FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
TIMOTHY S. VERNOR, No. 09-35969
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v. D.C. No.
2:07-cv-01189-RAJ
AUTODESK, INC.,
OPINION
Defendant-Appellant.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Western District of Washington
Richard A. Jones, District Judge, Presiding
Argued and Submitted
June 7, 2010—Seattle, Washington
Filed September 10, 2010
Before: William C. Canby, Jr., Consuelo M. Callahan and
Sandra S. Ikuta, Circuit Judges.
Opinion by Judge Callahan
13861
13864 VERNOR v. AUTODESK, INC.
COUNSEL
Jerome B. Falk (argued), Clara J. Shin, and Blake J. Lawit of
Howard Rice Nemerovski Canady Falk & Rabkin P.C., and
Michael A. Jacobs and George C. Harris of Morrison & Foer-
ster LLP, for defendant-appellant Autodesk, Inc.
Gregory A. Beck (argued) and Deepak Gupta of the Public
Citizen Litigation Group, for plaintiff-appellee Timothy S.
Vernor.
Randi W. Singer, Mark J. Fiore, and Lisa R. Eskow of Weil,
Gotshal & Manges LLP, for amicus curiae eBay Inc.
Fred von Lohmann of the Electronic Frontier Foundation and
Sherwin Siy and John Bergmayer of Public Knowledge, for
amicus curiae American Library Association, Association of
College and Research Libraries, Association of Research
Libraries, Consumer Federation of America, Electronic Fron-
tier Foundation, Public Knowledge, and U.S. PIRG.
VERNOR v. AUTODESK, INC. 13865
Scott E. Bain, Keith Kupferschmid, and Mark Bohannon, for
amicus curiae Software & Information Industry Association.
Robert H. Rotstein, Patricia H. Benson, and J. Matthew Wil-
liams of Mitchell Silberberg & Knupp LLP, for amicus curiae
Motion Picture Association of America, Inc.
OPINION
CALLAHAN, Circuit Judge:
Timothy Vernor purchased several used copies of
Autodesk, Inc.’s AutoCAD Release 14 software (“Release
14”) from one of Autodesk’s direct customers, and he resold
the Release 14 copies on eBay. Vernor brought this declara-
tory judgment action against Autodesk to establish that these
resales did not infringe Autodesk’s copyright. The district
court issued the requested declaratory judgment, holding that
Vernor’s sales were lawful because of two of the Copyright
Act’s affirmative defenses that apply to owners of copies of
copyrighted works, the first sale doctrine and the essential
step defense.
Autodesk distributes Release 14 pursuant to a limited
license agreement in which it reserves title to the software
copies and imposes significant use and transfer restrictions on
its customers. We determine that Autodesk’s direct customers
are licensees of their copies of the software rather than own-
ers, which has two ramifications. Because Vernor did not pur-
chase the Release 14 copies from an owner, he may not
invoke the first sale doctrine, and he also may not assert an
essential step defense on behalf of his customers. For these
reasons, we vacate the district court’s grant of summary judg-
ment to Vernor and remand for further proceedings.
13866 VERNOR v. AUTODESK, INC.
I.
A. Autodesk’s Release 14 software and licensing
practices
The material facts are not in dispute. Autodesk makes
computer-aided design software used by architects, engineers,
and manufacturers. It has more than nine million customers.
It first released its AutoCAD software in 1982. It holds regis-
tered copyrights in all versions of the software including the
discontinued Release 14 version, which is at issue in this case.
It provided Release 14 to customers on CD-ROMs.
Since at least 1986, Autodesk has offered AutoCAD to cus-
tomers pursuant to an accompanying software license agree-
ment (“SLA”), which customers must accept before installing
the software. A customer who does not accept the SLA can
return the software for a full refund. Autodesk offers SLAs
with different terms for commercial, educational institution,
and student users. The commercial license, which is the most
expensive, imposes the fewest restrictions on users and allows
them software upgrades at discounted prices.
The SLA for Release 14 first recites that Autodesk retains
title to all copies. Second, it states that the customer has a
nonexclusive and nontransferable license to use Release 14.
Third, it imposes transfer restrictions, prohibiting customers
from renting, leasing, or transferring the software without
Autodesk’s prior consent and from electronically or physi-
cally transferring the software out of the Western Hemi-
sphere. Fourth, it imposes significant use restrictions:
YOU MAY NOT: (1) modify, translate, reverse-
engineer, decompile, or disassemble the Software
. . . (3) remove any proprietary notices, labels, or
marks from the Software or Documentation; (4) use
. . . the Software outside of the Western Hemisphere;
(5) utilize any computer software or hardware
VERNOR v. AUTODESK, INC. 13867
designed to defeat any hardware copy-protection
device, should the software you have licensed be
equipped with such protection; or (6) use the Soft-
ware for commercial or other revenue-generating
purposes if the Software has been licensed or labeled
for educational use only.
Fifth, the SLA provides for license termination if the user
copies the software without authorization or does not comply
with the SLA’s restrictions. Finally, the SLA provides that if
the software is an upgrade of a previous version:
[Y]ou must destroy the software previously licensed
to you, including any copies resident on your hard
disk drive . . . within sixty (60) days of the purchase
of the license to use the upgrade or update . . . .
Autodesk reserves the right to require you to show
satisfactory proof that previous copies of the soft-
ware have been destroyed.
