Small Stakes, Big Attorneys’ Fees in Copyright Litigation
March 4, 2003
Paul F. Kilmer- Washington
Anthony R. "Tony" Masiello- Washington
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit has held
that the prevailing plaintiff in a copyright infringement action where the
“monetary stakes are small” has a “presumptive entitlement” to an award of
attorneys’ fees. Gonzales v. Transfer Technologies Inc., 64 U.S.P.Q.2d 1319 (7th
Cir. 2000). The plaintiff, Gonzales, had created several copyrighted designs
for T-shirts and promptly registered his copyright claims with the U.S.
Copyright Office (thereby entitling him to statutory damages and attorneys’ fees
pursuant to 17 U.S.C. §§ 412, 504 and 505). The lower court found that the
defendant, Transfer Technologies, had infringed Gonzales’ copyright, and noted
that the acts of infringement were “willful” although not “flagrant.” The lower
court awarded Gonzales only $3,000 in statutory damages (the minimum amount
provided by law) and failed to make an award of attorneys’ fees. That limited
relief appears to have reflected the low value which the trial court placed on
the T-shirt art at issue.
The Appeals Court vacated and remanded the trial court’s
decision, indicating that the small award by the lower court did not serve the
objectives of the Copyright Act, namely, to compensate the copyright owner and
deter future infringements. “No one can prosecute a copyright suit for $3,000,”
the Seventh Circuit wrote. Allowing an infringer to escape at a such a low cost,
merely because the infringed copyrights were low in value, would mean that minor
infringements “cannot be adequately deterred,” making them “immune from legal
redress,” thereby allowing “minor infringements, though willful, to be committed
with impunity.” To the contrary, the Appeals Court held that “[t]he smaller the
damages…, the stronger the case for an award of attorneys’ fees.”
Attorneys’ fees are not the only device for redressing a
low-stakes infringement. A low-stakes plaintiff may opt for statutory damages
(up to $150,000 per willful infringement, in the court’s discretion). The lower
court in Gonzalez, for its own reasons, declined to use this device to
adequately compensate the copyright holder and punish the willful infringer.
The Gonzalez decision has several implications. First, the
Supreme Court has indicated that, when awarding attorneys’ fees to the
successful party in an infringement action, copyright defendants are as
important to protect as plaintiffs, since successful defenses enlarge the public
domain. Fogerty v. Fantasy, Inc., 510 U.S. 517 (1994). Employing the rationale
of Gonzales and the teachings of Fogerty may therefore mean that large corporate
plaintiffs that file frivolous or overreaching copyright actions could face
substantial awards of attorneys’ fees against them. This is the case because the
only remedy to which defendants are entitled in harassing or baseless copyright
litigation is recovery of attorneys’ fees; neither actual nor statutory damages
are available to the successful defendant.
The appeals court’s decision in Gonzales also raises the
issue of how attorneys’ fee awards are to be calculated in copyright actions. A
recent illustration is offered by Stevens v. Aeonian Press Inc., 64 U.S.P.Q.2d
1920 (S.D.N.Y. 2002), in which the court awarded attorneys’ fees to a copyright
plaintiff amounting to almost $290,000 (on top of the maximum statutory
damages). The court compared the rates charged by the plaintiff’s counsel to the
rates of lawyers of comparable skill, and considered the time and labor
involved; the novelty and difficulty of the case; the requisite skills; the
preclusion of other employment; the customary fee; time limitations; the amount
in controversy and the result obtained; the attorneys’ experience, reputation
and ability; the undesirability of the case; the attorneys’ relationship with
their client and their actual billing arrangement; awards in similar cases; and
the ability of the defendants to pay.
These decisions serve as a useful reminder of how the attorneys’ fees
provisions of the Copyright Act create a powerful remedy, both against
infringers and against unfounded accusations of infringement.
For more information, contact Tony Masiello or Paul Kilmer,
toll free, at 1-888-688-8500.