; RUSS BERRIE &
COMPANY, INCORPORATED; RUSSELL
ATHLETIC; RUSSELL CORPORATION;
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS, t/a Chargers
Football Company; SAN FRANCISCO
49ERS, t/a San Francisco Forty
Niners, Limited; SANCTUARY WOODS
MULTIMEDIA; SANFORD BEROL USA,
a/k/a Sanford L.P.; SARANAC GLOVE
COMPANY; SARA LEE KNIT PRODUCTS,
d/b/a Sara Lee Corporation; SASSI,
a/k/a Sassi, Incorporated;
SCHUESSLER KNITTING MILLS; SCOTT
EDITIONS; SDI TECHNOLOGIES; SEARS
ROEBUCK AND COMPANY; SEATTLE
SEAHAWKS, t/a Football Northwest
LLC; SEGA OF AMERICA,
INCORPORATED; SEVEN SONS &
COMPANY, INCORPORATED; SHAW
CREATIONS, INCORPORATED; SHIARA
HOLDINGS; SHIRT XPLOSION;
SHOEWARE; SIERRA SUN EDITIONS;
14 BOUCHAT v. BON-TON DEPARTMENT STORES
SIGNAL APPAREL COMPANY,
INCORPORATED; SIMPSON PRODUCTS;
SISKIYOU BUCKLE COMPANY; SMART
DOG PRODUCTS, d/b/a Smart Dog
Products, Incorporated; SMITHMARK
PUBLISHING, INCORPORATED; SNAP ON
TOOLS, d/b/a Snap-on Technologies,
Incorporated; SONY INTERACTIVE;
SOUTHERN MARYLAND IMPORTS,
INCORPORATED; SOUTHWEST AIRLINES;
SPORT COOK, INCORPORATED;
SPORTACULAR ART; SPORTS
ACCESSORIES; SPORTS COVERAGE;
SPORTS ILLUSTRATED MAGAZINE, a/k/a
Time Inc.; SPORTS SECTION;
SPORTSCAST; SPORTSPRO MARKETING;
SPORTSTAR; SPRINT COMMUNICATIONS
COMPANY L.P.; ST. LOUIS RAMS, t/a
St. Louis Rams Partnership;
STAPLES, INCORPORATED, d/b/a Staples
the Office Superstore, Incorporated;
STARLINE, INCORPORATED, a/k/a
Starline Novelties Incorporated;
STARTER CORPORATION; STARWAVE
CORPORATION; STERLING SPORTS,
INCORPORATED; STUFFINS,
INCORPORATED; STYLUS; SUBTLE
PERFECTION; SUGAR PLUM; SUN TIME
ENTERPRISES, INCORPORATED; SUNCAST
CORPORATION; SWISS ARMY BRANDS,
d/b/a Swiss Army Brands,
Incorporated; SWISS MAID; TABLETOP
ENTERPRISES; TAMPA BAY
BUCCANEERS; TEAM EDITIONS AUTO;
TEAM GOLF; TEAMWORKS,
INCORPORATED; TENNESSEE TITANS;
BOUCHAT v. BON-TON DEPARTMENT STORES 15
TERRISOL, d/b/a Terrisol
Corporation; TERRY MANUFACTURING;
THE BRADFORD EXCHANGE; THE
NORTHWEST COMPANY, d/b/a
Wilmington Products USA
Incorporated; THE PARTY ANIMAL,
INCORPORATED; THE PASTA SHOPPE;
THE SNACK FACTORY, INCORPORATED;
THE TOPPS COMPANY, INCORPORATED;
THE UPPER DECK COMPANY, LLC;
WALT DISNEY COMPANY,
INCORPORATED; THE WORMSER
COMPANY; THERMO-SERV,
INCORPORATED; TIME WARNER
ENTERTAINMENT COMPANY, L.P.;
TITLEIST AND FOOTJOY WORLDWIDE;
TOON ART, INCORPORATED;
TOPPERSCOT, INCORPORATED, d/b/a T.
Swanson Incorporated; TOY &
SPORT TRENDS, INCORPORATED;
TREASURE CHEST NOVELTY
CORPORATION; TRIUMPH PUBLISHING;
TULTEX CORPORATION, Logo Athletic;
TUNDRA/STANDARD KNITTING
INCORPORATED; TURBO SPORTSWEAR,
INCORPORATED, d/b/a Turbo Holding
Incorporated; TURNER NATIONAL
TELEVISION; TWENTY FOURTH AND
DEAN, INCORPORATED; TWINS
ENTERPRISES, INCORPORATED;
ULTIMATE VISION; UNIQUE PREMIUM
PRODUCTS; UNIQUE SPORTS
GENERATION; UNIVERSAL HEIGHTS,
INCORPORATED; UNIVERSAL
MARKETING ASSOCIATES,
INCORPORATED; USA GAMES; USA
LICENSED BOWS; UVEX SAFETY,
16 BOUCHAT v. BON-TON DEPARTMENT STORES
INCORPORATED; V. FRAAS, d/b/a V.
