Steve Altman Photography v. United States

18 Cl. Ct. 267, 1989 U.S. Claims LEXIS 190, 1989 WL 112888
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedSeptember 29, 1989
DocketNo. 378-84 C
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 18 Cl. Ct. 267 (Steve Altman Photography v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steve Altman Photography v. United States, 18 Cl. Ct. 267, 1989 U.S. Claims LEXIS 190, 1989 WL 112888 (cc 1989).

Opinion

OPINION

RADER, Judge.

Mr. Steve Altman, plaintiff, is a professional photographer. In 1981, the Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC) commissioned plaintiff to make a photographic record of its projects in the Caribbean Islands. After OPIC had published many of his photographs in its 1981 annual report, plaintiff requested return of all the color slides from his two Caribbean trips. According to plaintiff, OPIC did not return 600 of these slides. Plaintiff seeks damages for these purportedly lost slides.

Plaintiff also claims that OPIC infringed his copyrights. The copyright infringement claim arises from two photography [269]*269assignments which plaintiff performed for OPIC in 1982. In the first, Mr. Altman photographed a White House ceremony featuring President Ronald Reagan and Mr. Craig Nalen, OPIC’s president. Later OPIC released this photograph to a national business magazine without seeking plaintiff’s approval.

In the other assignment, plaintiff took executive photographs of OPIC’s Board of Directors for publication in the agency’s 1982 annual report. Seven of the portraits appeared in OPIC’s 1983 annual report without Mr. Altman’s approval. For these two allegedly unauthorized uses of his work, plaintiff seeks reasonable copyright royalties.

Defendant also has a counterclaim against plaintiff. OPIC purchased some photographic equipment for plaintiff’s use during the Caribbean assignment. Plaintiff did not return the equipment to OPIC. Defendant seeks compensation for the missing equipment.

On July 26, 1984, plaintiff filed this case in the United States Claims Court. The case was assigned to this court on October 18, 1988. After a trial held in Washington, D.C., from April 12 through April 14, 1989, this court determines plaintiff did not prove that OPIC lost any of his slides. OPIC, however, must compensate plaintiff for the unauthorized use of his portrait photographs. Plaintiff had authorized OPIC to release the White House picture. Finally, this court also grants defendant’s counterclaim. Therefore, the amount of the counterclaim reduces the compensation due to plaintiff under his copyright claim.

FACTS

In 1981, OPIC sought a professional photographer to take pictures of the agency’s projects in the Caribbean basin. Mr. Robert L. (Buck) Jordan, OPIC’s Director of Public Relations, met Mr. Altman when he came to photograph OPIC’s president for a business magazine. Transcript of Proceedings, No. 378-84C, filed May 25, 1989, at 458-61, 610 (Tr.). Upon learning that plaintiff had extensive experience producing photographs for annual reports, Mr. Jordan began negotiations to hire plaintiff for the Caribbean project.

Contract for the Caribbean Assignment

Mr. Altman requested his normal fee of $500.00 per day. Mr. Jordan responded that the agency usually paid $325.00 per day for professional photographers. Tr. at 461-2. Because plaintiff understood that he could market the pictures after OPIC published its report, plaintiff agreed to the lower fee. Tr. at 461-62, 466-67. With that understanding, plaintiff submitted an estimate of his costs on October 7, 1981. Mr. Jordan responded that plaintiff would have the contract to shoot the 1981 OPIC annual report. Tr. at 462.

During October 1981, plaintiff and Mr. Jordan met several times to discuss the upcoming OPIC missions to the Caribbean. Usually these meetings focused on the itinerary of the assignment. Tr. at 462-63. Mr. Jordan and plaintiff also discussed what would happen to the slides after publication of the annual report. Plaintiff mentioned that he had other uses, specifically resale on the stock photography market, for the slides after completion of the report. Tr. at 461-62, 614, 686. Mr. Jordan had no objection to returning those slides not used in the annual report to plaintiff because OPIC’s slide library was already extensive. Tr. at 615-16.

During one of these meetings, Mr. Jordan took plaintiff to see Mr. Walter Barnes, Jr., OPIC’s contracting officer. Mr. Barnes and plaintiff negotiated the contract for the Caribbean assignment. Two issues arose during the negotiations: ownership of the slides after publication of the annual report, and ownership of the photography equipment purchased with OPIC funds for use on the Caribbean assignment. Tr. at 364.

At the outset of the negotiations, Mr. Barnes gave plaintiff a draft contract patterned after contracts OPIC had executed with other professional photographers. This draft contract contained provisions stating that OPIC would own and possess all slides produced during the Caribbean shoot. Tr. at 369-71, 380. Mr. Altman [270]*270objected to these provisions. Tr. at 369-71, 464. Plaintiff wanted to market the images after publication of the annual report. Tr. 464-66. In these negotiations, Mr. Barnes strove to ensure that OPIC would not have to pay plaintiff for any future use of the slides. Tr. at 381. After discussions to accommodate plaintiffs objections, Mr. Barnes redrafted the contract. Tr. at 373.

On the question of slide ownership, the contract, without typographical error, stated:

9. RESIDUAL RIGHTS TO PHOTOGRAPHS
a. OPIC reserves the right to unlimited use of all photographic materials produced under this contract for OPIC produced or commissioned publications.
b. The conditions for the release of materials produced by the Contractor under this Contract to other activities must be negotiated with the Contractor prior to release of any materials.

Joint Memorandum Re: Stipulations, No. 378-84C, filed Feb. 1, 1989, at If 3 (Stip.). Mr. Barnes testified about the meaning of this language:

Q [Plaintiffs counsel]: Altman could do whatever he wanted to do with the images as long as OPIC had access for unlimited use, true?
A [Walter Barnes]: Yes.

Tr. at 381. Moreover, Mr. Barnes agreed that OPIC access to a duplicate set of the Caribbean slides would satisfy the agency’s rights under clause 9 of the contract. Tr. at 382.

On the other issue in the negotiations, the parties agreed that OPIC would own any equipment purchased with OPIC funds for use on the Caribbean trip. Thus, the compromise that produced the assignment contract gave OPIC unlimited use of the slides and ownership of the photography equipment. The compromise gave plaintiff the right to license the images and to receive compensation for his daily services in the Caribbean. Tr. at 465. With these understandings, the parties executed the contract on October 31, 1981.

Caribbean Trips

Under the contract, plaintiff travelled to the Caribbean twice. In November 1981, plaintiff spent 15 days photographing several OPIC projects. In December 1981, plaintiff accompanied another OPIC mission to the Caribbean for 19 days. The images taken by plaintiff—a sample of which the court viewed during trial, Tr. at 756-91—depict, among other Caribbean subjects, a Panamanian pipeline and fish meal processing plant, a Haitian tree farm and leather tanning enterprise, a Honduran machinery factory and printing business, a Costa Rican flower farm and coffee processing plant, and a Dominican Republic nickel smelting operation.

At the daily rate of $325.00, plaintiff earned $11,375.00.1

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18 Cl. Ct. 267, 1989 U.S. Claims LEXIS 190, 1989 WL 112888, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steve-altman-photography-v-united-states-cc-1989.