Case # | Name | Category | Court | Judge | Published |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
22-1078
|
Warner Chappell Music, Inc. v. Nealy
Copyright plaintiffs may recover damages for acts that allegedly occurred more than three years before the filing of the lawsuit if the claims are timely filed. |
Copyright, Civil Procedure |
|
E. Kagan | May 10, 2024 |
22-55890
|
Hanagami v. Epic Games, Inc.
Choreographer plausibly alleged claim for copyright infringement of his selection and arrangement of dance moves. |
Copyright |
|
R. Paez | Nov. 2, 2023 |
22-15188
|
Oracle USA Inc. v. Rimini Street Inc.
Interpretation of permanent injunction as precluding a party from engaging in de minimis copying that did not violate the Copyright Act was overly burdensome and improper. |
Copyright |
|
P. Bumatay | Aug. 25, 2023 |
22-15293
|
Alexis Hunley, et al. v. Instagram, LLC
Third-party news sites could embed photographers' copyrighted Instagram photos because the embedded images were not "displayed" under *Perfect 10*'s Server Test. |
Copyright |
|
J. Bybee | Jul. 18, 2023 |
22-35345
|
Enterprise Management Limited, Inc. et al v. Construx Software Builders, Inc. et al
By registering a derivative work, an author registers all of the material included in the derivative work, including that which previously appeared in an unregistered, original work created by the author. |
Copyright |
|
S. Ikuta | Jul. 18, 2023 |
22-35147
|
VHT Inc. v. Zillow Group, Inc.
Real estate photography studio's 2,700 photos constituted individual works with separate statutory damages rather than a single compilation because they were utilized for their individual pictorial value. |
Copyright |
|
M. McKeown | Jun. 8, 2023 |
21-869
|
Andy Warhol Foundation for Visual Arts, Inc. v. Goldsmith
Publication of artwork derived from copyrighted photograph in a magazine was a commercial use similar enough to that of the original photograph that weighed against a finding of fair use. |
Copyright |
|
S. Sotomayor | May 19, 2023 |
18-56253
|
Unicolors Inc. v. H&M Hennes & Mauritz L.P.
Because plaintiff did not know that its practice of bundling designs under a single, copyright registration would run afoul of registration requirements, its copyright registration was valid under the Copyright Act's safe-harbor provision. |
Copyright |
|
C. Bea | Nov. 11, 2022 |
21-55854
|
McGucken v. Pub Ocean Ltd.
Publisher's unlicensed use of twelve photographs in nature article was not entitled to a fair use defense because all four statutory factors weighed against fair use. |
Copyright |
|
J. Nguyen | Aug. 4, 2022 |
21-55379
|
Starz Entertainment v. MGM
Copyright plaintiff's cause of action accrued when it discovered the infringement, and it could recover damages for all incidents of infringement that occurred prior to the discovery. |
Copyright |
|
K. Wardlaw | Jul. 15, 2022 |
19-16913
|
Sicre De Fontbrune v. Wofsy
French judgment that imposed money damages for continued use of copyrighted Pablo Picasso photographs was not repugnant to United States public policy protecting free expression. |
Copyright |
|
J. Ericksen | Jul. 14, 2022 |
20-55401
|
Gray v. Hudson
Plaintiffs cannot prove substantial similarity between songs since an eight-note repeating instrumental figure is an uncopyrightable musical building block |
Copyright |
|
M. Smith | Mar. 11, 2022 |
20-915
|
Unicolors, Inc. v. H&M Hennes & Mauritz, L.P.
Lack of either factual or legal knowledge can excuse inaccuracy in a copyright registration under the Copyright Act's safe harbor provision. |
Copyright |
|
S. Breyer | Feb. 25, 2022 |
20-16469
|
CDK Global v. Brnovich
Because programmers would not necessarily engage in verbatim copying of protectable API source code, Arizona's Dealer Law did not conflict with the Copyright Act. |
Copyright |
|
E. Miller | Oct. 26, 2021 |
19-55882
|
Bell v. Wilmot Storage Services
The de minimis exception to copyright infringement applies to the substantial similarity element, rather than to the extent that defendant displays infringing material. |
Copyright |
|
K. Wardlaw | Sep. 10, 2021 |
17-55844
|
Flo & Eddie, Inc. v. Sirius XM Radio, Inc.