Fraas (USA) Incorporated; VERMONT
TEDDY BEAR, d/b/a The Vermont
Teddy Bear Company, Incorporated;
VF KNITWEAR, INCORPORATED;
VOYAGER EMBLEMS, INCORPORATED;
WASHINGTON REDSKINS; WATERFORD
WEDGEWOOD USA, INCORPORATED;
WELLS LAMONT; WEMCO; WHITE
ROSE COLLECTIBLES; WILLIAMS
ELECTRONIC GAMES, INCORPORATED;
WILLIAMS INDUSTRIES, INCORPORATED;
WILLOW HOISERY COMPANY,
INCORPORATED; WILSON SPORTING
GOODS, COMPANY; WINCRAFT,
INCORPORATED; WINNER DISTRIBUTING
COMPANY; WORKMAN PUBLISHING
COMPANY, INCORPORATED; XEROX
CORPORATION; ZIPPO MANUFACTURING
COMPANY; 4 SPORTS INCORPORATED;
989 STUDIOS; PEPSI-COLA
METROPOLITAN BOTTLING COMPANY,
INCORPORATED; CUSTOM EDGE,
INCORPORATED; GLOBAL RECOGNITION;
J. C. PENNEY COMPANY,
INCORPORATED; VENATOR GROUP,
INCORPORATED, t/a Champs Sports,
t/a Foot Locker, a/k/a Venator
Retail Group, Incorporated; MOUSE
PRODUCTS, INCORPORATED; B&B
HOLDINGS, INCORPORATED, d/b/a
Arizona Cardinals; AT-A-GLANCE
CORPORATION, t/a The Mead
Corporation, d/b/a At-A-Glance
BOUCHAT v. BON-TON DEPARTMENT STORES 17
Group, a subsidiary of the Mead
Corporation; THE FIVE SMITHS,
INCORPORATED, d/b/a Atlanta
Falcons; AURAFIN LLC; AUTHENTIC
IMAGES, INCORPORATED; BENTLEY
LINGERIE, INCORPORATED, a/k/a
Bentley; BUFFALO BILLS,
INCORPORATED, a/k/a Buffalo Bills;
RICHARDSON SPORTS LIMITED
PARTNERSHIP, d/b/a Carolina
Panthers; CHICAGO BEARS FOOTBALL
CLUB, INCORPORATED, a/k/a Chicago
Bears; COMMEMORATIVE BRANDS,
INCORPORATED; CROWN CRAFTS,
INCORPORATED; CROWN CENTRAL
LLC; CROWN PRO, INCORPORATED;
DENVER BRONCOS FOOTBALL CLUB,
a/k/a Denver Broncos; THE DETROIT
LIONS, INC.; BUENA VISTA BOOKS;
DREW PEARSON MARKETING,
INCORPORATED; ELECTRONIC ARTS
INCORPORATED; FLEER SKY/BOX
INTERNATIONAL, LP; FOLEY-MARTENS
COMPANY; FOR BARE FEET,
INCORPORATED; A.R.C. HOLDINGS,
LIMITED, d/b/a Fox Sports Direct; F.
SCHUMAKER & COMPANY, a/k/a
Village Wall Coverings; GENERAL
MILLS SALES, INCORPORATED; GREEN
BAY PACKERS, INCORPORATED;
HALLMARK CARDS, INCORPORATED;
CANDY CARGO; MCDONALD’S
CORPORATION; PAPEL GIFTWARE,
INCORPORATED; THE
18 BOUCHAT v. BON-TON DEPARTMENT STORES
PFALTZGRAFF COMPANY; THOMSON
CONSUMER ELECTRONICS,
INCORPORATED; TRIATIC,
INCORPORATED; KENTEX; LICENSED
LIFESTYLES, INCORPORATED, d/b/a Tag
Express; DAN RIVER INCORPORATED;
COCA-COLA ENTERPRISE, d/b/a The
Mid-Atlantic Coca-Cola Bottling
Company, d/b/a The Mid-Atlantic
Coca-Cola Bottling Company;
TIMEZONE PRODUCTS; TURNER
NETWORK TELEVISION, LP, LLP;
SBM, INCORPORATED, d/b/a
Scoreboard Memories; BACOU USA
SAFETY, INCORPORATED; PRO
FOOTBALL, INCORPORATED; NIKE
RETAIL SERVICES, INCORPORATED;
NFL PRODUCTIONS, LLC; MCMEEL
PUBLISHING, formerly known as
Andrews & McMeel; BIEDERLACK OF
AMERICA, d/b/a Cushion Craft
Andrews & McMeel; BIEDERLACK OF
AMERICA, d/b/a Cushion Craft
Biederlack Corporation; VIVENDI
UNIVERSAL GAMES, INCORPORATED,
formerly known as Cendant
Software Corporation; SIERRA
ENTERTAINMENT, INCORPORATED,
formerly known as Sierra On-Line,
Incorporated; DONRUSS PLAYOFF;
SUMMIT AMERICA TELEVISION,
INCORPORATED, formerly known as
Shop at Home Incorporated;
FOOTBALL NORTHWEST LLC;
TENNESSEE FOOTBALL, L.P.,
BOUCHAT v. BON-TON DEPARTMENT STORES 19
d/b/a Cumberland Football
Management, Incorporated; BOW
LINE FAMILY PRODUCTS, d/b/a
BowLine Family Products; CENDENT
SOFTWARE; GOLDEN GOLF; KITTRICH
CORPORATION; KR INDUSTRIES
INCORPORATED; MILTON BRADLEY,
d/b/a Hasbro, Incorporated; SIERRA
ONLINE; LIFESTYLES, INCORPORATED,
d/b/a Tag Express; TREAT
ENTERTAINMENT; VF KNITWEAR,
INCORPORATED; VILLAGE WALL
COVERINGS; XPRESS CORPORATION,
Defendants-Appellees,
and
ACTION IMAGES, INCORPORATED;
ADAMS U.S.A., INCORPORATED, d/b/a
Neuman Tackified Glove; ALLURE
HOME CREATION COMPANY,
INCORPORATED; AMERICA’S
SWEETHEART; BARON GROUP,
INCORPORATED; ALPHABET CITY
RECORDS, INCORPORATED; BIG FORK
BOOT COMPANY; BRIMMS,
INCORPORATED; DOLLY,
INCORPORATED; EVERLASTING IMAGES,
INCORPORATED; FOOT LOCKER; FOTO
FANTASY; FREMONT CONSUMER DIE;
FRUIT OF THE LOOM, LIMITED; FUJI
PHOTO FILM; FUTECH DESIGNS; G-III
APPAREL GROUP, LIMITED; GILMAN
GEAR; GLOBAL ONE DISTRIBUTION &
20 BOUCHAT v. BON-TON DEPARTMENT STORES
MERCHANDISING; GOLDEN HARVEST
POPCORN, INCORPORATED; GOTTA GO,
INCORPORATED, d/b/a Head Sokz;
HARPER COLLINS; HOUSTON HARVEST
GIFT PRODUCTS, LLC; KIMBERLY
CLARK CORPORATION; MAXIT
DESIGNS; PLAY-BY-PLAY TOYS &
NOVELTIES; PRO TEAM PLAYABLES;
SALVINO, INCORPORATED; SCORE
BOARD; SIMPLICITY MANUFACTURING;
SPORTS SPECIALTIES; TASCO SALES,
INCORPORATED; TEAM MOUSE; UNITED
PARCEL SERVICE, INCORPORATED; US
PLAYING CARD COMPANY; WARNER
BROTHERS; YORK BARBELL COMPANY,
INCORPORATED; THE BIBB COMPANY,
d/b/a Dan River Incorporated,
Defendants.