Autodesk takes measures to enforce these license require-
ments. It assigns a serial number to each copy of AutoCAD
and tracks registered licensees. It requires customers to input
“activation codes” within one month after installation to con-
tinue using the software.1 The customer obtains the code by
providing the product’s serial number to Autodesk. Autodesk
issues the activation code after confirming that the serial num-
ber is authentic, the copy is not registered to a different cus-
tomer, and the product has not been upgraded. Once a
customer has an activation code, he or she may use it to acti-
vate the software on additional computers without notifying
Autodesk.
1
Prior to using activation codes, Autodesk required users to return one
disc of an earlier version of the software to upgrade to a later version.
Autodesk has abandoned this return policy, deeming it slow and unwork-
able.
13868 VERNOR v. AUTODESK, INC.
B. Autodesk’s provision of Release 14 software to CTA
In March 1999, Autodesk reached a settlement agreement
with its customer Cardwell/Thomas & Associates, Inc.
(“CTA”), which Autodesk had accused of unauthorized use of
its software. As part of the settlement, Autodesk licensed ten
copies of Release 14 to CTA. CTA agreed to the SLA, which
appeared (1) on each Release 14 package that Autodesk pro-
vided to CTA; (2) in the settlement agreement; and (3) on-
screen, while the software is being installed.
CTA later upgraded to the newer, fifteenth version of the
AutoCAD program, AutoCAD 2000. It paid $495 per upgrade
license, compared to $3,750 for each new license. The SLA
for AutoCAD 2000, like the SLA for Release 14, required
destruction of copies of previous versions of the software,
with proof to be furnished to Autodesk on request. However,
rather than destroying its Release 14 copies, CTA sold them
to Vernor at an office sale with the handwritten activation
codes necessary to use the software.2
C. Vernor’s eBay business and sales of Release 14
Vernor has sold more than 10,000 items on eBay. In May
2005, he purchased an authentic used copy of Release 14 at
a garage sale from an unspecified seller. He never agreed to
the SLA’s terms, opened a sealed software packet, or installed
the Release 14 software. Though he was aware of the SLA’s
existence, he believed that he was not bound by its terms. He
posted the software copy for sale on eBay.
Autodesk filed a Digital Millennium Copyright Act
(“DMCA”) take-down notice with eBay claiming that Ver-
nor’s sale infringed its copyright, and eBay terminated Ver-
2
Autodesk brought suit in federal district court against CTA for these
sales. The parties stipulated to entry of a permanent injunction against
CTA from directly or contributorily infringing Autodesk’s copyrights.
VERNOR v. AUTODESK, INC. 13869
nor’s auction.3 Autodesk advised Vernor that it conveyed its
software copies pursuant to non-transferable licenses, and
resale of its software was copyright infringement. Vernor
filed a DMCA counter-notice with eBay contesting the valid-
ity of Autodesk’s copyright claim.4 Autodesk did not respond
to the counter-notice. eBay reinstated the auction, and Vernor
sold the software to another eBay user.
In April 2007, Vernor purchased four authentic used copies
of Release 14 at CTA’s office sale. The authorization codes
were handwritten on the outside of the box. He listed the four
copies on eBay sequentially, representing, “This software is
not currently installed on any computer.”5 On each of the first
three occasions, the same DMCA process ensued. Autodesk
filed a DMCA take-down notice with eBay, and eBay
removed Vernor’s auction. Vernor submitted a counter-notice
to which Autodesk did not respond, and eBay reinstated the
auction.
When Vernor listed his fourth, final copy of Release 14,
3
The DMCA provides that a service provider is not liable for infringing
user-posted material on its service if, inter alia, it responds expeditiously
to remove or disable access to the material upon receipt of a take-down
notice claiming infringement. 17 U.S.C. § 512(c)(1)(C).
4
The DMCA also provides that a user whose material has been removed
or disabled may provide a “counter-notification” to the service provider,
including a sworn statement that the user has a good-faith belief that the
material was mistakenly removed or disabled. 17 U.S.C. § 512(g)(3)(C).
After receiving a counter-notification, the service provider must do the
following to retain its liability exemption. It must promptly (1) provide the
person who filed the original take-down notice with a copy of the counter-
notification and (2) advise that it will replace the removed material or
cease disabling access to it in ten business days. 17 U.S.C. § 512(g)(2)(B).
It must also timely replace the removed material or cease disabling access
to it, unless the person who provided the take-down notice gives notice
that he or she has filed a court action to restrain the user’s infringement.
17 U.S.C. § 512(g)(2)(C).
5
Vernor acknowledged at his deposition that he did not know whether
this was true.
13870 VERNOR v. AUTODESK, INC.
Autodesk again filed a DMCA take-down notice with eBay.
This time, eBay suspended Vernor’s account because of
Autodesk’s repeated charges of infringement. Vernor also
wrote to Autodesk, claiming that he was entitled to sell his
Release 14 copies pursuant to the first sale doctrine, because
he never installed the software or agreed to the SLA. In
response, Autodesk’s counsel directed Vernor to stop selling
the software. Vernor filed a final counter-notice with eBay.
When Autodesk again did not respond to Vernor’s counter-
notice, eBay reinstated Vernor’s account. At that point, Ver-
nor’s eBay account had been suspended for one month, during
which he was unable to earn income on eBay.
