Scorpio Music S.A. et al v. Willis
Filing
13
REPLY to Response to Motion re 6 MOTION to Dismiss the Complaint Defendant's Reply Memorandum of Points and Authorities filed by Victor Willis. (Ross, Jonathan)(mtb).
1 SCOTT+SCOTT LLP
Walter W. Noss (277580)
2 Kristen M. Anderson (246108)
707 Broadway, 10th Floor
3 San Diego, CA 92101
Telephone: (619) 233-4565
4 Facsimile: (619) 233-0508
Email: wnoss@scott-scott.com
5
kanderson@scott-scott.com
6 -and7 CAPLAN & ROSS, LLP
Brian D. Caplan (admitted pro hac vice)
8 Jonathan J. Ross (admitted pro hac vice)
270 Madison Avenue, 13th Floor
9 New York, NY 10016
Telephone: (212) 973-2376
10 Facsimile: (212) 661-4290
Email: bcaplan@caplanross.com
11
jross@caplanross.com
12 Attorneys for Defendant Victor Willis
13
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
14
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA
15
SCORPIO MUSIC (BLACK SCORPIO) S.A. and
16 CAN’T STOP PRODUCTIONS, INC.
17
Plaintiffs,
18 vs.
Case No. 3:11-CV-01557-BTM (RBB)
REPLY MEMORANDUM OF
POINTS AND AUTHORITIES IN
SUPPORT OF DEFENDANT’S
MOTION TO DISMISS THE
COMPLAINT
19 VICTOR WILLIS
Honorable Barry T. Moskowitz
20
Defendant.
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Defendant’s Reply Memorandum
Case No. 3:11-CV-01557-BTM (RBB)
TABLE OF CONTENTS
1
2 PRELIMINARY STATEMENT ..................................................................................................1
3 I.
5
PLAINTIFFS’ OPPOSITION IS SOLELY BASED UPON THE
INCORRECT CONTENTIONS THAT (i) A BROADER TERMINATION
RIGHT EXISTED PRIOR TO THE 1976 REVISIONS TO THE
COPYRIGHT ACT, AND (ii) THAT CONGRESS’ INTENTION IN 1976
WAS PURPORTEDLY TO LIMIT THOSE BROADER RIGHTS .............................2
6
A.
Contrary to Plaintiffs’ Contentions, Termination Rights did not Exist
at all under the Copyright Act of 1909.................................................................2
B.
Contrary to Plaintiffs’ Contentions, the Legislative History of the
1976 Revisions to the Copyright Act reflect that their Underlying
Purposes and Goals were not to Limit Then-Existing Rights, but to
Expand and Protect Authors’ Rights ...................................................................3
C.
Plaintiffs Likewise Wrongly Contend, without any support, that
Congress inserted the Majority Requirement for Grants Executed by
Co-authors into Section 203, but not Section 304, to place limits upon
the termination rights of post-1978 co-authors; The True Reason for
this Difference Arose from Unique Circumstances of the Renewal
Term System, not any Goal of Limiting Authors’ Rights ..................................4
D.
The Plain Meaning of the Statute is Wholly Consistent with the True
Purposes of the Revisions to the Copyright Act ..................................................7
4
7
8
9
10
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15 II.