FREDERICK E. BOUCHAT,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
BALTIMORE RAVENS LIMITED No. 03-2389
PARTNERSHIP; BALTIMORE RAVENS
FOOTBALL CLUB, INCORPORATED;
BALTIMORE STADIUM COMPANY, LLC,
Defendants-Appellees.
BOUCHAT v. BON-TON DEPARTMENT STORES 21
FREDERICK E. BOUCHAT,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v. No. 04-1008
7-ELEVEN,
Defendant-Appellee.
Appeals from the United States District Court
for the District of Maryland, at Baltimore.
Marvin J. Garbis, Senior District Judge.
(CA-01-1996-1-MJG; CA-99-1576-1-MJG; CA-01-647-MJG;
CA-03-2229-MJG)
Argued: September 21, 2005
Decided: October 17, 2007
Before NIEMEYER and MICHAEL, Circuit Judges, and
WIDENER,1 Senior Circuit Judge.
Affirmed by published opinion. Judge Michael wrote the opinion in
which Judge Niemeyer joined. Judge Niemeyer wrote a separate con-
curring opinion.
COUNSEL
ARGUED: Howard J. Schulman, SCHULMAN & KAUFMAN,
L.L.C., Baltimore, Maryland, for Appellant. Robert Lloyd Raskopf,
WHITE & CASE, New York, New York, for Appellees. ON BRIEF:
George Beall, HOGAN & HARTSON, L.L.P., Baltimore, Maryland;
1
Judge Widener heard oral argument in this case but died prior to the
time the decision was filed. The decision is filed by a quorum of the
panel. 28 U.S.C. § 46(d).
22 BOUCHAT v. BON-TON DEPARTMENT STORES
Marc E. Ackerman, WHITE & CASE, New York, New York, for
Appellees.
OPINION
MICHAEL, Circuit Judge:
This is the latest in a series of appeals in copyright infringement
cases arising out of the design and use of the logo for the Baltimore
Ravens football team. In the first case, which concluded in 2004,
Frederick E. Bouchat sued the Baltimore Ravens, Inc. (the Ravens)
and National Football League Properties, Inc. (NFLP), alleging that
these defendants had copied one of his drawings in choosing a logo
for the Ravens. A jury considering liability found that the Ravens and
NFLP had infringed Bouchat’s copyright in the drawing, but a second
jury considering damages awarded none. We affirmed in each of two
appeals. In the four cases before us today, Bouchat sues several hun-
dred companies (licensees) that used the infringing logo in various
endeavors, including the production and marketing of official Ravens
merchandise. In summary judgment proceedings in these cases, the
district court held that the licensees had infringed Bouchat’s copy-
right, but denied his requests for actual or statutory damages. Bouchat
appeals the judgments, and we affirm. We conclude that the doctrine
of claim preclusion prevents Bouchat from obtaining actual damages
from the licensees and that his failure to register his copyright before
infringement began renders him ineligible for statutory damages.
I.
A.
In November 1995 the National Football League announced that
the Cleveland Browns team was moving to Baltimore. The Browns
name, however, was to be left in Cleveland, which required the relo-
cated team to select a new name. Bouchat, an amateur artist who
worked as a security guard in Baltimore, sketched several logos illus-
trating names (including the Ravens) being considered by the newly
arrived team. On December 5, 1995, Bouchat drew a logo with a
BOUCHAT v. BON-TON DEPARTMENT STORES 23
shield bearing the letter B and held by a raven (the Shield drawing).
In March 1996 the Ravens name was officially chosen, and the NFL’s
marketing arm, NFLP, hired artists to begin logo design. On April 1
or 2, 1996, Bouchat faxed his Shield drawing to the Maryland Sta-
dium Authority with a note asking the authority’s chairman to send
the drawing to the Ravens’ owner. The note said that if the Ravens
used his logo, Bouchat wanted a letter of recognition and an auto-
graphed helmet. After the Ravens had access to Bouchat’s drawing,
NFLP’s artists created a logo called the Flying B. The Flying B
depicted a winged shield bearing the letter B, and this logo bore a
remarkable resemblance to Bouchat’s Shield drawing. The Ravens
team presented the Flying B to the public for the first time in June
1996, and the team used this logo until the end of the 1998 season.
During the time the Flying B was the team logo, the NFLP licensed
it as part of a package of all NFL team logos to hundreds of manufac-
turers and retailers for use on Ravens merchandise. The team never
gave Bouchat the recognition letter or autographed helmet he had
requested. On July 25, 1996, Bouchat registered the Shield drawing
with the U.S. Copyright Office.
In May 1997 Bouchat filed a copyright infringement action against
the Ravens and NFLP in the U.S. District Court for the District of
Maryland, Bouchat v. Baltimore Ravens, Inc. (Bouchat I), No. MJG-
97-1470. He alleged that the Flying B infringed his copyright in the
Shield drawing and that the defendants had earned profits from licens-
ing the infringing work. The district court bifurcated the case into lia-
bility and damages phases. The jury in the liability phase found that
the Ravens and NFLP had infringed Bouchat’s copyright, and we
affirmed in an interlocutory appeal. Bouchat v. Baltimore Ravens,
Inc., 228 F.3d 489 (4th Cir. 2000), amended by and reh’g en banc
denied by 241 F.3d 350 (4th Cir.), cert. denied, 532 U.S. 1038 (2001).
