I
blogged a few months ago about a case in which a former New Yorker named
Catherine Leuthold sued the CBC for copyright infringement over the “honest
mistake” (as the Court called it) of the unauthorized reuse of 18 seconds worth
of a few of her still photographs in a documentary about 9/11. She tried to get
$21,554,954.25 plus a portion of the CBC’s revenues. This astounding sum was
based upon a theory, inasmuch as I can understand it, that each of the CBC’s 800
or so participating affiliated stations and Broadcasting Distribution
Undertakings [BDUs] gave rise to a separate act of infringement. Not
surprisingly, the Court did not agree. She was awarded $19,200 (six times
$3,200) on the basis as found by the Court that “Miss Leuthold could have
negotiated a higher license fee than the initial $2,500.00 in view of the
repeated usage.”
This was
not a case of “theft” or “piracy”. It was apparently nothing more than six inadvertent
reuses beyond the original licensed use. She recovered less than 1/1,000 of
what she sought. Her initial license fee for one use was $2,500.
…an
American photographer named Catherine Leuthold sought $21,554,954.25 from the
CBC and one of its employees personally for the mistaken re-uses of a few of
her stills from 9/11.
At
the end of the day, the Court quite predictably
rejected her frankly
astonishing suggestion that each transmission from each of the CBC’s hundreds
of “distribution undertakings” warranted separate claims for damages, and
awarded $3,200 for each of six unauthorized broadcasts, to which the CBC had
admitted – i.e. $19,200. Even this amount was arguably generous under the
circumstances and given the evidence.
The
Court reduced Ms. Leuthold’s claim of $92,998 for her alleged entitlement to a
share of Newsworld’s revenue to $168.74.
I also said:
The
plaintiff was awarded about 0.0009 or less than one thousandth of what she was
seeking. And she has yet to learn what the costs order will be. Her counsel
apparently acknowledges … that costs could be awarded against her.
By seeking so much and
recovering so little (and there were other unsuccessful claims for relief), the
Plaintiff was at very great risk for
costs, if the CBC had availed itself of the benefit of the Federal Courts Rules by offering
a timely and strategic settlement offer – which it turns out was exactly what happened.
The case lasted for seven years and there was a six day trial and a very lengthy docket of motions, etc.
The
costs issue has now come home to roost. In an order and reasons for order
from Justice Scott dated October 29, 2012, the Court has predictably ruled under the
Federal Courts Rules that Ms. Leuthold must pay CBC double the costs it would
otherwise be entitled from August 9th, 2005. That was the date that the CBC served
an offer to settle to the Plaintiff for an amount of USD $37 500 USD plus
interest, which Ms. Leuthold rejected. The offer also included the costs of the
action up to the date of the offer on a party and party basis.
Ms.
Leuthold made some headway on this costs matter in a few respects. Most
notably, the Court also allowed for a deduction on account of the “vexatious
conduct of the defendant s during the discovery of [individual] defendant Jerry
McIntosh”. But, but none of this is very significant in light of the foregoing
ruling re double cost liability. The Court also added that she must pay for:
(a) the fees and disbursements
of the experts heard at the hearing;
(b) all disbursements,
including travel expenses for witnesses, photocopy fees, online research fees,
transcript fees for examinations for discovery and the hearing, long distance
fees, fax fees, postage and courier fees and other administrative fees;
(c) interest on fees and disbursements
since June 14, 2012.
It goes
without saying that she is also responsible for whatever she is obligated to
pay to her own lawyer.
The
Court notes that Ms. Leuthold’s taxable income in 2006 was $20,661 USD. The
actual amount of costs assessed for the trial and proceedings leading up to it,
which will then be doubled, has not yet been determined. However, it is safe to
predict that it could be many, many times Ms. Leuthold’s taxable income for 2006.
An
interesting aspect of all of this is that Ms. Leuthold reportedly lived in New York on 9/11 and
is now reported to be living in Maine.
