Before KING, Chief Judge, JOLLY, HIGGINBOTHAM, DAVIS, JONES,
SMITH, WIENER, BARKSDALE, EMILIO M. GARZA, DeMOSS, BENAVIDES, STEWART, PARKER,
DENNIS and CLEMENT, Circuit Judges.
EDITH H. JONES, Circuit Judge:
[1] The issue in this en banc case is the extent
to which a private organization may assert copyright protection for its model
codes, after the models have been adopted by a legislative body and become
"the law". Specifically, may a code-writing organization prevent a website
operator from posting the text of a model code where the code is identified
simply as the building code of a city that enacted the model code as law?
Our short answer is that as law, the model codes enter the public domain
and are not subject to the copyright holder's exclusive prerogatives. As model
codes, however, the organization's works retain their protected status.
BACKGROUND[n1]
[2] Peter Veeck individually operates
"Regional Web" (<http://regionalweb.texoma.net>), a non-commercial website
that provides information about north Texas. Sometime in 1997, Veeck decided
to post on Regional Web the local building codes of Anna and Savoy, two small
towns in north Texas that had adopted the 1994 edition of the Standard Building
Code written by appellee, Southern Building Code Congress International, Inc.
("SBCCI"). Veeck made a few attempts to inspect several towns' copies of the
Building Code, but he was not able to locate them easily. Eventually, Veeck
purchased the 1994 model building codes directly from SBCCI; he paid $72.00
and received a copy of the codes on disk. Although the software licensing
agreement and copyright notice indicated that the codes could not be copied
and distributed, Veeck cut and pasted their text onto his Regional Web. Veeck's
website did not specify that the codes were written by SBCCI. Instead, he
identified them, correctly, as the building codes of Anna and Savoy, Texas.
[3] The author of the codes, SBCCI,
is a non-profit organization consisting of approximately 14,500 members from
government bodies, the construction industry, business and trade associations,
students, and colleges and universities. Since 1940, SBCCI's primary mission
has been to develop, promote, and promulgate model building codes, such as
the Standard Plumbing Code, the Standard Gas Code, the Standard Fire Prevention
Code, and the Standard Mechanical Code. SBCCI encourages local government
entities to enact its codes into law by reference, without cost to the governmental
entity. No licensing agreements are executed in connection with legislative
adoption, nor does SBCCI keep track of the entities that have adopted its
codes. Although SBCCI is a non-profit organization, its annual budget, exceeding
$9 million, derives in part from sales of its model codes and is used to fund
continuing activities. There are no restrictions or requirements on membership
in SBCCI, but non-members are charged considerably more for copies of its
codes than are members.
[4] While SBCCI continues to assert
its copyright prerogatives -- exclusively to publish the codes and license
their reproduction and distribution -- even as to codes that have been adopted
by local entities, the organization insists that it grants liberal permission
for copying. To support this contention, SBCCI offered in evidence several
dozen letters of permission written to entities as diverse as book publishers,
seminar providers, and municipal inspection agencies. Notably, each permit
letter carefully circumscribed the amount of copying allowed.
[5] SBCCI's generosity did not extend to Veeck's public-service
posting of the Anna and Savoy building codes on his website. The organization
demanded that he cease and desist from infringing its copyrights. Veeck filed
a declaratory judgment action seeking a ruling that he did not violate the
Copyright Act. SBCCI counterclaimed for copyright infringement, unfair competition
and breach of contract. Both parties moved for summary judgment on the copyright
infringement issue.
[6] Finding no genuinely disputed material facts, the
district court granted summary judgment in favor of SBCCI, including a permanent
injunction and monetary damages. On appeal, a divided panel of this court
upheld SBCCI's copyrights in the municipal building codes posted by Veeck,
and it rejected his defenses to infringement based on due process, merger,
fair use, copyright misuse and waiver.
[7] We elected to rehear this case en banc because
of the novelty and importance of the issues it presents.
DISCUSSION[n2]
[8] As the organizational author of original works,
SBCCI indisputably holds a copyright in its model building codes. See
17 U.S.C. § 102(a).
Copyright law permits an author exclusively to make or condone derivative
works and to regulate the copying and distribution of both the original and
derivative works. 17
U.S.C. § 106. The question before us is whether Peter Veeck infringed
SBCCI's copyright on its model codes when he posted them only as what they
became -- building codes of Anna and Savoy, Texas -- on his regional website.
