Webber v. Dash

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedAugust 30, 2021
Docket1:19-cv-00610
StatusUnknown

This text of Webber v. Dash (Webber v. Dash) 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
Webber v. Dash, (S.D.N.Y. 2021).

Opinion

USDC SDNY DOCUMENT UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT ELECTRONICALLY FILED SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK DOC #: □□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□ K DATE FILED:__ 8/30/2021 JOSH WEBBER, and MUDDY WATER PICTURES LLC d/b/a MUDDY WATER PICTURES, INC., 19-cv-610 (RWL) Plaintiffs, DECISION AND ORDER: SUMMARY JUDGMENT - against - : DAMON ANTHONY DASH, and POPPINGTON LLC d/b/a DAMON DASH STUDIOS, Defendants.

ROBERT W. LEHRBURGER, United States Magistrate Judge. This case is a dispute over copyright authorship and ownership in a film called “The List,” later Known as “Dear Frank” (the “Film”). Before the Court is the motion for summary judgment pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56 filed by Plaintiff Muddy Water Pictures LLC (“Muddy”). Muddy asserts summary judgment should be granted in his favor, finding that Muddy is the sole owner and author of the Film. The motion is Muddy’s third motion for summary judgment, the prior two motions having been denied. Unlike those two other motions, however, this motion follows completion of fact discovery. For the following reasons, Muddy’s motion is GRANTED in part and DENIED in part. Factual Background The facts are based on the parties’ filings in support of and against summary judgment as well as admissible evidence elsewhere in the record. Pursuant to standards for summary judgment set forth below, the Court resolves all ambiguities and draws all reasonable inferences in favor of Defendants as the nonmoving parties.

A. The Parties And Their Intentions As its name suggests, Muddy is a film production company. Plaintiff Josh Webber is a movie director, whom Muddy hired to direct the Film.1 Defendant Damon Anthony Dash is, among other things, a producer and director.2

Muddy and Dash intended to work together on the Film; they dispute, however, what they each intended.3 According to Muddy, he initially intended to work with Dash and give him credit for direction in return for “the use of his celebrity associated with the film.”4 Ultimately, however, Muddy and Dash could not reach an agreement on terms.5 Muddy hired Webber to direct the Film along with another individual named Brian White.6

1 Defendants’ Response To Plaintiffs’ Rule 56.1 Statement Of Purported Undisputed Facts (Dkt. 213) (“56.1 Response”) ¶¶ 2-3.

2 Declaration Of Damon Dash In Opposition filed Feb. 11, 2019 (Dkt. 26) (“Dash Decl. I”) at ¶ 8. Dash has provided at least three different declarations in this case. Dash Decl. I was submitted in opposition to Muddy’s motion for a preliminary injunction. The same declaration appears again at Dkt. 38. Other Dash declarations include the Declaration Of Damon Dash in response to Plaintiffs’ second motion for summary judgment relating to libel per se filed Feb. 18, 2020 (Dkt. 136) (“Dash Decl. II”); and the Declaration Of Damon Dash in opposition to Plaintiffs’ second motion for summary judgment on the issue of ownership/authorship filed March 4, 2020 (Dkt. 148) (“Dash Decl. III”). In opposing the instant motion for summary judgment, Dash re-submitted Dash Decl. III (Dkt. 212). There is no Dash declaration in opposition to Muddy’s first motion for summary judgment.

3 56.1 Response ¶ 4.

4 Affidavit Of Abdullah Muntaser filed February 12, 2019 (Dkt. 35) (“Muntaser Aff.”) at ¶ 4.

5 Muntaser Aff. at ¶ 4.

6 Affidavit Of Josh Webber, filed Feb. 19, 2019 (Dkt. 36) at ¶ 3; Muntaser Aff. at ¶ 3; see 56.1 Response at ¶ 3 (admitting that Muddy hired Webber to direct the Film). Dash tells a different story, although that story has shifted repeatedly. At the outset of this case, in opposing Muddy’s motion for a preliminary injunction in February 2019, Dash averred that he “was hired” by Muddy to direct and produce the Film “in return for a 25% net interest in the Film’s royalties (which I was to co-own, in perpetuity).”7 Dash

