Toc Fall 2014 - Table of Contents

JurisdictionUnited States,Federal
Publication year2014
CitationVol. 10 No. 2

Washington Journal of Law, Technology and Arts Volume 10, Issue 2Fall 2014

Table of Contents

10 Wash. J.L. Tech. and Arts 89Framing the Issue: Avoiding a Substantial Similarity Finding in Reproduced Visual ArtRachael Wallace

10 Wash. J.L. Tech. and Arts 109Hologram Images and the Entertainment Industry: New Legal Territory?Stephen Anson

10 Wash. J.L. Tech. and Arts 125Consignment Catastrophes: Lessons from New York's Art Gallery FraudMegan Haslach

10 Wash. J.L. Tech. and Arts 137Getting Beyond Abstract Confusion: How the United Kingdom's Jurisprudence Can Aid in Developing an Analytic Framework for Patent-Eligibility in Light of Alice v. CLS BankBrendon Beheshti

10 Wash. J.L. Tech. and Arts 891Framing the Issue: Avoiding a Substantial Similarity Finding in Reproduced Visual Art

Washington Journal of Law, Technology and Arts Volume 10, Issue 2 Fall 2014

Framing the Issue: Avoiding a Substantial Similarity Finding in Reproduced Visual Art

Rachael Wallace(fn*) © Rachael Wallace

ABSTRACT

Copyright issues are litigated in the United States every day. Yet attorneys representing visual artists settle suits more often when those suits involve the potential of a copyright infringement, partly because of the relatively few decisions on the matter. In Harney v. Sony Pictures, Inc., the First Circuit found that a copyrighted photograph could be copied to look nearly the same as the original because the copied elements were each unprotectable under the copyright. The copyright protected only those elements of the photo that were the result of the photographer's choices in depicting the subject. The court held that the placement of the subjects in the frame of the photo was the only protected feature shared by the recreation, and this was insufficient to establish "substantial similarity" necessary for the court to find a copyright violation. This Article puts forth an organizational scheme based on existing cases to help attorneys defend their clients' work. By explaining how attorneys have avoided substantial similarity findings in the past and how courts treat different approaches, this Article will provide attorneys with guidance on avoiding a substantial similarity finding in their clients' works, focusing specifically on photographs.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Introduction .................................................................................... 90

I. Expansion of Copyright to Photographs ................................. 91

II. Harney v. Sony Picture Television, Inc. ................................. 93

III. Elements of Copyright Infringement ...................................... 95

A. Actual Copying .................................................................. 95

B. Substantial Similarity ......................................................... 96

IV. Avoiding Liability for Infringement ....................................... 97

1. Circuit Tests for "Substantial Similarity" ................ 98

a. The Second Circuit's "More Discerning Ordinary Observer Test" ................................... 98

b. The Ninth Circuit's "Intrinsic/Extrinsic Test" ..99

c. The Tenth Circuit's "Abstraction-Filtration-Comparison Test" ............................................ 100

2. Filtering Unprotected Elements ............................. 100

3. Distinguishing Protected Elements ........................ 103

4. Raising Affirmative Defenses ................................ 106

a. Merger ............................................................. 106

b. Scenes a Faire ................................................. 106

Conclusion ................................................................................... 107

Practice Pointers ........................................................................... 108

INTRODUCTION

As photography becomes an increasingly popular medium, photographers and visual artists who wish to recreate some aspects of a photo are susceptible to copyright suits against them. Attorneys representing artists face mounting confusion over copyright infringement in their clients' work. For an attorney representing an artist who has referenced or recreated another's copyrighted art, the law is unclear as to which elements of the reproduction are copyrightable and which elements are unprotectable. Courts have never explicitly listed the features of a photo that are copyrightable and instead apply a series of tests to determine if infringement occurred. While the refusal to create any per se rules can be frustrating to a visual artist toeing the line and to that artist's attorney, courts are wise to avoid a per se rule that might stifle creativity. Partly because copyrightable features are not clearly explained, many parties in these kinds of copyright disputes end up settling out of court, thereby perpetuating the confusion.

While it would be impossible to create a list of "off-limits" features that cannot be recreated in a photo, circuit courts tend to protect the creative decisions a photographer or artist would consciously make in order to create an original work. An attorney should identify any intentional creative decisions that the original artist made and distinguish those creative decisions from the client's work. Copyright infringement by recreated photographs can be particularly difficult to prove because the subject matter itself is not copyrightable. An attorney can avoid a "substantial similarity" finding-and thereby avoid a copyright infringement finding-by showing that the client did not copy creative decisions of the original artist and instead copied only subject matter. Defining which elements are not substantially similar can guide attorneys and help avoid settling meritless suits out of fear or confusion.

I. EXPANSION OF COPYRIGHT TO PHOTOGRAPHS

The U.S. Constitution governs copyright law. Article I, Section 8, Clause 8 of the Constitution provides that Congress shall have the exclusive power "[t]o promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries."(fn1) For many years, copyright law applied only to literal writings and discoveries, but over time Congress expanded the definition of "writings" to include "maps, charts, dramatic or musical compositions, engravings, cuts, prints, paintings, drawings, statues, statuary, and models or designs intended to be perfected as works of the fine arts."(fn2) But the United States Supreme Court faced a dilemma in Burrow-Giles Lithographic Co. v. Sarony.(fn3) There, Napoleon Sarony, a famed photographer, sued Burrow-Giles Lithographic Company for marketing unauthorized lithographs of a famous photograph Sarony had taken of Oscar Wilde.(fn4)

Click Here To View Image

Figure 1: Left, Napoleon Sarony's lithograph. Right, Burrow-Giles Lithographic Company's advertisement.

Congress had not specifically included photographs as protected by copyright law, yet photographs concern the same type of artistic expression as other items included under "writings."(fn5) The Court struggled with the scope of Clause 8, but concluded that, because Congress protected "literary productions . . . by which the ideas in the mind of the author are given visible expression," photographs should also be protected by copyright law.(fn6) The Court explained: The only reason why photographs were not included in the extended list in the act of 1802 is, probably, that they did not exist, as photography, as an art, was then unknown, and the scientific principle on which it rests, and the chemicals and machinery by which it is operated, have all been discovered long since that statute was enacted.(fn7) Because photographs combine a snapshot of reality and an artist's expression of that reality, copyright suits involving...

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