Vernor currently has two additional copies of Release 14
that he wishes to sell on eBay. Although the record is not
clear, it appears that Vernor sold two of the software packages
that he purchased from CTA, for roughly $600 each, but did
not sell the final two to avoid risking further suspension of his
eBay account.
II.
In August 2007, Vernor brought a declaratory action
against Autodesk to establish that his resales of used Release
14 software are protected by the first sale doctrine and do not
infringe Autodesk’s copyright. He also sought damages and
injunctive relief. On January 15, 2008, Autodesk moved to
dismiss Vernor’s complaint, or in the alternative, for summary
judgment. The district court denied the motion, holding that
Vernor’s sales were non-infringing under the first sale doc-
trine and the essential step defense. See Vernor v. Autodesk,
Inc., 555 F. Supp. 2d 1164, 1170-71, 1175 (W.D. Wash.
2008).
Following discovery, the parties filed cross-motions for
summary judgment. The district court granted summary judg-
ment to Vernor as to copyright infringement in an unpub-
lished decision. However, the district court declined to resolve
VERNOR v. AUTODESK, INC. 13871
Vernor’s affirmative defense that Autodesk had misused its
copyright, reasoning that a misuse defense would not benefit
Vernor since he had prevailed on copyright infringement. In
October 2009, the district court entered judgment for Vernor,
and Autodesk timely appealed.
III.
[1] Copyright is a federal law protection provided to the
authors of “original works of authorship,” including software
programs. 17 U.S.C. §§ 101-103. The Copyright Act confers
several exclusive rights on copyright owners, including the
exclusive rights to reproduce their works and to distribute
their works by sale or rental. Id. § 106(1), (3). The exclusive
distribution right is limited by the first sale doctrine, an affir-
mative defense to copyright infringement that allows owners
of copies of copyrighted works to resell those copies. The
exclusive reproduction right is limited within the software
context by the essential step defense, another affirmative
defense to copyright infringement that is discussed further
infra. Both of these affirmative defenses are unavailable to
those who are only licensed to use their copies of copyrighted
works.
This case requires us to decide whether Autodesk sold
Release 14 copies to its customers or licensed the copies to its
customers. If CTA owned its copies of Release 14, then both
its sales to Vernor and Vernor’s subsequent sales were non-
infringing under the first sale doctrine.6 However, if Autodesk
only licensed CTA to use copies of Release 14, then CTA’s
and Vernor’s sales of those copies are not protected by the
6
If Autodesk’s transfer of Release 14 copies to CTA was a first sale,
then CTA’s resale of the software in violation of the SLA’s terms would
be a breach of contract, but would not result in copyright liability. See
United States v. Wise, 550 F.2d 1180, 1187 (9th Cir. 1977) (“[T]he exclu-
sive right to vend the transferred copy rests with the vendee, who is not
restricted by statute from further transfers of that copy, even though in
breach of an agreement restricting its sale.”).
13872 VERNOR v. AUTODESK, INC.
first sale doctrine and would therefore infringe Autodesk’s
exclusive distribution right.
A. The first sale doctrine
The Supreme Court articulated the first sale doctrine in
1908, holding that a copyright owner’s exclusive distribution
right is exhausted after the owner’s first sale of a particular
copy of the copyrighted work. See Bobbs-Merrill Co. v.
Straus, 210 U.S. 339, 350-51 (1908). In Bobbs-Merrill, the
plaintiff-copyright owner sold its book with a printed notice
announcing that any retailer who sold the book for less than
one dollar was responsible for copyright infringement. Id. at
341. Plaintiff sought injunctive relief against defendants-
booksellers who failed to comply with the price restriction. Id.
at 341-42. The Supreme Court rejected the plaintiff’s claim,
holding that its exclusive distribution right applied only to
first sales of copies of the work. Id. at 350-51. The distribu-
tion right did not permit plaintiff to dictate that subsequent
sales of the work below a particular price were infringing. Id.
The Court noted that its decision solely applied to the rights
of a copyright owner that distributed its work without a
license agreement. Id. at 350 (“There is no claim in this case
of contract limitation, nor license agreement controlling the
subsequent sales of the book.”).
[2] Congress codified the first sale doctrine the following
year. See 17 U.S.C. § 41 (1909). In its current form, it allows
the “owner of a particular copy” of a copyrighted work to sell
or dispose of his copy without the copyright owner’s authoriza-
tion.7 Id. § 109(a) (enacted 1976). The first sale doctrine does
not apply to a person who possesses a copy of the copyrighted
work without owning it, such as a licensee. See id. § 109(d);
7
The parties dispute who bears the burden to prove the first sale or the
absence thereof in a civil case, a question we have not yet resolved. Since
the facts in this case are undisputed, including the chain of software trans-
fers, we need not decide the issue.
VERNOR v. AUTODESK, INC. 13873
cf. Quality King Distribs., Inc. v. L’Anza Research Int’l Inc.,
523 U.S. 135, 146-47 (1998) (“[T]he first sale doctrine would
not provide a defense to . . . any non-owner such as a bailee,
a licensee, a consignee, or one whose possession of the copy
was unlawful.”).
B. Owners vs. licensees
We turn to our precedents governing whether a transferee
of a copy of a copyrighted work is an owner or licensee of
that copy. We then apply those precedents to CTA’s and Ver-
nor’s possession of Release 14 copies.