Put otherwise, does SBCCI retain the right wholly to exclude others from copying
the model codes after and only to the extent to which they are adopted as
"the law" of various jurisdictions?
[9] The answer to this narrow issue seems compelled
by three sources: the Supreme Court's holding that "the law" is not copyrightable;
alternatively, the Copyright Act's exclusion from its scope of "ideas" or
"facts"; and the balance of caselaw.
I. The Supreme Court's View
[10] Excluding "the law" from the purview of the copyright
statutes dates back to this nation's earliest period. In 1834, the Supreme
Court interpreted the first federal copyright laws and unanimously held that
"no reporter has or can have any copyright in the written opinions delivered
by this Court. . ." Wheaton v. Peters, 33 U.S. (8 Pet.) 591, 668 (1834).
The case arose when one of the Court's official reporters was asserting copyright
protection for his annotated compilations of Supreme Court opinions. The Court
distinguished between the reporter's individual work and the Justices' opinions.
The Court's rejection of copyright for judicial opinions paralleled the principle
-- recognized by attorneys for both parties -- that "[s]tatutes were never
copyrighted."[n3] Based on the acknowledged
and incontestable analogy with legislative acts, Wheaton held unanimously
that "the law" in the form of judicial opinions may not be copyrighted.
[11] The same broad understanding of what constitutes
"the law" for copyright purposes underlies the Court's later decision in Banks
v. Manchester, 128 U.S. 244, 9 S.Ct. 36 (1888). The Court there denied
a copyright to a court reporter in his printing of the opinions of the Ohio
Supreme Court. The Court first noted that whatever work the judges perform
in their official capacity cannot be regarded as authorship under the copyright
law. As a question of "public policy," the Court stated that,
there has always been a judicial consensus, from the time
of the decision in the case of Wheaton v. Peters, 8 Pet. 591, that
no copyright could, under the statutes passed by Congress, be secured in the
products of the labor done by judicial officers in the discharge of their
judicial duties. The whole work done by the judges constitutes the authentic
exposition and interpretation of the law, which, binding every citizen, is
free for publication to all, whether it is a declaration of unwritten law,
or an interpretation of a constitution or statute.
Banks, 128 U.S. at 253, 9 S.Ct. at 40. (emphasis added). At this point,
Banks relied upon a decision of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court,
which stated,
[I]t needs no argument to show that justice requires that all should
have free access to the opinions, and that it is against sound public policy
to prevent this, or to suppress and keep from the earliest knowledge of the
public the statutes, or the decisions and opinions of the Justices.
Nash v. Lathrop, 142 Mass. 29, 6 N.E. 559 (1886). The court in
Nash
further observed that a legislature likewise could not deny public access to
statutes.
[12] Banks represents a continuous understanding
that "the law," whether articulated in judicial opinions or legislative acts
or ordinances, is in the public domain and thus not amenable to copyright.(4)
Modern decisions have followed suit.(5) Significantly,
the 1976 Copyright Act specifically denies protection to federal statutes
and regulations. 17 U.S.C. § 105. Given the state law foundation of Banks
and its progeny, there is no reason to believe that state or local laws are
copyrightable. See generally L. Ray Patterson & Craig Joyce, Monopolizing
the Law: The Scope of Copyright Protection for Law Reports and Statutory Compilations,
36 U.C.L.A. L. Rev. 719, 751-58 (1989); 1 Melville B. Nimmer & David Nimmer,
Nimmer on Copyright § 5.06 [c] at 5-92 (2000) ("state statutes, no less
than federal statutes, are regarded as being in the public domain"); 1 Patry,
Copyright Law and Practice 351, 357 (1994).
[13] As governing law, pursuant to Banks, the
building codes of Anna and Savoy, Texas cannot be copyrighted.
[14] SBCCI and its numerous amici[n6]
must limit or circumvent the Banks line of cases in order to prevail.
Initially, SBCCI divides Banks into two holdings and concludes that
either holding must be squared with the policies and purposes of copyright
law. This not insubstantial mode of analysis must be carefully reviewed.
