Mannion V. Coors Brewing Co.
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''Mannion v. Coors Brewing Co.'' (377 F.Supp.2d 444) is a 2005
copyright A copyright is a type of intellectual property that gives its owner the exclusive legal right to copy, distribute, adapt, display, and perform a creative work, usually for a limited time. The creative work may be in a literary, artistic, ...
case decided by the
United States District Court for the Southern District of New York The United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (in case citations, S.D.N.Y.) is a federal trial court whose geographic jurisdiction encompasses eight counties of the State of New York. Two of these are in New York Ci ...
. It concerns the issue of copyrightability in photography.
Jonathan Mannion Jonathan Mannion is a photographer and film director. He has shot album covers for hip hop and R&B performers including Dr. Dre, Jay Z, Aaliyah, Outkast, Nas, Nicki Minaj, Brandy Norwood and Kendrick Lamar. Early life and education With English ...
, the
plaintiff A plaintiff ( Π in legal shorthand) is the party who initiates a lawsuit (also known as an ''action'') before a court. By doing so, the plaintiff seeks a legal remedy. If this search is successful, the court will issue judgment in favor of the ...
, sued the brewer and its advertising agency, Carol H. Williams Advertising (CHWA), alleging they had too closely copied an image he took of basketball star
Kevin Garnett Kevin Maurice Garnett ( ; born May 19, 1976) is an American former professional basketball player who played 21 seasons in the National Basketball Association (NBA). Nicknamed "the Big Ticket," Garnett is considered one of the greatest power f ...
. Mannion had photographed Garnett wearing athletic clothing and jewelry for a magazine article. CHWA, after having licensed Mannion's image for possible use on a billboard, decided to shoot a very similar image for its ads. Mannion registered his image with the
U.S. Copyright Office The United States Copyright Office (USCO), a part of the Library of Congress, is a United States government body that registers copyright claims, records information about copyright ownership, provides information to the public, and assists ...
and sued Coors and CHWA after seeing one of the billboards several months later. Coors argued in its defense that Mannion was claiming copyright on the idea of a photo of a Black man dressed that way and there was nothing original and protectable in it. Nor were the two images substantially similar since the man in the Coors ad was turned in a different direction and the image was in black and white rather than color. Both parties moved for
summary judgement may refer to: * Abstract (summary), shortening a passage or a write-up without changing its meaning but by using different words and sentences * Epitome, a summary or miniature form * Abridgement, the act of reducing a written work into a shor ...
. Judge Lewis A. Kaplan's decision denied Mannion's motion since he found the substantial similarity question to be one of fact that should be tried. (A jury ultimately found for Mannion.) But he held also that Mannion's image was indeed original enough to be copyrighted. Finding existing
case law Case law, also used interchangeably with common law, is a law that is based on precedents, that is the judicial decisions from previous cases, rather than law based on constitutions, statutes, or regulations. Case law uses the detailed facts of ...
wanting on what constituted originality in photography, he established three criteria—rendition, timing and composition—for determining the originality, and thus the copyrightability, of photographs. He also criticized the applicability of the idea-expression dichotomy and its merger doctrine to visual art, including photography. Scholars have in turn expressed concern about some of the implications of the case, while praising it as "the most extensive judicial discussion of photographic copyright in recent years". It has been cited by other courts deciding whether photographs at issue are eligible for copyright protection, including in cases filed against
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and
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.