1. United States v. Wise, 550 F.2d 1180 (9th Cir. 1977)
In Wise, a criminal copyright infringement case, we consid-
ered whether copyright owners who transferred copies of their
motion pictures pursuant to written distribution agreements
had executed first sales. Id. at 1187. The defendant was found
guilty of copyright infringement based on his for-profit sales
of motion picture prints. See id. at 1183. The copyright own-
ers distributed their films to third parties pursuant to written
agreements that restricted their use and transfer. Id. at 1183-
84. On appeal, the defendant argued that the government
failed to prove the absence of a first sale for each film.8 If the
copyright owners’ initial transfers of the films were first sales,
then the defendant’s resales were protected by the first sale
doctrine and thus were not copyright infringement.
To determine whether a first sale occurred, we considered
multiple factors pertaining to each film distribution agree-
ment. Specifically, we considered whether the agreement (a)
was labeled a license, (b) provided that the copyright owner
retained title to the prints, (c) required the return or destruc-
8
In Wise, we construed former 17 U.S.C. § 27, since replaced by 17
U.S.C. § 109(a), the current codification of the first sale doctrine. The pro-
visions are materially similar.
13874 VERNOR v. AUTODESK, INC.
tion of the prints, (d) forbade duplication of prints, or (e)
required the transferee to maintain possession of the prints for
the agreement’s duration. Id. at 1190-92. Our use of these
several considerations, none dispositive, may be seen in our
treatment of each film print.
For example, we reversed the defendant’s conviction with
respect to Camelot. Id. at 1194. It was unclear whether the
Camelot print sold by the defendant had been subject to a first
sale. Copyright owner Warner Brothers distributed Camelot
prints pursuant to multiple agreements, and the government
did not prove the absence of a first sale with respect to each
agreement. Id. at 1191-92, 1194. We noted that, in one agree-
ment, Warner Brothers had retained title to the prints,
required possessor National Broadcasting Company (“NBC”)
to return the prints if the parties could select a mutual agree-
able price,9 and if not, required NBC’s certification that the
prints were destroyed. Id. at 1191. We held that these factors
created a license rather than a first sale. Id.
We further noted, however, that Warner Brothers had also
furnished another Camelot print to actress Vanessa Redgrave.
Id. at 1192. The print was provided to Redgrave at cost, and
her use of the print was subject to several restrictions. She had
to retain possession of the print and was not allowed to sell,
license, reproduce, or publicly exhibit the print. Id. She had
no obligation to return the print to Warner Brothers. Id. We
concluded, “While the provision for payment for the cost of
the film, standing alone, does not establish a sale, when taken
with the rest of the language of the agreement, it reveals a
transaction strongly resembling a sale with restrictions on the
use of the print.” Id. There was no evidence of the print’s
whereabouts, and we held that “[i]n the absence of such
9
Although the Wise defendant contended that this repurchase provision
created a first sale, we held that it merely allowed Warner Brothers to
compensate NBC for its out-of-pocket cost in producing additional prints.
Id.
VERNOR v. AUTODESK, INC. 13875
proof,” the government failed to prove the absence of a first
sale with respect to this Redgrave print. Id. at 1191-92. Since
it was unclear which copy the defendant had obtained and
resold, his conviction for sale of Camelot had to be reversed.
Id.
Thus, under Wise, where a transferee receives a particular
copy of a copyrighted work pursuant to a written agreement,
we consider all of the provisions of the agreement to deter-
mine whether the transferee became an owner of the copy or
received a license. We may consider (1) whether the agree-
ment was labeled a license and (2) whether the copyright
owner retained title to the copy, required its return or destruc-
tion, forbade its duplication, or required the transferee to
maintain possession of the copy for the agreement’s duration.
Id. at 1190-92. We did not find any one factor dispositive in
Wise: we did not hold that the copyright owner’s retention of
title itself established the absence of a first sale or that a trans-
feree’s right to indefinite possession itself established a first
sale.10
2. The “MAI trio” of cases
Over fifteen years after Wise, we again considered the dis-
tinction between owners and licensees of copies of copy-
righted works in three software copyright cases, the “MAI
trio”. See MAI Sys. Corp. v. Peak Computer, Inc., 991 F.2d
511 (9th Cir. 1993); Triad Sys. Corp. v. Se. Express Co., 64
F.3d 1330 (9th Cir. 1995); Wall Data, Inc. v. Los Angeles
County Sheriff’s Dep’t, 447 F.3d 769 (9th Cir. 2006). In the
MAI trio, we considered which software purchasers were
10
Cf. Hampton v. Paramount Pictures Corp., 279 F.2d 100, 103 (9th
Cir. 1960) (holding in non-first sale doctrine case that the transferee of a
movie print was a licensee because the parties designated their agreement
as a perpetual license, even though their agreement provided for a one-
time lump sum payment and imposed no requirement that the transferee
would return the outstanding prints and negatives).
13876 VERNOR v. AUTODESK, INC.
owners of copies of copyrighted works for purposes of a sec-
ond affirmative defense to infringement, the essential step
defense.
[3] The enforcement of copyright owners’ exclusive right
to reproduce their work under the Copyright Act, 17 U.S.C.
§ 106(1), has posed special challenges in the software context.