[15] The first holding of Banks is said to deny
copyright to judicial opinions because judges, whose salaries are paid by
the government, cannot claim to be "authors" of their official works. SBCCI
contends that this discussion shows only that judges have no need of the Copyright
Act's economic incentives in order to author judicial opinions. Banks,
it is implied, articulates a utilitarian rationale for denying copyright protection
to judicial opinions. SBCCI contrasts government employees with the private
"authors" of model codes who allegedly depend on copyright incentives in order
to perform their public service. SBCCI concludes that this "prong" of Banks
does not apply to private code-writing organizations whose work has been adopted
or incorporated into statutes, ordinances, or government regulations. Two
courts, in addition to the panel that originally heard this case, have identified
the consideration of authorship incentives as a "holding" of Banks.
See Practice Management Info. Corp. v. American Medical Ass'n,
121 F.3d 516, 518 (9th Cir. 1997), opinion amended by
133 F.3d 1140 (9th Cir. 1998);[n7] County
of Suffolk v. First American Real Estate Solutions, 261 F.3d 179, 194
(2d Cir. 2001).
[16] The second "holding" of Banks, which requires
"the law" or its exposition to be "free for publication to all," is recharacterized
by SBCCI as a "due process" argument. That argument devolves into a factual
question concerning public "access" to the law. Because SBCCI contends that
there is no dispute about the adequacy of public "access" to its model codes,
after their enactment as the building codes of Anna and Savoy, Banks
is inapplicable.
[17] The "dual holding" analysis seems to foist on
Banks a rationale that the Supreme Court never explicitly articulated.
Banks, however, does not bifurcate its holding based on the particular
authors' need of the Copyright Act's incentives or a factual calculus concerning
the "adequacy" of public access to the law. Instead, Banks declares
at the outset of its discussion that copyright law in the United States is
purely a matter of statutory construction. See Banks, 128 U.S.
at 251, 9 S.Ct. at 39. In the next paragraph, the Court points out that the
court reporter was not the statutory "author" of the judicial decisions. Then,
the Court states that
In no proper sense can the judge who, in his judicial capacity,
prepares the opinion or decision, the statement of the case, and the syllabus,
or head-note, be regarded as their author or their proprietor, in the sense
of [the copyright statute] . . .
Judges, as is well understood, receive from the public treasury a stated
annual salary, fixed by law, and can themselves have no pecuniary interest
or proprietorship, as against the public at large, in the fruits of their
judicial labors.
128 U.S. at 253, 9 S.Ct. at 40. The Court then broadly defines the judges'
official work and states that as a matter of public policy and judicial consensus,
"no copyright could, under the statutes passed by Congress, be secured in
the products of the labor done by judicial officers in the discharge of their
official duties." This paragraph of Banks climaxes with the explanation:
The whole work done by the judges constitutes the authentic exposition
and interpretation of the law, which, binding every citizen, is free for publication
to all, whether it is a declaration of unwritten law, or an interpretation
of a constitution or statute. Id. at 253-54 [citing Nash v. Lathrop].
[18] There is simply no independent holding in Banks
that judges are not "authors" under the copyright law because, as public officials,
they do not need the "incentives" that copyright law affords in order to write
opinions. Instead, Banks refers to the source of the judges' salary
in order to explain that it is the public at large, not the judges, who have
the "pecuniary interest or proprietorship" in "the fruits of their judicial
labors." The whole of those judicial labors, as Banks immediately defines
them, "constitutes the authentic exposition and interpretation of the law,"
which is "free for publication to all . . ." Id.[n8]
[19] Moreover, when viewed in light of Wheaton,
the last case relied on by Banks's analysis, the argument for bifurcation
is seriously weakened. Wheaton's holding, as has been shown, derives
from an analogy between judicial opinions and legislative acts as together
constituting "the law," which is not subject to copyright.
[20] The origin of the bifurcated holding interpretation
of Banks seems to lie in the First Circuit's thoughtful opinion in
Building Officials and Code Adm. v. Code Technology, Inc., 628 F.2d
730 (1st Cir. 1980), but the First Circuit does not endorse bifurcation. In
this opinion, which will be discussed further infra, the First Circuit
considered the argument of BOCA, the model code writer, urging copyright protection
for a model building code similar in origin and purpose to the one before
us. BOCA's argument, the court said, "implies that the rule of Wheaton
v. Peters was based on the public's property interest in work produced
by legislators and judges, who are, of course, government employees." BOCA,
628 F.2d at 734.
[21] While acknowledging that this interpretation is
"not without foundation," the First Circuit cautioned: "But BOCA's
argument overlooks another aspect of the ownership theory discussed in these
cases." Id. BOCA then identifies the real premises of Banks
and related cases: the "metaphorical concept of citizen authorship" of the
law, together with "the very important and practical policy that citizens
must have free access to the laws which govern them." Id. BOCA
cited the authorship rationale for Banks only to find it unsatisfactory.
