The Rottlund Company, Inc., Doing Business as Rottlund Homes, a Minnesota Corporation v. Pinnacle Corporation, Doing Business as Town & Country Homes, an Illinois Corporation Town & Country Homes, Inc., a Minnesota Corporation Bloodgood Sharp Buster Architects and Planners of Iowa, Inc., an Iowa Corporation the Bloodgood Group, Inc., an Iowa Corporation, the Rottlund Company, Inc., Doing Business as Rottlund Homes, a Minnesota Corporation v. Pinnacle Corporation, Doing Business as Town & Country Homes, an Illinois Corporation Town & Country Homes, Inc., a Minnesota Corporation, Bloodgood Sharp Buster Architects and Planners of Iowa, Inc., an Iowa Corporation the Bloodgood Group, Inc., an Iowa Corporation, the Rottlund Company, Inc., Doing Business as Rottlund Homes, a Minnesota Corporation v. Pinnacle Corporation, Doing Business as Town & Country Homes, an Illinois Corporation Town & Country Homes, Inc., a Minnesota Corporation, Bloodgood Sharp Buster Architects and Planners of Iowa, Inc., an Iowa Corporation the Bloodgood Group, Inc., an Iowa Corporation

452 F.3d 726, 70 Fed. R. Serv. 520, 79 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1161, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 15075
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJune 20, 2006
Docket05-1296
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 452 F.3d 726 (The Rottlund Company, Inc., Doing Business as Rottlund Homes, a Minnesota Corporation v. Pinnacle Corporation, Doing Business as Town & Country Homes, an Illinois Corporation Town & Country Homes, Inc., a Minnesota Corporation Bloodgood Sharp Buster Architects and Planners of Iowa, Inc., an Iowa Corporation the Bloodgood Group, Inc., an Iowa Corporation, the Rottlund Company, Inc., Doing Business as Rottlund Homes, a Minnesota Corporation v. Pinnacle Corporation, Doing Business as Town & Country Homes, an Illinois Corporation Town & Country Homes, Inc., a Minnesota Corporation, Bloodgood Sharp Buster Architects and Planners of Iowa, Inc., an Iowa Corporation the Bloodgood Group, Inc., an Iowa Corporation, the Rottlund Company, Inc., Doing Business as Rottlund Homes, a Minnesota Corporation v. Pinnacle Corporation, Doing Business as Town & Country Homes, an Illinois Corporation Town & Country Homes, Inc., a Minnesota Corporation, Bloodgood Sharp Buster Architects and Planners of Iowa, Inc., an Iowa Corporation the Bloodgood Group, Inc., an Iowa Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Rottlund Company, Inc., Doing Business as Rottlund Homes, a Minnesota Corporation v. Pinnacle Corporation, Doing Business as Town & Country Homes, an Illinois Corporation Town & Country Homes, Inc., a Minnesota Corporation Bloodgood Sharp Buster Architects and Planners of Iowa, Inc., an Iowa Corporation the Bloodgood Group, Inc., an Iowa Corporation, the Rottlund Company, Inc., Doing Business as Rottlund Homes, a Minnesota Corporation v. Pinnacle Corporation, Doing Business as Town & Country Homes, an Illinois Corporation Town & Country Homes, Inc., a Minnesota Corporation, Bloodgood Sharp Buster Architects and Planners of Iowa, Inc., an Iowa Corporation the Bloodgood Group, Inc., an Iowa Corporation, the Rottlund Company, Inc., Doing Business as Rottlund Homes, a Minnesota Corporation v. Pinnacle Corporation, Doing Business as Town & Country Homes, an Illinois Corporation Town & Country Homes, Inc., a Minnesota Corporation, Bloodgood Sharp Buster Architects and Planners of Iowa, Inc., an Iowa Corporation the Bloodgood Group, Inc., an Iowa Corporation, 452 F.3d 726, 70 Fed. R. Serv. 520, 79 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1161, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 15075 (8th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

452 F.3d 726

THE ROTTLUND COMPANY, INC., doing business as Rottlund Homes, a Minnesota corporation, Plaintiff/Appellant,
v.
PINNACLE CORPORATION, doing business as Town & Country Homes, an Illinois corporation; Town & Country Homes, Inc., a Minnesota corporation; Bloodgood Sharp Buster Architects and Planners of Iowa, Inc., an Iowa corporation; The Bloodgood Group, Inc., an Iowa corporation, Defendants/Appellees.
The Rottlund Company, Inc., doing business as Rottlund Homes, a Minnesota corporation, Plaintiff/Appellee,
v.
Pinnacle Corporation, doing business as Town & Country Homes, an Illinois corporation; Town & Country Homes, Inc., a Minnesota corporation, Defendants,
Bloodgood Sharp Buster Architects and Planners of Iowa, Inc., an Iowa corporation; The Bloodgood Group, Inc., an Iowa corporation, Defendants/Appellants.
The Rottlund Company, Inc., doing business as Rottlund Homes, a Minnesota corporation, Plaintiff/Appellee,
v.
Pinnacle Corporation, doing business as Town & Country Homes, an Illinois corporation; Town & Country Homes, Inc., a Minnesota corporation, Defendants/Appellants,
Bloodgood Sharp Buster Architects and Planners of Iowa, Inc., an Iowa corporation; The Bloodgood Group, Inc., an Iowa corporation, Defendants.