In order to use a software program, a user’s computer will
automatically copy the software into the computer’s random
access memory (“RAM”), which is a form of computer data
storage. See MAI, 991 F.2d at 513. Congress enacted the
essential step defense to codify that a software user who is
the “owner of a copy” of a copyrighted software program
does not infringe by making a copy of the computer program,
if the new copy is “created as an essential step in the utiliza-
tion of the computer program in conjunction with a machine
and . . . is used in no other manner.” 17 U.S.C. § 117(a)(1).
The Copyright Act provides that an “owner of a copy” of
copyrighted software may claim the essential step defense,
and the “owner of a particular copy” of copyrighted software
may claim the first sale doctrine. 17 U.S.C. §§ 109(a),
117(a)(1). The MAI trio construed the phrase “owner of a
copy” for essential step defense purposes. Neither Vernor nor
Autodesk contends that the first sale doctrine’s inclusion of
the word “particular” alters the phrase’s meaning, and we
“presume that words used more than once in the same statute
have the same meaning throughout.” Moldo v. Matsco, Inc.
(In re Cybernetic Servs., Inc.), 252 F.3d 1039, 1051 (9th Cir.
2002). Accordingly, we consider the MAI trio’s construction
of “owner of a copy” controlling in our analysis of whether
CTA and Vernor became “owner[s] of a particular copy” of
Release 14 software.
In MAI and Triad, the defendants maintained computers
that ran the plaintiffs’ operating system software. MAI, 991
F.2d at 513; Triad, 64 F.3d at 1333. When the defendants ran
the computers, the computers automatically loaded plaintiffs’
VERNOR v. AUTODESK, INC. 13877
software into RAM. MAI, 991 F.2d at 517-18; Triad, 64 F.3d
at 1333, 1335-36. The plaintiffs in both cases sold their soft-
ware pursuant to restrictive license agreements, and we held
that their customers were licensees who were therefore not
entitled to claim the essential step defense. We found that the
defendants infringed plaintiffs’ software copyrights by their
unauthorized loading of copyrighted software into RAM.
MAI, 991 F.2d at 517-18 & n.5; Triad, 64 F.3d at 1333, 1335-
36. In Triad, the plaintiff had earlier sold software outright to
some customers. 64 F.3d at 1333 n.2. We noted that these
customers were owners who were entitled to the essential step
defense, and the defendant did not infringe by making RAM
copies in servicing their computers. Id.
In Wall Data, plaintiff sold 3,663 software licenses to the
defendant. Wall Data, 447 F.3d at 773. The licenses (1) were
non-exclusive; (2) permitted use of the software on a single
computer; and (3) permitted transfer of the software once per
month, if the software was removed from the original com-
puter. Id. at 775 n.5, 781. The defendant installed the software
onto 6,007 computers via hard drive imaging, which saved it
from installing the software manually on each computer. It
made an unverified claim that only 3,663 users could simulta-
neously access the software. Id. at 776.
[4] The plaintiff sued for copyright infringement, contend-
ing that the defendant violated the license by “over-installing”
the software. Id. at 775. The defendant raised an essential step
defense, contending that its hard drive imaging was a neces-
sary step of installation. Id. at 776. On appeal, we held that
the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying the
defendant’s request for a jury instruction on the essential step
defense. Id. at 784. Citing MAI, we held that the essential step
defense does not apply where the copyright owner grants the
user a license and significantly restricts the user’s ability to
transfer the software. Id. at 784-85. Since the plaintiff’s
license imposed “significant restrictions” on the defendant’s
13878 VERNOR v. AUTODESK, INC.
software rights, the defendant was a licensee and was not enti-
tled to the essential step defense. Id. at 785.
In Wall Data, we acknowledged that MAI had been criti-
cized in a Federal Circuit decision, but declined to revisit its
holding, noting that the facts of Wall Data led to the conclu-
sion that any error in the district court’s failure to instruct was
harmless. Even if the defendant owned its copies of the soft-
ware, its installation of the software on a number of comput-
ers in excess of its license was not an essential step in the
software’s use. Id. at 786 n.9 (citing Nimmer on Copyright
§ 8.08[B][1][c] at 8-136; DSC Commc’ns Corp. v. Pulse
Commc’ns, Inc., 170 F.3d 1354, 1360 (Fed. Cir. 1999) (criti-
cizing MAI)).
We read Wise and the MAI trio to prescribe three consider-
ations that we may use to determine whether a software user
is a licensee, rather than an owner of a copy. First, we con-
sider whether the copyright owner specifies that a user is
granted a license. Second, we consider whether the copyright
owner significantly restricts the user’s ability to transfer the
software. Finally, we consider whether the copyright owner
imposes notable use restrictions.11 Our holding reconciles the
MAI trio and Wise, even though the MAI trio did not cite
Wise. See Cisneros-Perez v. Gonzales, 451 F.3d 1053, 1058
(9th Cir. 2006) (“[W]e are required to reconcile prior prece-
dents if we can do so.”)
11
Although use restrictions were not dispositive in the MAI trio, we con-
sidered them in each case. See MAI, 991 F.2d at 517 n.3 (license limited
user to making one working and one backup copy of the software, and for-
bade examination, disclosure, copying, modification, adaptation, and
visual display of the software); Triad, 64 F.3d at 1333 (license prohibited
software duplication and third-party use); Wall Data, 447 F.3d at 775 n.5
(license permitted software use on single computer, prohibited multi-
computer and multi-user arrangements, and permitted transfer to another
computer no more than once every thirty days).
