Oracle USA, Inc. v. Rimini St., Inc.
This text of 324 F. Supp. 3d 1157 (Oracle USA, Inc. v. Rimini St., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Nevada primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
LARRY R. HICKS, UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
*1161Before the court are plaintiffs Oracle USA, Inc.; Oracle America, Inc.; and Oracle International Corporation's (collectively "Oracle") renewed motion for a permanent injunction (ECF No. 1117) and renewed motion for attorneys' fees (ECF No. 1118). Defendants Rimini Street, Inc. ("Rimini Street") and Seth Ravin ("Ravin") filed oppositions to the renewed motions (ECF Nos. 1130, 1145) to which Oracle replied (ECF Nos. 1139, 1152). A hearing on Oracle's renewed motions was held by the court on Monday, July 23, 2018.
I. Facts and Procedural History
This action has an extensive eight-year history. In brief, and relevant to the renewed motions, Oracle develops, manufactures, and licenses computer software. Oracle also provides after-license software support services to customers who license its copyrighted software. Defendant Rimini Street is a company that provides similar after-license software support services to customers licensing Oracle's copyrighted software and competes directly with Oracle to provide these services. Defendant Ravin is the owner and CEO of Rimini Street.
On January 25, 2010, Oracle filed a complaint for copyright infringement against defendants alleging that beginning in 2006, Rimini Street copied several of Oracle's copyright-protected software programs - including Oracle's copyrighted PeopleSoft, J.D. Edwards, and Siebel-branded Enterprise Software products - onto its own computer systems in order to provide after-license software support services to customers who licensed the copyrighted software programs. ECF No. 1. In June 2011, Oracle filed a second amended complaint alleging thirteen causes of action against defendants: (1) copyright infringement; (2) violation of the Federal Computer Fraud and Abuse Act ("CFAA"),
*1162(8) negligent interference with prospective economic advantage; (9) unfair competition; (10) trespass to chattels; (11) unjust enrichment; (12) unfair practices; and (13) an accounting. ECF No. 146.
A jury trial was held on Oracle's claims for copyright infringement and violation of the California and Nevada computer access statutes from September 14 through October 13, 2015. On October 13, 2015, the jury returned its verdict and found that defendant Rimini Street engaged in copyright infringement on ninety-three of Oracle's copyrighted PeopleSoft, J.D. Edwards, and Siebel-branded Enterprise Software products. ECF No. 896. The jury also found that both defendants Rimini Street and Ravin violated the California and Nevada computer access statutes.
On January 8, 2018, the Ninth Circuit issued its decision and opinion on defendants' appeal. Oracle USA, Inc. v. Rimini Street, Inc. ,
In response to the Ninth Circuit's opinion, Oracle filed the present renewed motion for a permanent injunction to enjoin and restrain Rimini Street from any further infringement of Oracle's software copyrights (ECF No. 1117)1 and renewed motion for attorneys' fees in the amount of $28,502,246.20 (ECF No. 1118). Both motions are addressed below.
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LARRY R. HICKS, UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
*1161Before the court are plaintiffs Oracle USA, Inc.; Oracle America, Inc.; and Oracle International Corporation's (collectively "Oracle") renewed motion for a permanent injunction (ECF No. 1117) and renewed motion for attorneys' fees (ECF No. 1118). Defendants Rimini Street, Inc. ("Rimini Street") and Seth Ravin ("Ravin") filed oppositions to the renewed motions (ECF Nos. 1130, 1145) to which Oracle replied (ECF Nos. 1139, 1152). A hearing on Oracle's renewed motions was held by the court on Monday, July 23, 2018.
I. Facts and Procedural History
This action has an extensive eight-year history. In brief, and relevant to the renewed motions, Oracle develops, manufactures, and licenses computer software. Oracle also provides after-license software support services to customers who license its copyrighted software. Defendant Rimini Street is a company that provides similar after-license software support services to customers licensing Oracle's copyrighted software and competes directly with Oracle to provide these services. Defendant Ravin is the owner and CEO of Rimini Street.