Underlying dispute

In 1999 '' Slam'', a magazine that covers basketball from a perspective shaped by
hip hop Hip-hop or hip hop (originally disco rap) is a popular music genre that emerged in the early 1970s from the African-American community of New York City. The style is characterized by its synthesis of a wide range of musical techniques. Hip- ...
culture, commissioned photographer
Jonathan Mannion Jonathan Mannion is a photographer and film director. He has shot album covers for hip hop and R&B performers including Dr. Dre, Jay Z, Aaliyah, Outkast, Nas, Nicki Minaj, Brandy Norwood and Kendrick Lamar. Early life and education With English ...
to take pictures of
Kevin Garnett Kevin Maurice Garnett ( ; born May 19, 1976) is an American former professional basketball player who played 21 seasons in the National Basketball Association (NBA). Nicknamed "the Big Ticket," Garnett is considered one of the greatest power f ...
, then a young star with the
Minnesota Timberwolves The Minnesota Timberwolves (often referred to as the Wolves or T-wolves) are an American professional basketball team based in Minneapolis. The Timberwolves compete in the National Basketball Association (NBA) as a member of the Northwest Divisio ...
, for a story the magazine was running on him. Mannion, whose earlier images of Garnett had met with the player's approval, went to Garnett's home. Garnett said he would do anything Mannion wanted. "I want you to wear all the jewelry you have in this moment of over-opulence and go crazy", he responded. Garnett went to his wardrobe and came back wearing a white T-shirt and pants with a black baseball cap. He had, as suggested, put on a wide array of jewelry, including several necklaces, bracelets on both wrists, earrings, rings on one finger of each hand, all of gold or platinum with diamond settings. On his right wrist he had a
Rolex Rolex () is a Swiss watch brand and manufacturer based in Geneva, Switzerland. Founded in 1905 as ''Wilsdorf and Davis'' by German businessman Hans Wilsdorf and his eventual brother-in-law Alfred Davis in London, the company registered ''Rolex ...
watch. Mannion shot him with his head cocked, his eyes looking to the right and his hands on his abdomen with the thumbs hooked in his waistband. He was lit from the left, the camera looking upwards at him from below, with a cloudy background through which some blue sky was visible. " storm was coming in and I remember that being the moment", Mannion recalled to ''Slam'' in 2013. "There are a handful of pictures that exist like that in my career, and that's one of them." The story ran in the magazine's December 1999 issue, with the photograph rotated at a 90-degree angle counterclockwise and most of Garnett's left arm cropped out in order to fit onto a two-page spread. It had the headline "Above the Clouds". In 2001, the
Coors Brewing Company The Coors Brewing Company is an American brewery and beer company based in Golden, Colorado, that was founded in 1873. In 2005, Adolph Coors Company, the holding company that owned Coors Brewing, merged with Molson, Inc. to become Molson Coor ...
tasked the Carol H. Williams Advertising (CHWA) agency with developing a new campaign to increase consumption of its
Coors Light Coors Light is a 4.2% ABV light American lager beer sold by Coors (currently Molson Coors) of Chicago, Illinois. It was first produced in 1978 by the Coors Brewing Company. They had briefly produced a different low-alcohol beer by the same n ...
brand among young Black men in urban areas. Among the ideas CHWA considered was something based on Mannion's photo of Garnett. One of its "comp boards", mockups for
outdoor advertising Outdoor advertising or out-of-home (OOH) advertising includes public billboards, wallscapes, and posters seen while "on the go". OOH advertising formats fall into four main categories: billboards, street furniture, Transit media, transit, and a ...
such as billboards proposed for the campaign, included the part of Mannion's image that showed Garnett's torso, without his head, and on the other side a can of Coors Light, with the phrase "Iced Out" (referencing both the diamonds in the jewelry and the actual ice on the beer can) in between on a background with clouds and sky. Mannion had licensed this use to CHWA. Later they contacted him, among other photographers, to see if they would be interested in producing an image for the campaign. Mannion submitted a bid but heard nothing in response. Unbeknownst to Mannion, CHWA and Coors decided to use an image very similar to his picture of Garnett. After he saw it on a billboard while driving around Los Angeles, he pulled over, took a picture of the billboard and asked his studio to send him his original so he could compare them, believing they had used his image without permission. It was not, but " ey copied it so identically down to the placement of the watch and it wasn't KG's Rolex, it was a Folex with a different color band or whatever." Mannion submitted his image to the
Copyright Office The United States Copyright Office (USCO), a part of the Library of Congress, is a United States government body that registers copyright claims, records information about copyright ownership, provides information to the public, and assists ...
for formal registration in 2003. Early the following year he filed suit against Coors and CHWA in the
United States District Court for the Southern District of New York The United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (in case citations, S.D.N.Y.) is a federal trial court whose geographic jurisdiction encompasses eight counties of the State of New York. Two of these are in New York Ci ...
alleging
copyright infringement Copyright infringement (at times referred to as piracy) is the use of Copyright#Scope, works protected by copyright without permission for a usage where such permission is required, thereby infringing certain exclusive rights granted to the c ...
and seeking damages. After submitting evidence to Judge Lewis A. Kaplan, the parties both moved for
summary judgement may refer to: * Abstract (summary), shortening a passage or a write-up without changing its meaning but by using different words and sentences * Epitome, a summary or miniature form * Abridgement, the act of reducing a written work into a shor ...
in their favor, arguing there were no disputed issues of fact to be decided.


Decision

After summarizing the facts of the case, Kaplan turned to the underlying law. Coors conceded that Mannion's copyright on the image was valid, and Kaplan said it would be reasonable for a trier of fact to conclude that since Coors had actual access to the image, actual copying occurred. The question then was whether the two images were substantially similar. To determine that, Kaplan asked what aspects of the original could be considered original to it and protectible under Mannion's copyright. He began with an observation from ''
Nimmer on Copyright ''Nimmer on Copyright'' is a multi-volume legal treatise on United States copyright law that is widely cited in American courts, and has been influential for decades as the leading secondary source on American copyright law. The work was origina ...
'', a frequently cited legal treatise, that copyright in photography cannot cover the subject matter of the photograph. "But this is not always true", Kaplan wrote:''Mannion'', 450–51 In '' Burrow-Giles Lithographic Co. v. Sarony'', the 1884 case where the
Supreme Court In most legal jurisdictions, a supreme court, also known as a court of last resort, apex court, high (or final) court of appeal, and court of final appeal, is the highest court within the hierarchy of courts. Broadly speaking, the decisions of ...
had upheld Congress's grant of copyright protection to photography, Kaplan noted that it held that most photographs could claim some protectible originality. Later courts' efforts to more specifically define what constituted that originality "are somewhat unsatisfactory", he observed, for two reasons. First, Kaplan said, "the nature and extent of a photograph's protection differs depending on what makes that photograph original." Second, they inadvertently elevated the photographer's technical choices in making the image to originality sufficient to confer copyright. "Decisions about film, camera, and lens, for example, often bear on whether an image is original", Kaplan observed. "But the fact that a photographer made such choices does not alone make the image original." This was not just an observation; it contravened the Supreme Court's more recent decision in '' Feist Publications, Inc., v. Rural Telephone Service Co.'' rejecting the "
sweat of the brow Sweat of the brow is a copyright law doctrine. According to this doctrine, an author gains rights through simple diligence during the creation of a work, such as a database, or a directory. Substantial creativity or "originality" is not require ...
" doctrine. "Protection derives from the features of the work itself, not the effort that goes into it." Kaplan also recalled the decision he had handed down several years before in '' Bridgeman Art Library v. Corel Corp.'', where he had rejected the plaintiff's claim that American copyright law protected its photographs of classic artworks themselves in the
public domain The public domain (PD) consists of all the creative work to which no Exclusive exclusive intellectual property rights apply. Those rights may have expired, been forfeited, expressly Waiver, waived, or may be inapplicable. Because no one holds ...
since the immense effort that went into making them look exactly like the originals meant Bridgeman's photos were "slavish copies" that similarly could not claim copyright protection for lack of originality.