VERNOR v. AUTODESK, INC. 13879
In response to MAI, Congress amended § 117 to permit a
computer owner to copy software for maintenance or repair
purposes. See 17 U.S.C. § 117(c); see also H.R. Rep. No.
105-551, pt. 1, at 27 (1998). However, Congress did not dis-
turb MAI’s holding that licensees are not entitled to the essen-
tial step defense.
IV.
A. The district court’s decision
The district court interpreted Wise to hold that a first sale
occurs whenever the transferee is entitled to keep the copy of
the work. Since Autodesk does not require its customers to
return their copies of Release 14, the district court found that
Autodesk had sold Release 14 to CTA. It reasoned that thus,
CTA and Vernor were successive “owner[s] of a copy” of the
software and were entitled to resell it under the first sale doc-
trine. The district court also found that Vernor’s customers’
copying of software during installation was protected by the
essential step defense.
The district court acknowledged that were it to follow the
MAI trio, it would conclude that Autodesk had licensed
Release 14 copies to CTA, rather than sold them. However,
it viewed Wise and the MAI trio as irreconcilable, and it fol-
lowed Wise as the first-decided case. See United States v.
Rodriguez-Lara, 421 F.3d 932, 943 (9th Cir. 2005).
B. Analysis
[5] We hold today that a software user is a licensee rather
than an owner of a copy where the copyright owner (1) speci-
fies that the user is granted a license; (2) significantly restricts
the user’s ability to transfer the software; and (3) imposes
notable use restrictions.12 Applying our holding to Autodesk’s
12
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment to Vernor
de novo. Padfield v. AIG Life Ins. Co., 290 F.3d 1121, 1124 (9th Cir.
2002).
13880 VERNOR v. AUTODESK, INC.
SLA, we conclude that CTA was a licensee rather than an
owner of copies of Release 14 and thus was not entitled to
invoke the first sale doctrine or the essential step defense.
[6] Autodesk retained title to the software and imposed
significant transfer restrictions: it stated that the license is
nontransferable, the software could not be transferred or
leased without Autodesk’s written consent, and the software
could not be transferred outside the Western Hemisphere. The
SLA also imposed use restrictions against the use of the soft-
ware outside the Western Hemisphere and against modifying,
translating, or reverse-engineering the software, removing any
proprietary marks from the software or documentation, or
defeating any copy protection device. Furthermore, the SLA
provided for termination of the license upon the licensee’s
unauthorized copying or failure to comply with other license
restrictions. Thus, because Autodesk reserved title to Release
14 copies and imposed significant transfer and use restric-
tions, we conclude that its customers are licensees of their
copies of Release 14 rather than owners.
[7] CTA was a licensee rather than an “owner of a particu-
lar copy” of Release 14, and it was not entitled to resell its
Release 14 copies to Vernor under the first sale doctrine. 17
U.S.C. § 109(a). Therefore, Vernor did not receive title to the
copies from CTA and accordingly could not pass ownership
on to others. Both CTA’s and Vernor’s sales infringed
Autodesk’s exclusive right to distribute copies of its work. Id.
§ 106(3).
[8] Because Vernor was not an owner, his customers are
also not owners of Release 14 copies. Therefore, when they
install Release 14 on their computers, the copies of the soft-
ware that they make during installation infringe Autodesk’s
exclusive reproduction right because they too are not entitled
to the benefit of the essential step defense.13 17 U.S.C.
§§ 106(1), 117(a)(1).
13
It may seem intuitive that every lawful user of a copyrighted software
program, whether they own their copies or are merely licensed to use
VERNOR v. AUTODESK, INC. 13881
[9] Although unnecessary to our resolution of the case, we
address the legislative history in order to address the argu-
ments raised by the parties and amici. That legislative history
supports our conclusion that licensees such as CTA are not
entitled to claim the first sale doctrine. The House Report for
§ 109 underscores Congress’ view that the first sale doctrine
is available only to a person who has acquired a copy via an
“outright sale”. H.R. Rep. No. 94-1476, at 79 (1976),
reprinted in 1976 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5659, 5693. The report also
asserts that the first sale doctrine does not “apply to someone
who merely possesses a copy or phonorecord without having
acquired ownership of it.” Id.
[10] Our conclusion that those who rightfully possess, but
do not own, a copy of copyrighted software are not entitled
to claim the essential step defense is also supported by the
legislative history. Congress enacted § 117 following a report
from the National Commission on New Technological Uses
of Copyrighted Works (“CONTU”) proposing Copyright Act
amendments. DSC Commc’ns Corp. v. Pulse Commc’ns, Inc.,
170 F.3d 1354, 1360 (Fed. Cir. 1999) (citing Final Report of
the National Commission on New Technological Uses of
Copyrighted Works, U.S. Dept. of Commerce, PB-282141, at
30 (July 31, 1978)). CONTU’s proposed version of § 117 was
identical to the version that Congress enacted with one excep-
tion. Id. CONTU’s version provided, “[I]t is not an infringe-
ment for the rightful possessor of a copy of a computer
program to make or authorize the making of another copy or
adaptation of that program . . . .” Id. Without explanation,
Congress substituted “owner” for “rightful possessor.” Id.
