v
Mark Frost which was handed down in the Court of Appeal of California last
week.
In this case Frost wrote a book called "The Match: The Daythe Game of Golf Changed Forever". Copyright in the book was assigned to
Good Comma Ink, of which Frost was the sole owner, however a company called MVP
was interested in acquiring rights in the book to make it into a film.
© kulicki |
At some point in the summer of 2009, Frost met with the president
of MVP and shortly afterwards told him he did not want MVP to make his book
into a film. This caused MVP to sue Frost for breach of contract, promissory
estoppel, declaratory relief, and negligent misrepresentation. MVP's
overarching claim was that the parties entered a contract or promised MVP they
would enter into a contract to allow MVP to make a film of Frost's book. Essentially
they were arguing that Wertheimer's email saying "done . . . thanks! Werth"
was signed by Wertheimer and created a binding contract. This may seem a far
reaching claim, so readers will not be surprised by the court's decision.
Wertheimer's response to the claim was that his email "was
intended to simply note that the parties were in accord on the broad economic
terms of a deal" and that by signing off as "Werth" he had not
intended to sign a contract or to bind himself or Frost to anything. Frost
added that although Wertheimer negotiated deals on his behalf, he never signed
contracts for him and that in this instance Frost had not given Wertheimer the
authority to assign copyright in his book.
In the US, as in the UK, assignment of copyright must be done in writing and must be signed (s.204(a) of the US Copyright
Act and s.90(3) CDPA 1988).
At first instance the trial court granted summary judgment concluding
that a transfer of ownership was invalid unless signed by the owner or the
owner's duly authorized agent. The court further concluded that even if express
authority were not required, Frost had done nothing to suggest that Wertheimer
had authority to transfer the property.
MVP appealed this decision saying that Wertheimer had actual or
ostensible authority to enter into the alleged contract. The Court of Appeal
held that it was undisputed that Wertheimer did not have actual authority to
transfer the copyright in the book, and it was actual rather than ostensible
authority that was required under the US Copyright Act. Because MVP failed to
raise a triable issue of fact showing that Wertheimer was Frost's duly
authorized agent, its remaining arguments could not defeat summary judgment.
This
is a simple case which serves to remind us that although assignment of
copyright is very straightforward in the US and the UK, it pays to get it
right: assignment needs to be signed by or on behalf of the owner of the
copyright and it needs to be done in writing. Also additional requirements may
apply in other jurisdictions and there may also be more fundamental differences
to consider. In Germany, for example, copyright cannot be assigned but can be
bequeathed, and in France future copyright cannot be assigned.
I think that the Defendant's name is confusing with that of Merck Frosst.
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