In Bouchat I’s damages phase Bouchat sought recovery under 17
U.S.C. § 504(a)(1), which allows a copyright owner to obtain actual
damages plus any additional profits of the infringer. Bouchat claimed
no actual damages but did seek infringer profits. Before the damages
issue was submitted to the jury, the district court decided that the only
component of the defendants’ profits that could be attributed to the
infringement for § 504(b) purposes was revenue from the sale of
products bearing the Flying B. The jury then found that the defen-
24 BOUCHAT v. BON-TON DEPARTMENT STORES
dants’ income from such products "was attributable completely to fac-
tors other than the artwork of the Flying B." J.A. 388. The district
court entered judgment for the defendants on the jury’s finding that
Bouchat was entitled to no damages, and we affirmed, Bouchat v.
Baltimore Ravens Football Club, Inc., 346 F.3d 514 (4th Cir. 2003),
cert. denied, 541 U.S. 1042 (2004).
B.
In the meantime, Bouchat brought four additional actions, which
are the subject of this appeal, against several hundred "downstream
defendants" for copyright infringement: Bouchat v. Champion Prods.,
Inc., No. MJG-99-1576 (D. Md.) (Bouchat II); Bouchat v. Baltimore
Ravens Ltd. P’ship, No. MJG-01-0647 (D. Md.) (Bouchat III);
Bouchat v. K-Mart Corp., No. MJG-01-1996 (D. Md.) (Bouchat IV);
and Bouchat v. 7-Eleven, Inc., No. MJG-03-2229 (D. Md.) (Bouchat
V). Bouchat describes these downstream defendants as "NFL-related
entities . . . who utilized the infringing work in advertisements, pub-
lishers of game day magazines, broadcast and media entities which
licensed the use of the infringing logo," and makers of video games,
trading cards, and other products that displayed the Ravens’ Flying B.
Appellant’s Br. at 4-5. All of the downstream defendants used the
logo with permission from NFLP, and NFLP required all of its licens-
ees to submit proposed logo use to NFLP for approval. (Because
every downstream defendant used the logo with either direct or indi-
rect authorization from NFLP, we will refer to all of the downstream
defendants as "licensees."). The district court held these four related
cases in abeyance while it dealt with Bouchat I.
When Bouchat I concluded in the district court, litigation resumed
in Bouchat II through V with Bouchat and the licensees cross-moving
for summary judgment. The district court decided the summary judg-
ment motions in a published opinion, Bouchat v. Champion Products,
Inc., 327 F. Supp. 2d 537 (D. Md. 2003). First, the court held that
NFLP virtually represented the licensees in Bouchat I. The licensees
were accordingly bound by the Bouchat I finding that their use of the
Flying B infringed Bouchat’s copyright, and the district court granted
partial summary judgment in favor of Bouchat on the issue of liabil-
ity. Id. at 544. Second, the district court held that Bouchat was pre-
cluded from relitigating the issue of whether any of the licensees’
BOUCHAT v. BON-TON DEPARTMENT STORES 25
merchandising profits were attributable to the infringement of
Bouchat’s copyrighted work because the Bouchat I jury conclusively
resolved that claim against him. Id. at 545-46. Third, the district court
rejected Bouchat’s argument that he is entitled to an award of statu-
tory damages from each of the licensees who used the infringing Fly-
ing B. Specifically, the court ruled that the judgment in Bouchat I
precluded Bouchat from obtaining any statutory damages in the later
litigation. Id. at 549. The court reasoned in the alternative that even
if judge-made preclusion doctrines did not prohibit statutory damages,
Bouchat did not qualify for such damages because he did not register
his copyright before the infringing conduct began. Id. at 552. Based
on these determinations, the district court entered judgment in favor
of Bouchat on liability, but denied him monetary recovery in each of
the four related cases, Bouchat II, III, IV, and V. Bouchat now appeals
the judgments insofar as they deny damages. We review grants of
summary judgment de novo. Murrell v. Ocean Mecca Motel, Inc., 262
F.3d 253, 256 (4th Cir. 2001)2
II.
A copyright owner in a civil infringement action may elect one of
two types of damages: (1) actual damages and "any additional profits
of the infringer" or (2) statutory damages. 17 U.S.C. § 504(a). The
election is made "at any time before final judgment is rendered." Id.
§ 504(c)(1). Bouchat concedes that the jury verdict in Bouchat I’s
damages phase precludes him from seeking infringement profits from
the licensees in Bouchat II, IV, and V. His appeal therefore challenges
2
The defendants in Bouchat III (Baltimore Ravens Limited Partner-
ship, Baltimore Ravens Football Company, Inc., and Baltimore Stadium
Company, LLC) are all closely affiliated with Baltimore Ravens, Inc.,
one of the defendants in Bouchat I. Indeed, before Bouchat III was filed,
Baltimore Ravens, Inc. and the stadium company transferred all of their
assets to the limited partnership in exchange for partnership shares; the
football company was merged into Baltimore Ravens, Inc. and ceased to
exist. Bouchat does not explain how the district court erred in determin-
ing that the claim against Baltimore Ravens, Inc. resolved in Bouchat I
was indistinguishable from the claim against the Bouchat III defendants.
Accordingly, we affirm the grant of summary judgment in favor of the
Bouchat III defendants and eliminate that case from the remainder of our
discussion.
26 BOUCHAT v. BON-TON DEPARTMENT STORES
the district court’s determination that he is not entitled to either actual
or statutory damages against the licensees.
A.
"The copyright owner is entitled to recover the actual damages suf-
fered by him or her as a result of the infringement, and any profits of
the infringer that are attributable to the infringement and are not taken
into account in computing the actual damages." 17 U.S.C. § 504(b).