Originality in photography

"The Court therefore will examine more closely the nature of originality in a photograph", Kaplan announced. He wrote that he found useful ''The Modern Law of Copyright'', a treatise on English copyright law by Hugh Laddie, a High Court judge in the UK, since despite differences in other areas of copyright law the two jurisdictions had similar conceptions of originality. "A photograph may be original in three respects", Kaplan concluded. "They are not exclusive."''Mannion'', 452–54 The first Kaplan called : the combined effect of the camera, its settings such as exposure and
aperture In optics, the aperture of an optical system (including a system consisting of a single lens) is the hole or opening that primarily limits light propagated through the system. More specifically, the entrance pupil as the front side image o ...
, lens, films, lighting and developing techniques used, as well as the angle and framing, on the image. "To the extent a photograph is original in this way," the judge concluded, "copyright protects not is depicted, but rather it is depicted." He cited '' SHL Imaging v. Artisan House, Inc.'', a 2000 case decided by the Southern District in which it held that the unlicensed reuse of images of mirror-clad picture frames the defendant manufacturer had commissioned from the plaintiff photographer was infringing. The manufacturer had argued that the photographer could claim no independent copyright in images entirely of products it had designed, but Judge William H. Pauley III rejected it, pointing to the effect of the photographer's technique on the images. "What made the photographs original," in that case, Kaplan commented, "was not the lens and filter selection themselves. It was the effect produced by the lens and filters selected, among other things." He distinguished them from the photographs in ''Bridgeman'', where "the goal was to reproduce exactly other works. The photographs were entirely unoriginal in the rendition, an extremely unusual circumstance. Unless a photograph replicates another work with total or near-total fidelity, it will be at least somewhat original in the rendition." Secondly, Kaplan found that a photographer's may give rise to originality in a photograph. The legal precedent was an early 20th-century case, '' Pagano v. Charles Beseler Inc.'', again from the Southern District, in which the copyright of a photograph of a street scene in front of the
New York Public Library The New York Public Library (NYPL) is a public library system in New York City. With nearly 53 million items and 92 locations, the New York Public Library is the second-largest public library in the United States behind the Library of Congress a ...
was challenged. The court, finding for the photographer, observed that "It undoubtedly requires originality to determine just when to take the photograph, so as to bring out the proper setting for both animate and inanimate objects.... The photographer caught the men and women in not merely lifelike, but artistic, positions, and this is especially true of the traffic policeman." Kaplan looked outside reported case law for examples modern readers would be more familiar with: first, Alfred Eisenstadt's ''
V-J Day in Times Square ''V-J Day in Times Square'' is a photograph by Alfred Eisenstaedt that portrays a U.S. Navy sailor kissing a total stranger after grabbing her—a dental assistant—on Victory over Japan Day ("V-J Day") in New York City's Times Square on Augu ...
'', and wildlife photographer Thomas D. Mangelsen's widely reprinted '' Catch of the Day'', showing a grizzly bear waiting with an open mouth for a salmon leaping out of an Alaskan river. Timing necessarily applied only to the image, and not its subject matter: The third aspect, ''creation of the subject'', was an exception to the general rule that photographers cannot claim copyright over the subject matter, Kaplan wrote. This applied to images such as posed portraits and
still life A still life (: still lifes) is a work of art depicting mostly wikt:inanimate, inanimate subject matter, typically commonplace objects which are either natural (food, flowers, dead animals, plants, rocks, shells, etc.) or artificiality, human-m ...
s where the photographer created the scene and had a large degree of control over what appeared in the image and where. Kaplan looked at '' Gross v. Seligman'' and ''
Rogers v. Koons ''Rogers v. Koons'', 960 F.2d 301 (2d Cir. 1992), is a leading U.S. court case on copyright, dealing with the fair use defense for parody. The United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit found that an artist copying a photograph could ...
'', two cases decided decades apart by the
Second Circuit Court of Appeals The United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit (in case citations, 2d Cir.) is one of the thirteen United States Courts of Appeals. Its territory covers the states of Connecticut, New York, and Vermont, and it has appellate jurisdic ...
, which has
appellate jurisdiction An appellate court, commonly called a court of appeal(s), appeal court, court of second instance or second instance court, is any court of law that is empowered to hear a case upon appeal from a trial court or other lower tribunal. Appellat ...
over the Southern District. In ''Gross'', decided in 1914, the court had held that a photographer who took a second version of an earlier photo he had taken of a young woman for a client (who thus owned the copyright) where the woman was posed the same way, except smiling and holding a cherry stem between her teeth, infringed the copyright on the earlier work. Almost 80 years later, in ''Rogers'', the court ruled that a
Jeff Koons Jeffrey Lynn Koons (; born January 21, 1955) is an American artist recognized for his work dealing with popular culture and his sculptures depicting everyday objects, including balloon animals produced in stainless steel with mirror- finish s ...
sculpture infringed the photograph it had been based on since despite the change of medium and dimension the record showed that Koons had wanted it to meticulously replicate the original image. In that case, the court had noted some of the other aspects of originality Kaplan had already identified were present, " utits originality in the creation of the subject was more salient". "To conclude," Kaplan continued, "the nature and extent of protection conferred by the copyright in a photograph will vary depending on the nature of its originality." In all the images he had discussed under rendition and timing, copyright did not cover the subject of the image. "By contrast, to the extent that a photograph is original in the creation of the subject, copyright extends also to that subject. Thus, an artist who arranges and then photographs a scene often will have the right to prevent others from duplicating that scene in a photograph or other medium."


