Sinicola v. Warner Bros., Inc.

948 F. Supp. 1176, 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19476, 1996 WL 748204
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedDecember 31, 1996
DocketCV 94-4285
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 948 F. Supp. 1176 (Sinicola v. Warner Bros., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sinicola v. Warner Bros., Inc., 948 F. Supp. 1176, 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19476, 1996 WL 748204 (E.D.N.Y. 1996).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

WEXLER, District Judge.

Plaintiff Emilio Sinicola brings this action against defendants Warner Bros., Inc. (“Warner Bros.”), Warner Home Video (‘WHV”), 1 and Steven Seagal (“Seagal”) (collectively, “defendants”), 2 claiming defendants infringed plaintiffs copyright in an unpublished novel entitled “The Family ... and Some” (the “Novel”) by and through their motion picture entitled “Out for Justice” (the “Film”). Presently before the Court is defendants’ motion for summary judgment to dismiss plaintiffs amended complaint pursuant to Rule 56 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. For the reasons below, the motion is granted.

I. BACKGROUND

A. The Parties and the Plaintiff’s Claim

Defendant Warner Bros, is engaged in film production and distribution. WHV is engaged in distribution of videotapes of film productions for home viewing. Seagal is a screen actor and producer of films. Warner Bros, produced the Film in 1991 and distributed it throughout the world. WHV distributed the Film on video tape for home viewing. Seagal portrays the main character in the Film and is identified in the credits of the Film as one of the Film’s producers. The Film was a relative box office success, earning Seagal in excess of one million dollars.

Plaintiff maintains that in 1976 he created and authored the Novel. Thereafter, he attempted to have the Novel published or made into a screen play. He submitted a manuscript of the Novel to various persons, including agents, sales managers, and producers, none of whom, defendants maintain, has any connection with defendants. Plaintiff claims that defendants infringed plaintiffs copyright in the Novel by and through the Film.

For purposes of this motion only, defendants do not dispute that plaintiff is the owner of a valid copyright in the Novel, and that defendants had access to the Novel. Thus, the Court must determine if there are genuine issues of material fact as to whether the two works are substantially similar as to copyrightable elements of plaintiffs work. In reaching its determination, the Court has read, the 334-page Novel and viewed the 91-minute Film (in addition to reviewing the parties’ briefs and other submissions). The following is a brief description of the Novel and the Film.

B. The Works

1. The Novel

The Novel is set primarily in an Italian-American neighborhood in Manhattan, New York, beginning in the summer of 1947. Most of the story is recounted in the first person by Vince Aceola, the Novel’s protagonist, a 17-year-old high school basketball star at the time. The events of the Novel take place over approximately two years.

As the Novel begins, Vince’s father, Salvatore, and brother, Paul, are innocent bystanders who are shot and killed after witnessing the murder of a friend, Ralph Gaetano, a reputed mobster, in the apartment building where Vince and his family live. With his father’s and brother’s deaths, Vince has become the “head of the family,” expected to look after his mother, Jennie, and sister, Helen, as he prepares to enter his last year of high school.

The police, led by a homicide detective named Kelly, investigate the murders, but are unsuccessful in identifying the killers. Vince and his uncle, Gino Accola, vow to find the killers and avenge the murders of their family members, as they are certain the justice system will not adequately punish the killers if they are caught:

*1178 Uncle Gino is a large, powerful man who emigrated from Italy at a young age. He speaks in broken English and works as a handyman. He is regarded by others in his community as gentle and benevolent, caring deeply for his family, particularly Vince, whom he treats and loves like a son.

Vince and Uncle Gino soon learn the identity of one of the killers from a resident of their apartment, Julia. Julia tells Vince and Uncle Gino that she saw the killers pursue Ralph Gaetano to the roof of the apartment building and then flee via the fire escape; she also saw them drop something in a garbage can as they fled. The discarded objects were silencers, which she had retrieved from the garbage can and handed to Uncle Gino. She then tells them that one of the killers— identified by a conspicuous tattoo of the devil on his wrist — is a local mobster named Frankie “Eyes” Rizzo, a ruthless thug.

After a closed-casket funeral for Vince’s father and brother, the local mob boss, Vittorio, invites Uncle Gino and his family to live in an apartment building above the social club that the mob uses as a hangout in exchange for Uncle Gino’s handyman services at the club. The offer is made out of sympathy for Gino’s family, as Vittorio is unaware of the killers’ identities. Consequently, Uncle Gino and his wife (Vince’s Aunt Rosa), Vince, and Vince’s mother and sister move into an apartment above the club. Over time, Uncle Gino, Aunt Rosa, and Vince’s mother become fond of Vittorio, who bears an uncanny resemblance to Vince’s slain father, and who has moved into another apartment above the club. In fact, Vince’s mother and Aunt Rosa often cooks meals for Vittorio.

In the meantime, the early chapters of the Novel focus extensively on Vince’s childhood and high school friendships and experiences, including racial riots (between blacks and whites and between Irish and Italians), his basketball successes (culminating in a championship game at Madison Square Garden), and his early sexual encounters (with prostitutes and his high school history teacher). Before a tryst with his history teacher, Vince goes to a local candy store to purchase condoms. The candy store is owned by a former prize fighter named “Johnny Vito,” who once fought in Madison Square Garden. The candy store also functions as the mob’s local gambling center, activities which are protected through police payoffs. While Vince is leaving the candy store, he is confronted by an Irish police detective, Detective Finn, who is there with other officers of Irish descent to extort protection money from the proprietor. Finn recognizes Vince as a participant in a riot at a local high school football game be-, tween the Italian fans and players of Vince’s brother’s high school and the Irish fans and players of the opposing school. With tension apparently high between the neighborhood’s Irish police officers and its Italian residents, Finn makes an ethnically insulting reference to Vince. To humiliate Vince further, Finn takes the condoms from Vince’s hand, holds them up, and refers to them as “Italian sausage holders.” He pushes Vince around, but is prevented from doing so further by Vito’s threat to stop the payoffs should the cops harm Vince. Vito further warns the corrupt police officers that “if you weren’t cops, you would be getting your asses pushed in.”

As the Novel progresses, Uncle Gino meticulously plans his revenge.

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Bluebook (online)
948 F. Supp. 1176, 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19476, 1996 WL 748204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sinicola-v-warner-bros-inc-nyed-1996.