16
PLAINTIFFS HAVE NOT OPPOSED THE DISMISSAL OF THE
REMAINING ALTERNATIVE CLAIMS CONTAINED IN THE
COMPLAINT .....................................................................................................................8
17 CONCLUSION ............................................................................................................................10
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Defendant’s Reply Memorandum
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Case No. 3:11-CV-01557-BTM (RBB)
TABLE OF AUTHORITIES
1
2 CASES
3 Barnhart v. Sigmon Coal Co., 534 U.S. 438 (2002) ....................................................................... 7
4 Clark v. Capital Credit 460 F.3d 1162 (9th Cir 2006) ................................................................... 7
5 Fred Fisher Music Co. v. M. Witmark and Sons, 318 U.S. 642 (1943).......................................... 4
6 Johnson v. Homecomings Financial, 2011 WL 4373975 (S.D. Cal. Sept. 20, 2011) .................... 8
7 Stitching Pensioenfonds ABP v. Countrywide Financial Corp., 2011 WL 3558173,
(C.D.Cal. Aug. 9, 2011) ...................................................................................................... 8
8
Sweet Music, Inc. v. Melrose Music Corp., 189 F. Supp. 655 (S.D. Ca. 1960) .............................. 5
9
STATUTES
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17 U.S.C. § 203 (1976) ................................................................................................................... 2
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17 U.S.C. § 203(a)(1) (1976). ......................................................................................................... 7
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17 U.S.C. § 203(b) (1976) .............................................................................................................. 9
13
17 U.S.C. § 24 (1909) ................................................................................................................. 2, 4
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17 U.S.C. § 304 (1976) ................................................................................................................... 3
15
17 U.S.C. 201(d) (1976) ................................................................................................................. 6
16
OTHER AUTHORITIES
17
H.R. Rep. No. 94-1476, 94th Cong., 2d Sess. (1976) ............................................................. 3, 4, 5
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S. Rep. No. 473, 94th Cong., 1st Sess. (1975) ........................................................................ 3, 4, 5
19
TREATISES
20
3 Nimmer on Copyright § 11.03[A][1] ........................................................................................... 6
21
3 Nimmer on Copyright § 9.02 ....................................................................................................... 2
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Goldstein on Copyright § 5.4.2 (3d. ed. 2010) ............................................................................... 7
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Defendant’s Reply Memorandum
ii
Case No. 3:11-CV-01557-BTM (RBB)
PRELIMINARY STATEMENT
1
2
Plaintiffs’ Complaint for declaratory relief in this action asserts numerous, alternative, bases
3 for a declaration that Defendant’s Notice of Termination was invalid. As each of these bases fail to
4 set forth a claim for which relief can be granted to Plaintiffs, Defendant Victor Willis (“Willis”)
5 moved to dismiss all of these “claims” set forth in the Complaint (the “Motion”). Plaintiffs’
6 Opposition to Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss the Complaint only opposes one aspect of the Motion;
7 namely, Plaintiffs’ erroneous contention that a majority of the authors of a Composition is needed to
8 terminate a Grant executed by only one of the authors.
Plaintiffs provide no opposition to
9 Defendant’s request that all of the other claims set forth in the Complaint should also be dismissed.
10
With respect to the grantor issue, Plaintiffs simply ignore the plain, and concededly
11 unambiguous, terms of the statute. Instead, Plaintiffs resort to reliance upon unsupported, and
12 erroneous, contentions concerning purported policies and purposes of the statutory provisions at
13 issue. Without citation to any support, Plaintiffs essentially attempt to turn the statute on its head
14 and argue that the 1976 revisions to the Copyright Act were somehow meant to limit a co-author’s
15 rights. This is the exact opposite of the true purposes of the revisions to protect authors’ rights, as
16 expressly stated in the legislative history to the Act. Plaintiffs likewise ignore, and thereby concede,
17 Willis’ position that Plaintiffs’ strained interpretation of the “Grant” -- to mean various separate
18 grants of each co-author entered into at different times with various different grantees -- is wholly
19 inconsistent and unworkable with the related provisions of the Copyright Act and implementing
20 Regulations, which clearly contemplate the termination of a specific grant.
21
Accordingly, Willis respectfully submits that given the unambiguous language of the statute
22 and related Regulations, and the true purposes underlying its provisions, Plaintiffs’ claim that Willis
23 could not serve a Notice of Termination of the Grants solely executed by him should be dismissed,
24 and the remaining claims in the Complaint should likewise be dismissed for the unopposed reasons
25 set forth in the Motion.
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Defendant’s Reply Memorandum
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Case No. 3:11-CV-01557-BTM (RBB)
1
2
ARGUMENT
I.
PLAINTIFFS’ OPPOSITION IS SOLELY BASED UPON THE INCORRECT
CONTENTIONS THAT (i) A BROADER TERMINATION RIGHT EXISTED
PRIOR TO THE 1976 REVISIONS TO THE COPYRIGHT ACT, AND (ii) THAT
CONGRESS’ INTENTION IN 1976 WAS PURPORTEDLY TO LIMIT THOSE
BROADER RIGHTS
3
4
5
A.
