Seng-Tiong Ho v. Taflove

648 F.3d 489, 98 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1935, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 11388, 2011 WL 2175878
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJune 6, 2011
Docket10-2144
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 648 F.3d 489 (Seng-Tiong Ho v. Taflove) 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.

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Seng-Tiong Ho v. Taflove, 648 F.3d 489, 98 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1935, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 11388, 2011 WL 2175878 (7th Cir. 2011).

Opinion

RIPPLE, Circuit Judge.

Seng-Tiong Ho and Yingyan Huang brought this action against Allen Taflove and Shi-Hui Chang in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois. They alleged that the defendants, members of another research team at the same university, violated the Copyright Act by publishing equations, figures and text copied from the plaintiffs’ work. The plaintiffs also raised several state law claims against the defendants based on the alleged copying. The defendants filed a motion for summary judgment and a motion to dismiss. The district court granted the defendants’ motion for summary judgment as to all claims and therefore declined to address the motion to dismiss.

We conclude that the district court correctly granted summary judgment in favor of the defendants. Professor Ho and Ms. Huang fail to show a genuine dispute of *493 material fact that, if resolved in their favor, would give the allegedly copied equations, figures and text the protection of the Copyright Act. Moreover, the Copyright Act preempts two of the three state law claims raised on appeal; the third state law claim fails to survive summary judgment on the merits. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the district court.

I

BACKGROUND

A. Facts

Professors Ho and Taflove are both engineering professors at Northwestern University, and, during the relevant period, Ms. Huang and Mr. Chang were engineering graduate students at Northwestern University. 1

Starting in 1997, Mr. Chang worked as a graduate student with Professor Ho. In 1998, Professor Ho conceived of and first formulated a “4-level 2-electron atomic model with Pauli Exclusion Principle for simulating the dynamics of active media in a photonic device (‘the Model’).” Appellants’ Br. 4. It is not contested that the Model significantly advanced previous models. By 1999, Professor Ho had completed mathematical derivations of the Model, which comprised sixty-nine pages of notes and equations. The Model currently has no known commercial use.

Professor Ho then tasked Mr. Chang with creating a computer program code, using the derived equations, for the purpose of running Model simulations. The computer program code was based on an earlier program that Mr. Chang had helped create. Mr. Chang, however, was unsuccessful in this task because of programming errors.

In June 2002, Mr. Chang switched to Professor Taflove’s research group. When Mr. Chang switched groups, he was warned by the head of the department not to continue any work previously done in Professor Ho’s group and to avoid misappropriating Professor Ho’s work. Mr. Chang returned several of Professor Ho’s notebooks, but he failed to return an original copy of one of Professor Ho’s notebooks previously issued to him in early 2002 to record his work.

Ms. Huang began to work for Professor Ho in September 2000. Until 2001, Ms. Huang’s work focused on applying the Model to different mediums. With permission from Professor Ho, some results from the plaintiffs’ research were mentioned briefly in a conference paper published in 2001 2 and then were published in full in 2002 in Ms. Huang’s master’s thesis. Mr. Chang, who already had switched to Professor Taflove’s research group, asked Ms. Huang to provide him with two figures from her work and copies of her master’s thesis.

Professor Taflove and Mr. Chang submitted a symposium paper to the IEEE Antennas and Propagation Society (“APS paper”) and an article to the journal Optics Express (“OE article”). These submissions described the Model and its applications: The APS paper provided a brief summary, and the OE article described the Model in detail. Some of the figures in Ms. Huang’s master’s thesis also were in- *494 eluded in these submissions. The APS paper was published in 2003, and the OE article was published in 2004. Professor Taflove and Mr. Chang did not attribute any of the contents of the OE article or the APS paper to Professor Ho or Ms. Huang.

Professor Ho first became aware of the alleged wrong-doing in 2004, when he submitted his project for publication in Optics Communications, and it was rejected because of a previously published paper on the same topic, namely Professor Taflove and Mr. Chang’s APS paper. In 2007, the plaintiffs received certificates of copyright in Professor Ho’s 1998 and 1999 notebooks, Ms. Huang’s master’s thesis, two figures used within Ms. Huang’s master’s thesis and a visual presentation given by Ms. Huang that discussed the Model.

Professor Ho and Ms. Huang allege that Professor Taflove and Mr. Chang infringed upon their copyrights six times, by using the copyrighted materials without permission in the following documents, listed chronologically: (1) the APS paper; (2) Mr. Chang’s Ph.D. thesis; (3) the OE article; (4) Professor Taflove and Mr. Chang’s book chapter, published by Artech House in 2005; (5) Professor Taflove’s presentation in 2006; and (6) Professor Taflove’s presentation in 2007. “[T]he two main infringing documents” are the APS symposium paper and the OE article, as the other incidents of infringement involve parts of these two documents. Appellants’ Br. 7.

Professor Ho and Ms. Huang assert that the OE article has twenty-one items copied from their work and that the APS symposium paper has twelve, creating thirty-three infringements in total. Professor Ho and Ms. Huang calculate that, from that list of copied items, fifty-five percent are text, thirty percent are equations and fifteen percent are figures.

B. District Court Proceedings

Professor Ho and Ms. Huang brought this action against Professor Taflove and Mr. Chang, alleging copyright infringement and state law claims of false designation of origin, unfair competition, conversion, fraud and misappropriation of trade secrets. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the defendants for all claims, see Ho v. Taflove, 696 F.Supp.2d 950 (N.D.Ill.2010), and subsequently denied the plaintiffs’ motion for reconsideration, see R.139.

1. Summary Judgment Motion

The district court addressed separately each of the plaintiffs’ five claims. On appeal, Professor Ho and Ms. Huang challenge only the district court’s summary judgment ruling on their claims of copyright infringement, conversion, fraud and trade secrets misappropriation. We therefore shall examine the district court’s rulings only on those claims.

With respect to copyright infringement, the district court held that the equations, figures and text were “unprotectable concepts, ideas, methods, procedures, processes, systems, and/or discoveries” and that the merger doctrine is applicable because there are limited ways of mathematically expressing the Model. Ho, 696 F.Supp.2d at 954. The district court rejected the plaintiffs’ analogy that, just as Mickey Mouse is a particular expression of a mouse, the Model is a creative expression of a scientific phenomenon. In the district court’s view, Mickey Mouse is entirely fictitious, but the Model mimics reality.

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648 F.3d 489, 98 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1935, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 11388, 2011 WL 2175878, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seng-tiong-ho-v-taflove-ca7-2011.