Operating System Support, Inc. v. Wang Laboratories, Inc.

52 F. App'x 160
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedAugust 5, 2002
Docket01-2700
StatusUnpublished

This text of 52 F. App'x 160 (Operating System Support, Inc. v. Wang Laboratories, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Operating System Support, Inc. v. Wang Laboratories, Inc., 52 F. App'x 160 (3d Cir. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION

BECKER, Chief Judge.

This appeal involves a dispute between plaintiff Operating System Support, Inc., (“OSS”) and defendant Wang Laboratories, Inc. (“Wang”) over Wang’s rights in a piece of computer software known as the Ult-Plus operating system. Ult-Plus was created by Allerion, Inc., and is a derivative of the Pick Operating System (“Pick OS”), which Pick Systems, Inc. (“Pick”) developed and owns. Through a complex series of licensing agreements and assignments, OSS claims a contractual right to exclude Wang from sublicensing Ult-Plus. In addition to alleging breach of contract, OSS also claims that Wang’s use of Ult-Plus infringes OSS’s copyright in Ult-Plus and constitutes unfair competition.

Wang appeals from the order of the District Court granting OSS a preliminary injunction, granting OSS partial summary judgment, and denying Wang’s cross-motion for summary judgment. The District Court’s grant of partial summary judgment declared that ‘Wang does not have the right to sublicense Ult-Plus or disclose the source code of the Pick Operating System.” A.26. Accordingly, the District Court enjoined Wang from “sublicensing Ult-Plus or otherwise disclosing the source code of the Pick Operating System.”

We conclude that the District Court’s analysis of the relevant contractual provisions was erroneous, and that Wang has a contractual right both to sublicense Ult-Plus in object code form and to use the Ult-Plus source code and Pick OS source code to perform software support for customers. Accordingly, we will reverse the District Court’s order granting OSS a preliminary injunction and partial summary judgment, and denying Wang’s cross-motion for summary judgment, and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I. Facts and Procedural History

Ult-Plus is a derivative of the Pick OS, which was created by Pick, who continues to own the Pick OS. A.5. Pursuant to various licensing agreements between Pick and Allerion (collectively the “Pick-Allerion” agreement), Allerion developed Uli> *162 Plus. A.147-291. 1 These agreements prohibited Allerion from disclosing the Pick OS source code to any third party, and permitted Allerion to license its derivatives of the Pick OS in object code form only. It is important to note in this regard that computer programmers initially write software in what is known as “source code,” which consists of a set of instructions in some programming language such as C++ or Visual Basic. A computer programmer who has access to software’s source code can understand how the software works. Access to the source code is thus necessary to modify how the software operates, for example, to eliminate a “bug” or to add extra functionality to the software. Before a computer can actually execute the software, however, the source code form of the software must be translated, usually via a computer program known as a “compiler,” into object code. The object code version of a program, unlike the source code version, is directly executable by a computer, but generally unintelligible to humans. See Whelan As socs., Inc. v. Jaslow Dental Lab., Inc., 797 F.2d 1222, 1230-31 (3d Cir.1986); Apple Computer, Inc. v. Franklin Computer Corp., 714 F.2d 1240, 1243 (3d Cir.1983); Note, Copyright Protection of Computer Program Object Code, 96 Harv. L.Rev. 1723, 1724-25 (1983).

Allerion eventually sold its entire Customer Service Division, including its contracts for support and maintenance of Ult-Plus customers, to Bull HN Information Systems, Inc. (“Bull”), which is a defendant in this lawsuit but not a party to this appeal. A.293. Under the terms of the sale, which we will refer to as the “Allerion-Bull” agreement, Allerion granted Bull a nonexclusive license to use Ult-Plus, including the right to use the source code of Ult-Plus to perform software support for customers. A.294. The agreement also granted Bull “the right to grant sublicenses to CUSTOMERS worldwide to utilize, modify, and copy the LICENSED PRODUCTS, in object code form only.” A.294. The contract defined “CUSTOMER” as “an end-user or prospective end-user of data processing products which utilize the Ultimate Operating system,” and defined “LICENSED PRODUCTS” to include Ult-Plus and the Pick OS. A.293-94.

On the same day that Allerion and Bull entered this agreement, Pick and Bull also entered an agreement (the “Pick-Bull” agreement), whereby Pick granted Bull a nonexclusive license to use the Pick OS and Ult-Plus. Under the contract, Bull obtained “the right to grant sublicenses to CUSTOMERS worldwide to utilize and copy for archival purposes the LICENSED PRODUCTS, in object form only.” A.301. The agreement, however, limited Bull’s rights in the Ult-Plus and Pick OS source code, stating that “the license to use source code is limited to the right to have and use source code to the LICENSED PRODUCTS to perform software support for Customers, and to develop and use CHANGES to the LICENSED PRODUCTS.” A.301.

Both the Allerion-Bull and the Pick-Bull agreements provided that they would enure “to the benefit of the assignee of the entire assets of either PARTY to which [the] Agreement relates.” A.297, 303. The Agreements stated, however, that they “shall not otherwise be assignable without the prior written consent of the *163 other PARTY.” A.303. The agreements further provided that in the event of “any termination” of the agreements, “[a]ll sub-licenses granted to CUSTOMERS ... shall survive” and that “BULL shall continue to have those rights and licenses ... which are reasonably necessary for BULL to fulfill obligations to CUSTOMERS under contracts entered into up to and including the date of such termination .... ” A.296, 302.

In January 1995, Wang purchased Bull’s entire customer service operations and business in the United States, including Bull’s rights under the Pick-Bull and Alerion-Bull agreements. A.452-633. We will refer to this sale as the “Bull-Wang” agreement. By this time, Allerion had filed for bankruptcy, and in an assignment executed on March 23, 1995, which we will refer to as the “Allerion-Pick” agreement, Allerion conveyed to Pick its ownership of Ult-Plus and its interest in the licenses that Pick had earlier granted Allerion under the Pick-Allerion agreement. A.306-08. This assignment provided that “nothing herein shall be deemed to modify or extinguish the rights of any third party licensee of Alerion,” and was made subject to the approval of the Bankruptcy Court. A.307. On June 12, 1995, the Bankruptcy Court, pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 363(f), approved the assignment “free and clear of any and all liens, claims and encumbrances, with valid liens, claims and encumbrances to attach to the proceeds of sales in the same priority as presently exists against the License .... ” A.833.

On March 27, 1995, Pick and OSS, the plaintiff in this case, entered a software distribution agreement, which provided that “PICK has recently acquired the rights to the Ultimate and Ultimate Plus software products. Distributor [OSS] shall be given exclusive rights to market these products through its resellers.” A.892.

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