Mag Jewelry Co., Inc. v. Cherokee, Inc.

496 F.3d 108, 30 A.L.R. Fed. 2d 851, 83 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1812, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 18762, 2007 WL 2258279
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedAugust 8, 2007
Docket06-1556, 06-2127
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 496 F.3d 108 (Mag Jewelry Co., Inc. v. Cherokee, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mag Jewelry Co., Inc. v. Cherokee, Inc., 496 F.3d 108, 30 A.L.R. Fed. 2d 851, 83 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1812, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 18762, 2007 WL 2258279 (1st Cir. 2007).

Opinion

LIPEZ, Circuit Judge.

In December 2001, plaintiff Mag Jewelry Company (“Mag”) purchased some costume jewelry at a Target store in Rhode Island. The necklaces, whose pendants were comprised of four crystal stones in the shape of an angel, were of interest to Mag because it holds a copyright on that “crystal angel” design, and Target was not one of Mag’s customers. Mag subsequently filed this copyright infringement action against Target Corporation and its supplier, Style Accessories, Inc. (“Style”). 1 The defendants denied copying Mag’s angel, claiming that their jewelry was based on an identical design independently created by someone else. Following presentation of Mag’s case to a jury, the district court granted defendants’ motion for judgment as a matter of law. Mag appeals that ruling, and, in a cross-appeal, defendants challenge the district court’s refusal to award attorney’s fees. 2 After careful review of the record, we affirm the judgment for defendants on the merits but reverse the fees ruling.

I.

The angel design at the center of this controversy is a fairly simple figure. A round crystal stone serves as its head and a teardrop stone as its body, two oblong (“navette”) stones create the wings, and a metal “jump” ring — a piece typically used to link a charm to a chain — is attached at the top as a halo. The crystal stones are commercially sold in standard sizes, and the stones are neither cut nor otherwise altered to create the angel shape at issue here. The design has been used for necklaces, earrings and pins.

The facts underlying the dispute — other than the ultimate question whether copying occurred — are largely undisputed. Mag’s president, Daniel Magnanimi, applied for copyright registration for the angel in November 1995, listing 1995 as the year of its creation and June 1,1995 as the date of first publication. The United States Copyright Office issued the registration and, in the following months, Mag sent letters through counsel to dozens of individuals and businesses demanding that they stop selling similar crystal angels.

*112 One such letter was sent to Alan Gre-german, a Rhode Island jewelry designer and manufacturer, 3 who was selling a crystal angel virtually identical to Mag’s. Gre-german hired an attorney, who in February 1996 sent a response to Mag stating that Gregerman had created the same angel design earlier than 1995 and that he also had “first manufactured, marketed, and sold products incorporating the angel design” before that year. Gregerman later testified that he created his crystal angel in the summer of 1994, that he began selling and shipping copies by September 1994, and that his angel was included in a 1995 gift catalog. His attorney’s letter reciprocally accused Mag of copyright infringement and demanded that Mag “cease and desist” using the angel in any products.

There were further communications between Mag’s and Gregerman’s attorneys, followed by two significant events. First, in June 1996, Mag filed a supplement to its original copyright registration, changing its crystal angel’s date of creation to March 1992 — more than two years earlier than Gregerman claimed to have created his angel. Second, Gregerman and Mag-nanimi agreed that they both would sell crystal angels without interference or threat of suit from the other, and Greger-man also gave Mag permission to make and sell two other angel jewelry designs that he had created. Magnanimi sent Gre-german a letter reflecting that arrangement in September 1996, stating that “we have both agreed that you can make the crystal angel as copyrighted by Mag Jewelry Co.” At trial, Gregerman testified that he rejected his attorney’s advice to pursue litigation at that time because he could continue to use the four-stone angel design, and litigation would have upset his mother, who was elderly and ill.

Mag and Gregerman continued to make and sell crystal angels, co-existing without incident until Mag discovered the crystal angel necklaces sold by Target Corporation in late 2001. After purchasing some at the Target store in Warwick, Rhode Island in December 2001 and more at a Target store in New York the next month, Mag filed this copyright infringement action against the retailer. 4 Target later identified Style as its supplier, and Mag amended its complaint to add Style as a defendant, alleging that Style had sold crystal angel items that were copied from Mag’s angel.

Style, however, was a customer of Gre-german. In its answers to Mag’s interrogatories, the company denied that it had copied “any piece sold or created by Mag jewelry” and reported that it had “adapted a piece purchased from Alan Gregerman Co.” to create the Target necklace. Style had purchased crystal angels from Greger-man between May 1997 and August 1998 and subsequently had similar pieces produced, at a lower cost, by two other companies. Style did not obtain Gregerman’s permission to bring the design to other manufacturers.

Based on the uncontroverted evidence that Style’s crystal angel was modeled on a design it obtained from Gregerman, 5 the defendants moved for summary judgment in July 2005. In support of their motion, *113 they cited a June 2000 affidavit from Gre-german stating that he had independently created his crystal angel. 6 In opposition, Mag offered a new affidavit from Greger-man, taken on September 1, 2005, that included the following assertions:

5. Based on an agreement with Daniel Magnanimi, Alan Gregerman Company can make and sell the subject “Crystal Angel” jewelry piece.
6. I inform any potential customer interested in purchasing the subject “Crystal Angel” piece that it has been copyrighted by Mag Jewelry Co., Inc. and that Alan Gregerman Company has an agreement with Mag and can make and sell the piece to its customers.
8. To the best of my recollection, I informed Chad Mollica of Style Accessories, Inc. of the fact that the subject “Crystal Angel” piece was copyrighted by Mag Jewelry Co.

Relying on the new affidavit, Mag argued during a hearing on the summary judgment motion that factual disputes remained, particularly “whether Mr. Greger-man independently created that piece” and, even if he did create a crystal angel, whether the angel Gregerman sold to Style was his own or the Mag design. Mag’s counsel suggested that Gregerman was a licensee of Mag, and he told the court that, if the new affidavit is read “preciselyt,] what it says is that he sold to Style the Mag angel. Assuming that there even is an angel that he still maintains that he independently created, that’s not what he sold to Style.”

At the end of the hearing, the district court denied the summary judgment motions, observing that “there are just too many factual links that have to be established here ... for the Court to say as a matter of law that this is not an infringing product.” The case thus proceeded to trial before a jury.

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Bluebook (online)
496 F.3d 108, 30 A.L.R. Fed. 2d 851, 83 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1812, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 18762, 2007 WL 2258279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mag-jewelry-co-inc-v-cherokee-inc-ca1-2007.