Infotech And The Law -
First Sale Doctrine Alive And Well.
Author/s:
Issue: April 28, 1998
WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A., 1998 APR 28 (NB) -- By
Jonathan T. Cain, Washington Technology. In a decision that may have surprised
some software companies, the Supreme Court reminded the copyright licensing
community last month that a doctrine of copyright law known as the "first
sale doctrine" is alive and well.
This decision affirms one of the bargains between
the rights of copyright owners and copyright users found in the Copyright Act -
the right of the copyright owner to control the first sale of a copy of his
work, but the unrestricted right of the owner of the copy to resell it to
another without the owner's consent.
The decision handed down by the Supreme Court -
Quality King Distributors v. L'anza Research International - involved the
resale of hair-care products manufactured by L'anza and distributed throughout
the world. L'anza brought its case under the copyright law based on the fact
that each container of product bore a label that was subject to copyright
protection.
With very slight changes in facts, L'anza's case
easily could have been fought over software, videotapes, electronic game
cartridges or any other gray market item containing copyrighted material.
L'anza, a California manufacturer of hair-care
products, sold them to U.S. distributors under exclusive licensing and
distribution agreements. It charged higher prices to its domestic distributors
than it did in foreign markets.
One foreign distributor arranged for several tons
of L'anza products, with their copyrighted labels attached, to be imported back
into the United States without L'anza's permission and resold them at
discounted prices to unauthorized retailers.
L'anza sued, claiming the scheme violated its
exclusive rights under the Copyright Act to reproduce and distribute the
copyrighted material in the United States and to control the importation of
gray market copies.
Among the exclusive rights of a copyright owner is the right "to distribute copies ... by sale or other transfer of ownership." However, the Copyright Act also provides that "the owner of a particular copy ... lawfully made under this title ... is entitled, without the authority of the copyright owner, to sell or otherwise dispose of the possession of that copy."
Read literally, the Copyright Act unambiguously
says the owner of a legitimate copy "is entitled, without the authority of
the copyright owner, to sell" that item.
Next, L'anza tried to rely on another section of
the Copyright Act that is designed to control the unauthorized importation of
copies in violation of the exclusive rights granted by the act. The Supreme
Court explained, however, that the Copyright Act does not categorically
prohibit the unauthorized importation of copyrighted materials. The copyright
owner's exclusive rights are limited rights. They are subservient to other
provisions of the act, including those protecting fair use, first sale and
other limitations on the owner's exclusive rights.
Nor was the court particularly sympathetic to
arguments that it should try to restrain the gray market in copyrighted
materials. It expressed some disgust that it was being asked to uphold price
discrimination so great that it was economically attractive for a foreign distributor
to re-import the items back into the United States for sale at prices less than
those available through authorized domestic sales.
"We are not at all sure that (gray market)
appropriately describes the consequences of an American manufacturer's decision
to limit its promotional efforts to the domestic market, and to sell its
products abroad at discounted prices that are so low that its foreign
distributors can compete in the domestic market," the court's decision
reads.
The Supreme Court, at least, has not forgotten
that copyright is a bargain - that the copyright owner takes away some
exclusive rights, but those rights are limited by and subservient to other
rights held by the owners of copies of protected works and by the public at
large.
Recent proposals in Congress have suggested that a
change is needed in this long-standing bargain for "digital works."
The obvious question is: needed by whom? There is no legal distinction between
digital works and those in any other format.
Granting greater rights to copyright owners to
control the distribution and use of copies of their works necessarily will
impose a new cost on the owners and users of copies of those works.
The L'anza case also highlights the important distinction between the ownership of the intangible intellectual property rights in a work and ownership of the tangible copy. In the software arena, this distinction is often overlooked.
Publishers frequently sell copies of software and
then attempt to impose restrictions on the transfer of those copies to third
parties. The lesson of L'anza is that such practices face real hurdles.
Jonathan T. Cain chairs the Technology Practice
Group of Mays & Valentine LLP, McLean, Va. His e-mail address is
jcain@maysval.com.
Reported by Washington Technology:
http://www.wtonline.com
(19980428/WIRES LEGAL, PC, ONLINE/)
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