On January 25, 2010, Oracle filed a complaint for copyright infringement against defendants alleging that beginning in 2006, Rimini Street copied several of Oracle's copyright-protected software programs - including Oracle's copyrighted PeopleSoft, J.D. Edwards, and Siebel-branded Enterprise Software products - onto its own computer systems in order to provide after-license software support services to customers who licensed the copyrighted software programs. ECF No. 1. In June 2011, Oracle filed a second amended complaint alleging thirteen causes of action against defendants: (1) copyright infringement; (2) violation of the Federal Computer Fraud and Abuse Act ("CFAA"),
*1162(8) negligent interference with prospective economic advantage; (9) unfair competition; (10) trespass to chattels; (11) unjust enrichment; (12) unfair practices; and (13) an accounting. ECF No. 146.
A jury trial was held on Oracle's claims for copyright infringement and violation of the California and Nevada computer access statutes from September 14 through October 13, 2015. On October 13, 2015, the jury returned its verdict and found that defendant Rimini Street engaged in copyright infringement on ninety-three of Oracle's copyrighted PeopleSoft, J.D. Edwards, and Siebel-branded Enterprise Software products. ECF No. 896. The jury also found that both defendants Rimini Street and Ravin violated the California and Nevada computer access statutes.
On January 8, 2018, the Ninth Circuit issued its decision and opinion on defendants' appeal. Oracle USA, Inc. v. Rimini Street, Inc. ,
In response to the Ninth Circuit's opinion, Oracle filed the present renewed motion for a permanent injunction to enjoin and restrain Rimini Street from any further infringement of Oracle's software copyrights (ECF No. 1117)1 and renewed motion for attorneys' fees in the amount of $28,502,246.20 (ECF No. 1118). Both motions are addressed below.
*1163II. Renewed Motion for Permanent Injunction (ECF No. 1117)
A. Effect of the Ninth Circuit Opinion
The parties dispute the breadth and effect of the Ninth Circuit's opinion and remand upon the court's analysis on the renewed motion for a permanent injunction. See ECF Nos. 1117, 1130. In its renewed motion, Oracle argues that the Ninth Circuit's remand on the issue of whether to grant a permanent injunction is limited and in no way undercut the basis for, or the court's prior analysis on, issuing a permanent injunction against Rimini Street to enjoin and restrain future copyright infringement. See ECF No. 1117. Rather, Oracle argues that the Ninth Circuit remand only requires the court to reevaluate the relevant injunction factors solely under the Copyright Act and without reference to the now reversed state law computer claims.
The court has reviewed the parties' documents, along with the Ninth Circuit's opinion, and agrees with Oracle's reading of the opinion and the limited nature of the remand. In its order, the Ninth Circuit recognized that the court entered a permanent injunction against Rimini Street "based on copyright infringement and ... based on alleged violations of the [state computer access statutes]."
B. Legal Standard for a Permanent Injunction
The Copyright Act provides that a district court may enter a permanent injunction "on such terms as it may deem reasonable to prevent or restrain infringement of a copyright."
1. Irreparable Injury
The first factor in a permanent injunction analysis is whether a plaintiff has suffered an irreparable injury as a result of a defendant's conduct, or will suffer an irreparable injury absent an injunction. See American Trucking Ass'ns v. City of Los Angeles ,
Here, the court once again finds that Rimini Street's infringement of ninety-three separate copyright registrations over four of Oracle software product lines (Oracle Database, PeopleSoft, J.D. Edwards, and Siebel-branded Enterprise Software) irreparably injured Oracle's business reputation and goodwill. First, it is undisputed (and has been repeatedly acknowledged by the parties) that Oracle and Rimini Street directly compete with each other to provide after-license software support services to customers that license Oracle's copyrighted software. Direct competition between a copyright holder and a proven copyright infringer has consistently supported the issuance of a permanent injunction. See Presidio Components, Inc. ,
Second, the evidence in this action established that Rimini Street's conscious disregard for Oracle's software copyrights enabled Rimini Street to rapidly build its business from a new and unknown company in the after-license software support market to a major competitor of Oracle. By offering cut-rate prices on its own services, generally at a discount of 50% of Oracle's prices for similar service contracts, Rimini Street gained increasing market share and growth, including through the length of this litigation. The evidence further establishes that Rimini Street's business model from 2006, and up until at least the court's summary judgment orders in February 2014, was built entirely on its infringement of Oracle's copyrighted software. Rimini Street would not have achieved its current market share and exceptional revenue growth without its infringing conduct. In fact, the evidence in this action establishes that Rimini Street landed clients for its services by telling customers that Oracle's services were overpriced and