The district court, after concluding that Bouchat did not seek actual
damages, granted the licensees summary judgment foreclosing this
category of recovery in the cases before us today. Champion Prods.,
327 F. Supp. 2d at 545. The complaint in each case, however,
includes a prayer for actual damages, and at oral argument on the
summary judgment motion Bouchat contended that he is entitled to
actual damages in the form of a reasonable royalty from each
licensee. The district court therefore erred when it concluded that
Bouchat had forfeited his claim for actual damages. As a result, we
may determine whether the claim is viable. The licensees invoke the
doctrine of claim preclusion, arguing that the Bouchat I judgment —
a judgment that awarded no damages — blocks Bouchat from seeking
actual damages in Bouchat II, IV, and V. We agree.
The related doctrines of claim preclusion and issue preclusion "re-
lieve parties of the cost and vexation of multiple lawsuits, conserve
judicial resources, and, by preventing inconsistent decisions, encour-
age reliance on adjudication." Allen v. McCurry, 449 U.S. 90, 94
(1980). A subsequent claim is precluded when (1) the judgment in the
prior action was final and on the merits; (2) the parties in the two
actions are identical or in privity; and (3) the claims in the two actions
are identical. Grausz v. Englander, 321 F.3d 467, 472 (4th Cir. 2003).
The first element (a prior final judgment on the merits) is not dis-
puted. The final judgment in Bouchat I, which we affirmed on appeal,
was on the merits, and the district court was empowered to render that
judgment. The second element (identical parties or privies) is also not
disputed. Bouchat does not appeal the district court’s determination
that the Ravens and NFLP virtually represented the licensees in
Bouchat I. This determination is important to Bouchat because it
prompted the district court’s conclusion that the licensees were bound
BOUCHAT v. BON-TON DEPARTMENT STORES 27
by Bouchat I’s finding that the Ravens and NFLP infringed the copy-
right, which means that NFLP’s licensees were also infringers. Cham-
pion Prods., 327 F. Supp. 2d at 543-44. In embracing this much of
the district court’s decision, Bouchat effectively concedes that the
licensees were in privity with the Ravens and NFLP for claim preclu-
sion purposes, since virtual representation is a recognized category of
privity. See Martin v. Am. Bancorporation Ret. Plan, 407 F.3d 643,
651 (4th Cir. 2005).
Evaluation of the third element (identical claims), which is con-
tested, calls for more extended discussion. The requirement that the
claims in the first and subsequent actions be identical is met if "the
new claim arises out of the same transaction or series of transactions
as the claim resolved by the prior judgment." Meekins v. United
Transp. Union, 946 F.2d 1054, 1058 (4th Cir. 1991). We have recog-
nized that the word "transaction"
in the claim preclusion context connotes a natural grouping
or common nucleus of operative facts. Among the factors to
be considered in deciding whether the facts of the current
and prior claims are so woven together that they constitute
a single claim are their relatedness in time, space, origin, or
motivation, and whether, taken together, they form a conve-
nient unit for trial purposes.
Pittston Co. v. United States, 199 F.3d 694, 704 (4th Cir. 1999) (cita-
tions and punctuation omitted).
There are several actions here — Bouchat I on the one hand and
Bouchat II, IV, and V on the other — but there is only a single nucleus
of operative facts, satisfying the third element of claim preclusion. In
the latter actions, Bouchat II, IV, and V, Bouchat asserts claims
against the commercial users of the Ravens logo, whether they dis-
played the logo in broadcast coverage of Ravens games, produced
Ravens merchandise, or sold that merchandise to ordinary consumers.
In Bouchat I Bouchat sought to hold NFLP and the Ravens account-
able for these very same acts that infringed his copyright. The com-
plaint in Bouchat I is clear on this point. It alleged that NFLP
"licensed third parties to use the logos and trade/service marks of the
Baltimore Ravens in connection with a variety of merchandise and
28 BOUCHAT v. BON-TON DEPARTMENT STORES
promotional activities directly associated" with the Ravens. Com-
plaint at 2-3, ¶ 4, Bouchat I, No. MJG-97-1470 (D. Md. filed May 1,
1997). The Bouchat I complaint further alleged:
Since June 5, 1996, if not before, Defendants [the Ravens
and NFLP] have been reproducing, distributing, promoting
and offering for sale illegal and unauthorized copies of the
subject works in the form of Baltimore Ravens’ logos and/or
trade/service marks to promote their business enterprises
. . . . Defendants have licensed the use of the subject works
. . . to third parties for the sale and merchandising of prod-
ucts and thereby have derived profits from the use of the
subject works.
Id. at 7, ¶ 11. While Bouchat I focused on the licensor’s conduct, and
Bouchat II, IV, and V shift the focus to the licensees’ conduct, the
same violations of Bouchat’s copyright are described throughout all
of the complaints. Though the several cases before us today are
sequels in which the licensees who had only a bit part in the first
installment now take center stage, there is still only one interwoven
story.