conceded that there was no written agreement, contending instead that he and Muddy had a verbal agreement.8 Shortly after the Court granted Muddy’s motion, Dash again asserted, by way of counterclaim, the same verbal agreement by which the he “was hired” by Muddy.9 This time, however, Dash omitted the phrase “in perpetuity.”10 About a year later in both February (in response to Muddy’s second motion for summary judgment as to defamation) and March 2020 (in response to Muddy’s second motion for summary judgment as to authorship and ownership), Dash submitted declarations describing an oral agreement with Muddy much different from the one he first described in February 2019. Instead of saying he “was hired” by Muddy, Dash asserted that “it was agreed by [Muddy] that I would direct and produce the film” in return

for the same 25% net interest in the film’s royalties and co-ownership.11 According to Dash, his agreement with Muddy “was conditioned on there being a $250,000 budget

7 Dash Decl. I at ¶ 20.

8 Dash Decl. I at ¶¶ 20, 22.

9 Answer and Counterclaim (Dkt. 48) at ¶ 16.

10 A likely explanation for Dash’s omission of the phrase “in perpetuity” is that just two days earlier, the Court granted Muddy’s motion for a preliminary injunction based, in part, on having held that the oral agreement for royalties in perpetuity asserted by Dash was unenforceable under the statute of frauds. (Dkt. 46 at 12.)

11 Dash Decl. II at ¶ 3; Dash Decl. III at ¶ 4. which I was promised,” even though his earlier declaration and counterclaim did not mention any such condition. Dash also newly asserted that the “original verbal agreement/promise” was made by someone named Tony White, one of Muddy’s employees.12 Dash avowed that White offered him White’s own 25% interest in the Film

and that Muddy’s principal, Mike Muntaser, “acquiesced and ratified this verbal agreement,” thus giving Dash a total of 50% interest in the Film.13 Even further, according to Dash, Muntaser promised Dash “total creative control.”14 In deposition testimony, however, Dash denied the existence of a written or oral agreement with Muddy. In the first installment of his deposition taken on November 21, 2019, Dash conceded: “The nature of my relationship with Muddy was never ever, ever articulated.”15 And in January 2021, Dash testified that he did not recall any agreement with Muddy “at all.”16 Dash also admitted that he did not even meet Muntaser “until after the whole movie was shot.”17

12 Dash Decl. II at ¶¶ 3-4; Dash Decl. III at ¶ 18. It is not clear to the Court whether Tony White is a different person from Brian White, but whether he is or is not is not material to determination of this motion.

13 Dash Decl. II at ¶ 6; Dash Decl. III at ¶ 20.

14 Dash Decl. II at ¶ 6; Dash Decl. III at ¶ 21.

15 Transcript Of Deposition Of Damon Dash, Nov. 21, 2019 (“Dash Depo. I”), at p. 40, attached as Ex. A to Affidavit Of Christopher Brown In Support Of Plaintiffs’ Motion For Summary Judgment (Ownership) filed June 7, 2021 (Dkt. 214) (“7/7/2021 Brown Aff.”).

16 Transcript Of Deposition Of Damon Dash, Jan. 29, 2021 (“Dash Depo. II”), at p. 15, attached as Ex. C to 7/7/2021 Brown Aff.

17 Dash Depo. I at 39-40; see also Transcript Of Deposition Of Damon Dash, March 15, 2021 (“Dash Depo. III”) at p. 46, attached as Ex. D to 7/7/2021 Brown Aff. (“Again, my acknowledgement of Muddy is after the film was shot, not before”). In opposing the instant motion for summary judgment, Dash once again says that a verbal agreement was made between Muddy and Dash. In support of that contention, however, he relies on the same February 2020 declaration submitted to the Court before his 2021 re-admission noting that there was no agreement.18

B. Production Of The Film Shooting for the Film began in or about November 2016. The parties sharply dispute each other’s contributions the Film.

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Bluebook (online)
Webber v. Dash, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webber-v-dash-nysd-2021.