FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
F.B.T. PRODUCTIONS, LLC; EM2M,
LLC,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
No. 09-55817
v.
AFTERMATH RECORDS, DBA D.C. No.
2:07-cv-03314-PSG-
Aftermath Entertainment; MAN
INTERSCOPE RECORDS; UMG
RECORDING, INC.; ARY, INC.,
Defendants-Appellees.
F.B.T. PRODUCTIONS, LLC; EM2M,
LLC,
Plaintiffs-Appellants, No. 09-56069
v. D.C. No.
AFTERMATH RECORDS, DBA 2:07-cv-03314-PSG-
Aftermath Entertainment; MAN
INTERSCOPE RECORDS; UMG OPINION
RECORDING, INC.; ARY, INC.,
Defendants-Appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Central District of California
Philip S. Gutierrez, District Judge, Presiding
Argued and Submitted
July 12, 2010—Pasadena, California
Filed September 3, 2010
13399
13400 F.B.T. PRODUCTIONS v. AFTERMATH RECORDS
Before: Jerome Farris, Cynthia Holcomb Hall and
Barry G. Silverman, Circuit Judges.
Opinion by Judge Silverman
13402 F.B.T. PRODUCTIONS v. AFTERMATH RECORDS
COUNSEL
Jerome B. Falk Jr., Daniel B. Asimow, and Sara J. Eisenberg,
Howard Rice Nemerovski Canady Falk & Rabkin PC, San
Francisco, California; and Richard S. Busch, King & Ballow,
Nashville, Tennessee, for the plaintiffs-appellants.
F.B.T. PRODUCTIONS v. AFTERMATH RECORDS 13403
Glenn D. Pomerantz, Kelly M. Klaus, and Melinda E. Lem-
oine, Munger, Tolles & Olson LLP, Los Angeles, California,
for the defendants-appellees.
OPINION
SILVERMAN, Circuit Judge:
This dispute concerns the percentage of royalties due to
Plaintiffs F.B.T. Productions, LLC, and Em2M, LLC, under
their contracts with Defendant Aftermath in connection with
the recordings of Marshal B. Mathers, III, professionally
known as the rap artist Eminem.1 Specifically, F.B.T. and
Aftermath disagree on whether the contracts’ “Records Sold”
provision or “Masters Licensed” provision sets the royalty
rate for sales of Eminem’s records in the form of permanent
downloads and mastertones. Before trial, F.B.T. moved for
summary judgment that the Masters Licensed provision
unambiguously applied to permanent downloads and master-
tones. The district court denied the motion. At the close of
evidence, F.B.T. did not move for judgment as a matter of
law, and the jury returned a verdict in favor of Aftermath. On
appeal, F.B.T. reasserts that the Masters Licensed provision
unambiguously applies to permanent downloads and master-
tones. We agree that the contracts are unambiguous and that
the district court should have granted summary judgment to
F.B.T. We therefore reverse the judgment and vacate the dis-
trict court’s order awarding Aftermath its attorneys’ fees.
BACKGROUND
F.B.T. signed Eminem in 1995, gaining exclusive rights to
his recordings. In 1998, F.B.T. signed an agreement transfer-
1
This case involves multiple Plaintiffs and Defendants. For ease of ref-
erence, we refer to Plaintiffs collectively as F.B.T. and to Defendants col-
lectively as Aftermath.
13404 F.B.T. PRODUCTIONS v. AFTERMATH RECORDS
ring Eminem’s exclusive recording services to Aftermath. The
“Records Sold” provision of that agreement provides that
F.B.T. is to receive between 12% and 20% of the adjusted
retail price of all “full price records sold in the United States
. . . through normal retail channels.” The agreement further
provides that “[n]otwithstanding the foregoing,” F.B.T. is to
receive 50% of Aftermath’s net receipts “[o]n masters
licensed by us . . . to others for their manufacture and sale of
records or for any other uses.” The parties refer to this provi-
sion as the “Masters Licensed” provision. The contract
defines “master” as a “recording of sound, without or with
visual images, which is used or useful in the recording, pro-
duction or manufacture of records.” The agreement does not
contain a definition of the terms “licensed” or “normal retail
channels.”
In 2002, Aftermath’s parent company, Defendant UMG
Recordings, Inc., concluded an agreement with Apple Com-
puter, Inc., that enabled UMG’s sound recordings, including
the Eminem masters, to be sold through Apple’s iTunes store
as permanent downloads. Permanent downloads are digital
copies of recordings that, once downloaded over the Internet,
remain on an end-user’s computer or other device until
deleted. The contract between UMG and Apple is but one
example of the many agreements that Aftermath has con-
cluded to sell sound recordings in digital formats since
approximately 2001. Since 2003, Aftermath has also con-
cluded contracts with major cellular telephone network carri-
ers to sell sound recordings as mastertones, which are short
clips of songs that can be purchased by users to signal incom-
ing calls, popularly known as ringtones.