That Bouchat did not seek actual damages in Bouchat I but now
seeks such damages from the licensees does not alter our conclusion
that the claims in Bouchat’s cases are identical. The relief Bouchat
seeks for the licensees’ commercial use of the infringing logo is
"woven together," Pittston, 199 F.3d at 704, with the relief he sought
against the Bouchat I defendants. While Bouchat’s reasons for not
presenting any evidence of actual damages and focusing on infringe-
ment profits in Bouchat I may have been perfectly sound, that is of
no moment here. Cf. Bouchat I, 346 F.3d at 527 n.1 (Widener, J., dis-
senting) (explaining why "it is likely that Bouchat’s actual damages,
if any, were nominal."). In seeking infringement profits against the
Ravens and NFLP, Bouchat asserted a right to recovery under
§ 504(a)(1), which makes the copyright infringer "liable for . . . the
copyright owner’s actual damages and any additional profits of the
infringer." 17 U.S.C. § 504(a)(1) (emphasis added). Bouchat had his
day in court on his § 504(a)(1) claim against the Ravens and NFLP
in Bouchat I, so he could not seek actual damages against them in
some later action. In Bouchat II, IV, and V he chose a new road and
BOUCHAT v. BON-TON DEPARTMENT STORES 29
elected actual damages against NFLP’s licensees. But § 504(a)(1)
links actual damages (which Bouchat never sought before) to
infringement profits (which he did seek before). Section 504(b) fur-
ther suggests that actual damages and infringer profits are related
although distinct measures of recovery. By the statute’s plain terms,
recoverable infringement profits are "any profits of the infringer that
are attributable to the infringement and are not taken into account in
computing the actual damages." Id. § 504(b) (emphasis added). In
deciding what profits the infringer must disgorge, a court must
exclude certain amounts calculated as actual damages to avoid double
counting. Robert R. Jones Assocs. v. Nino Homes, 858 F.2d 274, 281
(6th Cir. 1988); 3 Melville B. Nimmer & David Nimmer, Nimmer on
Copyright § 14.01[A] (1994). Thus, evaluation of infringement profits
must take into account the nature of any actual damages. This link
between the remedies Bouchat has sought reinforces our identification
of a "common nucleus of operative facts" in these cases.
As we have explained, Bouchat I and Bouchat II, IV, and V all arise
from a common series of transactions, so the claims are identical. The
three requirements of claim preclusion are therefore satisfied. Accord-
ingly, the district court correctly granted judgment in favor of the
licensees because Bouchat is precluded from obtaining actual dam-
ages against them.
We do not suggest that Bouchat was legally obligated to join the
licensees as defendants in the first action. In other words, we do not
create a rule of mandatory joinder, for it remains settled that a copy-
right holder may exercise discretion in suing as many co-infringers as
he chooses. Salton, Inc. v. Philips Domestic Appliances & Pers. Care,
B.V., 391 F.3d 871, 877 (7th Cir. 2004); Robbins Music Corp. v.
Alamo Music, Inc., 119 F. Supp. 29, 31 (S.D.N.Y. 1954). It is equally
well established, however, that when an injured person sues joint tort-
feasors in successive actions, preclusion principles determine the
effect of the first judgment on the later actions. Restatement (Second)
of Torts § 884 (1979). This rule invites the application of conven-
tional preclusion doctrines in Bouchat II, IV, and V because of the
relationship between NFLP and the licensees, who used the logo with
NFLP’s authorization. Each time a licensee copied the Flying B,
Bouchat’s copyright was infringed, and two parties were responsible:
the licensee who made the copy and NFLP who authorized the
30 BOUCHAT v. BON-TON DEPARTMENT STORES
licensee to copy the logo. Because NFLP and the licensee were at
fault together for the licensee’s violation, they are liable jointly and
severally for any damages the violation caused. See Salton, 391 F.3d
at 877 ("[T]he principle of joint and several liability . . . governs . . .
the federal statutory tort of copyright infringement") (citations omit-
ted). Any plaintiff who sues joint tortfeasors separately bears the risk
that an adverse determination in the first action will trigger preclusion
doctrines in a later action. Bouchat bore this risk from the time he
filed his first action, suing only the Ravens and NFLP. He made this
choice, and we have no reason to insulate him from the unfavorable
consequences.
B.
Bouchat argues in the alternative that the district court erred in
holding that he is not entitled to statutory damages. A copyright
owner may be able to choose statutory damages instead of actual
damages and infringement profits. When this option is available, the
Copyright Act allows
an award of statutory damages for all infringements
involved in the action, with respect to any one work, for
which any one infringer is liable individually, or for which
any two or more infringers are liable jointly and severally,
in a sum of not less than $750 or more than $30,000 as the
court considers just.
17 U.S.C. § 504(c)(1). Not every copyright owner is eligible to seek
statutory damages. The Act provides that "no award of statutory dam-
ages . . . as provided by section[ ] 504 . . . shall be made for (1) any
infringement of copyright in an unpublished work commenced before
the effective date of its registration." Id. § 412.
The registration requirement is important to the statutory scheme.
A person registers by filing a form with the U.S. Copyright Office.
Registration promotes orderly resolution of copyright disputes
because it creates a permanent record of the protected work, putting
the world on constructive notice of the copyright owner’s claim.
Johnson v. Jones, 149 F.3d 494, 505 (6th Cir. 1998). While the pre-
decessor statute did not allow any relief for copyright violations that
BOUCHAT v. BON-TON DEPARTMENT STORES 31
occurred before registration and publication, id., the 1976 Act
reversed that. Now
a copyright owner whose work has been infringed before
registration [is] entitled to the remedies ordinarily available
in infringement cases: an injunction on terms the court con-
siders fair, and his actual damages plus any applicable prof-
its not used as a measure of damages. However, section 412
[denies] any award of the special or ‘extraordinary’
remed[y] of statutory damages . . . where infringement of
copyright in an unpublished work began before registration.
H.R. Rep. No. 94-1476, at 158 (1976), reprinted in 1976
U.S.C.C.A.N. 5659, 5774. By making registration a precondition for
the "extraordinary remed[y]" of statutory damages, Congress sought
to motivate speedy registration. Johnson, 149 F.3d at 505.
Bouchat registered his copyright on July 25, 1996. NFLP’s
infringement began the month before, in June 1996. Consequently,
NFLP was not individually liable to Bouchat for statutory damages.
We confirmed this when we affirmed the judgment in the second
phase of Bouchat I, see 346 F.3d at 517 n.2, and the reasons were
apparent from the record. For example, the Bouchat I complaint
alleged that "[s]ince June 5, 1996, if not before, Defendants have been
reproducing, distributing, promoting and offering for sale illegal and
unauthorized copies of the subject works in the form of Baltimore
Ravens’ logos." Complaint at 7, ¶ 11, Bouchat I, No. MJG-97-1470
(D. Md. filed May 1, 1997). Bouchat’s own expert witness, after
reviewing NFLP’s documents, concluded that NFLP’s use of the logo
generated over $2.6 million in gross revenue "from June 1996 through
March 31, 1999." Bouchat I, 346 F.3d 514 (4th Cir. 2003) (No. 02-
1999), Joint Appendix at 1260. Today Bouchat argues that the date
of NFLP’s first infringement was never conclusively resolved in
Bouchat I. He now contends that his copyright was first infringed
when NFLP failed within a reasonable time to give him the auto-
graphed helmet and recognition he requested in exchange for use of
his drawing. But there has never before been any disagreement about
the fact that NFLP infringed in June 1996 when it and the Ravens first
unveiled the Flying B, and it is too late now for Bouchat to raise the
issue.