District court erred in concluding that 'exclusive ownership' under California Civil Code Section 980(a)(2) included the right of public performance. |
Copyright |
|
K. Lee | Aug. 24, 2021 |
18-956
|
Google LLC v. Oracle America, Inc.
Google's copying of Java SE API, which included only lines of code that were needed to allow programmers to put their accrued talents to work in new and transformative program, was fair use. |
Copyright |
|
S. Breyer | Apr. 6, 2021 |
19-55348
|
Dr. Seuss Enterprises v. ComicMix LLC
Defendants' use of Dr. Seuss's copyrighted works, including the book 'Oh, the Places You'll Go!' was not fair use. |
Copyright |
|
M. McKeown | Dec. 21, 2020 |
17-16337
|
Corbello v. Valli
Under asserted truths doctrine, author who holds their work out as nonfiction cannot later claim, in litigation, that aspects of the work were actually made up and thus entitled to full copyright protection. |
Copyright |
|
M. Berzon | Sep. 9, 2020 |
19-15506
|
Oracle America v. Hewlett Packard Enterprise
District court's partial summary judgment for defendant on claims for copyright infringement and intentional interference with prospective economic advantage based upon statute of limitations was proper. |
Copyright |
|
M. Smith | Aug. 21, 2020 |
18-56253
|
Unicolors v. H&M Hennes & Mauritz
Plaintiff's copyright registration application contained inaccuracies that it knew were inaccurate; thus, district court was required to request Register of Copyrights to advise. |
Copyright |
|
C. Bea | Jun. 1, 2020 |
18-55635
|
Amended Opinion: Daniels v. The Walt Disney Co.
Using colors to represent a mood or emotion is an idea that does not fall within the protection of copyright; thus, plaintiff's characters were not protected. |
Copyright |
|
M. McKeown | May 5, 2020 |
17-56006
|
Tresona Multimedia v. Burbank High School Vocal Music Association
Defense of fair use applied due to limited and transformative nature of the use and work's nonprofit educational purposes. |
Copyright |
|
K. Wardlaw | Mar. 25, 2020 |
18-877
|
Allen v. Cooper
The Intellectual Property Clause did not allow Congress to abrogate sovereign immunity from copyright suits. |
Copyright |
|
E. Kagan | Mar. 24, 2020 |
18-55635
|
Daniels v. The Walt Disney Co.
Using colors to represent a mood or emotion is an idea that does not fall within the protection of copyright; thus, plaintiff's characters were not protected. |
Copyright |
|
M. McKeown | Mar. 17, 2020 |
16-56057
|
Skidmore v. Led Zeppelin
Under the 1909 Copyright Act, protection was circumscribed to the material actually deposited and nothing else could be used to show substantial similarity. |
Copyright |
|
M. McKeown | Mar. 10, 2020 |
18-55331
|
Great Minds v. Office Depot
Licensee's hiring of third-party copy service to reproduce licensed material strictly for licensee's own permitted use does not turn third party into licensee that is bound to license terms. |
Copyright |
|
J. Farris | Dec. 30, 2019 |
17-55818
|
Gold Value Int'l Textile v. Sanctuary Clothing
Copyright registration was invalid because all elements of Section 411(b) of the Prioritizing Resources and Organization for Intellectual Property Act of 2008 were established. |
Copyright |
|
G. Steeh | Jun. 5, 2019 |
17-55983
|
Malibu Textiles v. Label Lane Int'l
Because plaintiff successfully pled striking similarity in its copyright infringement claim against defendants, the district court erred in dismissal. |
Copyright |
|
M. Real | Apr. 25, 2019 |
15-16801
|
Erickson Productions,Inc. v. Kraig Kast
Trial court incorrectly found for plaintiff in copyright suit where defendant did not seek or receive 'direct financial benefit' by use of plaintiff's images on defendant's website. |
Copyright |
|
M. Hawkins | Apr. 17, 2019 |