Contrary to Plaintiffs’ Contentions, Termination Rights did not Exist at all
under the Copyright Act of 1909
6
On page 2 of the Opposition Memorandum, Plaintiffs make the erroneous statement that, “the
7
1976 revision to the Copyright Act changed Section 203 to require that a grant of copyright in a joint
8
work executed on or after January 1, 1978, may be terminated only by a majority of the joint authors
9
who granted rights.” Plaintiffs then build upon this legal fallacy to argue that Willis is somehow
10
attempting to return to old, rejected, law. Putting aside for the moment the tortuous paraphrasing of
11
the statute, this statement is simply incorrect, as the revisions did not “change” Section 203. That
12
section, and, for that matter, termination rights in general, simply did not exist prior to the 1976
13
revisions to the Copyright Act.
14
Under the Copyright Act of 1909, Section 24 thereof provided for two separate terms of
15
copyright, an original and renewal term, both lasting 28 years, for a total of 56 years of copyright
16
protection. 17 U.S.C. § 24 (1909). The purpose of the separate renewal term of copyright was to
17
provide the author with a second opportunity to market his work after its value had been
18
established during the original term of copyright. 3 Nimmer on Copyright § 9.02, citing the
19
House Report for the 1909 Act, H.R. Rep. No. 2222 60th Cong. 2d Sess. P. 14. At the expiration
20
of the original term of copyright, the copyright in the work would automatically, by operation of
21
law, return to the author, or the statutory heirs of the author. Thus, there was no “termination
22
right” under the Copyright Act prior to the 1976 revisions. Rather, barring an express
23
assignment of the renewal term, the copyright would simply re-vest in the author.
24
The 1976 revisions to the Copyright Act did away with the renewal term system for new
25
works created after January 1, 1978 (the effective date of the revisions) providing for a term of
26
copyright of the author’s life plus 50 years (since extended further), 17 U.S.C. § 203 (1976), and also
27
added an additional 19 years to the renewal term of copyright for pre-1978 works. 17 U.S.C. § 304
28
Defendant’s Reply Memorandum
2
Case No. 3:11-CV-01557-BTM (RBB)
1 (1976). Since there would now no longer be an automatic re-vesting in the author, the revisions also
2 included a new termination right for post-1978 works, codified in the new § 203 of the Copyright
3 Act. Moreover, with respect to then existing works (i.e. works created prior to 1978), the revisions
4 also provided for a termination of the renewal term grant with respect to the additional 19 years of
5 copyright (the so-called “extended term”), codified in new § 304 of the Copyright Act.
6
Thus, Plaintiffs’ Opposition wrongly represents that § 203 was “changed” by the 1976
7 revisions -- in an apparent attempt to further their errant implication that the 1976 revisions were
8 meant to limit authors’ rights.
9
10
B.
Contrary to Plaintiffs’ Contentions, the Legislative History of the 1976
Revisions to the Copyright Act reflect that their Underlying Purposes and Goals
were not to Limit Then-Existing Rights, but to Expand and Protect Authors’
Rights
11
Plaintiffs cannot point to any statement, and Willis is not aware of any, in either the
12
House or Senate Reports to the 1976 Copyright Act that would even remotely imply that the
13
purpose and “legislative goals” underlying Sections 203 and 304 were to place limits upon, or to
14
otherwise restrict, then-existing rights of authors under the Copyright Act of 1909. To the
15
contrary, the House and Senate Reports unequivocally reflect that the purpose of enacting the
16
termination provisions was to protect authors by providing an opportunity to re-market their
17
works once the true value of such works had been established.
18
For example, the House and Senate Reports to the 1976 Copyright Act, in no uncertain
19
terms, express the goal of protecting authors’ from “unremunerative transfers” made by authors
20
due to unequal bargaining positions and the impossibility of knowing the true value of a work
21
until it has a track record of exploitation :
22
23
24
25
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The provisions of section 203 are based upon the premise that the reversionary
provisions of the present section on copyright renewal (17 U.S.C. sec. 24) should
be eliminated, and that the proposed law should substitute for them a provision
safeguarding authors against unremunerative transfers. A provision of this sort is
needed because of the unequal bargaining position of authors, resulting in part
from the impossibility of determining a work's value until it has been exploited.