32 BOUCHAT v. BON-TON DEPARTMENT STORES
Although NFLP violated the copyright for the first time in June
1996 (when it first exhibited the Flying B to the public and authorized
Ravens merchandise), NFLP may have continued to violate the copy-
right long after July 25, 1996, when Bouchat registered. The post-
registration activities make no difference. In using the word "com-
menced," § 412(1) instructs us to trace NFLP’s infringing conduct
after registration back to NFLP’s original infringement in June 1996.
In other words, "infringement ‘commences’ for the purposes of § 412
when the first act in a series of acts constituting continuing infringe-
ment occurs." Johnson, 149 F.3d at 506. This interpretation makes
sense "because ‘it would be peculiar if not inaccurate to use the word
"commenced" to describe a single act’ rather than the first in a group
of acts." Id. (quoting Singh v. Famous Overseas, Inc., 680 F. Supp.
533, 535 (E.D.N.Y. 1988)); accord Mason v. Montgomery Data, Inc.,
967 F.2d 135, 144 (5th Cir. 1992); Johnson v. Univ. of Va., 606 F.
Supp. 321, 325 (W.D. Va. 1985). Because NFLP’s first infringement
preceded Bouchat’s registration, Bouchat could not pursue statutory
damages against NFLP.
NFLP’s battalion of licensees — not NFLP itself — are the defen-
dants in the cases before us today. Nevertheless, the district court held
that the date on which NFLP first infringed was the date on which the
infringement by the licensees commenced because NFLP approved all
of the licensees’ infringing acts. Champion Prods., 327 F. Supp. 2d
at 551-52. Bouchat argues that the correct approach would have been
to treat the date on which each individual licensee first violated
Bouchat’s copyright as the date that licensee’s infringement com-
menced under § 412(1). We disagree.
Section 412 cannot be read in isolation. That section, which defines
the registration prerequisite for statutory damages awards, must be
read in harmony with § 504, which allows statutory damages "for all
infringements involved in the action . . . for which any one infringer
is liable individually, or for which any two or more infringers are lia-
ble jointly and severally." 17 U.S.C. § 504(c)(1). An infringer is
"[a]nyone who violates any of the exclusive rights of the copyright
owner" granted by the Copyright Act. Id. § 501(a). When a licensee
copied the Flying B onto Ravens merchandise, the licensee became
an infringer. NFLP gave each licensee permission to copy, so NFLP
BOUCHAT v. BON-TON DEPARTMENT STORES 33
was also responsible for the licensee’s acts of copying, making NFLP
jointly and severally liable for the infringing acts of each licensee.
Again, in an action against NFLP as "one infringer . . . liable indi-
vidually," id. § 504(c)(1), we would trace post-registration infringing
conduct back to pre-registration conduct in violation of the same
copyright. When each licensee is paired with NFLP, the licensor-
licensee pair constitutes "two . . . infringers . . . liable jointly and sev-
erally." Id. Because the statute does not distinguish between "one
infringer . . . liable individually" and "two or more infringers . . . lia-
ble jointly and severally," id., we must treat these two categories of
infringers identically when assessing their statutory damages liability.
The statute thus subjects a licensor-licensee pair to the same tracing
rule that would apply to either one as an individually liable infringer.
Here, then, we must trace the licensee’s post-registration infringing
conduct back to NFLP’s pre-registration conduct and thereby deny
statutory damages to Bouchat.
Of course, NFLP is not a party in today’s cases, and none of the
licensees appear responsible for NFLP’s initial act of infringement
since none aided in designing the Flying B. But these factors do not
change the analysis. Section 504(c)(1) speaks of "infringers," not par-
ties. Because a statutory damages award covers "all infringements
involved in the action . . . for which" infringers are liable, id. (empha-
sis added), it is appropriate to treat the earliest date of infringement
by any participant in a line of related copyright violations as the date
of commencement. Focusing on NFLP’s conduct here is entirely logi-
cal. Once NFLP designed and licensed the Flying B logo that
infringed Bouchat’s copyright, the liability of all of NFLP’s licensees
became a foregone conclusion. Thus, we hold that a copyright owner
may not obtain statutory damages from a licensee liable jointly and
severally with a licensor when the licensor’s first infringing act
occurred before registration and was part of the same line of related
infringements that included the licensee’s offending act.
The following hypothetical illustrates our holding. Suppose that in
January 1997, several months after Bouchat registered his copyright,
a sweatshirt manufacturer, M Corp., printed a batch of Ravens
sweatshirts bearing the Flying B pursuant to an NFLP license. Pro-
duction of the sweatshirts violated Bouchat’s exclusive right to "re-
34 BOUCHAT v. BON-TON DEPARTMENT STORES
produce the copyrighted work in copies," 17 U.S.C. § 106(1), and was
thus an infringement. NFLP’s authorization of M Corp.’s use of the
Ravens logo gave rise to M Corp.’s act, making NFLP and M Corp.
jointly and severally liable for the infringement. But NFLP began
public display and commercial distribution of the offending logo
before Bouchat’s registration. As a result, "the first act in a series of
acts constituting continuing infringement," Johnson, 149 F.3d at 506,
would be the first display and distribution by NFLP in June 1996,
before Bouchat’s registration. Bouchat would be entitled in this hypo-
thetical to injunctive relief, actual damages, and infringement profits
against M Corp. and NFLP. Statutory damages, however, would not
be an option because the continuing infringement commenced before
registration.
