Shaw Family Archives, Ltd. v. CMG Worldwide, Inc.

589 F. Supp. 2d 331, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 99816, 2008 WL 5191194
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedDecember 4, 2008
Docket05 Civ. 3939(CM)
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 589 F. Supp. 2d 331 (Shaw Family Archives, Ltd. v. CMG Worldwide, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shaw Family Archives, Ltd. v. CMG Worldwide, Inc., 589 F. Supp. 2d 331, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 99816, 2008 WL 5191194 (S.D.N.Y. 2008).

Opinion

*332 DECISION AND ORDER GRANTING IN PART AND DENYING IN PART PLAINTIFFS’ MOTION FOR ATTORNEYS’ FEES AND SANCTIONS; DENYING AS MOOT PLAINTIFFS’ MOTION FOR THE POSTING OF A BOND; DIRECTING THE ENTRY OF JUDGMENT AND THE CLOSING OF THIS FILE BY THE CLERK

McMAHON, District Judge.

Familiarity with the court’s many opinions in this overly-long litigation is presumed.

*333 I will deal with the issues raised in the following order: plaintiffs’ claim for attorneys’ fees under the Indiana Right of Publicity Statute; plaintiffs’ motion for sanctions in connection with the Indiana Right of Publicity Claim and related issues; plaintiffs’ claim for attorneys’ fees in connection with litigation concerning the constitutionality of amendments to the California Right of Publicity Statute; plaintiffs’ claim for attorneys’ fees in connection with copyright claims asserted in defendants’ Third Amended Complaint (filed in the transferred Indiana action); and plaintiffs’ claim for sanctions in connection with those copyright claims.

Indiana Right of Publicity Claim

A Brief History of this Litigation

Defendants, who control whatever intellectual property rights were owned by the heirs of the deceased actress Marilyn Monroe, brought an action in the United States District Court for the District of Indiana against the heirs of photographer Ted Shaw, alleging that their commercial exploitation in Indiana of certain photographs of Monroe that were taken by Shaw violated Indiana’s Right of Publicity Statute, Ind.Code § 32-36-1-8.

The Shaw heirs responded by commencing this action in which they originally sought injunctive relief and damages, including attorneys’ fees and any and all gains, profits, and advantages obtained by defendants as a result of alleged infringement of copyrights owned by the Shaw Family. They also sought an order, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2201-2202, declaring that defendants had no authority or right to copy or publish photographs on which Shaw Family Partners held the copyright.

Defendants moved to have this case dismissed or stayed in favor of the action they had commenced in Indiana, or in the alternative to have this case transferred to Indiana. They also moved in the Central District of California to have that court transfer to Indiana virtually identical cases brought against CMG and MMLLC by other photographers, The Milton H. Greene Archives, Shirley De Deines et al., and Tom Kelley Studios — who had registered copyrights in photographs of Monroe. See Milton H. Greene Archives v. CMG Worldwide, Inc., CV 05-02200, Docket #47. Both courts declined to grant the motions. Eventually, the Indiana action against the Shaws was transferred here and consolidated with the lawsuit pending before me.

The central claim in both lawsuits, as originally filed, was whether the Indiana statute — passed more than a quarter century after Monroe’s death, by a state with which she had no known contact during her life — could possibly have conferred any right of publicity on Monroe or on her heirs.

The Indiana statute provided that it applied to all sales made into Indiana regardless of the domicile of the famous person. It also purported to bestow a right of publicity on famous people (“personalities”) both living and deceased, regardless of their domicile on the date of their death.

However, whether a famous person already dead had managed to leave behind for his/her heirs any descendible right of publicity is not a function of Indiana law (unless, of course, the famous person died a domiciliary of Indiana). Instead it is a function of where that famous person happened to be domiciled at the time of death. New York (where Monroe maintained an apartment and where her estate was probated and administered) and California (where she owned a house, made movies and committed suicide) were the only states that could possibly have been Monroe’s domicile at the time of her death; no one has ever suggested that she was domiciled in Indiana. And in 1962, when Monroe died, neither New York nor California *334 recognized any post-mortem, descendible right of publicity. California passed a law creating such a right for California domi-ciliaries in 1984, but nothing in the text of the statute or its history suggested that the Legislature intended the statute to be anything other than prospective in its application.

The Shaw Family were of the view that Monroe’s right of publicity had died with her, and that Indiana could not retroactively confer any such right on the Monroe Estate, or on defendants, the entities formed by Monroe’s heirs to exploit Monroe’s intellectual property on their behalf. Defendants argued otherwise, claiming that the Indiana statute created a retroactive right of publicity that passed to the Estate, and so to them, via the residuary clause in Monroe’s will.

From the inception of the lawsuits, it was crystal clear that the issue of Monroe’s date-of-death domicile would be central to resolution of the dispute among the parties. In fact, in their initial Rule 26(1)(1), CMG and MMLLC indicated that “documents related to Marilyn Monroe’s domicile at the time of her death” would be relevant to the case and were within the possession, custody or control of defendants. The court’s personal notes indicate that the issue of Monroe’s domicile was discussed at the initial pre-trial conference in the Shaw’s case, which was held on April 24, 2006.

Despite its centrality, the issue appeared to recede in importance after this court issued an opinion, on March 27, 2007, in which I granted summary judgment dismissing CMG and MMLLC’s right of publicity claim under Indiana law. I concluded that Monroe had no descendible right of publicity to bequeath to her heirs, so defendants had nothing they could enforce using the cudgel of Indiana’s Right of Publicity law. Because the law in 1962 was the same in both states, I did not need to determine, and did not determine, whether Monroe had died a domiciliary of New York or California (although I ruled that it had to be one or the other).

In response, the Monroe Estate (and, I assume, others) convinced California’s Legislature to pass a statute purporting to confer a right of publicity on Californians who had died prior to passage of the 1984 law mentioned above. The 2007 law was notable for indicating that it was specifically intended to overrule the March 27 decision in this action, as well as a decision reaching the same result by Judge Morrow in the Central District of California action. The Monroe Estate lobbied for passage of a similar law in New York, but its efforts were unsuccessful.

Because the California Legislature purported to confer a descendible right of publicity — but only on persons who died as domiciliaries of California — the issue of Monroe’s date-of-death domicile had to be resolved. In this action, as part of their Second Amended Complaint, plaintiffs had asserted a claim (on August 7, 2007) seeking a declaration that Monroe died a New York domiciliary (Second Amended Complaint, Count 9).

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Bluebook (online)
589 F. Supp. 2d 331, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 99816, 2008 WL 5191194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shaw-family-archives-ltd-v-cmg-worldwide-inc-nysd-2008.