Originality of Mannion's photograph of Garnett

Moving to the photograph at issue in the instant case, "There can be no serious dispute that the Garnett Photograph is an original work", Kaplan wrote. " tdoes not result from slavishly copying another work and therefore is original in the rendition. Mannion's relatively unusual angle and distinctive lighting strengthen that aspect of the photograph's originality. His composition—posing man against sky—evidences originality in the creation of the subject." The judge allowed there were limits, as Mannion had not created Garnett's likeness and could not claim copyright in it, nor for the same reason the sky.''Mannion'', at 455 Coors had overreached in arguing against copyrightability based on this, however, said Kaplan. The defense had pointed to Garnett having chosen the clothing and jewelry he wore rather than Mannion. But Kaplan found that argument failed in two ways. First, even if Garnett had chosen what he wore, that was only one element of the overall image, and that led to the second problem: that the originality of the overall image was at issue, not simply how Garnett was dressed. Kaplan emphasized this by quoting a ''
reductio ad absurdum In logic, (Latin for "reduction to absurdity"), also known as (Latin for "argument to absurdity") or ''apagogical argument'', is the form of argument that attempts to establish a claim by showing that the opposite scenario would lead to absur ...
'' observation from a previous Second Circuit copyright case: " we took this argument to its logical conclusion, we might have to decide that 'there can be no originality in a painting because all colors of paint have been used somewhere in the past.'"