In 2003, F.B.T. and Aftermath entered into a new agree-
ment that terminated the 1998 agreement. The 2003 agree-
ment increased some royalty rates, but incorporated the
wording of the Records Sold and Masters Licensed provisions
from the 1998 agreement. In 2004, the parties amended the
agreement to provide that “Sales of Albums by way of perma-
F.B.T. PRODUCTIONS v. AFTERMATH RECORDS 13405
nent download shall be treated as [U.S. Normal Retail Chan-
nel] Net Sales for the purposes of escalations.” Escalations are
increases in the royalty rate when total album sales surpass
certain targets. The amendment further provides, “Except as
specifically modified herein, the Agreement shall be unaf-
fected and remain in full force and effect.”
F.B.T. brought suit after a 2006 audit showed that After-
math had been applying the Records Sold provision to calcu-
late the royalties due to F.B.T. for sales of Eminem’s
recordings in the form of permanent downloads and master-
tones. Before trial, F.B.T. moved for summary judgment that
the Masters Licensed provision unambiguously applied to
those sales. Aftermath cross-moved for summary judgment. It
argued, in part, that the 2004 amendment showed that the par-
ties intended the Records Sold provision to apply to perma-
nent downloads.
After provisionally reviewing the undisputed extrinsic evi-
dence, the district court concluded that the agreements were
reasonably susceptible to either party’s interpretation and
denied both motions for summary judgment. At trial, only
Aftermath moved for judgment as a matter of law at the close
of the evidence. The court denied the motion. The jury
returned a verdict in favor of Aftermath, and the district court
awarded Aftermath its attorneys’ fees of over $2.4 million.
F.B.T. timely appealed the district court’s final judgment and
award of attorneys’ fees. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28
U.S.C. § 1291 and we reverse.
DISCUSSION
I. F.B.T. Is Not Precluded from Arguing that the Masters
Licensed Provision Unambiguously Applies to Perma-
nent Downloads and Mastertones.
[1] F.B.T. did not file a pre-verdict motion for judgment as
a matter of law pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure
13406 F.B.T. PRODUCTIONS v. AFTERMATH RECORDS
50, so it has not preserved “a challenge to the sufficiency of
the evidence to support the verdict” in this case. Nitco Hold-
ing Corp. v. Boujikian, 491 F.3d 1086, 1089 (9th Cir. 2007).
However, F.B.T.’s argument that the contracts are unambigu-
ous raises an issue of law that does not rest on the sufficiency
of the evidence to support the jury’s verdict. See Wolf v. Supe-
rior Court, 8 Cal. Rptr. 3d 649, 656 (Ct. App. 2004) (“The
trial court’s determination of whether an ambiguity exists is
a question of law, subject to independent review on appeal.”).
F.B.T. therefore did not have to present that argument in a
motion for judgment as a matter of law. Rather, F.B.T. had to
raise the argument at some point before the judge submitted
the case to the jury, which it did. See Cochran v. City of L.A.,
222 F.3d 1195, 1200 (9th Cir. 2000) (holding that an issue of
law that “does not concern the sufficiency of the evidence
presented to the jury” need not be raised in a motion for judg-
ment as a matter of law to preserve the issue for appeal);
Landes Constr. Co. v. Royal Bank of Can., 833 F.2d 1365,
1370 (9th Cir. 1987) (“As long as a party properly raises an
issue of law before the case goes to the jury, it need not
include the issue in a motion for a directed verdict in order to
preserve the question on appeal.”).
F.B.T. argued that the contract was unambiguous in its
motion for summary judgment, and the district court denied
the motion. A district court’s denial of summary judgment is
subject to review on appeal, despite full trial on the merits,
“where the district court made an error of law that, if not
made, would have required the district court to grant the
motion.” Banuelos v. Constr. Laborers’ Trust Funds for S.