In our view, BOCA was correct.
[22] Only by bifurcating Banks can SBCCI achieve
its purpose of claiming authorship of "the law" and proprietary rights in
its codes that have been enacted into law. However, the acceptance of SBCCI's
and the dissent's theory, that non-governmental employees who draft model
statutes or regulations may be entitled to copyright protection, raises troubling
issues. The complexities of modern life and the breadth of problems addressed
by government entities necessitate continuous participation by private experts
and interest groups in all aspects of statutory and regulatory lawmaking.
According to SBCCI, a utilitarian test should be invoked to determine which
organizations "need" the incentives provided by the Copyright Act in order
to perform the public service of drafting specialized statutes, ordinances
or regulations. Alternatively, perhaps SBCCI and the dissent intend that whenever
any private "author" finds his or her proposal adopted verbatim in law, copyright
protection may be claimed.[n9] As an example,
three law professors have taken credit for drafting a recent federal statute
on supplemental federal court jurisdiction. See 28 U.S.C. § 1367;
Christopher M. Fairman, Abdication to Academia: The Case of the Supplemental
Jurisdiction Statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1367, 19 SETON HALL LEGIS. J. 157
(1994). Under SBCCI's reasoning, it is likely that these professors, had they
so desired, could have asserted a copyright in their "model supplemental jurisdictional
provision."[n10] SBCCI offers no outer
limit on claims of copyright prerogatives by nongovernmental persons who contribute
to writing "the law."
[23] Not only is the question of authorship of "the
law" exceedingly complicated by SBCCI's and the dissent's position, but in
the end, the "authorship" question ignores the democratic process. Lawmaking
bodies in this country enact rules and regulations only with the consent of
the governed. The very process of lawmaking demands and incorporates contributions
by "the people," in an infinite variety of individual and organizational capacities.
Even when a governmental body consciously decides to enact proposed model
building codes, it does so based on various legislative considerations, the
sum of which produce its version of "the law." In performing their function,
the lawmakers represent the public will, and the public are the final "authors"
of the law.
[24] The BOCA decision put it thus:
The citizens are the authors of the law, and therefore its owners,
regardless of who actually drafts the provisions, because the law derives
its authority from the consent of the public, expressed through the democratic
process.
628 F.2d at 734.
[n11] This "metaphorical
concept of citizen authorship" together with the need for citizens to have free
access to the laws are the ultimate holding of
Banks.
Id.
[25] BOCA described free access as a policy
"based on the concept of due process," the people's right to know what the
law requires so that they may obey it and avoid its sanctions. SBCCI and the
dissent contend that this "due process" reasoning involves nothing more than
the factual issue of "sufficient" public access to the building codes of Anna
and Savoy. Since a copy of the codes is available for inspection and individual
copying in a public office, SBCCI contends that the obligations of due process
are fulfilled.
[26] We disagree that the question of public access
can be limited to the minimum availability that SBCCI would permit. Banks
does not use the term "due process." There is also no suggestion that the
Banks concept of free access to the law is a factual determination
or is limited to due process, as the term is understood today. Instead, public
ownership of the law means precisely that "the law" is in the "public domain"
for whatever use the citizens choose to make of it. Citizens may reproduce
copies of the law for many purposes, not only to guide their actions but to
influence future legislation, educate their neighborhood association, or simply
to amuse. If a citizen wanted to place an advertisement in a newspaper quoting
the Anna, Texas building code in order to indicate his dissatisfaction with
its complexities, it would seem that he could do so. In our view, to say,
as Banks does, that the law is "free for publication to all" is to
expand, not factually limit, the extent of its availability.
[27] Moreover, as the BOCA decision observed,
it is difficult to reconcile the public's right to know the law with the statutory
right of a copyright holder to exclude his work from any publication or dissemination.
