Slides From Copyright/Trademark CLE

by Lee Gesmer on April 27, 2012

I’ve posted the slides from a CLE talk I gave on Wednesday, April 25th.  Hopefully, the  slides are informative standing alone.  They address the very recent DMCA decisions by the 9th Circuit (Veoh) and 2nd Circuit (Youtube), the copyright “first sale” doctrine as applied to digital files in the Redigi case pending in SDNY, and recent trademark “keyword advertising” cases decided in the 4th and 9th Circuits (Rosetta Stone in the 4th Circuit, Network Automation and Louis Vuitton in the 9th).  There are also some slides devoted to the CFAA, including the 9th Circuit’s en banc decision in the Nosal case.

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Copyright and Trademark Issues on the Internet

Continue Reading Slides From Copyright/Trademark CLE

I’ll be reading this decision, issued today, more carefully in the next day or two, but my first impression is that it’s a win for supporters of the DMCA safeharbor statute based on various legal rulings, and a loss for Youtube based on the really dumb behavior of Youtube’s founders.  Of course, these guys didn’t know, back in 2005, that seven years later the courts would be judging whether they were aware that they were hosting copyrighted videos.  If they had known, they might not have emailed each other comments like these:

  • “[W]e need views, [but] I’m a little concerned with the recent [S]upreme [C]ourt ruling on copyrighted material”
  • “[S]ave your meal money for some lawsuits!”
  • “concentrate all of our efforts in building up our numbers as aggressively as we can through whatever tactics, however evil”
  • “our dirty little secret . . . is that we actually just want to sell out quickly”

And there’s more like that. Ouch!

In the future companies with Youtube-like businesses will, one hopes, not create evidentiary grist of this sort for content owners to use in lawsuits against them.  So, this case may turn out to be a great lesson for the online industry (careful what you say), and an expensive lesson for Google, which will likely have to add some dollars to the $1.65 billion it paid for Youtube in 2006.

Second Circuit decision in Viacom v. Youtube

Continue Reading Second Circuit to Youtube (i.e., Google): Remanded for Trial

Here is an unusual spin on Massachusetts non-compete law.  As best I can understand the facts (which require a bit of “between the lines” reading) Trillium sued Cheung, a former employee of Trillium.  Cheung had, it appears, released an employee from a non-compete agreement without company approval.

Trillium’s suit asserted breach of fiduciary duty to the company.

A trial ensued, but at the outset the judge observed that if the underlying non-compete agreement had not been enforceable the release had caused no harm to Trillium, and hence there had been no legal wrong committed by Cheung.  In other words, the trial involved a concept that lawyers dislike greatly: a “trial within a trial.”  (Think Russian nesting dolls). Here, the two trials involved the question of whether the non-compete was enforceable and, if so, whether Cheung acted illegally by releasing the employee from the agreement.

The trial began with a jury proceeding, during which the jury was asked to decide the second of these issues first  - whether Cheung had improperly given the employee a release from  the non-compete.  However, in an odd twist the parties agreed that the judge, not the jury, would rule on damages.  Before doing so, however, the judge addressed the second issue (which, one would think, should have gone first),  held that the non-compete agreement was unenforceable, and concluded therefore that Trillium had suffered no damages.  Case over.

The Appeals Court found several problems with this outcome, and sent the case back for a new trial.  First, the judge failed to describe the legal standard he had applied to determine the enforceability of the non-compete agreement. The Appeals Court had no way of reviewing a trial judge’s decision if he failed to state, on the record in open court or in a written decision, the legal grounds  for his conclusion.  Making matters even worse, the Appeals Court indicated that the trial judge had heard evidence developed during the jury  trial which contributed to his conclusion that the non-compete was unenforceable, but he failed to describe these facts so that the Appeals Court could review them and determine if the trial court had correctly applied the legal grounds to them.  The Appeals Court had no record upon which is could review the ruling on the law or the facts.

This case illustrates a crucial aspect of legal proceedings that we sometimes take for granted, but which somehow got lost in this case.  The Appeals Court observed that as far back as 1923 (and likely long before 1923) the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court noted “the underlying principle that a judge must set forth the legal grounds on which he makes his legal determination . . .  the court shall specify with particularity the grounds on which his mind rests in reaching his conclusion. The parties thus are advised of the exact foundation for the action taken by the judge.”  Without this information, there is no basis for appellate review.

Of course, when a case is decided by a jury things proceed a bit differently – a jury renders a verdict with no explanation of its grounds, and that decision is inviolate, so long as the judge properly instructs the jury on the law and follows the rules of evidence (more or less).

But, phase two of this case was a judge case, not a jury case, and why the judge didn’t explain the factual and legal bases for his decision is something of a mystery.  The trial took place in early 2009 and now, three years later, the parties will have to undergo a retrial. However, it will still be a “trial within a trial” – as the Appeals Court stated, “we remand the matter for a new trial on the issue of damages, which shall include determination of the predicate issue of enforceability of the [non-compete] agreement.”