No. 05-1296.

No. 05-1501.

No. 05-1398.

United States Court of Appeals, Eighth Circuit.

Submitted: December 15, 2005.

Filed: June 20, 2006.

Thomas H. Boyd, argued, Minneapolis, MN (Robert R. Weinstine, Craig S. Krummen, Philip R. Mahowald and David A. Davenport of Minneapolis, on the brief), for appellant

Christopher J. Murdoch of Chicago, IL (Matthew I. Farmer Chicago, IL, Land Darren B. Schwiebert, Minneapolis, MN, on the brief), for appellee Pinnacle Corporation d/b/a Town & Country Homes.

Holly J. Newman and Benjamin Patrick, Minneapolis, MN, for Bloodgood.

Before WOLLMAN, McMILLIAN,1 and RILEY, Circuit Judges.

WOLLMAN, Circuit Judge.

The Rottlund Company, Inc. (Rottlund) appeals from the district court's denial of its motion for a new trial following a jury verdict adverse to its copyright infringement claim. Because we agree with Rottlund's contention that the district court erred in admitting certain expert testimony, we reverse and remand for a new trial. Appellees have filed a conditional cross appeal, arguing that if a new trial is granted, the district court's grant of partial summary judgment should be reversed. The cross appeal is denied.

I.

Rottlund is a production home builder that owns copyrights on the architectural design plans and architectural works covering the Villa II townhome technical drawings and as-built works. Rottlund alleged infringement of its Villa II copyrights and filed suit against Pinnacle Corporation (Pinnacle), Town & Country Homes, Inc. (T & C), and eventually, Bloodgood Sharpbusters Architects and Planners of Iowa, Inc. (BSB) and The Bloodgood Group, Inc. (BGI). Pinnacle and T & C are production home builders, and BSB is an architectural firm utilized by Pinnacle and T & C to develop two of the alleged infringing collections. BGI is BSB's parent company.

Before trial began, the district court granted partial summary judgment in favor of Rottlund, holding that (1) Rottlund owned valid copyrights in its Villa II technical drawings; (2) Pinnacle, T & C, and BSB (collectively, Appellees) had access to Rottlund's Villa II copyrighted materials; and (3) the ideas in Appellees' Homestead Collection, Washington Square, and Chateau Collection technical drawings and architectural works were substantially similar to Rottlund's Villa II technical drawings and architectural works. D. Ct. Order of Oct. 19, 2004, at 6-7; D. Ct. Order of Nov. 9, 2004, at 2. The district court further held that there was a triable dispute of material fact for the jury as to whether Appellees directly copied Rottlund's copyrighted material and whether the expression of ideas in Appellees' alleged infringing technical drawings and architectural works was substantially similar to that in Rottlund's Villa II technical drawings and architectural works. The jury trial commenced on November 15, 2004, and continued on for some sixteen trial days.

Jeffrey Scherer, Appellees' architectural expert, served as a principal witness at trial. Although Rottlund moved in limine to exclude Scherer's testimony and objected vigorously to his testimony at trial, the district court permitted Scherer to testify that, in his expert opinion, there was no direct evidence of copying.

To illustrate his point, Scherer created electronic overlays of the townhome products at issue in the lawsuit. The set of exhibits included drawings and overlays of T & C's Homestead Collection end unit and Rottlund's Villa II end unit. The sequence started with side-by-side drawings of both units. The next slide showed an overlay of T & C's unit outlined in red over Rottlund's unit to show "the comparable differences which led [Scherer] to conclude that they were not direct copies." Tr. at 3148. Although the district court did not admit this set of exhibits into evidence, it permitted Appellees to use the drawings and overlays as demonstrative exhibits from which Scherer testified. The court acknowledged, that the overlays "would encroach on the jury's work that they have to do.... They would not be in conformance with the law of the Eight Circuit as relates to this kind of a case." Tr. at 3147.

Scherer then testified regarding the differences of the key elements of the plans. He described in detail the differences between the plans and how those differences would affect the people who lived in each unit. For example, he explained that meal preparation would be different in the Rottlund kitchen than it would be in the T & C kitchen:

On the Rottlund plan, if I take my food out of the refrigerator and I go to the sink to clean it, then I go to the cooktop to cook it, I then have to pass by the sink again to go to the dining room. Whereas in the Town & Country example, I can take the food out of the refrigerator, go to the sink, cook it, and go immediately into the dining room. That's totally different ways to prepare food and lay out a kitchen.

Tr. at 3149-50.

In a similar manner, Scherer discussed the differences between the location of the stairs, the width of the passageways, and the design of the breakfast area, the dining area, the living room, and the loft. Scherer testified that the differences between the gabled entries, "illustrate[d] to [him] that the columns supporting the gables are not copies of each other." Tr. at 3157. In response to Rottlund's objection and request that the answer be stricken, the district court stated that although the issue of element comparison was not before the jury, there was a dispute over what constituted an "element." The court instructed the jury that it would be charged with the question of whether there is substantial similarity between the designs and that a "breakdown by elements is not appropriate in that kind of determination." Tr. at 3157.

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Bluebook (online)
452 F.3d 726, 70 Fed. R. Serv. 520, 79 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1161, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 15075, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-rottlund-company-inc-doing-business-as-rottlund-homes-a-minnesota-ca8-2006.