could be offered at the same cut-rate, 50% discount that Rimini Street offered. Rimini Street was able to offer its *1165after-license software support services at such low prices because its copyright infringement allowed it to offer support services without licensing the ninety-three different copyrighted software products from Oracle or having to expend significant resources in time and money in developing its own competing software. Further, by purporting to offer vendor-level support at half the price of Oracle support, Rimini Street created the impression that Oracle was overcharging for support and eroded the bonds and trust that Oracle has with its customers. Such injuries to a business' reputation and goodwill have consistently been held to constitute irreparable harm. See Apple Inc. v. Psystar Corp. (Apple II) ,
Finally, Rimini Street's claim that it no longer engages in the conduct adjudged by the court and jury to infringe Oracle's software copyrights is not a basis to deny issuance of an injunction. See Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios v. Grokster, Ltd. ,
2. Inadequacy of Monetary Damages
In order to establish that an injunction is warranted, a plaintiff must show that monetary damages alone are inadequate to fully compensate it for the defendant's conduct. See eBay ,
Second, the copyright infringement damages in this action were uniquely complex and difficult to determine. Unlike a patent case where a specific number of infringing products are sold at a specific price, in this copyright infringement action there was no mathematically efficient way for the jury to measure Oracle's damages. At trial, the jury was provided with two separate damage theories, both of which required the jury to evaluate a substantial amount of evidence and expert testimony before the jury reached the $35.6 million in copyright infringement damages awarded in this action. In particular, Oracle's lost profits theory required the jury to determine the lost profits, if any, of a multi-billion-dollar company that has a continuously growing business. In contrast, Oracle's hypothetical license damages theory required the jury to determine the amount Oracle would have charged and received from Rimini Street, its competitor in the after-license software support service market, to license the ninety-three different software products in this action after being presented with ample evidence that Oracle does not, and would not, license its software to competitors in the after-license support market. The difficulty for the jury in quantifying Oracle's damages in this action supports the court's finding that monetary damages alone are insufficient to fairly and fully compensate Oracle for Rimini Street's copyright infringement.
*1166Finally, one of the most fundamental rights a copyright holder has is the right to exclude others from taking and distributing the copyrighted work and this right has routinely been held difficult to compensate solely through monetary compensation. See eBay ,
3. The Balance of Hardships
A court must weigh and balance the competing effect that granting or withholding an injunction would have on each party. See Williams v. Bridgeport Music, Inc. ,
4. The Public Interest
"[T]he touchstone of the public interest factor is whether an injunction, both in scope and effect, strikes a workable balance between protecting the [copyright holder's] rights and protecting the public from the injunction's adverse effects." i4i ,
*1167Kirtsaeng v. John Wiley & Sons, Inc. , --- U.S. ----,
III. Renewed Motion for Attorneys' Fees (ECF No. 1118)
In the same prior order granting Oracle's motion for a permanent injunction against Rimini Street, the court also granted Oracle's motion for attorneys' fees and awarded Oracle $28,502,246.40 in attorneys' fees against defendants Rimini Street and Ravin after a careful analysis of all relevant factors and a general reduction of Oracle's requested fees amount by 20%. See ECF No. 1049. The Ninth Circuit, "[i]n view of [their] conclusion that there was no violation of the state computer laws ... vacate[d] the fee award and remand[ed] for reconsideration in light of Oracle's more limited success at litigation." Oracle USA, Inc. ,
The first issue before the court is whether to re-award attorneys' fees in this action in light of the Ninth Circuit's reversal of the state law claims. Then, if the court finds that such a fee award is still appropriate under the Copyright Act, the court must determine what amount of fees is reasonable.
A. Determination of Whether to Award Fees
Under Section 505 of the Copyright Act, the court has discretion to award a prevailing party its reasonable attorneys' fees. See
In order to determine whether an award of attorneys' fees is warranted under the Copyright Act, a district court examines the nonexclusive factors laid out by the Supreme Court in Fogerty v. Fantasy, Inc. ,
In applying these factors, a district court is not bound by any "precise rule," strict formulation, or weighing of the relevant factors. Kirtsaeng ,
1. Degree of Success/Frivolousness
Oracle argues that despite the Ninth Circuit's reversal on the state law claims, the degree of success it achieved on its copyright infringement claim establishes that this action was not frivolous and that the claim warrants reissuing an award of attorneys' fees in this case. See ECF No. 1118. The court agrees.
