Goldenberg v. Doe

731 F. Supp. 1155, 1990 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2861, 1990 WL 28069
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedFebruary 2, 1990
DocketCV-85-4293
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 731 F. Supp. 1155 (Goldenberg v. Doe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goldenberg v. Doe, 731 F. Supp. 1155, 1990 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2861, 1990 WL 28069 (E.D.N.Y. 1990).

Opinion

SIFTON, District Judge.

This is an action brought pursuant to the Copyright Act of 1976, 17 U.S.C. §§ 101 et seq., seeking to recover damages for infringement of plaintiff’s copyright to an audiovisual recording (a videotape) of plaintiff's performance of a comedy routine called “Plitot Peh ” or, in English, a “Slip of the Tongue.” 1

The case was tried before the undersigned, sitting without a jury, in May 1989. Since the date of the post trial submissions in June, the undersigned has been engaged in the trials of criminal cases, as mandated by the Speedy Trial Act. With that explanation for the delay, the Court’s decision is that plaintiff is not entitled to recover damages from defendant for defendant’s conceded infringement of plaintiff’s copyright.

Plaintiff is not entitled to statutory damages because he registered his copyright more than three months after first use and after the violation occurred. There were no profits to defendant from sales and rentals of the infringing videotape at defendant’s video rental store. Finally, the preponderance of the evidence does not establish that plaintiff’s claimed actual damages came about as a result of the infringing rentals. What follows sets forth the findings of fact and conclusions of law on which these determinations are based as required by Rule 52(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.

The videotape of plaintiff’s performance was made in Israel in March and April 1985, pursuant to a January 10, 1985 agreement between plaintiff and one Amram Ha-dida, the owner of a recording studio, Chen Studios. The agreement provided that Ha-dida would be responsible for renting the studio, recording, filming, and editing the videotape, preparing the cassette cover, and advertising the tape’s availability while plaintiff would be responsible for hiring the technical crew and would supply his own services without charge. Plaintiff was to receive the equivalent of $3 for each cassette sold and Hadida was to keep the balance. Hadida was to have exclusive distribution rights for the cassette in Israel *1157 with an option to obtain distribution rights for the rest of the world including the United States in return for a lump-sum payment of $50,000.

After completion of the tape in April 1985, it was widely distributed in Israel. 2 The tape was successful. According to plaintiff, some 4,000 copies were sold at a retail price equivalent of $25. Of this, Ha-dida earned $19 per tape as the wholesale price and, after remitting some $12,000 (or $3 a tape) to plaintiff, made, according to Hadida’s deposition, some $80,000 profit on the venture, after expenses. Plaintiff, in addition, cleared some $700,000 from over 300 live performances of the show which, he testified, was seen by over 250,000 persons in Israel. After release of the videotape in Israel, according to plaintiff, he experienced some decline in attendance at his live performances. The dimensions of this decline and the reasons for it (i.e., whether because of the availability of the tape or the unavailability of new customers for the live performance) is like much else in this litigation a matter of speculation since no attendance records for the performances were offered at trial. 3 Nor was any testimony offered from prospective customers either in Israel or in this country as a basis for determining the relationship between the availability of a videotape and attendance at a live performance.

Plaintiff alleges without contradiction that he secured a valid copyright in the videotape in Israel shortly after its creation and first use in April 1985. The tape contained an audio and visual warning that it was not to be copied, rented, or shown in public. The tape did not carry the international copyright symbol, nor was it registered in this country until after this lawsuit was commenced, effective February 1986.

In July 1985, plaintiff toured the United States, performing on July 10 in Los Ange-les before what he described (without documentation) as a full house of 1,300 persons. Almost immediately, plaintiff says, he learned from “my people” in New York (not otherwise identified or testifying at the trial) that others had said to them “yes, we know it’s an excellent show, but we’ve seen it on video cassette distributed by International Video Exchange. You can get the cassette for $65 or rent it out for an evening for one or two dollars.” I do not, for reasons which will appear, credit this testimony, nor much else to which plaintiff testified, that is not corroborated by other evidence.

According to plaintiff, his “full house” in Los Angeles was not duplicated in New York, where only 600 tickets were sold out of a seating capacity at Town Hall of 1,800. The only record of support for all this consists of a single xerox of a Town Hall office memorandum appearing to reflect the sale of some 238 tickets on July 20, 1985. (In calculating his anticipated profits from the Town Hall performance, plaintiff elsewhere uses a figure of 2,300 for the capacity of Town Hall. After describing the ticket price as $25 — in fact, the record from Town Hall shows the ticket prices at $18 and $15 — and multiplying that times the capacity of 2,300, plaintiff claims that he anticipated a gross of $50,000 before deducting $15,000 of expenses.)

In fact, the credible evidence at trial establishes that defendant did not gain possession of the infringing copies of plaintiff’s tape until August 1985. According to defendant’s testimony, on August 14, 1985, a salesman entered his video rental and sales store on Kings Highway in Brooklyn and offered to sell him four infringing copies of plaintiff’s tape. 4 After taking one *1158 and playing it at home, the next day defendant purchased the four tapes for $35 apiece. Defendant then entered the tape into his computerized business records, giving each copy a catalog number and recording the date acquired as “8/18/85.” These records, which were produced at trial, reflect the rental of the three tapes some forty-three times over a period from August through October at a gross revenue of $1 per rental. 5 Interestingly, one customer card is contained in the records produced by defendant reflecting a rental to a Shi-mon Cohen on October 20, 1985, a date when plaintiff was appearing live in Montreal and six days before his appearance at Hunter College in Manhattan. It illustrates the speculative nature of plaintiff’s claim to wonder whether Mr. Cohen knew or would have cared that for a few dollars and a subway ride he could have seen plaintiffs performance live. It is, in all events, plausible to say that a large part of defendant’s 60 or 70 Hebrew-speaking customers saw the tape.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
731 F. Supp. 1155, 1990 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2861, 1990 WL 28069, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goldenberg-v-doe-nyed-1990.