H.R. Rep. No. 94-1476, 94th Cong., 2d Sess. 124-28 (1976); S. Rep. No. 473,
94th Cong., 1st Sess. 111 (1975)
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Defendant’s Reply Memorandum
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Case No. 3:11-CV-01557-BTM (RBB)
1
Moreover, the termination provisions, and in particular the prohibition against transfers
2 of termination rights prior to the effective date of termination, were also a direct response to the
3 Supreme Court’s decision of Fred Fisher Music Co. v. M. Witmark and Sons, 318 U.S. 642
4 (1943), which effectively thwarted the legislative intent of the renewal term system. In that case,
5 the Court held that an author’s simultaneous assignment of both the original term and the
6 author’s contingent interests in the renewal term of copyright in a single document was valid,
7 even though the renewal right would not vest until the commencement of the renewal term.
8 Accordingly, this ruling significantly eviscerated the ability of an author to regain his copyright
9 upon the commencement of the renewal term, as publishers could simply insert language
10 assigning the renewal term of copyright into their original agreements with authors. As noted in
11 the House Report and Senate Reports:
12
13
14
15
16
Section 203 would not prevent the parties to a transfer or license from voluntarily
agreeing at any time to terminate an existing grant and negotiating a new one,
thereby causing another 35 year period to start running. However, the bill seeks
to avoid the situation that has arisen under the present renewal provision, in which
third parties have bought up contingent future interests as a form of speculation.
Section 203(b)(4) would make a further grant of rights that revert under a
terminated grant valid “only if it is made after the effective date of the
termination.” … H.R. Rep. No. 94-1476, 94th Cong., 2d Sess. 127 (1976); S.
Rep. No. 473, 94th Cong., 1st Sess. 111 (1975)
17
Thus, rather than limiting authors’ rights, the clear intent and purpose of the 1976
18
Copyright Act is to protect author’s rights through the creation of a new termination right.
19
Plaintiffs’ strained interpretation of the termination provision espoused in this action is in direct
20
conflict with that express purpose.
21
C.
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Plaintiffs Likewise Wrongly Contend, without any support, that Congress
inserted the Majority Requirement for Grants Executed by Co-authors into
Section 203, but not Section 304, to place limits upon the termination rights of
post-1978 co-authors; The True Reason for this Difference Arose from Unique
Circumstances of the Renewal Term System, not any Goal of Limiting Authors’
Rights
Under the Copyright Act of 1909, an author’s grant of the renewal term would only be
26 effective if the granting author survived to the commencement of that term. 17 U.S.C. § 24
27 (1909). Thus, if the author died prior to the renewal term commencing, the author’s grant of
28 renewal rights would be void, and the renewal rights would instead vest automatically, by
Defendant’s Reply Memorandum
4
Case No. 3:11-CV-01557-BTM (RBB)
1 operation of law, in the author’s statutory heirs, notwithstanding the assignment of the renewal
2 term contained in the document executed by the author. Thus, with respect to pre-1978 works, a
3 termination of the renewal term grant would not be necessary for a deceased co-author’s heirs to
4 recapture the co-author’s copyright interests in the work, since the renewal term copyright would
5 have already automatically vested in the deceased author’s heirs, by operation of law, if the
6 author did not survive to the renewal term. Consequently, it could be the case that a grant
7 executed by two or more authors would only act to convey renewal rights as to one of the two
8 authors.
9
Given such circumstances unique to pre-1978 works, the House and Senate Reports make
10 clear that the reason for the differing language under 203 and 304 was not to place limits upon co11 authors going forward; Rather, it was due to the realities concerning renewal rights grants by two or
12 more co-authors contained in one document, where one may vest and one may not vest due to the
13 author’s death:
14
17
Under Section 304, a grant of renewal rights executed by joint authors during the
first term of copyright would be effective only as to those who were living at the time
of renewal; where any of them are dead, their statutory beneficiaries are entitled to
claim the renewal independently as a new estate. It would therefore be inappropriate
to impose a requirement of majority action with respect to transfers executed by two
or more authors. H.R. Rep. No. 94-1476, 94th Cong., 2d Sess. 141 (1976); S. Rep.
