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In Copyright Litigation, Availability of Attorney’s Fees Awards Can Cut Both Ways

A recent opinion written by Judge Richard Posner for the 7th Circuit highlights the importance of carefully considering some of the risks of loss for plaintiffs in proceeding with a copyright infringement lawsuit.

In Eagle Services Corp. v. H2O Industrial Services, Inc., the plaintiff, Eagle, filed suit after several of its employees, who left to form H2O, used copies of Eagle’s safety manual in operations at the new business. The manual in question consisted largely, if not entirely, of quotations from OSHA regulations, making the scope of the copyright limited to the compilation as a whole. Instead of pursuing an award of statutory damages under the Copyright Act, Eagle argued that it should be awarded all the profits that H2O made in its business before it created its own manual, because, according to Eagle, without a manual H2O could not have provided any services in its industry without violating OSHA regulations. Though the trial court allowed Eagle to present its case to the jury, at the close of its evidence, H2O moved for judgment in its favor as a matter of law, which the court granted, based on Eagle’s failure to prove that OSHA requires the companies it regulates to maintain a safety manual. However, the trial court refused to award H2O, as the prevailing party, its reasonable attorney’s fees on the ground that the suit was not frivolous and had not been filed in bad faith. H2O appealed the denial of attorney’s fees.

The 7th Circuit reversed the trial court’s decision. In his opinion, Judge Posner noted that the suit “could not have been brought in good faith,” because Eagle never had any reasonable basis to believe that the state would have shut down H2O’s operations for want of a safety manual, especially in light of the fact that, even if a manual were required, the applicable regulations would have given H2O an opportunity to procure one. Judge Posner further noted, colorfully:

So we have a suit brought almost certainly in bad faith, a frivolous suit, a suit against a newer and probably smaller and weaker firm. Under any standard we know for shifting attorney's fees from a losing plaintiff to a winning defendant, H2O (and the individuals joined as defendants along with it) would be entitled to an award of attorney's fees.

Judge Posner also noted that in copyright cases, prevailing defendants are not required to prove that the plaintiffs’ suit was frivolous in order to prove their entitlement to an award of attorney’s fees. According to Judge Posner, if there is any asymmetry in the analysis regarding whether to award attorney’s fees in copyright cases, that asymmetry actually tips in favor of prevailing defendants:

The successful assertion of a copyright confirms the plaintiff's possession of an exclusive, and sometimes very valuable, right, and thus gives it an incentive to spend heavily on litigation. In contrast, a successful defense against a copyright claim, when it throws the copyrighted work into the public domain, benefits all users of the public domain, not just the defendant; he obtains no exclusive right and so his incentive to spend on defense is reduced and he may be forced into an unfavorable settlement.

Though H2O’s success in this case did not result in the enlargement of the public domain, that fact did not rebut the basic presumption affirmed by Judge Posner that, in most cases, awards of attorney’s fees to prevailing parties are presumed to be appropriate.

This case serves as a useful reminder to businesses considering whether to file suit over infringement of its copyrighted works. The costs of federal litigation are always high, and a loss at trial could mean that the plaintiff would be out not only its own attorney’s fees, but also those of its adversary.

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This page contains a single entry from the blog posted on August 6, 2008 10:29 AM.

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