Throughout the history of this litigation, which was substantially and significantly focused on Rimini Street's alleged copyright infringement, Oracle successfully defeated all three of defendants' counterclaims, including defendants' counterclaim for copyright misuse. Further, Oracle successfully defeated all of defendants' eleven affirmative defenses which were heavily focused on Oracle's claim of copyright infringement including affirmative defenses for invalid copyright registrations, express license, consent of use, copyright misuse, improper copyright registration, implied license, statute of limitations, and fair use. Then, at trial, Oracle successfully prevailed on its claim for copyright infringement as the jury found that Rimini Street infringed every one of the ninety-three separate copyright registrations at issue in this action. As a result of Oracle's success in establishing Rimini Street's liability on its copyright infringement claim, the jury awarded Oracle a $35.6 million judgment against Rimini Street for the infringement. Then, on appeal, the Ninth Circuit affirmed the court's orders and the jury's verdict on Oracle's copyright infringement claim in its entirety. Oracle USA, Inc. ,
The court recognizes that several of Oracle's claims were either dismissed or voluntarily withdrawn before trial, and, on appeal, the Ninth Circuit reversed the jury's verdict on the state law computer access claims. However, despite these dismissed, withdrawn, and reversed claims, the court finds that Oracle's overall success in this litigation supports an award of attorneys' fees. Most important to the court in its analysis and decision is that this litigation, at its heart and core, was a copyright infringement action against Rimini Street regardless of any other claims pled. First and foremost, Oracle alleged a claim of ninety-three separate incidents of copyright infringement against Rimini Street. The other pled claims were secondary to this central issue, and in some cases, were derivative claims for which Oracle could not receive any additional monetary relief. Several of these claims were voluntarily withdrawn by Oracle before trial as to bring central focus to Rimini Street's copyright infringement before the jury.
Second, the vast majority of the parties' pretrial motions and the court's related orders were significantly related to the issue of copyright infringement. For example, several rounds of motions, briefing, and court orders were devoted to defendants' counterclaims and affirmative defenses related to Oracle's claim of copyright infringement, particularly the counterclaim and affirmative defense of copyright misuse, and these were issues absolutely central to Oracle's copyright infringement claim. See ECF Nos. 67, 72, 74, 111, 405, 436, 450, 476. Further, an entire round of summary judgment briefing was solely devoted to the copyright infringement claim. See ECF Nos. 237, 259, 281, 474. All of this combined *1169briefing, including submitted evidence, resulted in over two thousand pages of documents relating to Oracle's copyright infringement claim. Comparing the parties' briefing, the copyright infringement issues completely dwarfed the parties' briefing on all the other claims and issues in this action. Further, over two-thirds of the Ninth Circuit's opinion is dedicated to the issue of Oracle's copyright infringement claim. See Oracle USA, Inc. ,
Third, almost all of the evidence submitted at trial - documentary exhibits, witness testimony, and expert testimony and reports - was directed at or related to Oracle's copyright infringement claim. Disregarding the now reversed state law computer access claims which were submitted to the jury, the court finds that almost all of the evidence that was submitted at trial would have been submitted had these two claims not been at issue. Then, at trial, the jury awarded Oracle $35.6 million in copyright infringement damages based on this evidence after Oracle established Rimini Street's liability.
There is no question to the court that a $35.6 million verdict is a substantial success regardless of what could have been awarded in this case had the jury agreed with Oracle's larger damages figure. The Ninth Circuit recognizes that one of the most important aspects of a party's degree of success in a copyright infringement action is establishing the defendant's liability, regardless of the amount of damages awarded. See Glacier ,
2. Objective Reasonableness
Another relevant factor in whether to award fees under the Copyright Act is the objective reasonableness (or unreasonableness) of the losing party's position during the litigation. Kirtsaeng ,
Here, the court finds that--from the earliest part of litigation--defendants' position that it did not engage in copyright infringement of Oracle's software copyrights was not an objectively reasonable position to take in this litigation. First, as reflected in the court's summary judgment orders, Rimini Street's position was based on a clear misreading of Oracle's software licensing agreements and a conscious disregard for the manner that Rimini Street used and housed the copyrighted software programs on its own servers.