No. 473, 94th Cong., 1st Sess. 124 (1975)
18
Thus, once again, Plaintiffs’ unsupported arguments as to the purposes and legislative goals
15
16
19 of the 1976 revisions to the Copyright Act are directly contradicted by the actual legislative history.
20 Rather than seeking to limit authors’ rights, the House and Senate Reports clearly express an intent
21 to protect an author’s right to terminate (in this instance to preserve a surviving co-author’s ability to
22 terminate a grant of his extended term interests, notwithstanding the death of a co-author who
23 executed the same grant).
24
In this connection, Plaintiffs oddly rely upon Sweet Music v. Melrose Music, 189 F. Supp.
25 655 (S.D. Ca. 1960), which concerned the renewal term vesting issues discussed above, and
26 holds that co-authors’ separate renewal interests in a joint work are to be separately addressed,
27 even where the renewal assignments were contained in the same document. Thus, the Court then
28 found that because one of the co-authors did not survive to the renewal term, the renewal
Defendant’s Reply Memorandum
5
Case No. 3:11-CV-01557-BTM (RBB)
1 assignment was not void in total, but rather the assignee only owned the renewal interests of the
2 surviving co-author (with the dead co-author’s renewal interests devolving to his heirs by
3 operation of law). This holding is thus at odds with Plaintiffs’ argument and wholly consistent
4 with Willis’ position and the fundamental copyright principles of alienability and severability of
5 co-authors’ copyright interests in a work. See 17 U.S.C. 201(d). As Sweet Music v. Melrose
6 makes clear, it is proper and appropriate for Willis to terminate a Grant that solely concerns his
7 copyright interests in a Composition, and thereby reclaim ownership of those copyright interests
8 in the Composition. Plaintiffs’ out-of-context quote from the Melrose decision noting that had
9 there been separate assignments of the renewal terms the same result would have been reached
10 (see Opposition at p. 5), simply does not support Plaintiffs’ arguments here.
11
In this same vein, Plaintiffs’ selective excising of one sentence from the Nimmer treatise on
12 Copyright, when placed back into its full context, likewise actually supports Willis’ position.
13 Nimmer provides a hypothetical example of Author A, B, and C, all transferring their rights to D, to
14 explain when a majority would be needed to terminate under Section 304 (for pre-1978 works).
15 While Plaintiffs egregiously fail to note it in their Opposition, Nimmer’s example is expressly based
16 upon such authors having all executed the same granting document, not separate grants by each, and
17 then Nimmer correctly notes that the termination of such a document under Section 203(for a post18 1978 work) would require a majority of the three authors who executed that Grant:
19
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Grants executed by two or more joint authors prior to January 1, 1978, are
terminable by each executing joint author even if a majority of the executing joint
authors do not join in such termination … Suppose, for example, that a work is
jointly written by A, B and C, who share the copyright equally. If all three joint
authors join in executing a grant of renewal rights in the work to D in advance of the
vesting of such rights, and if all three survive to the time of such vesting, then absent
any termination of the grant, D will be entitled to the renewal term of copyright in
the work. Suppose at the time the authors are able to terminate A wishes to terminate
the grant, but neither B nor C is willing to join in the termination. As indicated
above, if this were a grant executed on or after January 1, 1978, no termination could
occur because the consent of a majority of joint owners is required for this purpose.
25 3 Nimmer on Copyright § 11.03[A][1](emphasis added). Nimmer also points out, however, in the
26 earlier part of the section cited in Willis’ initial motion papers, that a single grant executed by only
27 three of five total authors of a work would only require a majority of the three authors who actually
28 executed the Grant being terminated, not a majority of the five authors in total. Id; see also,
Defendant’s Reply Memorandum
6
Case No. 3:11-CV-01557-BTM (RBB)
1 Goldstein on Copyright § 5.4.2, at 5:119 (3d. ed. 2010) (“Termination of a grant of interests in a
2 joint work under section 203(a)(1) requires action by a majority of the authors who executed the
3 grant, and not merely a majority of the authors of the work.”). Plaintiffs’ desperate attempt to
4 conflate the two different examples provided by Nimmer only highlights the fallacy of Plaintiffs’
5 Complaint in this action, and the depths to which Plaintiffs will go in their efforts to thwart Willis’
6 termination rights.
