Indyne, Inc. v. Abacus Technology Corp.

876 F. Supp. 2d 1278, 2012 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 96259, 2012 WL 2700420
CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedJune 1, 2012
DocketCase No. 6:11-cv-137-Orl-22DAB
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 876 F. Supp. 2d 1278 (Indyne, Inc. v. Abacus Technology Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Indyne, Inc. v. Abacus Technology Corp., 876 F. Supp. 2d 1278, 2012 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 96259, 2012 WL 2700420 (M.D. Fla. 2012).

Opinion

Order

ANNE C. CONWAY, District Judge.

This cause comes before the Court for consideration of the following motions and responses:

1. Defendant Abacus Technology Corporation, Jerry Reninger, and Matthew Boylan’s (“Abacus”) Motion for Summary Judgment on Plaintiffs Copyright Infringement Claim Based on the Government’s Unlimited Rights & Supporting Memorandum of Legal Authority (Doc. No. 53), filed on March 5, 2012;
2. Plaintiff InDyne, Inc.’s (“InDyne”) Opposition to Defendants’ Government Contracts Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. No. 76), filed on April 9, 2012;
3. Abacus’ Motion for Summary Judgment on Plaintiffs Copyright Infringement Claim & Supporting Memorandum of Legal Authority (Doc. No. 54), filed on March 5, 2012;
4. InDyne’s Opposition to Defendants’ Copyright Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. No. 74), filed on April 9, 2012.
5. Defendants’ Reply in Support of their Motion for Summary Judgment on Plaintiffs Copyright Infringement Claim Based on the Government’s Unlimited Rights (Doc. No. 87), filed on April 24, 2012; and
6. Defendants’ Reply in Support of Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment on Plaintiffs Copyright Infringement Claim (Doc. No. 89), filed on April 24, 2012.

[1280]*1280Because the Court finds dispositive Abacus’ motion for summary judgment based on InDyne’s copyright infringement claim (Doc. No. 54), it will not reach the other arguments raised in Abacus’ motion for summary judgment based on the government’s contracts argument (Doc. No. 53).

I. BACKGROUND

From 2003 to 2008, InDyne contracted with NASA to “deliver communications and information technology services at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center (KSC).” (Doc. No. 1 at ¶ 11). This contract was known as the Kennedy Integrated Communications Services (“KICS”) contract. As a part of the KICS contract, InDyne utilized its Program Information Management System (“PIMS”), an umbrella system of modules for a contract environment that functions to allow program management staff and customers to see and use data in areas such as work management, work procurement, logistics, safety, and timesheets. (Lawrence Marcoullier Dep., Doc. No. 86^4 at 36:14-37:4); (Thomas Albert Niemeyer Dep., Doc. No. 86-5 at 49:15-19). Prior to the KICS contract, InDyne had utilized PIMS on at least five government contracts at NASA since 1996. (See Doc. No. 86-3 a p. 4).

InDyne wrote the source code1 for the PIMS modules in ColdFusion, code language, and the PIMS software suite changed over time as InDyne developed new features for its suite of modules. (Niemeyer Dep. at 54:20-55:3). The first version of PIMS (“PIMS V.l”) was written in June 1997. (Doc. No. 1 at ¶ 9). InDyne never registered with the United States Copyright Office PIMS V.l. (Cf. Doc. No. 75-1 at p. 24). In fact, InDyne did not maintain a copy of PIMS V.l. The alleged second version of PIMS (“PIMS V.2”), of which some variation was used during the KICS contract, was registered with United States Copyright Office on November 17, 2008 (Registration No.: TX 6-879-047), and InDyne claimed on the registration form that the date of first publication was August 29, 2003. (Doc. No. 75-1 at p. 24). As well, on its copyright registration form, InDyne listed PIMS V.l as a previous version that should be excluded from copyright protection. (Doc. No. 86^44 at p. 6).2

As stated previously, InDyne relied heavily on PIMS to perform its KICS contract and constantly customized the PIMS modules to conform to the KICS contract as it did with all of its government contracts that employed PIMS. (D. Fuji Nguyen Dep., Doc. No. 86-15 at 112:14-113:12 (noting that there is a version of PIMS V.2 for KICS contract that was result of customization to the contract)). Thus, the PIMS modules were chameleon-like in nature, i.e. were constantly morphing over the years. (Thomas Albert Niemeyer Dep., Doc. No. 86-5 at 54:20-55:3).

Unfortunately, for InDyne, it failed to keep a copy of the PIMS V.2 code as it existed on the date of publication. (Deck of Due Fuji Nguyen, Doc. No. 75-1 at ¶ 16). Instead, by the time of its registration in 2008, InDyne only had some version adulterated by years of government contracts and customizations and no clear roadmap[1281]*12813. by which to decipher what portions were paid for by which parties and what alterations were made. (D. Fuji Nguyen Dep. at 41:10-42:9, 49:21-50:12); (see Expert Rpt. of Jeff C. Parmet, Doc. No. 86-46 (noting how the alleged copyrighted code references KICS over ninety-five times despite its supposed first publication occurring prior to the beginning of the KICS contract in 2003)). In fact, thirty-six percent of the alleged copyrighted PIMS V.2 code files produced in discovery have “last modified” dates after the publication date. (Expert Rpt. of Jeff Parmet at p. 20). With this information as a backdrop, the present dispute took shape between InDyne and Abacus.

At the end of the KICS contract period, NASA retained Abacus, instead of InDyne, to perform InDyne’s previous functions along with additional duties under the new Information Management and Communications Service (IMCS) contract. In July 2008, during the ninety-day transition period between the contracts, NASA requested Abacus to implement an integrated portal management system similar to the one InDyne had used during the KICS contract because an imminent launch was to occur in October 2008 soon after Abacus’ contract period was to begin officially. (Jose Rivera Dep., Doc. No. 86-39 at 26:17-31:9); (Richard Petcol Dep., Doc. No. 86-40 at 34:16-35:9 (noting NASA’s concern about having a similarly functioning website for a launch in the first month of the contract)). Eventually, the launch was delayed and NASA requested that Abacus make a new-webpage; specifically making it compliant with the Americans with" Disabilities Act. (Rivera Dep. at 76:21-78:4).

During the ninety-day period when Abacus was attempting to replicate InDyne’s website for the fast-approaching launch, Richard Petcol, Abacus’ supervisor over the initial website creation, informed others in an email titled “KICS replacement webpage” that an InDyne’s transition person, Jerry Reninger 4 (“Reninger”) offered to give Abacus all of the non-proprietary source code so Abacus could “stand up” the website as quickly as possible. (Doc. No. 86-42). At that time, Reninger was working for InDyne, aiding in the transition of software to Abacus.5 (Jerry Dale Reninger Dep., Doc. No. 86-7 at 24:21-25:5). On September 8, 2008, Matt Boylan (“Boylan”), an Abacus expert in ColdFusion, met with Reninger because he was told that Reninger would give him access to the InDyne files needed to “stand up” the IMCS website. (Matthew Boylan Dep., Doc. No. 76-10 at 79:12-16). While in Reninger’s office, Boylan stated that Reninger directed him to the directories of files that Boylan needed to copy to a [1282]*1282thumb drive. (Id. at 81:2-82:19). After transferring the files from the thumb drive to his laptop, Boylan, through global changes rather than opening up each file, began rebranding the website with the IMCS logo, replacing the KICS logo. (Id. at 95:2-18).

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Bluebook (online)
876 F. Supp. 2d 1278, 2012 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 96259, 2012 WL 2700420, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/indyne-inc-v-abacus-technology-corp-flmd-2012.