Idea/expression distinction

Coors had also argued that Mannion was claiming copyright on "the generalized idea and concept of a young African American man wearing a white T-shirt and a large amount of jewelry", when under law only the expression of an idea can be copyrighted. Alternatively, they cited the merger doctrine, arguing that Mannion's idea and its expression were so closely intertwined that granting copyright on the latter would effectively grant copyright on the former. Kaplan allowed that the idea had some legal validity but called Coors's reliance on it "misplaced":''Mannion'', 455–61 For Kaplan, that alone sufficed to dispose of Coors's argument on this issue. "But the argument reveals an analytical difficulty in the case law about which more ought to be said." He began with '' Kaplan v. Stock Market Photo Agency, Inc.'', a 2001 Southern District decision that Coors had based its argument on. In that case the court found enough difference between two images showing the same idea, a view looking down the face of a tall building from the perspective of a businessman standing on a ledge, his shoes prominent in the foreground, to hold against infringement of the plaintiff's copyright. "But what is the "idea" of Kaplan's photograph?", the judge asked. He posited several possibilities, one of which, had Judge Allen G. Schwartz held them to be the "idea" of the plaintiff's photograph, might have led to a different result. In two decisions of the Second Circuit, rendered 30 years apart, Judge
Learned Hand Billings Learned Hand ( ; January 27, 1872 – August 18, 1961) was an American jurist, lawyer, and judicial philosopher. He served as a federal trial judge on the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York from 1909 to 1924 a ...
had acknowledged the issue of distinguishing the idea from the expression in a work, Kaplan observed. "Nobody has ever been able to fix that boundary, and nobody ever can", Hand wrote in ''
Nichols v. Universal Pictures Corp. ''Nichols v. Universal Pictures Corporation'', 45 F.2d 119 ( 2d Cir. 1930), was a United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit case on copyright infringement by non-literal copying of a dramatic work. The Court held that copyright prote ...
'', a 1930 case which established that fictional characters, when sufficiently developed, can be copyrighted. In 1960's '' Peter Pan Fabrics v. Martin Weiner Corp.'' holding that patterns on print fabrics are eligible for copyright, Hand reiterated the point: "Obviously, no principle can be stated as to when an imitator has gone beyond copying the 'idea,' and has borrowed its 'expression.' Decisions must therefore inevitably be ad hoc." But according to Kaplan, this understated the problem. Where to draw a line, as Hand acknowledged, is a common question in many areas of the law. Beyond that, the problem was "not simply that it is not always clear where to draw the line; it is that the line itself is meaningless because the conceptual categories it purports to delineate are ill-suited to the subject matter." That, to Kaplan, was a function of the idea-expression distinction having arisen from cases over literary works where the difference between the two can more readily be ascertained: This critique was not unique to him, Kaplan wrote. Hand had expressed it in ''Peter Pan Fabrics'', noting that "In the case of designs, which are addressed to the aesthetic sensibilities of an observer, the test is, if possible, even more intangible." Second Circuit Judge Jon O. Newman, had, when holding for the panel in '' Warner Bros. Inc. v. American Broadcasting Companies, Inc.'' that the title character of ''
The Greatest American Hero ''The Greatest American Hero'' is an American comedy-drama superhero television series that aired on ABC. Created by producer Stephen J. Cannell, it premiered as a two-hour pilot movie on March 18, 1981, and ran until February 2, 1983. The seri ...
'' television series did not infringe the studio's copyright on live-action depictions of
Superman Superman is a superhero created by writer Jerry Siegel and artist Joe Shuster, which first appeared in the comic book ''Action Comics'' Action Comics 1, #1, published in the United States on April 18, 1938.The copyright date of ''Action Comics ...
, observed that some of the tensions between the roles of similarities and differences in deciding whether infringement has occurred come from legal tests derived from literary works being used for other media. He had then observed that " story has a linear dimension: it begins, continues, and ends. If a defendant copies substantial portions of a plaintiff's sequence of events, he does not escape infringement by adding original episodes somewhere along the line. A graphic or three-dimensional work is created to be perceived as an entirety." In a later
law review A law review or law journal is a scholarly journal or publication that focuses on legal issues. A law review is a type of legal periodical. Law reviews are a source of research, imbedded with analyzed and referenced legal topics; they also provide ...
article, Newman clarified that he had been saying "one cannot divide a visual work into neat layers of abstraction in precisely the same manner one could with a text." Other circuits had taken note of the issue, Kaplan observed. In 1978's '' Franklin Mint Corp. v. National Wildlife Art Exchange'', a case involving a claim similar to ''Mannion''s where a ''painting'' was alleged to be so similar to a prior work as to be infringing, Judge Joseph F. Weis Jr. of the
Third Circuit The United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit (in case citations, 3d Cir.) is a federal court with appellate jurisdiction over the district courts for the following districts: * District of Delaware * District of New Jersey * Eas ...
had found it: "For all of these reasons," Kaplan concluded, "I think little is gained by attempting to distinguish an unprotectible 'idea' from its protectible 'expression' in a photograph or other work of visual art." He next considered what courts had found to be the "idea" in works of visual art. In ''Rogers'', the court had found the idea to be "a couple with eight small puppies seated on a bench." But Kaplan said it "just as easily could be 'people with dogs on their laps,' 'the bliss of owning puppies,' or even a sheepishly ironic thought such as 'Ha ha! This might look cute now, but boy are these puppies going to be a lot of work!'" The ''Rogers''s court's language, he said, was instead "a description of the subject at a level of generality sufficient to avoid implicating copyright protection for an original photograph." For Kaplan, this led to the central quandary of the idea-expression divide in visual art: He concluded that it was "not useful or relevant" for photography at least.


Substantial similarity

Kaplan next turned to the question of whether an observer could reasonably find the two images substantially similar, which would constitute infringement. The usual test is "whether an 'ordinary observer, unless he set out to detect the disparities, would be disposed to overlook them, and regard heaesthetic appeal as the same.'" The Second Circuit had also established a decade earlier a "more discerning observer" test for work, usually visual, that combined copyrighted and uncopyrightable elements, But citing concerns expressed in intervening circuit cases about the foundation of that test, concerns that seemed to Kaplan to undermine it, he concluded that both tests would, in the instant case, reach the same result, since the unprotectible elements the images had in common—Garnett's clothing and jewelry, and the background—were not "copyrightable in and of themselves, but their existence and arrangement in this photograph indisputably contribute to its originality ... The question is whether the aesthetic appeal of the two images is the same."''Mannion'', at 461–63 The similarity of the subject's pose, background and dress suggested to Kaplan that "the defendants .. appear to have recreated much of the subject that Mannion had created and then, through imitation of angle and lighting, rendered it in a similar way." While those ''were'' protected elements based on Kaplan's earlier analysis, he also had to take into account the differences, which he characterized as changes rather than additions: color in the original and black and white in the other, the angle at which the subject was posed, the absence of a head in the Coors image, and the jewelry and clothing not being exactly the same between the two. Those had to be considered as well. "The parties have catalogued at length and in depth the similarities and differences between these works", Kaplan wrote. "In the last analysis, a reasonable jury could find substantial similarity either present or absent." He looked back to a 1987 Southern District case in which a photographer had also sued an advertising agency over a similar image to his, likewise created for a beverage ad. There, the court had concluded that the balance between similarities and differences was close enough that the ultimate finding of a trier of fact could not be reasonably anticipated by the court, denying plaintiff's motion for summary judgement. " tpresents facts as close to this case as can be imagined, nd sothe images are such that infringement cannot be ruled out—or in—as a matter of law." Kaplan granted only a small part of Coors's motion, a request for relief from Mannion's request for violation of his right to make
derivative work In copyright law, a derivative work is an expressive creation that includes major copyrightable elements of a first, previously created original work (the underlying work). The derivative work becomes a second, separate work independent from ...
s. Mannion's motion was denied in its entirety.