Cal., 382 F.3d 897, 902 (9th Cir. 2004) (citing Pavon v. Swift
Transp. Co., Inc., 192 F.3d 902, 906 (9th Cir. 1999)). For
example, in Wilson Arlington Co. v. Prudential Insurance
Co., 912 F.2d 366, 370-71 (9th Cir. 1990), we reversed the
denial of a summary judgment motion after a jury trial
because the contract in question was unambiguous as a matter
of law. Accord King v. PA Consulting Group, Inc., 485 F.3d
577, 589 (10th Cir. 2007) (holding that despite the absence of
F.B.T. PRODUCTIONS v. AFTERMATH RECORDS 13407
a motion for judgment as a matter of law, “King adequately
preserved the purely legal question of whether the Agreement
is ambiguous by raising the matter in his trial brief”); Chemet-
all GMBH v. ZR Energy, Inc., 320 F.3d 714, 718-20 (7th Cir.
2003) (reviewing a district court’s conclusion on summary
judgment that a contract was ambiguous despite the absence
of a motion for judgment as a matter of law at trial); White
Consol. Indus., Inc. v. McGill Mfg. Co., 165 F.3d 1185,
1189-90 (8th Cir. 1999) (same).
Just as in Wilson, we may review the district court’s deter-
mination that the contracts in this case are ambiguous. Under
California law, “[t]he language of a contract is to govern its
interpretation, if the language is clear and explicit, and does
not involve an absurdity.” Cal. Civ. Code § 1638. Parol evi-
dence is properly admitted to construe a contract only when
its language is ambiguous.
The decision whether to admit parol evidence
involves a two-step process. First, the court provi-
sionally receives (without actually admitting) all
credible evidence concerning the parties’ intentions
to determine “ambiguity,” i.e., whether the language
is “reasonably susceptible” to the interpretation
urged by a party. If in light of the extrinsic evidence
the court decides the language is “reasonably suscep-
tible” to the interpretation urged, the extrinsic evi-
dence is then admitted to aid in the second step—
interpreting the contract.
Winet v. Price, 6 Cal. Rptr. 2d 554, 557 (Ct. App. 1992).
Despite the trial court’s provisional review of extrinsic evi-
dence, its determination of whether an ambiguity exists
remains “a question of law, subject to independent review on
appeal.” Wolf, 8 Cal. Rptr. at 656; see also City of Hope Nat’l
Med. Ctr. v. Genetech, Inc., 181 P.3d 142, 156 (Cal. 2008)
(stating that contract interpretation is a question of law for the
13408 F.B.T. PRODUCTIONS v. AFTERMATH RECORDS
court “when it is based on the words of the instrument alone
[or] when there is no conflict in the extrinsic evidence”).
[2] Here, F.B.T. moved for summary judgment that the
Masters Licensed provision unambiguously applied to perma-
nent downloads and mastertones. The district court denied
F.B.T.’s motion because it determined that the agreements
were reasonably susceptible to Aftermath’s contrary interpre-
tation that the Records Sold provision applied. That determi-
nation was on a “question of law,” Wolf, 8 Cal. Rptr. 3d at
656, that if decided in F.B.T.’s favor “would have required
the district court to grant the [summary judgment] motion,”
Banuelos, 382 F.3d at 902. We may therefore review the dis-
trict court’s denial of summary judgment despite full trial on
the merits.
II. The District Court Erred in Determining that the
Contracts Were Ambiguous.
[3] Turning to the agreements in question, the Records
Sold provision contains the royalty rate for “full price records
sold in the United States . . . through normal retail channels.”
On summary judgment, Aftermath argued that the Records
Sold provision applied because permanent downloads and
mastertones are records, and because iTunes and other digital
music providers are normal retail channels in the United
States.
[4] However, the agreements also provide that “notwith-
standing” the Records Sold provision, F.B.T. is to receive a
50% royalty on “masters licensed by [Aftermath] . . . to others
for their manufacture and sale of records or for any other
uses.” The parties’ use of the word “notwithstanding” plainly
indicates that even if a transaction arguably falls within the
scope of the Records Sold provision, F.B.T. is to receive a
50% royalty if Aftermath licenses an Eminem master to a
third party for “any” use. A contractual term is not ambiguous
just because it is broad. Here, the Masters Licensed provision
F.B.T. PRODUCTIONS v. AFTERMATH RECORDS 13409
explicitly applies to (1) masters (2) that are licensed to third
parties for the manufacture of records “or for any other uses,”
(3) “notwithstanding” the Record Sold provision. This provi-
sion is admittedly broad, but it is not unclear or ambiguous.
