Foxcroft Productions v. Universal City Studios

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 26, 2022
DocketB303161M
StatusPublished

This text of Foxcroft Productions v. Universal City Studios (Foxcroft Productions v. Universal City Studios) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Foxcroft Productions v. Universal City Studios, (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed 4/26/22 (unmodified opn. attached) CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION EIGHT

FOXCROFT PRODUCTIONS, B303161 INC., et al., Los Angeles County Plaintiffs and Appellants, Super. Ct. No. BC683206

v. ORDER MODIFYING OPINION AND DENYING UNIVERSAL CITY STUDIOS, PETITION FOR LLC, REHEARING

Defendant and Appellant. [No change in Judgment]

THE COURT:

IT IS ORDERED the opinion in the above-entitled matter filed on March 30, 2022, be modified in three ways:

1. On page 16, in the first full paragraph, the sentence “As Hirsch agreed, episodic photoplays are episodes” shall be replaced with: As Hirsch agreed, this meant episodes for a series.

2. On page 19, at the end of section II.B and before the beginning of section II.C, the following two paragraphs shall be added: For the first time on appeal, the writers raise three new arguments for why the court should not have granted a new trial. First, they argue Universal could not deduct standard fees when it distributed Columbo episodes through foreign syndication, re-runs, home video, and other distribution means because these methods exploit subsidiary rights rather than photoplays. Second, they claim Universal cannot deduct standard fees for first-run Columbo episodes distributed as a “series.” Third, they assert it is unconscionable to allow Universal to deduct its distribution fees. The writers forfeited these arguments by failing to raise them in the trial court. As to their first and second new arguments, the writers say they “consistently emphasized” the difference between photoplays and “subsidiary rights in the series,” but that is not the same as stating an argument. The writers’ appellate briefing made no attempt to establish they raised the third argument at trial. The three theories are new. We decline to consider them.

3. On page 25, after the final sentence, which ends with the words, “which are now moot,” the following sentence shall be added: As the writers stated in their opening brief, “If the new trial order is affirmed, appeal of other aspects of the judgment will await entry of judgment after retrial.”

There is no change in the judgment. The petition for rehearing is denied.

2 ____________________________________________________________ GRIMES, Acting P. J. STRATTON, J. WILEY, J.

3 Filed 3/30/22 (unmodified opn.) CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

FOXCROFT PRODUCTIONS, B303161 INC., et al., Los Angeles County Plaintiffs and Appellants, Super. Ct. No. BC683206

v.

UNIVERSAL CITY STUDIOS LLC,

Defendant and Appellant.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Richard J. Burdge, Jr. and David S. Cunningham III, Judges. Reversed in part and affirmed in part. Burkhalter Kessler Clement & George, Alton G. Burkhalter, Daniel J. Kessler, Keith E. Butler; Greines, Martin, Stein & Richland, Robert A. Olson and Alana H. Rotter for Plaintiffs and Appellants. O’Melveny & Myers, Daniel M. Petrocelli, Timothy B. Heafner; Hueston Hennigan, Robert N. Klieger and Rajan S. Trehan for Defendant and Appellant. ____________________ We must define a key contract word: “photoplays.” This word includes television episodes of Columbo, says the studio that made this long-running television show. The creators of the Columbo character disagree. They say the word photoplays has many meanings and is ambiguous—but it cannot mean what the studio says. The studio, however, is right: photoplays includes episodes. That resolves the core of this contractual dispute. The court held a trial without defining photoplays for jurors, who found the studio breached its contract about Columbo. After this verdict, however, the court came to agree with the studio: defining the contract word was an issue for the court and not the jury, and a photoplay meant “any video recorded program,” which included episodes of Columbo. The court granted the studio’s motion for a new trial but denied its motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. These rulings were right. The interpretive task was for the court, not the jury. The court’s interpretation of photoplays was correct, as was its order for a new trial. The trial court also properly refused to give the studio the judgment outright. The pretrial summary adjudication of a fraud claim was, however, in error. We reverse this ruling. I Events began in the 1960s, when two writers entered a decades-long relationship with Universal City Studios, LLC. The relationship fell into litigation in 2017, when these writers sued Universal, alleging the studio owed them money from a 1971 contract. The facts span half a century.

2 A We divide this long story into three little chapters. First we summarize Columbo’s origin. Next we recount the 1971 contract at issue. Then we sketch later events. 1 William Link and Richard Levinson invented the character of a detective named Columbo. Foxcroft Productions, Inc. is Link’s company. Fairmount Productions, Inc. is Levinson’s company. In their work here as writers and producers, Link and Levinson were a team. For simplicity, we sometimes refer to this team, or their companies, as “the writers.” In 1962, the team’s stage play about Columbo toured in 56 cities. In 1967, Link and Levinson licensed the television and movie rights to their play to Universal. They also sold Universal the rights to the Columbo character. Link and Levinson remained involved with Columbo, however, through several agreements with Universal. Link and Levinson agreed, for fixed compensation, to write and to executive produce a television movie based on their play. In 1970, a different writer wrote the script for a second Columbo television movie that served as a pilot. NBC picked up the show for a television series. 2 A 1971 contract is the linchpin of this case. Link and Levinson entered this contract with Universal about the right to produce and distribute their work for up to three years. This arrangement applied both to their work on Columbo and to their other projects.

3 Marvin Moss, an agent from a major talent agency, led negotiations for Link and Levinson. Attorney Barry Hirsch, who had worked in entertainment law since approximately the early 1960s, also represented them. The 1971 negotiations culminated in a 17-page contract. The contract has two parts: a 15-page typed body (the Memorandum) and a two-page printed attachment (the Rider). When we use the word “contract,” we are referring to the whole deal: the Memorandum and the Rider together. We excerpt these two parts in turn. a The Memorandum is typed on Universal letterhead. Executives at Universal negotiated the Memorandum’s terms with the writers’ representatives, Moss and Hirsch. A Universal typist then put the Memorandum on paper. The Memorandum is not a form contract. Its terms are personalized to the particulars of the ongoing relationship between Universal and the team of Link and Levinson. The Memorandum is long, organized, and detailed, but contains no section devoted to definitions. It uses the words photoplay or photoplays more than two dozen times. Sometimes it uses this noun alone and unmodified: photoplay. Other times it modifies the noun in five ways: television photoplays, anthological photoplays, episodic photoplays, pilot photoplay, and feature-length photoplay. The Memorandum’s paragraphs display structural logic. We tour them, pausing where appropriate. The first paragraph specifies a guaranteed annual payment to the writers. The second paragraph lists their writing and producing duties. The third paragraph sets dollar sums of “ ‘per

4 assignment’ compensations” for an array of specified possible jobs involving executive producing, producing, and writing. This paragraph has subsections, sub-subsections and so forth.

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Foxcroft Productions v. Universal City Studios, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foxcroft-productions-v-universal-city-studios-calctapp-2022.