Disposition

The case was turned over to a jury to decide, which found that Coors had infringed Mannion's copyright and awarded him $30,000 in damages from Coors and $20,000 from CHWA. Mannion believed that those amounts were based on an undercalculation of the revenue Coors had earned from the use of the infringing image in its ad and moved for judgement as a matter of law instead, or a retrial of the damages issue. He argued that since Coors's plan was to use the billboard as part of its marketing strategy toward young urban black men, and copies of the billboard had been shipped to 18 cities as part of that effort, he was entitled to a portion of Coors's $803 million gross profit on Coors Light for 2002 equal to the percentage of the Black population in those cities. That came to 0.574 percent of the total American population, which Mannion argued worked out to $4.6 million. Kaplan denied the motion, holding that Mannion had not proved that later increases in Coors's profits were solely due to the increased sales of Coors Light. and that there was little evidence to suggest that the billboards played any significant role in that increase.


Subsequent jurisprudence

In 2009, the
Seventh Circuit The United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit (in case citations, 7th Cir.) is the U.S. federal court with appellate jurisdiction over the courts in the following districts: * Central District of Illinois * Northern District of Ill ...
became the first appellate circuit to accept the ''Mannion'' standards in '' Schrock v. Learning Curve International, Inc.'', a case involving the reuse of a photo rather than its recreation. There, the plaintiff photographer sued the licensed maker of
Thomas & Friends ''Thomas & Friends'' is a British children's television series which aired from 9 October 1984 to 20 January 2021. Based on ''The Railway Series'' books by Wilbert Awdry and his son Christopher Awdry, Christopher, the series was developed for ...
toy sets after it continued to use photos of the toys it had commissioned from him following the end of his employment. Looking to both ''Mannion'' and ''Bridgman'', Judge Diane Sykes, writing for a unanimous panel, held that: In 2013 the First Circuit found ''Mannion'' "instructive" in helping it resolve ''Harney v. Sony Pictures Television''. The plaintiff photographer alleged that a scene in a television movie about
Christian Gerhartsreiter Christian Karl Gerhartsreiter (born 21 February 1961) is a German convicted murderer and impostor. Born in West Germany, he is currently serving a prison sentence in the U.S. state of California. After moving to the United States in his late te ...
imitated too closely an image he took of Gerhartsreiter, then living under the alias of Clark Rockefeller, in a Boston park with his young daughter on his shoulders. When Gerhartsreiter abducted the girl a few days later, the FBI distributed Harney's image nationally in order to help find Gerhartsreiter, resulting in the scene and the photo being replicated in the TV movie. Sony's motion for summary judgement had been granted by the district judge. Harney had argued on appeal that, like Mannion, the similarities and differences between the two images were complex enough to require that a jury be allowed to decide the substantial similarity question. Judge Kermit Lipez, writing for a unanimous panel, found the two cases "notably distinguishable" by the fact that Mannion had worked with his subject to create the scene and create what Kaplan found to be protectable originality, while Harney had simply happened upon Gerhartsreiter and his daughter and could not claim to have created his subject. Back in the Southern District, Judge
Shira Scheindlin Shira Ann Scheindlin (; née Joffe; born August 16, 1946) is an American attorney and jurist who served as a United States federal judge, United States district judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York. She ...
also adopted Kaplan's standards of photographic originality in a 2011 finding that David LaChappelle's suit alleging infringement of his photos by
Rihanna Robyn Rihanna Fenty ( ; born February 20, 1988) is a Barbadian singer, businesswoman, and actress. One of the List of music artists by net worth, wealthiest musicians in the world, List of awards and nominations received by Rihanna, her vario ...
's video for " S&M", where he had like Mannion been involved at the early planning stages, should also be decided by a jury. She noted the decisions Mannion had taken in creating his subject. "Because LaChapelle alleges he made comparable decisions in creating and rendering the Photographs," she wrote, "he successfully alleges that they contain protectible elements." Five years later, ''Mannion'' helped another Southern District judge, Jed Rakoff, reach a contrary decision in another case involving a filmmaker claiming a pop star unlawfully appropriated their work in a video. Matthew Fulks claimed
Beyoncé Beyoncé Giselle Knowles-Carter ( ; born September 4, 1981) is an American singer, songwriter, actress, and businesswoman. With a career spanning over three decades, she has established herself as one of the most Cultural impact of Beyoncé, ...
's ''
Lemonade Lemonade is a sweetened lemon-flavored drink. There are many varieties of lemonade found throughout the world. In some parts of the world, lemonade refers to an un-carbonated, traditionally, homemade drink, using lemon juice, water, and a sw ...
'' film, made to accompany that album, borrowed extensively from his short film ''Palinoia'' without acknowledgement. In one of nine examples Fulks argued were copied from his film, he noted that both it and ''Lemonade'' depicted the subject from their left. While finding that too broad and general to warrant protection by itself, Rakoff noted that Kaplan ''had'', in ''Mannion'', held the upward, right-facing view of Garnett to be original enough to be copyrightable in that image. "But here," Rakoff wrote, distinguishing the cases, "plaintiff fails to allege that there is anything unusual about 'facing' subjects to the 'left' or shooting scenes 'from the left.'" That same year Judge Richard J. Sullivan heard another case where a photographer alleged a defendant's video was infringing. Janine Gordon claimed Ryan McGinley's "Levi's America" infringed some of her photos. Finding it hard to begin with to understand how a 1,700-frame video could infringe a still image of Gordon's, Sullivan wrote that her extensive reliance on ''Mannion''s holding that a photographer can copyright a subject they have created or orchestrated was misguided. "But the protected 'conception' is not the idea of an interracial kiss, but the artist's 'originality in the rendition, timing, and creation of the subject — for that is what copyright protects in photography.'" Gordon could claim neither of the latter two as her own, and the use of video made the rendition issue moot. "Thus, Plaintiff's appeal to ''Mannion'' simply underscores the substantial dissimilarity between the images at issue." In 2020's '' Cruz v. Cox Media Group'' the defendant company tried to use ''Mannion'' to argue that the plaintiff photographer's image of Sayfullo Saipov being taken into custody on the streets of
Lower Manhattan Lower Manhattan, also known as Downtown Manhattan or Downtown New York City, is the southernmost part of the Boroughs of New York City, New York City borough of Manhattan. The neighborhood is History of New York City, the historical birthplace o ...
following the
2017 New York City truck attack On October 31, 2017, Sayfullo Habibullaevic Saipov drove a rented pickup truck into cyclists and runners for about of the Hudson River Park's bike path alongside West Side Highway#West Street, West Street from Houston Street south to Chambers ...
lacked sufficient originality to be protectible. "This argument misses the mark", wrote Southern District Judge
Nicholas Garaufis Nicholas George Garaufis (born September 28, 1948) is a senior United States district judge of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York. Early life and education Garaufis was born in Paterson, New Jersey, to Demetri ...
, in denying Cox's summary judgement motion. "As with almost any photograph, the Photograph reflects creative choices, including Cruz's timing for when he took the Photograph."