Our holding flows from the statute’s plain language. Moreover, our
holding has the added benefit of respecting Congress’s purpose for
enacting § 412, which is to encourage speedy registration. If we
ignored this purpose and construed the Copyright Act to allow
Bouchat to obtain the "extraordinary remed[y]" of statutory damages
for acts that occurred long after he registered his copyright, we would
discourage rather than promote swift registration of creative works.
See H.R. Rep. No. 94-1476 at 158. In sum, we conclude that the dis-
trict court correctly awarded the licensees a summary judgment deny-
ing Bouchat’s claim for statutory damages.
III.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgments in Bouchat II,
III, IV, and V that deny Bouchat’s requests under the Copyright Act
for actual or statutory damages.
AFFIRMED
NIEMEYER, Circuit Judge, concurring:
I concur in the good opinion of my colleague writing for the court,
recognizing that Bouchat, in seeking to avail himself of his victory in
Bouchat I, has conceded that the downstream defendants he has
named in the related cases before us are in privity with the defendants
BOUCHAT v. BON-TON DEPARTMENT STORES 35
in Bouchat I. Therefore, the downstream defendants benefit from the
preclusive effects of Bouchat I insofar as Bouchat has pursued the
same claims against them as privies. And we now hold that he has,
because the same transaction and occurrence underlies all Bouchat’s
lawsuits.
But absent Bouchat’s concession, made for understandable strate-
gic reasons, we would face almost irresolvable issues presented by
this multi-party licensing infringement case. While the Copyright Act
addresses adequately the single infringement of a work, it is not sus-
ceptible to a straightforward application when multiple infringements
by multiple parties arise from a single work.
The Copyright Act strives to be complete and comprehensive by
creating causes of action at the subatomic level. Yet in doing so, the
Act loses focus on the bigger picture. In granting an author a separate
"exclusive right" in every reproduction, derivative preparation, distri-
bution, performance, display, and digital audio transmission of his
work, see 17 U.S.C. § 106, the Act gives the author a right to institute
an action for each infringement of each exclusive right, see id. § 501.
The enforcement rights are further sub-atomized by the Act’s defini-
tion of distribution as any sale or other transfer of ownership, rental,
lease, or lending. See id. § 106(3). And with respect to each infringe-
ment, the owner may receive actual damages or disgorgement of prof-
its or, by election made "any time before judgment, statutory damages
of not less than $750 or more than $30,000 as the court considers
just." Id. § 504. The Act provides for a separate statutory damage
award "for all infringements involved in the action, with respect to
any one work." Id. § 504(c).
Thus, when the "Village Book Store" sells a copy of a book con-
taining a photograph that infringes on a photographer’s work, the
photographer has a cause of action against the book store. And if the
photographer so elects, he may claim, in lieu of actual damages, statu-
tory damages of "not less than $750 or more than $30,000 as the court
considers just." Id. § 504(c)(1). When one million copies of the book
are sold, it appears that the photographer may elect to file separate
action after separate action against every book store every time the
store violates one of the photographer’s § 106 rights. I question
whether Congress intended conceptually to provide for an award to
36 BOUCHAT v. BON-TON DEPARTMENT STORES
the photographer of at least $750,000,000, that is, $750 for each of
the million copies sold. Regardless of the answer to that question, the
Act undoubtedly encourages multiple, separate infringement actions
because a statutory damage award is available in each action for "all
infringements involved in the action" with respect to any one work.
Id. (emphasis added); see also 4 Nimmer on Copyright § 14.04[E][2].
Relying on § 501(b) of the Act, the first book store might be able
to join the infringing book’s author, publisher, and distributor —
which certainly would include any licensees, see 17 U.S.C. § 101 —
arguing that it was bringing into "one action" "any person hav[ing] or
claim[ing] an interest in the copyright." Id. § 501(b). Opposing such
joinder, because it would potentially frustrate his effort to receive
multiple statutory awards, the photographer would assert that all of
the sellers are not "jointly and severally" liable for each other’s
infringing sales for purposes of determining statutory damages. See
id. § 504(c) (authorizing a statutory award "for all infringements
involved in the action, with respect to any one work, for which any
one infringer is liable individually, or for which any two or more
infringers are liable jointly and severally").
A crowning layer of complexity is added if the photographer files
first against the publisher and elects to seek actual damages and there-
after sues the book stores, seeking statutory damages. The Act would
seem to limit the photographer only by requiring that he make his
election of remedies in the specific action "at any time before final
judgment is rendered." See id. § 504(c). A question of claim preclu-
sion might be raised, but its application would depend on whether
there was privity among the parties. Moreover, if the book stores were
thought to be in privity with the publisher, the photographer could
simply sue each of the book stores for statutory damages before suing
the publisher for actual damages or disgorgement of profits.
Even as the Copyright Act seems to encourage claim splitting and
manipulation of the litigation process, federal judicial policy encour-
ages resolving in one action all claims arising out of a transaction or
occurrence. See, e.g., Fed. R. Civ. P. 13, 14, 18, 19, & 20.
These questions, I believe, demonstrate that the Copyright Act
pulls in tension from traditional joinder and claim preclusion policies
BOUCHAT v. BON-TON DEPARTMENT STORES 37
and tends to undermine good judicial administration aimed at effi-
ciency and justice. As a consequence, this case easily could have pre-
sented the fundamental but difficult issue whether a copyright owner
must join all related infringers — from the original copier to the
downstream licensees — in a single infringement action, or whether
he has the prerogative to proceed piecemeal against the gamut of
infringers. Today, however, we do not resolve these nettlesome issues
because of the peculiar circumstances created by Bouchat’s desire to
leverage his win in Bouchat I into a claim for statutory damages in
the cases before us now. Yet these issues will arise with increasing
frequency — especially in view of advanced technology for copying
and transmitting data, which facilitates massive infringements — and
therefore Congress should reconsider them soon to define a more
workable balance.