Not long ago I was involved in what should have been a
routine lawsuit over a collection of past-due royalties. At some point during the litigation the other
side brought up 17 USC 205(e) as a possible defense.
For the
unaware this little-discussed section of the Copyright Act states:
A non-exclusive license, whether
recorded or not, prevails over a conflicting transfer of copyright ownership if
the license is evidenced by a written instrument signed by the owner of the
rights licensed…and if
(1) the
license was taken before execution of the transfer; or
(2) the license was taken in good faith
before the recordation of the transfer and without notice of it.
Section (1)
is a no-brainer but Section (2) is a potential landmine as it gives a possible
defense of innocent infringement in a case where a licensee claims to have
acquired rights without notice of the prior assignment (for example from an
artist or a songwriter).
I
researched the statute pretty carefully and could find no reported cases
dealing with it specifically although there are plenty of cases that explore
similar territory and those cases generally come down on the side of the
copyright owner (see for example Douglas
v. Hustler Magazine, Inc., 769 F.2d 1128 and Symnatec Corp v. CD Micro,
LLC, 286 F. Supp. 2d 1265) which states plainly “failure to record an
assignment of copyright is not available as a defense to infringement”.
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