Schiller & Schmidt, Incorporated v. Nordisco Corporation

969 F.2d 410, 23 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1762, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 16698, 1992 WL 171896
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJuly 23, 1992
Docket91-2195, 91-2781
StatusPublished
Cited by91 cases

This text of 969 F.2d 410 (Schiller & Schmidt, Incorporated v. Nordisco Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schiller & Schmidt, Incorporated v. Nordisco Corporation, 969 F.2d 410, 23 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1762, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 16698, 1992 WL 171896 (7th Cir. 1992).

Opinion

POSNER, Circuit Judge.

Schiller and Schmidt, a seller of office supplies, brought suit against a competitor, Nordisco, charging copyright infringement and misappropriation of trade secrets. (The other defendants and other charges require no discussion.) The judge found no copyright infringement and awarded damages of only $16,545 for the misappropriation. Schiller and Schmidt (we shall call it “Schiller” for short) appeals, raising issues concerning works for hire, infringement of copyrighted compilations, and proof of damages.

The suit grows out of a family squabble. James Rybak, the nephew of Schiller’s president, Bernard Garvey, was an employee of his uncle’s company when in 1979 he launched the company into the mail order business by creating a catalog of office supplies sold by Schiller. The catalog consisted of product descriptions and prices together with photographs of the products. The product descriptions were based on but not copied verbatim from printed information supplied to Schiller by the manufacturers of the products. The manufacturers were the source of the vast majority of the photos as well, although Rybak determined the layout of each product’s photos — that is, how they would be arranged in relation to each other and to the text. (The pictures at the end of this opinion are of sample layouts from the catalogs of the. parties and of other mail order houses.) Some of the photos in the catalog did not come from manufacturers but instead had been made at Rybak’s direction by “Spot-line Studios,” the name under which the photographer Carl Bertel did business. Rybak would take the office supplies that he wanted photographed to Bertel’s studio and' would give him some, though apparently few, directions with regard to the positioning of the objects to be photographed.

By the middle of 1983 Schiller was mailing 200,000 copies of its catalog quarterly and was making some $2 million a year in mail order sales. But Garvey was concerned about the cost of the catalog and also wanted to give his son Kenneth a bigger role in the mail order end of the business. Rybak, whose employment contract with Schiller did not contain a non-competition clause, decided to leave and form his own mail order office supplies company. He took with him his father (another employee of Schiller), hundreds of photos (which he later returned to Schiller) including those he had commissioned on Schiller’s behalf from Bertel, and the mailing list for Schiller’s catalog. Rybak’s company, Nordisco, brought out its own catalog later in 1983, precipitating this suit filed two years later. Schiller claimed that not only Nordisco’s first catalog, but its subsequent catalogs as well, infringed Schiller’s catalogs. It sought damages in excess of $1 million based on a decline in its mail order sales that set in after Nordis-co’s catalog came out.

The focus of the evidence at trial was Nordisco’s first catalog. A third of the entries appear to duplicate the corresponding entries in Schiller’s summer 1983 cata *412 log, as is evident from the illüstrations at the end of this opinion. Among the duplicate entries, 18 use photos taken by Bertel for Rybak when the latter was employed by Schiller. Although Schiller denies it and Nordisco did not help its cause by systematically misciting the record in its brief in our court, it is fairly clear that the photos in the 40-plus other duplicate entries come from the product manufacturers — there was no second Bertel who took photos for Schiller. Schiller did, however, create the layouts for the photos supplied by the manufacturers, and Nordisco appears to have duplicated those layouts.

The plaintiff claims three sources of copyright protection. First, it claims to own copyright in the 18 photos, and if so there is no doubt that Nordisco infringed by copying the photos into its own catalog. Nordisco denies that Schiller is the copyright owner. Second, Schiller claims that Nordisco infringed its copyright on the catalog itself, viewed as a compilation. Nor-disco should (but doesn’t) concede that Schiller has such a copyright, but it denies any infringement. Third, Schiller claims that Nordisco infringed its copyright on individual layouts within the compilation, that is, on separately copyrightable components of the compilation. Nordisco again denies infringement.

Bertel made the 18 photos, but Schiller owned the copyrights in them if they were “works for hire,” or if Bertel assigned the copyrights to Schiller. 17 U.S.C. §§ 101(1), (2), 201(b), (d). Since no one could suppose after Community for Creative Non-Violence v. Reid, 490 U.S. 730, 109 S.Ct. 2166, 104 L.Ed.2d 811 (1989), that Bertel was an employee of Schiller, they were works for hire only if they fell in one or more of the categories of intellectual property enumerated in section 101(2), as they did, and were specially commissioned by Schiller, as they were, and the parties had signed a statement to that effect— which they had not. What is true is that in 1988, long after this suit had begun, Bertel obligingly signed a statement in which he “agree[d] that Schiller and Schmidt has owned the copyright [in the photos], and I hereby assign any remaining copyright which I may own in any photographs which I took for Schiller and Schmidt, and any right to maintain actions, now or hereafter existing, for alleged infringement thereof” to Schiller. The statement was not signed by Schiller, however, as the statute required if the photos were to be works for hire. The statutory language is “signed by them,” 17 U.S.C. § 101(2), that is, by both parties, and it means what it says. 1 Paul Goldstein, Copyright: Principles, Law and Practice § 4.3.2.2, at p. 405 and n. 54 (1989).

The statement also came too late. The requirement of a written statement regarding the copyright on a specially commissioned work is not merely a statute of frauds, although that is the purpose emphasized by the cases. Dumas v. Gommerman, 865 F.2d 1093, 1101 (9th Cir.1989); Easter Seal Society for Crippled Children and Adults of Louisiana, Inc. v. Playboy Enterprises, Inc., 815 F.2d 323, 328 n. 8 (5th Cir.1987). That is, it is not only designed to protect people against false claims of oral agreements. If it were, then it might not matter when the statement had been made or signed, Monetti, S.P.A. v. Anchor Hocking Co., 931 F.2d 1178, 1183 (7th Cir.1991); Cattin v. General Motors Corp., 955 F.2d 416, 429-30 (6th Cir.1992), although there is authority that it must be signed before suit is brought. Watson v. McCabe, 527 F.2d 286, 289 (6th Cir.1975); E. Allan Farnsworth, Contracts § 6.7, at p. 428 and n. 19 (2d ed. 1990).

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969 F.2d 410, 23 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1762, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 16698, 1992 WL 171896, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schiller-schmidt-incorporated-v-nordisco-corporation-ca7-1992.