[5] Accordingly, to determine whether the Masters
Licensed provision applies, we must decide whether After-
math licensed the Eminem masters to third parties. Aftermath
argues that there was no evidence that it or F.B.T. used the
term “licensed” in a technical sense. See Cal. Civ. Code
§ 1644 (“The words of a contract are to be understood in their
ordinary and popular sense, rather than according to their
strict legal meaning; unless used by the parties in a technical
sense . . . .”). In the ordinary sense of the word, a license is
simply “permission to act.” WEBSTER’S THIRD NEW
INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE 1304
(2002). Aftermath did not dispute that it entered into agree-
ments that permitted iTunes, cellular phone carriers, and other
third parties to use its sound recordings to produce and sell
permanent downloads and mastertones. Those agreements
therefore qualify as licenses under Aftermath’s own proposed
construction of the term.
[6] The conclusion that Aftermath licensed the Eminem
masters to third parties also comports well with and finds
additional support in federal copyright law. When one looks
to the Copyright Act, the terms “license” and “sale” have well
differentiated meanings, and the differences between the two
play an important role in the overall structures and policies
that govern artistic rights. For example, under the language of
the Act and the Supreme Court’s interpretations, a “sale” of
a work may either be a transfer in title of an individual copy
of a work, or a sale of all exclusive intellectual property rights
in a work. See 17 U.S.C. § 109 (describing the “first sale”
doctrine); Quality King Distribs. v. L’Anza Research Int’l,
523 U.S. 135, 145 (1998) (describing the transfer of an indi-
vidual copy of a work as a sale); see also 3-10 NIMMER ON
13410 F.B.T. PRODUCTIONS v. AFTERMATH RECORDS
COPYRIGHT § 10.02 (2009) (describing a transfer of all owner-
ship in a copyright as a sale).
[7] There is no dispute that Aftermath was at all relevant
times the owner of the copyrights to the Eminem recordings
at issue in this case, having obtained those rights through the
recording contracts in exchange for specified royalty pay-
ments. Pursuant to its agreements with Apple and other third
parties, however, Aftermath did not “sell” anything to the
download distributors. The download distributors did not
obtain title to the digital files. The ownership of those files
remained with Aftermath, Aftermath reserved the right to
regain possession of the files at any time, and Aftermath
obtained recurring benefits in the form of payments based on
the volume of downloads.
Much as Section 109 describes a “sale” under the “first
sale” doctrine, various other sections of the Copyright Act
illuminate the meaning of the term “license.” For example,
section 114(f), titled “Licenses for Certain Nonexempt Trans-
missions,” describes the statutory authorization for a third
party to exercise public performance rights that otherwise
remain the exclusive rights of a copyright holder and defines
this authorization as a “license.” 17 U.S.C. § 114(f); see also
17 U.S.C. §§ 111(a), 114(d)(2). Section 115, titled “Scope of
Exclusive Rights in Nondramatic Musical Works: Compul-
sory License for Making and Distributing Phonorecords,”
refers directly to the statutory authorization for artists to exer-
cise the copyright owner’s right to make and distribute phono-
record “covers” as a license, but again makes it clear that title
remains with the copyright owner. 17 U.S.C. § 115.
[8] Under our case law interpreting and applying the Copy-
right Act, too, it is well settled that where a copyright owner
transfers a copy of copyrighted material, retains title, limits
the uses to which the material may be put, and is compensated
periodically based on the transferee’s exploitation of the
material, the transaction is a license. See, e.g., Wall Data Inc.
F.B.T. PRODUCTIONS v. AFTERMATH RECORDS 13411
v. Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Dep’t, 447 F.3d 769, 785 (9th
Cir. 2006); MAI Sys. Corp. v. Peak Computer, Inc., 991 F.2d
511 (9th Cir. 1993); United States v. Wise, 550 F.2d 1180,
1190-91 (9th Cir. 1977); Hampton v. Paramount Pictures
Corp., 279 F.2d 100, 103 (9th Cir. 1960).
It is easily gleaned from these sources of federal copyright
law that a license is an authorization by the copyright owner
to enable another party to engage in behavior that would oth-
erwise be the exclusive right of the copyright owner, but with-
out transferring title in those rights. This permission can be
granted for the copyright itself, for the physical media con-
taining the copyrighted work, or for both the copyright and
the physical media.
[9] When the facts of this case are viewed through the lens
of federal copyright law, it is all the more clear that After-
math’s agreements with the third-party download vendors are
“licenses” to use the Eminem master recordings for specific
purposes authorized thereby—i.e., to create and distribute per-
manent downloads and mastertones—in exchange for periodic
payments based on the volume of downloads, without any
transfer in title of Aftermath’s copyrights to the recordings.
Thus, federal copyright law supports and reinforces our con-
clusion that Aftermath’s agreements permitting third parties
to use its sound recordings to produce and sell permanent
downloads and mastertones are licenses.