Trillium v. Cheung

Continue Reading Mass. Appeals Court Reverses an Unusual Trial Order in Non-Compete Case: Trillium v. Cheung

Two Recent Noncompete Cases From the Superior Court

by Lee Gesmer on March 23, 2012

Noncompete opinions from the Massachusetts Superior Court are few and far between, so the two decisions that have been issued so far this year — one from Judge Peter Lauriat sitting in the Suffolk Business Litigation Section (BLS), the other from Judge Thomas R. Murtagh in Middlesex Cournty — are worth noting.  Both judges are respected judicial veterans, and each decision illustrates a legal principle basic to this controversial and often confusing area of law.

The more note-worthy of the two cases is Judge Lauriat’s decision in Grace Hunt IT Soutions v. SIS Software, LLC.   There are relatively few ways to wriggle out of a non-compete, but one that should be near the top of every lawyer’s list is the question whether there has been a “material change” in the employment relationship since the non-compete agreement was signed.  If so, a “pre-change” non-compete may be unenforceable.  In this case the court found that there had been such a change, and therefore it denied a motion for preliminary injunction to enforce the  non-compete  covenant against the defendants.  Of course, what constitutes a “material change” can vary, depending upon the eye of the beholder, which in a preliminary injunction context is the judge.  In this case Judge Lauriat concluded that a 20% cut in salary was enough of a change to satisfy this standard.  Also, the employees had signed the non-compete with a company that had subsequently been acquired, and the acquiring company was attempting to enforce the non-compete agreement.  Judge Lauriat  seemed to put some weight on the fact that the new employer had asked the employees to  sign new non-competition agreements after the acquisition,  implying that the new employer had thought the employment relationships had materially changed, requiring new agreements.*  Preliminary injunction denied.

*Sometimes an acquisition alone will void a non-compete. That was not the case here, likely because the employment agreements permitted assignment.  However, many agreements do not include assignment clauses, preventing the post-acquisition employer from enforcing a non-compete agreement signed with the pre-acquisition employer.  See the discussion of L-3 Communications v. Reveal Imagining at this prior post (non-compete agreement signed not assigned as part of a sale to current employer was not enforceable).

The second of the two decisions illustrates more of a cookie-cutter approach to the enforcement of a non-compete covenant.  In this case, A.R.S. Services v. Baker, the plaintiff, a company disaster restoration field, asked the  court to enforce a one year non-compete provision against an employee who had resigned from the plaintiff’s firm .  It appears that the only argument Baker could make against enforcement was that his former employer had asked him to engage in “a fraudulent act involving moral turpitude,” and that this was a “material breach” of the non-compete agreement, rendering it unenforceable.  It is true that a material breach by an employer can invalidate a non-compete covenant.  However, this case appears to have involved  little  more than an internal disagreement between Baker and the employer over a cost estimate to rebuild a home.  The judge didn’t buy it – quite rightly, if the evidence in support of this assertion was as weak as the decision suggests.  This case was “plain vanilla.”  Preliminary injunction allowed.

Grace Hunt IT Soutions v. SIS Software, LLC

A.R.S. Services v. Baker

 

Continue Reading Two Recent Noncompete Cases From the Superior Court

You know all those used music stores you used to love to go to back in the day when you bought music on CDs?  You could browse through used CDs and buy them for less than retail.  Maybe you still do (kudos to Deja Vu Records in Natick, Mass.).  Of course, you can do the same thing online.

The founders of Massachsetts-based Redigi figured, why can’t we create a marketplace that will allow people to do the same thing with their digital music files?  Or, as Redigi puts it: ” Sell your old songs legally – The world’s first used digital music marketplace - Buy used music insanely cheap”.  However, in starting this business Redigi may have run smack into the disconnect between the U.S. copyright statute and digital media.  And, it has been forced to defend against a full-on assault by the RIAA  (in the form of its apparent designee, Capitol Records).

Redigi’s service launched in October 2011, and by reason of the sheer chutzpah of its business model the copyright industry (the usual ragtag collection of lawyers, industry types, bloggers, reporters and hangers-on) was soon debating the legality or illegality of its service. By early November Redigi was holding a ”roll over and die” letter from the RIAA. By early January 2012 Capitol had filed suit against Redigi in the Southern District of New York.

Issue was joined quickly when Capitol filed a motion for preliminary injunction seeking, in effect, to shut Redigi down and end the case with a single, crushing legal blow.  The district court denied the motion, so Redigi remains alive for now.  However, the case is on a fast track – Capitol and Redigi have waived a jury trial, and the parties will be filing summary judgment motions this summer.  The case is likely to be resolved before the end of the year, at least in the trial court.

