United States v. David L. Whetzel

589 F.2d 707, 191 U.S. App. D.C. 184, 200 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 193, 3 Fed. R. Serv. 1376, 1978 U.S. App. LEXIS 7458
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedNovember 27, 1978
Docket20-1045
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 589 F.2d 707 (United States v. David L. Whetzel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. David L. Whetzel, 589 F.2d 707, 191 U.S. App. D.C. 184, 200 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 193, 3 Fed. R. Serv. 1376, 1978 U.S. App. LEXIS 7458 (D.C. Cir. 1978).

Opinion

SPOTTSWOOD W. ROBINSON, III,

Circuit Judge:

The appeal is from a judgment, rendered following a jury trial, convicting appellant Whetzel on 33 counts of copyright infringement in contravention of 17 U.S.C. §§ 1(f) and 104(b), 1 and two counts of transporting property “stolen, converted or taken by fraud” across a state line in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2314. 2 We are asked, on varying grounds, to set the convictions aside in toto. We find the evidence legally insufficient to establish an essential element of the transportation offenses charged, and on these we accordingly reverse. We perceive no basis for disturbing the outcome on the copyright infringement counts, so on these we affirm.

I

The material facts are few and undisputed. On June 30, 1977, Whetzel drove his van across the District of Columbia line into Maryland, pulled into the parking lot of a fast-food restaurant and sold 1,040 eight-track tapes of popular sound recordings 3 to a special agent of the Federal Bureau of Investigation for $1,040. A month later, on July 31, Whetzel substantially repeated these actions, this time peddling 1,767 tapes to the agent for $1,767. Both transactions were videotaped, and subsequently Whetzel was indicted and tried. 4 The jury returned a verdict of guilty, and the District Court sentenced Whetzel to concurrent one-year terms of incarceration on each of the copyright infringement counts, 5 and to terms of two to six years on the transportation counts, those sentences to be served concurrently with each other and with those on the copyright counts.

Whetzel attacks the legal efficacy of the evidence to establish a value for the transported property meeting the minimum amount fixed by the statute defining the *710 transportation offense. Additionally, he contests the sufficiency of the proof to demonstrate that he lacked authority to distribute and sell the tapes in question. He also complains of the District Court’s admission of evidence that previously he had trafficked in pirated tapes and asserts that prejudicial imprecision infected the Court’s cautionary instruction on use of that “bad acts” evidence. We sustain the first challenge and consequently reverse Whetzel’s conviction on the transportation counts with direction to dismiss those charges. 6 We discern no other reversible error, however, and accordingly affirm the conviction on the copyright infringement counts. 7

II

To show that the tapes Whetzel transported into Maryland were in each instance worth at least $5,000 — an essential element of the crime charged in the two transportation counts 8 — the Government at trial offered extensive evidence as to the value of a license to legally produce and distribute tapes or records embodying the copyrighted sound recordings incorporated in Whetzel’s tapes. For example, a vice-president of ABC Records testified that procurement of a license to copy the recordings Whetzel’s tapes unlawfully duplicated would cost from $5,000 for The Captain and Tennille’s “Can’t Stop Dancing” to “millions” for Fleetwood Mac’s “Rumours.” 9 The Government asserts that the tapes Whetzel transported and sold to the FBI agent were goods “stolen, converted or taken by fraud,” and thus subject to the transportation statute, because the sounds they had captured were taken without the copyright holders’ permission. 10 It was, the Government says, the aggregation of sounds, not the tangible medium in which they were fixed, that was stolen; and it was this intangible property, the Government maintains, that was transported. Consequently, the argument concludes, it is the value of this intangible property that should determine whether the statutory requirement was satisfied, and that is best measured by the value of a license to produce the copyrighted tunes.

We are not persuaded by the Government’s syllogism. Section 2314 is violated only when the property transported is worth at least $5,000. Whetzel was not transporting the right to produce legitimate tapes, and evidence as to the value of that right was therefore irrelevant. To be sure, the tapes were worth something because of the sounds reproducible from them, but that value would be reflected in whatever market prices the tapes themselves could command. 11

“Value,” as used in Section 2314, is defined in Section 2311 to mean “the face, par, or market value, whichever is the greatest.” 12 The only evidence tending to *711 indicate a market value for the tapes Whet-zel transported was the testimony as to the prices the FBI agent paid for them. That value falls far short of the requisite $5,000, even if for purposes of satisfying the value requirement of Section 2314 the two transactions may be considered together — a question we need not decide. 13

The Government maintains that decisions under Section 2314 support its construction of the value requirement of that section. As we read the cases, however, they lend no aid to the Government’s position. Its strongest authority, United States v. Drebin, 14 a Ninth Circuit decision, involved transportation of unauthorized prints of motion pictures. After noting that the cost of the production and the revenues received from showings of the films which the prints infringed exceeded $1,000,000, the court discussed other substantial evidence in the case indicating the value of the transported prints on a “thieves” market. 15 That the court would not have deemed evidence of the former sort capable of establishing the statutory amount is made clear by its subsequent opinion in United States v. Atherton, 16 where overwhelming evidence of the huge box office receipts from the film “The Exorcist” was deemed insufficient to show that a 16-millimeter print thereof — a size unsuitable for theatrical distribution — was worth $5,000. The Government’s position prompts us to add that the value of a license is much more likely to be relevant proof of market value in a prosecution for transporting a pirated print of a movie than in a situation such as the one at hand. Prints of movies are seldom sold; rather, they are licensed to exhibitors. 17

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589 F.2d 707, 191 U.S. App. D.C. 184, 200 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 193, 3 Fed. R. Serv. 1376, 1978 U.S. App. LEXIS 7458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-david-l-whetzel-cadc-1978.