Security for costs is normal when a plaintiff is ordinarily resident outside of
Canada. A plaintiff can avoid such an order if impecuniosity can be
demonstrated and the Court is of the opinion that the case has merit. Curiously,
the CBC - which is subsidized by taxpayers to the tune of more than $1 billion
per year - did not ask the Court for an order for security of costs. Interestingly,
Ms. Leuthold also has another action pending in the Federal Court against CABLE
TV CAMROSE INC. ET AL that has been stayed pending the outcome of the CBC
action.
The
security for costs mechanism exists for the obvious reason that it can become
much more difficult for a Defendant that has been awarded costs to collect costs
from a Plaintiff outside of Canada, even if the Plaintiff has the means to pay
such costs. The prospect of an order for security for costs can sometimes serve
as a very useful reality check for foreign plaintiffs who may not have a strong
case and/or do not fully understand the Canadian litigation system. I have used
it elsewhere to precisely such effect.
Ms.
Leuthold is certainly persistent and determined. She is pursuing her appeal of the
substantive decision.
The appeal book consists of ten volumes. This will be a costly appeal. It remains to be seen if she will also try to appeal the costs award. Depending
on the outcome of all of this, she potentially may be on the hook for a great deal more costs.
Unless there
is a surprise ending, it may turn out that Ms. Leutholds’ costs in this case
could easily run well into at least six figures, all in order to recover a
little over $19,000 when she had been offered $37,500.
While this saga is clearly
not yet over, it’s safe to say once again that copyright plaintiffs may wish to
consider – as I’ve often said – the old adage of “be careful what you wish
for”.
HPK
Ouch for her, but the assessment by the Court seems quite reasonable. I think this paragraph pretty much sums it up:
ReplyDelete[48] The Court disagrees with the Plaintiff’s argument that the importance of the issue meant that her decision to litigate the issue was reasonable. Given the offer from the Defendants, the Plaintiff’s decision to forego the offer and risk spending large amounts of money litigating a claim is not necessarily reasonable.
At the end of the day, the Court did recognize there was an infringement of her copyright, awarded her a fair amount based on the value actual deemed infringement - an amount that was about half of what she might have got in a settlement. I think its a really good example of a reasonable assessment of copyright value in an infringement case, rather than an over application of statutory damages that are divorced from market reality.
My curiosity still remains though her legal legal strategy assessment in pursuing this matter for this long at this length, surely knowing that the legal and court costs would be considerable. Is it a lottery-like hope for US-style jackpot justice, or some really misguided sense of ownership and the scope of her entitlement under copyright? Will she appeal? Was this a contingency-fee case? That is something I'd like to see a documentary about.
Thanks for posting the update - really enjoyed your coverage and commentary on this case. And Rule 420 on 2x costs - who knew?
Anon 2:22 from Ottawa
Came across this while looking up a similar recent decision out of the USA as described on Ars Technica.
ReplyDeleteIts the case of the photographer who was at the Haiti earthquake, tweeted his photos for consideration for newswire pickup, somebody else claimed them and sold them to AFP/Getty, and part of Getty's response was to claim that uploading to Twitter implied there was a license to use them free of charge (still trying to figure out their reasoning/interpretation of the Twitter terms of service that bore that fruit of logic.)
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2013/11/photojournalist-gets-1-2-million-in-damages-for-images-cribbed-from-twitter/
It looks like US courts are also taking a reasonable assessment based on the value of the actual deemed infringement. It still begs the fundamental question though - if every instance of use of the copyrighted photo constitutes infringement, is it theoretically fair to seek compensation for each instance? If the courts are going to take a view of "enough is enough" or make a "reasonable assessment of copyright value" when infringement instances are multiplied through networks/automated distribution systems, what are the rules or guidelines for making those assessments? I read both cases and didn't get a clear sense of what those criteria are or the basis for deeming some infringements less actionable than others. Caching aside, Is a fleeting or automated or electronic replication infringement or not?
So many questions.