Continue Reading Redigi Case Poses A Novel Copyright Question on the Resale of Digital Audio Files – Is “Digital First Sale” Legal?

One of the risks of electing to resolve a dispute in arbitration is that, apart from a few narrow exceptions, the decision of the arbitrator is non-appealable.  This can be very hard on the losing party, who believes the arbitrator completely misapplied the law or, in the terminology of the courts, “manifestly disregarded” the law.

Affymax believed it was faced with such a situation when an arbitration panel ruled in favor of Otho-McNeil-Janssen on certain issues in a complicated patent dispute.  Affymax challenged the panel’s decision, and the federal district court reversed part of the arbitration panel’s award.

Wrong, said Chief Judge Easterbrook of the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals in Affymax, Inc. v. Ortho-McNeil-Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Inc., decided on October 3, 2011:  “Manifest disregard of the law” is not a ground on which a court may reject an arbitrator’s award.  The First Circuit, where I practice, has made this clear as well.  See Ramos-Santiago v. United Parcel Service, 524 F.3d 120, 124 n.3 (1st Cir. 2008) (“manifest disregard of the law is not a valid ground for vacating or modifying an arbitral award in cases brought under the Federal Arbitration Act”).

Continue Reading 7th Circuit Reminds District Court: Manifest Disregard of the Law Is Not Grounds for Vacating an Arbitration Award

Cases Cited in My 2011 MCLE Noncompete Chapter Update

by Lee Gesmer on November 7, 2011

Cases Cited in My 2011 MCLE Noncompete Chapter Update

Earlier this year Massachusetts Continuing Legal Education  (MCLE)  asked me to update my 2009 chapter on Employee Noncompetition Agreements.   The revised chapter, part of the 2-volume Massachusetts Employment Law series, was published in June.

Below are links to the cases I added to this chapter.   I’ve also included a sentence or two regarding each case.  However, I did not make an effort to describe every legally significant aspects of each case.

  • Ethicon Endo-Surgery, Inc. v. Pemberton, 27 Mass. L. Rptr. 541 (Super. Ct. 2010).  This case, decided by Judge Peter Lauriat  in the Suffolk Business Litigation Session, applies New Jersey non-compete law, but Massachusetts procedural law for purposes of ruling on a preliminary injunction.  The former employee filed suit in California first, but Judge Lauriat  refused to dismiss this case based on the “first filed” rule.  The court enforced an 18 month covenant not to compete against the former employee.
  • Inner-Tite Corp. v. Brozowski, No. 2010-0156 (Worcester Super. Ct. 2010).  This lenghy decision was written by Judge Janet Kenton-Walker, sitting in Worcester County, following a bench trial.   The judge enforced a one year convenant not to compete against an employee who had worked for Inner-Tite in Georgia.  Given Brozowski’s  relatively low salary, and the fact that he was asked to sign the non-compete after beginning work for Inner-Tite, this contract would not have been enforceable under the various proposed Massachusetts non-compete statutes.  Either ground would have invalidated the agreement.  This was a tough outcome for the former employee, and one which might have had a different outcome in Suffolk, Middlesex or Norfolk counties, which tend to have more liberal leanings in these cases.

Continue Reading Cases Cited in My 2011 MCLE Noncompete Chapter Update

Jury Consultants post – Rajaratnam: Are They Worth It?

I was interested to read the The Wall Street Journal’s report that Raj Rajaratnam spent $300,000 on jury consultants before the trial in which he was convicted on all 14 counts of securities law violations.  As my teenage daughter might say, “fail”!

OK, I admit that I’m being a bit unfair.  From everything I read in the press regarding this trial it would have been astounding if Mr. Rajaratnam had been acquitted. After all, the government had something quite rare in insider trading cases: audiotapes of the defendant, convicting him with his own words.  A jury consultant “fantasy team” comprised of Sigmund Freud and a certified psychic probably wouldn’t have been able to help in this case.

Nevertheless, it’s no great surprise that Raj’s attorneys chose to use jury consultants in this case.  $300,000 was a drop in the bucket given the “spare no expense” approach taken by defense counsel in this case.  Mr. Rajaratnam”s lawyers undoubtedly concluded that jury consultants might help, and couldn’t hurt.  The decision to utilize jury consultants probably was a prudent step in minimizing future regret.  (“If only we had used a jury consultant our client might not have been convicted! Darn.”).

Trial lawyers have long been deeply divided on the question of whether jury consultants are “worth it.” Some of the consultants’ recommendations in this case  (as reported in the WSJ), are so obvious that it your lawyer doesn’t know them without a jury consultant’s advice, get a new lawyer.  For example, the Journal reports that the consultantants concluded that jurors who were members of ethnic minority groups were more sympathetic to Mr. Rajaratnam, who was born in Sri Lanka.  Hmm . . . . did OJ’s lawyers need jury consultants to tell them that people of color might be more favorably disposed to OJ than whites?  I hope not.  Lawyers shouldn’t need jury consultants to tell them that people are predisposed to like people  like themselves.  If my client is an ultra orthodox Jew, I want a jury of the same.  If my client is a native American . . . . well, you get it.