Second, throughout over five and one half years of this litigation, literally until trial, Rimini Street contended that it had not engaged in any conduct which could be considered copyright infringement, and, in particular, did not engage in cross-use of the copyrighted software and only used certain versions of the copyrighted software for archival purposes and disaster-related testing. In fact, it was on Rimini Street's assertions through various affidavits and deposition testimony submitted at summary judgment that the court denied portions of Oracle's motion for summary judgment on its copyright infringement claim and let these issues go to trial. However, at trial, defendant Ravin testified for the first time that Rimini Street did in fact engage in cross-use and other conduct which constitutes copyright infringement, *1170but did so innocently and without knowledge that Rimini Street was acting improperly. This was a direct and major alteration, effectively a sea change, in Rimini Street's copyright defense throughout the litigation to that time and needlessly caused extensive investigation, discovery and expense to Oracle. As a result, Oracle was forced to spend substantially more time and resources to establish copyright infringement than should have been necessary.
Finally, the court finds that attorneys' fees are warranted because of Rimini Street's significant litigation misconduct in this action. See Kirtsaeng ,
3. The Need to Make Oracle Whole
In its renewed motion, Oracle argues that re-issuing an award of attorneys' fees is necessary to compensate it for its huge outlay of fees and costs necessarily incurred in enforcing its copyrights. See ECF No. 1118. The court agrees. In order to prosecute this action, Oracle expended over $58 million in legal fees and costs to prove Rimini Street's unlawful conduct and obtain a copyright infringement judgment. Without a fee award, the court finds that Oracle's investment in its intellectual property and its incentive to create future software would not be appropriately protected or compensated. See McCulloch v. Albert E. Price, Inc. ,
4. Deterrence
Oracle further argues that an award of attorneys' fees is necessary to deter Rimini Street as a copyright infringer, as well as other third parties, from engaging in future infringement. The court agrees. Here, the court finds that an award of attorneys' fees is an appropriate remedy to deter defendant Rimini Street from its pattern of infringing Oracle's copyrights, which started when the business began and continued up until, at the earliest, the court's orders on summary judgment in 2014. Further, an award of fees is necessary to deter other third party service providers from engaging in similar infringing conduct in order to compete with Oracle for after-license software support services. See McCulloch ,
5. Purpose of the Copyright Act
The last relevant factor in the court's analysis of whether to award attorneys'
*1171fees in this action is whether an award of attorneys' fees will further the purposes of the Copyright Act. See Mattel, Inc. v. MGA Entm't, Inc. ,
B. Amount of Fees
If, as here, a district court determines that an award of attorneys' fees is warranted under the Copyright Act, the court must then determine the amount of reasonable fees to award the prevailing party. In determining the reasonableness of an award of attorneys' fees, a district court considers several non-exclusive factors including: (1) the reputation and skill of counsel; (2) the financial terms of the client fee arrangement; (3) the nature and extent of work performed and results obtained; and (4) awards in similar cases. See, e.g. , LR 54-16(b)(3); Resurrection Bay Conservation Alliance v. City of Seward Alaska ,
First, the fees requested by Oracle in its renewed motion and previously awarded by the court are reasonable because they are the product of reasonable rates and a reasonable expenditure of time for the complexity of the litigation and because this action was first and foremost a copyright infringement action. See ECF No. 1049. The Ninth Circuit reversal on the state law claims does not change the court's analysis on the reasonableness of the rates charged by Oracle's counsel or the reasonableness of the time spent on this action. Nor does the reversal on the state law claims warrant a reduction of the court's previous award of $28,502,246.40. As addressed above, this action was first and foremost a copyright infringement action and the time spent on establishing Rimini Street's liability for copyright infringement, especially in light of Rimini Street's litigation conduct, is compensable. The court recognizes that Oracle's attorneys' fees request includes time billed not only on the successful copyright infringement claim, but also on Oracle's unsuccessful claims. However, the court finds that *1172these claims involved a "common core of facts" or "related legal theories" to Oracle's copyright claims, and thus, may be included in an award of fees. See Webb v. Sloan ,
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED that plaintiff's renewed motion for a permanent injunction (ECF No. 1117) and renewed motion for attorneys' fees (ECF No. 1118) are GRANTED.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the clerk of court shall enter an award of attorneys' fees in favor of plaintiffs Oracle USA, Inc.; Oracle America, Inc.; and Oracle International Corporation and against defendants Rimini Street, Inc. in the amount of $28,502,246.40.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
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