This modification suggests that more than rightful possession
them, should be entitled to an “essential step defense” that provides that
they do not infringe simply by using a computer program that they law-
fully acquired. However, the Copyright Act confers this defense only on
owners of software copies. See 17 U.S.C. § 117. In contrast, a licensee’s
right to use the software, including the right to copy the software into
RAM, is conferred by the terms of its license agreement.
13882 VERNOR v. AUTODESK, INC.
is required for § 117 to apply — i.e., that Congress did not
intend licensees subject to significant transfer and use restric-
tions to receive the benefit of the essential step defense.
C. Vernor’s four counterarguments are not persuasive
1. The district court’s decision concerning indefinite
possession
Vernor contends that the district court correctly concluded
that (1) Wise is the controlling precedent and (2) under Wise,
the key factor is whether transferees are entitled to indefinite
possession of their copy of a copyrighted work. As explained
supra, we disagree. In Wise, we utilized a multi-factor balanc-
ing test to distinguish between a first sale and a license of a
copyrighted film print. United States v. Wise, 550 F.2d 1180,
1190-92 (9th Cir. 1977). We considered a transferee’s ability
to possess a print indefinitely as one factor in our analysis, but
we did not treat it as dispositive. If we had, we would not
have needed to consider other contractual provisions, such as
retention of title, copying prohibitions, and lending restric-
tions. Id. Moreover, we held in Wise that two agreements
were licenses rather than first sales, even though those agree-
ments did not describe any provision requiring the transferee
to return the prints to the copyright owners. Id. at 1192 (ana-
lyzing VIP agreements for The Sting and Funny Girl).14
14
We also note that for some of the Wise films, there was a lack of evi-
dence whether transferees who had the option to purchase copies of the
prints had done so. Without evidence concerning these options, the gov-
ernment could not sustain its criminal burden of proof to demonstrate the
absence of a first sale. See, e.g., 550 F.2d at 1191-92 (“No evidence was
adduced at trial as to whether [transferee] exercised its election [to pur-
chase a copy of the print], or, if it did, whether it resold that print. In the
absence of such proof, the Government has failed in its burden of proving
the absence of first sale of the photoplay Funny Girl.”) Here, in contrast,
the undisputed evidence includes the SLA between Autodesk and CTA,
which reflects the absence of a first sale. The SLA evidences both the par-
ties’ intent to create a license and CTA’s acquiescence to substantive
restrictions that distinguish the transfer from an outright first sale.
VERNOR v. AUTODESK, INC. 13883
2. Circuit split with the Federal and Second Circuits
Vernor contends that reversing the district court will create
a circuit split with the Federal and Second Circuits. See DSC
Commc’ns Corp. v. Pulse Commc’ns, Inc., 170 F.3d 1354
(Fed. Cir. 1999); Krause v. Titleserv, Inc., 402 F.3d 119 (2nd
Cir. 2005). We disagree.
In DSC, the Federal Circuit considered the essential step
defense in a case in which the plaintiff and defendant sold
competing telephone systems hardware cards. 170 F.3d at
1358. Rather than develop its own software, the defendant
used its hardware to download plaintiff’s software into RAM
upon installation. Id. The plaintiff argued that this constituted
copyright infringement, and the defendant countered that the
relevant customers owned plaintiff’s software, entitling them
to an essential step defense. Id. at 1359-60. The court rejected
the defendant’s essential step defense, holding that plaintiff
licensed its customers’ use of their copies of the software in
the relevant license agreement’s transfer and use restrictions.
Id. at 1360-61. Although the Federal Circuit rejected MAI’s
“characterization of all licensees as non-owners,” it deemed
MAI “instructive” and determined that the agreements there in
issue were licenses. Id. at 1360. Although DSC is thus nar-
rower than MAI, it does not conflict with our holding today
that a software customer bound by a restrictive license agree-
ment may be a licensee of a copy not entitled to the first sale
doctrine or the essential step defense.
The Second Circuit’s decision in Krause is distinguishable.
In Krause, the plaintiff-copyright owner was a software
developer who sued his former employer for making allegedly
infringing modifications to his software program. Krause, 402
F.3d at 120-21. The Second Circuit considered the totality of
the parties’ agreement to determine that the defendant was
entitled to an essential step defense. Id. at 124. In Krause,
unlike here, the parties did not have a written license agree-
ment, the defendant-employer had paid the plaintiff-employee
13884 VERNOR v. AUTODESK, INC.
significant consideration to develop the programs for its sole
benefit, and the plaintiff had agreed to allow the defendant to
use the programs “forever,” regardless of whether the parties’
relationship terminated. Id. at 124-25. Thus, the Second Cir-
cuit found that the defendant-employer owned its copies of
the work. Id. The facts and the analysis in Krause are not con-
trary to our determination that CTA is a licensee rather than
an owner.
3. The Supreme Court’s holding in Bobbs-Merrill
Vernor contends that Bobbs-Merrill establishes his entitle-
ment to a first sale defense. See Bobbs-Merrill Co. v. Straus,
210 U.S. 339 (1908). However, Bobbs-Merrill stands only for
the proposition that a copyright owner’s exclusive distribution
right does not allow it to control sales of copies of its work
after the first sale. Id. at 350. Decided in 1908, Bobbs-Merrill
did not and could not address the question of whether the
right to use software is distinct from the ownership of copies
of software. Moreover, the Supreme Court in Bobbs-Merrill
made explicit that its decision did not address the use of
restrictions to create a license. Id. (“There is no claim in this
case of contract limitation, nor license agreement controlling
the subsequent sales of the book.”)
