In Re Application of MobiTV, Inc.

712 F. Supp. 2d 206, 2010 WL 1875706
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMay 11, 2010
Docket09 Civ. 7071 (DLC), 41 Civ. 1395 (DLC)
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 712 F. Supp. 2d 206 (In Re Application of MobiTV, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Application of MobiTV, Inc., 712 F. Supp. 2d 206, 2010 WL 1875706 (S.D.N.Y. 2010).

Opinion

712 F.Supp.2d 206 (2010)

In re APPLICATION OF MOBITV, INC.
Related to United States of America, Plaintiff,
v.
American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers, Defendant.

Nos. 09 Civ. 7071 (DLC), 41 Civ. 1395 (DLC).

United States District Court, S.D. New York.

May 11, 2010.

*208 Kenneth L. Steinthal, Joseph R. Wetzel, Harris Cohen, Matthew L. Reagan, Greenberg Traurig, LLP, San Francisco, CA, for applicant MobiTV, Inc.

David Leichtman, Hillel I. Parness, Bryan J. Vogel, Oren D. Langer, Robins, Kaplan, Miller & Ciresi, LLP, New York, NY, and Richard H. Reimer, Christine A. Pepe, New York, NY, for ASCAP.

REDACTED OPINION AND ORDER

DENISE COTE, District Judge.

                                Table of Contents
INTRODUCTION ........................................................................ 209
FINDINGS OF FACT .................................................................... 211
   I. ASCAP and Its Two Competitors ................................................. 211
  II. The Cable Television Industry ................................................. 212
 III. The Creation of a Television Program .......................................... 214
  IV. The Music Video Business and NDMAs ............................................ 215
   V. Mobi .......................................................................... 216
      A. Early Years and Growth ..................................................... 216
      B. Mobi's Product Lineup ...................................................... 217
      C. The Economics of Mobi's Business ........................................... 219
      D. Mobi's SESAC License: Its First PRO License ................................ 221
  VI. ASCAP Licenses ................................................................ 222
      A. ASCAP's Post-Turner Licenses ...................................... 222
      B. The Terms of the Post-Turner Licenses ............................. 223
      C. Application of the Post-Turner Licenses to Wireless Distribution
           Systems .................................................................. 224
      D. ASCAP Licenses with Cable System Operators ................................. 226
      E. Audio-Only Programming ..................................................... 226
CONCLUSIONS OF LAW .................................................................. 227
   I. The Non-Dramatic Performance Right ............................................ 227
  II. The Consent Decree ............................................................ 228
      A. Origins of the Consent Decree .............................................. 228
      B. The 1990s Turner Litigation ....................................... 228

*209
      C. The Negotiation of AFJ2's TTTA License Provision ........................... 229
      D. Other Provisions of AFJ2 ................................................... 231
III. Fair Market Value .............................................................. 232
     A. Music Choice: Retail or Wholesale Price as a Superior Indicator of
         Fair Market Value? ......................................................... 233
     B. AOL Rate Court Ruling ....................................................... 235
IV.  A Reasonable Rate .............................................................. 236
     A. ASCAP Rate Proposal ......................................................... 236
     B. Mobi's Fee Proposal ......................................................... 244
     C. Adoption of a Reasonable Rate ............................................... 246
CONCLUSION .......................................................................... 255

INTRODUCTION

It is hard to overstate the importance of music in most of our lives. Every concert we attend, every song we listen to, virtually every entertainment we enjoy reinforces that lesson. The task at hand is to determine the fair market value of a blanket license for the public performance of music. The challenges of that task include discerning a rate that will give composers an economic incentive to keep enriching our lives with music, that avoids compensating composers for contributions made by others either to the creative work or to the delivery of that work to the public, and that does not create distorting incentives in the marketplace that will improperly affect the choices made by composers, inventors, investors, consumers and other economic players.

This Opinion addresses these decades-old issues in the context of a relatively new phenomenon: the delivery of television programming to mobile telephones ("handsets"), an innovation made possible by the digital revolution. MobiTV ("Mobi") is a middleman between the cable television networks that create programming and the wireless carriers to which consumers subscribe to obtain wireless service on their handsets. Mobi does principally three things: it provides the back-end technology that permits television program content to be delivered seamlessly to handsets, it licenses cable television program content from the networks and provides it to the wireless carriers, and it programs music video channels that it provides to wireless carriers.

Mobi has asked for a through-to-the-audience ("TTTA") license from the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers ("ASCAP"), an organization representing almost half of American composers and music publishers in their negotiations of public performance rights, to cover the programming content that Mobi provides to wireless carriers. The parties have been unable to reach agreement on the terms of a TTTA license, and, pursuant to an antitrust consent judgment, they now request that this Court set a rate for that license. The parties dispute, among other things, whether the revenue base for the calculated fee should be the retail revenue received by the wireless carriers or the amounts Mobi pays to content providers, and the rates that should be applied to that revenue base. Their fee proposals differ by tens of millions of dollars.

ASCAP applied to the Court to set a reasonable rate on May 5, 2008.[1] A bench *210 trial was held from April 12 to 26, 2010, to determine a reasonable rate pursuant to Mobi's license application to ASCAP and ASCAP's application to this Court. This Opinion constitutes the Court's findings of fact and conclusions of law following that trial. The factual findings are principally set forth in the first section of this Opinion, but appear as well in the final section.

With the parties' consent, the trial was conducted in accordance with the Court's Individual Practices. On March 18, the direct testimony of the witnesses was presented through affidavit and submitted with the joint pretrial order, along with the parties' trial exhibits and proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law.

ASCAP presented affidavits constituting the direct testimony from four of its employees, two experts and two composers. Its employee-witnesses were Christopher Amenita, Senior Vice President for Broadcast Operations and New Media Licensing ("Amenita"); Matthew DeFilippis, Vice President of the New Media and Technology Department ("DeFilippis"); Dr. Peter M. Boyle, Chief Economist ("Boyle"); and Ray Schwind, Vice President and Director of Broadcast Licensing ("Schwind"). ASCAP's two experts were Dr. Jennifer Vanderhart, an economist ("Vanderhart"), and Cliff Petrovsky, who reported on his observations about Mobi's programming ("Petrovsky").[2]

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