''Bill Diodato Photography LLC v. Kate Spade LLC''

Other courts have found Kaplan's observations about the difficulty of applying the idea-expression divide helpful in reaching decisions in similar cases involving infringement claims related to photography. Before 2005 was out,
Denny Chin Denny Chin (Chinese: 陳卓光; born April 13, 1954) is a senior United States circuit judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, based in New York City. He was a United States District Judge of the United States Distri ...
, another Southern District judge, had to decide '' Bill Diodato Photography LLC v. Kate Spade LLC'', which involved similar facts. There, the plaintiff photographer had sent to the defendant fashion house, unsolicited, his photograph of the lower portions of a woman's legs, her feet in fashionable high-heeled sandals, seen from outside a stall door in a public restroom, with her panties around her legs and a handbag on the floor next to her feet, as part of a portfolio to see if Spade was interested in working with him. After some initial interest, Spade informed Diodato's agent that it preferred to work with higher-profile photographers. Diodato sued Spade after its images for its marketing campaign a few months later included one also showing a woman's heeled feet with her panties above next to her handbag, taken from outside a closed bathroom stall door. He argued against Spade's motion for summary judgement, citing the mix of similar and dissimilar elements that had been given to the jury to resolve in ''Mannion'', but Chin distinguished the two cases, pointing to the many similar photographs Spade submitted into evidence predating either that were before the court, an issue not present in ''Mannion'', one that made it clear that only Diodato's expression of a familiar idea could be protected:


Analysis and commentary

Legal scholars have praised ''Mannion'' for its willingness to tackle a difficult issue. Copyright law expert
Rebecca Tushnet Rebecca Tushnet (born April 4, 1973) is an American legal scholar. She serves as the Frank Stanton Professor of First Amendment Law at Harvard Law School. Her scholarship focuses on copyright, trademark, First Amendment, and false advertising. ...
called it "the most extensive judicial discussion of photographic copyright in recent years". St. John's law professor Eva Subotnick noted that Kaplan's move in favor of establishing originality within the four corners of an image highlights the absence of guidance as to the substantive content of originality from either Congress or the Supreme Court." Terry Kogan of
Utah Utah is a landlocked state in the Mountain states, Mountain West subregion of the Western United States. It is one of the Four Corners states, sharing a border with Arizona, Colorado, and New Mexico. It also borders Wyoming to the northea ...
describes it as "among the most insightful in case law". In 2011 another analysis noted how often it has been cited. Ten years later, that frequency of citations was described as being taken by other courts as "generally indicative of photography's copyrightability". Tushnet, nevertheless, found Kaplan's formulation problematic, particularly his point that in visual art the idea/expression divide often breaks down and becomes one and the same. "This analysis would seem to defeat copyright protection for photographs, since ideas are excluded by statute and policy from the subject matter of copyright," she wrote in the ''
Harvard Law Review The ''Harvard Law Review'' is a law review published by an independent student group at Harvard Law School. According to the ''Journal Citation Reports'', the ''Harvard Law Review''s 2015 impact factor of 4.979 placed the journal first out of ...
''. The same could be said of poetry, she notes. Tushnet dismisses Kaplan's use of a hypothetical treatise on the theory of
special relativity In physics, the special theory of relativity, or special relativity for short, is a scientific theory of the relationship between Spacetime, space and time. In Albert Einstein's 1905 paper, Annus Mirabilis papers#Special relativity, "On the Ele ...
to distinguish this problem as unique to visual art by herself distinguishing the treatise as "a classic factual work" rather than an artistic one. She notes that this creates a contradiction at the heart of the case: "Moreover, if the idea of a photograph really is its expression and vice versa, then a different photograph should have a different idea, and yet ''Mannion''s analysis is performed in the service of finding that the defendant's photograph might be similar enough to infringe the plaintiff's copyright." Ultimately, for Tushnet, Kaplan's criteria amount to distinguishing "the elements of a photograph that simply indicate that it ''is'' a photograph". But while there indeed might be, apart from those aspects, originality and protectibility in a photograph, "courts have gone well beyond nondiscrimination and crossed the line into protecting that which would be readily recognized as unprotectable in a literary work." Kogan finds Kaplan's dismissal of the idea-expression divide in photography incompatible with the Supreme Court's holding in ''Feist'' that it applies to ''all'' works of potentially original authorship. "The problem inherent in cases like heseis not that the idea/expression dichotomy cannot be applied to photography." he writes. Kogan pointed to '' Wallace Computer Services, Inc. v. Adams Business Forms, Inc.'', as a case where that was avoided and thus decided correctly. There, the plaintiff alleged the cover photos of hands, pens and telephones the defendant used for its phone message books were extremely similar to those it had long used for its own similar products. The
Northern District of Illinois The United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois (in case citations, N.D. Ill.) is the federal trial court with jurisdiction over the northern counties of Illinois. It is one of the busiest federal trial courts in the Uni ...
refused to consider the individual elements, which the plaintiff argued were non-protectible, separately, observing that "There are countless different layouts which could have been used by the photographer of the defendant to make photos which look different from those of the plaintiff ... The creative minds in charge of the defendant's advertising and marketing certainly could have opted for a photo layout that did not so closely resemble that of its competitor." Kogan considers that an example of what he calls a tableau, equivalent to Kaplan's "creation of the subject".


Effect on merger doctrine

Kaplan's comments about the unworkability of the idea-expression divide has led to discussion of the merger doctrine, a defense to infringement under the idea/expression divide that can apply if there are only a limited number of ways a particular idea can be expressed, the idea and the expression are merged and thus neither can be protected. Kogan's analysis of ''Mannion'' and other photography copyright cases touching on this issue suggested to him that: Amanda Adian takes the opposite view. In a 2022 '' NYU Law Review'' article, she argues the merger doctrine is not only compatible with photography, it needs to be revitalized and used not just in tests for infringement but as a threshold inquiry for copyrightability. This, Adian argues, would recognize changes in technology that have created
copyright troll A copyright troll is a party (person or company) that enforces copyrights it owns for purposes of making money through strategic litigation, in a manner considered unduly aggressive or opportunistic, sometimes without producing or licensing the ...
s like Richard Liebowitz, by denying copyrightability to a great many images like the one before the court in ''Cruz'', which in her opinion was too "ordinary" an idea to qualify for protection. "The conundrum that Judge Kaplan identified in ''Mannion''", she writes, "that ' the visual arts, the dea/expressiondistinction breaks down'—in fact counsels strongly ''in favor'' of merger's application in the context of photography as a near presumption, for it is this very inextricability of idea and expression that merger is designed to probe."Adian, 222–234


See also

*
List of copyright case law The following is a list of cases that deal with issues of concern to copyright in various jurisdictions. Some of these cases are leading English cases as the law of copyright in various Commonwealth jurisdictions developed out of English law while ...
*'' Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. v. Goldsmith'', 2023 U.S Supreme Court case stemming from a photographer's discovery of unlicensed reuse of her work following limited early licensed use.


Notes


References

{{Copyright law in the United States Copyrightability case law United States copyright case law United States District Court for the Southern District of New York cases 21st-century photography Molson Coors Beverage Company 2005 in United States case law