4. Economic realities of the transaction
Finally, Vernor contends that “economic realities” demon-
strate that Autodesk makes “first sales” to its customers,
because Autodesk allows its customers to possess their copies
of the software indefinitely and does not require recurring
license payments. We held supra that neither of these factors
is dispositive. Vernor cites no first sale doctrine case in sup-
port of this proposition. Rather, he cites In re DAK Indus., 66
F.3d 1091, 1095 (9th Cir. 1995), a case in which we inter-
preted the Bankruptcy Code to decide whether a particular
transaction should be considered a pre-petition sale. We com-
mented that “[w]hen applying the bankruptcy code to this
VERNOR v. AUTODESK, INC. 13885
transaction, we must look through its form to the ‘economic
realities of the particular arrangement.’ ” Id. Nothing in DAK
is contrary to our reconciliation of Wise and the MAI trio.
V.
Although our holding today is controlled by our precedent,
we recognize the significant policy considerations raised by
the parties and amici on both sides of this appeal.
Autodesk, the Software & Information Industry Associa-
tion (“SIIA”), and the Motion Picture Association of America
(“MPAA”) have presented policy arguments that favor our
result. For instance, Autodesk argues in favor of judicial
enforcement of software license agreements that restrict trans-
fers of copies of the work. Autodesk contends that this (1)
allows for tiered pricing for different software markets, such
as reduced pricing for students or educational institutions; (2)
increases software companies’ sales; (3) lowers prices for all
consumers by spreading costs among a large number of pur-
chasers; and (4) reduces the incidence of piracy by allowing
copyright owners to bring infringement actions against unau-
thorized resellers. SIIA argues that a license can exist even
where a customer (1) receives his copy of the work after mak-
ing a single payment and (2) can indefinitely possess a soft-
ware copy, because it is the software code and associated
rights that are valuable rather than the inexpensive discs on
which the code may be stored. Also, the MPAA argues that
a customer’s ability to possess a copyrighted work indefi-
nitely should not compel a finding of a first sale, because
there is often no practically feasible way for a consumer to
return a copy to the copyright owner.
Vernor, eBay, and the American Library Association
(“ALA”) have presented policy arguments against our deci-
sion. Vernor contends that our decision (1) does not vindicate
the law’s aversion to restraints on alienation of personal prop-
erty; (2) may force everyone purchasing copyrighted property
13886 VERNOR v. AUTODESK, INC.
to trace the chain of title to ensure that a first sale occurred;
and (3) ignores the economic realities of the relevant transac-
tions, in which the copyright owner permanently released
software copies into the stream of commerce without expecta-
tion of return in exchange for upfront payment of the full soft-
ware price. eBay contends that a broad view of the first sale
doctrine is necessary to facilitate the creation of secondary
markets for copyrighted works, which contributes to the pub-
lic good by (1) giving consumers additional opportunities to
purchase and sell copyrighted works, often at below-retail
prices; (2) allowing consumers to obtain copies of works after
a copyright owner has ceased distribution; and (3) allowing
the proliferation of businesses.
The ALA contends that the first sale doctrine facilitates the
availability of copyrighted works after their commercial life-
span, by inter alia enabling the existence of libraries, used
bookstores, and hand-to-hand exchanges of copyrighted mate-
rials. The ALA further contends that judicial enforcement of
software license agreements, which are often contracts of
adhesion, could eliminate the software resale market, require
used computer sellers to delete legitimate software prior to
sale, and increase prices for consumers by reducing price
competition for software vendors. It contends that Autodesk’s
position (1) undermines 17 U.S.C. § 109(b)(2), which permits
non-profit libraries to lend software for non-commercial pur-
poses, and (2) would hamper efforts by non-profits to collect
and preserve out-of-print software. The ALA fears that the
software industry’s licensing practices could be adopted by
other copyright owners, including book publishers, record
labels, and movie studios.
These are serious contentions on both sides, but they do not
alter our conclusion that our precedent from Wise through the
MAI trio requires the result we reach. Congress is free, of
course, to modify the first sale doctrine and the essential step
defense if it deems these or other policy considerations to
require a different approach.
VERNOR v. AUTODESK, INC. 13887
VI.
The district court did not consider Vernor’s claim that
Autodesk misused its copyright. Copyright misuse is an equi-
table defense to copyright infringement which precludes the
copyright holder’s enforcement of its copyright during the
misuse period. See Practice Mgmt. Info. Corp. v. Am. Med.
Ass’n, 121 F.3d 516, 520 n.9 (9th Cir. 1997). The district
court reasoned that a misuse defense would not benefit Ver-
nor since he prevailed on copyright infringement below. Since
we reverse the district court’s grant of summary judgment in
Vernor’s favor on copyright infringement, we remand for the
district court to consider Vernor’s copyright misuse defense
in the first instance.
VII.
[11] We vacate the district court’s grant of summary judg-
ment in Vernor’s favor and remand. We hold that because
CTA is a licensee, not an owner, the “sale” of its Release 14
copies to Vernor did not convey ownership. Vernor is accord-
ingly not entitled to invoke the first sale doctrine or the essen-
tial step defense, on behalf of his customers. We remand for
further proceedings consistent with this opinion, including
consideration of Vernor’s copyright misuse defense.
VACATED AND REMANDED.