7
D. The Plain Meaning of the Statute is Wholly Consistent with the True Purposes of
the Revisions to the Copyright Act
8
Plaintiffs’ Opposition does not dispute that the unambiguous terms of a statute are to be
9
given effect. See Barnhart v. Sigmon Coal Co., 534 U.S. 438, 450 (2002)(“As in all statutory
10
construction cases, we begin with the language of the statute. The first step is to determine whether
11
the language at issue has a plain and unambiguous meaning with regard to the particular dispute in
12
the case); Clark v. Capital Credit 460 F.3d 1162, 1168 (9th Cir 2006)(“Well-established canons of
13
statutory construction provide that any inquiry into the scope and meaning of a statute must begin
14
with the text of the statute itself). Plaintiffs likewise do not dispute that the statute here is
15
unambiguous, providing that, “in the case of a grant executed by one author, termination of the grant
16
may be effected by that author . . . .” 17 U.S.C. § 203(a)(1) (1976).
17
The above review of the actual legislative history and purposes of the enactment of the
18
termination provisions only confirms that the statute means what it says. Moreover, Plaintiffs’
19
Opposition does not dispute that the related Regulations and other provisions of the Copyright Act
20
noted in Willis’ initial Motion papers, are likewise wholly consistent with Willis’ position and a
21
plain reading of the statute.
22
Willis, as the sole author who executed the Grants that are the subject of the Notice of
23
Termination, is entitled to terminate those Grants.
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Defendant’s Reply Memorandum
7
Case No. 3:11-CV-01557-BTM (RBB)
1 II.
PLAINTIFFS HAVE NOT OPPOSED THE DISMISSAL OF THE REMAINING
ALTERNATIVE CLAIMS CONTAINED IN THE COMPLAINT
2
By failing to address Willis’ remaining arguments in favor of dismissal, Plaintiffs’
3
Opposition effectively concedes that the Complaint’s other attacks upon the validity of the notice of
4
termination are all unfounded. See, Johnson v. Homecomings Financial, 2011 WL 4373975, *7
5
(S.D. Cal. Sept. 20, 2011) (where plaintiff failed to address the arguments raised in defendants’
6
motion to dismiss, the Court concluded that plaintiff conceded the merits of defendants’ motion as to
7
those claims); see also, Stitching Pensioenfonds ABP v. Countrywide Financial Corp., 2011 WL
8
3558173, *4 (C.D.Cal. Aug. 9, 2011) (“In most circumstances, failure to respond in an opposition
9
brief to an argument put forward in an opening brief constitutes waiver or abandonment in regard to
10
the uncontested issue.”), citing, Sportscare of America, P.C. v. Multiplan, Inc., 2011 WL 589955, *1
11
(D.N.J. Feb. 10, 2011).
12
Notwithstanding Plaintiffs’ one-sentence “reservation of rights” in a footnote with respect to
13
the Complaint’s work-made for-hire claim, Plaintiffs have not refuted or opposed Willis’ requested
14
dismissal of this claim. Willis has duly raised and argued in the initial motion papers that such claim
15
fails to set forth a claim for which relief can be granted to Plaintiffs. As explained in the initial
16
Motion papers, the Complaint’s allegations are wholly insufficient to set forth a work-made-for-hire
17
claim and are otherwise directly contradicted by the documents referred to and relied upon by
18
Plaintiffs. Plaintiffs have provided no substantive opposition or refutation to deny the dismissal
19
requested by Willis.