[10] Furthermore, the sound recordings that Aftermath
provided to third parties qualify as masters. The contracts
define a “master” as a “recording of sound . . . which is used
or useful in the recording, production or manufacture of
records.” Aftermath admitted that permanent downloads and
mastertones are records. The sound recordings that Aftermath
supplied to third parties were “used or useful” in the produc-
tion of permanent downloads and mastertones, so those sound
recordings were masters. Because Aftermath permitted third
parties to use the Eminem masters to produce and sell records,
13412 F.B.T. PRODUCTIONS v. AFTERMATH RECORDS
in the form of permanent downloads and mastertones, F.B.T.
is entitled to a 50% royalty under the plain terms of the agree-
ments.
Aftermath argues that the 2004 amendment to the agree-
ments clarified that the Records Sold provision sets the roy-
alty for permanent downloads. However, the 2004
amendment states only that albums sold as permanent down-
loads are to be counted “for purposes of escalations” under
the Records Sold provision, and that “[e]xcept as specifically
modified herein, the Agreement shall be unaffected and
remain in full force and effect.” Read in context, the plain lan-
guage of the amendment provides that sales of permanent
downloads by third parties count towards escalations on the
royalty owed when Aftermath itself sells records through nor-
mal retail channels. It does not state, and in no way implies,
that the royalty rate for the sale of the permanent downloads
by third parties is set by the Records Sold provision.
Nor did any of the evidence regarding industry custom or
the parties’ course of performance support Aftermath’s inter-
pretation that the Records Sold provision applies. Aftermath’s
expert explained that the Masters Licensed provision had in
the past been applied “only to compilation records and incor-
poration into movies, TV shows, and commercials.” It was,
however, undisputed that permanent downloads and master-
tones only came into existence from 2001 to 2003. Conse-
quently, the fact that the Masters Licensed provision had
never previously been applied to those forms of licensing is
immaterial. There is no indication that the parties intended to
confine the contract to the state of the industry in 1998. To the
contrary, the contract contemplated advances in technology.
It provided that Aftermath had the right to exploit the “mas-
ters in any and all forms of media now known and hereinafter
developed.” Aftermath’s evidence of how the Masters
Licensed provision had been applied in the past therefore did
not cast doubt on its application to permanent downloads and
mastertones.
F.B.T. PRODUCTIONS v. AFTERMATH RECORDS 13413
[11] Furthermore, Aftermath renewed its agreement with
F.B.T. in 2003, by which time permanent downloads and
mastertones were coming into existence. Aftermath argued
that subsequent to renewal, F.B.T. had “never objected to
Defendants’ payment of royalties under the Records Sold pro-
vision until the auditor raised the issue in 2006.” However,
Aftermath provided no evidence that F.B.T. knowingly acqui-
esced to payment under the Records Sold provision between
2003 and 2006. It showed that F.B.T. had received statements
that included royalties for permanent downloads and master-
tones, but it was uncontroverted that F.B.T. did not audit
those royalty statements until 2006. F.B.T. had no obligation
to audit the statements any earlier than it did, and it immedi-
ately raised the issue with Aftermath after the audit. Accord-
ingly, Aftermath cannot use F.B.T.’s lack of objection to
payments made before 2006 to prove how it interpreted the
agreements. See Barnhart Aircraft, Inc. v. Preston, 297 P. 20,
22 (Cal. 1931) (holding that a party’s acts can be used to con-
strue its interpretation of an agreement only where such acts
were “direct, positive and deliberate and . . . done in an
attempted compliance with the terms of the contract or agree-
ment”). The undisputed extrinsic evidence provisionally
reviewed by the district court therefore did not support After-
math’s interpretation that the Records Sold provision applies.
[12] In sum, the agreements unambiguously provide that
“notwithstanding” the Records Sold provision, Aftermath
owed F.B.T. a 50% royalty under the Masters Licensed provi-
sion for licensing the Eminem masters to third parties for any
use. It was undisputed that Aftermath permitted third parties
to use the Eminem masters to produce and sell permanent
downloads and mastertones. Neither the 2004 amendment nor
any of the parole evidence provisionally reviewed by the dis-
trict court supported Aftermath’s interpretation that the
Records Sold provision applied. Because the agreements were
unambiguous and were not reasonably susceptible to After-
math’s interpretation, the district court erred in denying
F.B.T. summary judgment.
13414 F.B.T. PRODUCTIONS v. AFTERMATH RECORDS
The judgment in favor of Aftermath is REVERSED, the
district court’s order granting Aftermath its attorneys’ fees is
VACATED, and the case is REMANDED for further pro-
ceedings consistent with this opinion.