Continue Reading Jury Consultants post – Rajaratnam: Are They Worth It?

How to (or Not to) Write for the Supreme Court

by Lee Gesmer on May 20, 2011

How to (or Not to) Write for the Supreme Court

“I’m sorry this letter is so long, I didn’t have time to make it shorter.”
George Bernard Shaw

Non-lawyers see lawyers arguing before judges on television and in the movies, and they get the mistaken impression that oral argument is the heart and soul of lawyering.  In fact, it’s not.  Most judges based their decision on a careful reading of the legal briefs submitted to them.  That’s particularly true of the Supreme Court, where each side to a case may spend hundreds or thousands of hours preparing their written briefs, and get all of 30 minutes per side for oral argument.  This wasn’t always the case – until the mid-1800′s the time for argument was unrestricted, and could go for days.  In 1849 the time per side was limited to two hours.  This was reduced to one hour in 1925, and 30 minutes in 1970.  And, as Justice Alito recently noted, half of the words spoken during those 30 minutes are spoken by the Justices themselves, while questioning the lawyers.

Continue Reading How to (or Not to) Write for the Supreme Court

Trial Practice: If You Can’t Fix It, Feature It (or at least mention it before the other side does)

One of the oldest, most hoary rules of the trial practice is this: if you have a bad fact, reveal it to the jury before your opponent does.  Otherwise, the theory goes, the jury (or judge) will think you are trying to hide it from them, and will count it against you. Worst case, you will lose credibility as an advocate – if this lawyer will try to hide a significant fact from me this time, what else is he or she hiding?  Why should I trust this attorney?

Disclosing the bad fact is OK, but even better, figure out some way to turn the “bad” fact to your advantage – “if you can’t fix it, feature it.”  For example, “my client was convicted of criminal fraud ten years ago.  We want you to know about this, jurors, and to know that he has paid his price to society, and been free of any allegations of wrong doing since.  Since then he has married, he is the father of triplets, and he hasn’t gotten into trouble since.  We all make mistakes – don’t hold this one against him.”

Continue Reading Trial Practice: If You Can’t Fix It, Feature It (or at least mention it before the other side does)

Apple, Google, Have You No Shame? Really!

by Lee Gesmer on October 1, 2010

Apple, Google, Have You No Shame?  Really!

While the debate over whether Massachusetts should adopt a law restricting the enforceability of non-compete agreements rages on (well, at least among a group of maybe 100 economists, lawyers and business people), California proudly observes that noncompete agreements are unenforceable in that state (except under very limited circumstances).   And, economists argue, that is one reason why the high-tech industry in Silicon Valley is more successful than its counterpart Massachusetts.

Now, come to learn, things were not quite what they seemed.  I’m sure that 99% of California companies are in fact impacted by the California law — that is, they cannot impose covenants not to compete on their employees.  But a few companies — Google, Apple, Pixar, Adobe, Intuit and Intel — figured out an end-run around this law.  Apparently, the Federal Trade Commission tumbled to the fact that each of these companies agreed, with one or more of the others, not to solicit that company’s employees. For example, according to the FTC Apple and Google put each others employees on “Do Not Call” lists.

Continue Reading Apple, Google, Have You No Shame? Really!

Runescape Copyright and CFAA Case Fails at Preliminary Injunction Stage, But Runescape is Not Down for the Count: Jagex v. Impulse Software

A decision in Jagex v. Impulse Software, issued by Massachusetts U.S. District Court Judge Gorton in August, has some interesting (albeit not nonobvious) lessons for software developers seeking to protect their websites from copying or reverse engineering.  The decision arises in the context of a preliminary injunction – a request by Jagex to provide it with legal relief at the outset of the case, before discovery or trial – so Jagex may yet prevail in this case, particularly since most of the reasons the court denied it relief that this stage can be corrected before the case progresses much further.

The plaintiff, Jagex operates an online role-playing game called “Runescape.”  Runescape is a “massively multiplayer online role-playing game” (MMORPG for short, but we’ll just call it “the game”).

Impulse offers online cheat tools – software that lets users advance through the levels of the game without actually playing the game.  Moving to higher and more challenging levels is the goal of the game, and the Impulse software allows users to reach those hallowed grounds without investing the time and effort the game expects users to endure.  And, it is possible to invest a great deal of time and effort with this game – Judge Gorton noted that the top three Runescape players averaged about 20,000 hours of playing time.

Continue Reading Runescape Copyright and CFAA Case Fails at Preliminary Injunction Stage, But Runescape is Not Down for the Count: Jagex v. Impulse Software