20
The Opposition then wholly fails to oppose any of the other claims placed into issue by the
21
Motion. Plaintiffs do not oppose Willis’ argument, raised in the initial Motion papers, that the
22
Complaint’s frivolous Laches, Statute of Limitations, and other time-related Claims, should all be
23
dismissed as a matter of law. Similarly, the Opposition does not dispute or oppose that there is
24
simply no controversy ripe for decision concerning the “derivative works exception,” and thus the
25
Complaint’s claim in this regard should likewise be dismissed. Moreover, the Opposition does not
26
oppose Willis’ raised argument that the express, unambiguous, terms of the Copyright Act, which
27
provide that upon the effective date of termination Willis will reclaim “all rights” under the
28
Defendant’s Reply Memorandum
8
Case No. 3:11-CV-01557-BTM (RBB)
1 Copyright Act that were conveyed under the Grants, 17 U.S.C. § 203(b) (1976), mandates dismissal
2 of the Complaint’s claim that Willis’ reclaimed rights should be limited to the specific 12-20%
3 shares of income Willis agreed to accept thirty years ago in the Grants. Accordingly, Willis
4 respectfully submits that for the reasons set forth in the Motion all of these meritless claims should
5 be dismissed.
6
Finally, the fact that other issues may arise between the parties in the future simply has no
7 bearing on the dismissal of this Complaint, which did not plead any such controversies between the
8 parties. For example, while there may be a dispute as to the number of actual co-authors for certain
9 of the Compositions, that dispute is simply not raised in the Complaint before this Court. Willis’
10 Motion to Dismiss properly and dispositively addresses all of the claimed controversies set forth in
11 the Complaint – each of which fail to set forth a claim for relief as a matter of law. It is respectfully
12 submitted that the lack of any plausible claim for relief in the Complaint mandates its dismissal in
13 total.
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Defendant’s Reply Memorandum
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Case No. 3:11-CV-01557-BTM (RBB)
1
2
CONCLUSION
For all of the foregoing reasons, Defendant respectfully requests that this Court dismiss the
3 Plaintiffs’ Complaint in it entirety, and that Defendant be granted such other and further relief that to
4 this Court seems just, proper and equitable.
5 DATED: November 11, 2011
Respectfully Submitted,
6
CAPLAN & ROSS, LLP
7
/s/ Jonathan J. Ross
JONATHAN J. ROSS
8
9
13
Brian D. Caplan (admitted pro hac vice)
Jonathan J. Ross (admitted pro hac vice)
270 Madison Avenue, 13th Floor
New York, NY 10016
Telephone: (212) 973-2376
Facsimile: (212) 661-4290
Email: bcaplan@caplanross.com
jross@caplanross.com
14
-and-
15
19
SCOTT+SCOTT LLP
Walter W. Noss (277580)
Kristen M. Anderson (246108)
707 Broadway, 10th Floor
San Diego, CA 92101
Telephone: (619) 233-4565
Facsimile: (619) 233-0508
Email: wnoss@scott-scott.com
kanderson@scott-scott.com
20
Attorneys for Defendant Victor Willis
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Defendant’s Reply Memorandum
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Case No. 3:11-CV-01557-BTM (RBB)
1
2
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I hereby certify that on November 11, 2011, I caused the foregoing to be electronically filed
3 with the Clerk of Court using the CM/ECF system which will send notification of such filing to the
4 email addresses denoted on the Electronic Mail Notice List, and I hereby certify that I caused the
5 foregoing document or paper to be mailed via the United States Postal Service to the non-CM/ECF
6 participants indicated on the Manual Notice List.
7
I certify under penalty of perjury under the laws of the United States of America that the
8 foregoing is true and correct. Executed on November 11, 2011.
9
10
/s/ Jonathan J. Ross
JONATHAN J. ROSS
11
12
CAPLAN & ROSS, LLP
270 Madison Avenue, 13th Floor
New York, NY 10016
Telephone: (212) 973-2376
Facsimile: (212) 661-4290
Email: jross@caplanross.com
13
14
15
and
16
SCOTT+SCOTT LLP
707 Broadway, 10th Floor
San Diego, CA 92101
Telephone: (619) 233-4565
Facsimile: (619) 233-0508
Email: wnoss@scott-scott.com
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Attorney for Defendant Victor Willis
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Defendant’s Reply Memorandum
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Case No. 3:11-CV-01557-BTM (RBB)
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