SBCCI responds that due process must be balanced against its proprietary rights
and that the fair use doctrine as well as its honorable intentions will prevent
abuse. Free availability of the law, by this logic, has degenerated into availability
as long as SBCCI chooses not to file suit.[n12]
[28] For these reasons, we reject SBCCI's deconstruction
of Banks into merely utilitarian and factual issues. Instead, we read
Banks, Wheaton, and related cases consistently to enunciate
the principle that "the law," whether it has its source in judicial opinions
or statutes, ordinances or regulations, is not subject to federal copyright
law.[n13]
[29] To sum up this section, we hold that when Veeck
copied only "the law" of Anna and Savoy, Texas, which he obtained from
SBCCI's publication, and when he reprinted only "the law" of those municipalities,
he did not infringe SBCCI's copyrights in its model building codes. The basic
proposition was stated by Justice Harlan, writing for the Sixth Circuit: "any
person desiring to publish the statutes of a state may use any copy of such
statutes to be found in any printed book . . ." Howell v. Miller, 91
F. 129, 137 (6th Cir. 1898).(14) See Jerry E.
Smith, Government Documents: Their Copyright and Ownership, 22 Copyright
Symposium 147, 174 (ASCAP 1977), reprinted in 5 Tex. Tech L. Rev. 71, 92 (1973).
II. The Copyright Act
A. The Merger Doctrine
[30] As we earlier stated, SBCCI is the "author" of
model building codes that, qua model building codes, are facially copyright-protected.
This is true even if Banks places the building codes of Anna and Savoy,
and other governmental entities that adopted part or all of SBCCI's model
codes, in the public domain. But if the holding of Banks fails, Veeck
alternatively asserts a defense under the Copyright Act to the protection
of the model codes after they have been enacted into positive law. Once adopted,
he asserts, the model codes become "facts" that are not protected under the
Copyright Act. Further, because there is only one way to express the meaning
of the building codes, the "idea" embodied in the law merges with SBCCI's
expression, and at that point, renders copyright protection unavailable.
[31] It is not the sole purpose of copyright law to
secure a fair return for an author's creative labor. Under the Constitution,
The primary objective of copyright is not to reward the labor of authors
but '[to] promote the Progress of Science and the useful Arts.'" Article
I, Sec. 8, clause 8 [U.S. Constitution]. To this end, copyright law assures
authors the right to their original expression, but encourages others to
build freely upon the ideas and information conveyed by a work. This principle,
known as the idea/expression or fact/expression dichotomy, applies to all
works of authorships.
Feist Publications, Inc. v. Rural Tel. Serv. Co., 499 U.S. 340, 349,
111 S.Ct. 1282, 1289-90 (1991). The statute excludes from copyright protection
ideas, procedures, processes, systems methods of operation, or information in
the public domain.
See 17 U.S.C. § 102(b);
Feist Publications,
499 U.S. at 350, 111 S.Ct. at 1290 (citation omitted);
Harper & Row Publishers,
Inc. v. Nation Enters., 471 U.S. 539, 547-48, 105 S.Ct. 2218, 2223 (1985).
If an idea is susceptible to only one form of expression, the merger doctrine
applies and § 102(b) excludes the expression from the Copyright Act. As
the Supreme Court has explained it, this "idea/expression dichotomy strike[s]
a definitional balance between the First Amendment and the Copyright Act by
permitting free communication of facts while still protecting an author's expression."
Harper & Row, 471 U.S. at 556, 105 S.Ct. at 2228.
[32] Veeck copied the building code of the towns of
Anna and Savoy, Texas, based on their adoption of a version of the SBCCI model
code. The codes are "facts" under copyright law. They are the unique, unalterable
expression of the "idea" that constitutes local law. Courts routinely emphasize
the significance of the precise wording of laws presented for interpretation.
See, e.g., Consumer Product Safety Comm'n v. GTE Sylvania, Inc.,
447 U.S. 102, 108, 100 S.Ct. 2051, 2056 (1980) ("[T]he starting point for
interpreting a statute is the language of the statute itself."). Judge Little,
dissenting from the panel opinion in this case, observed that
. . . the merger doctrine is especially appropriate because other
methods of expressing the idea are foreclosed. [citation omitted] An individual
wishing to publish the text of a law cannot develop his own, unique version
and still publish an authoritative copy.
Veeck v. Southern Bldg. Code Cong. Int'l, 241 F.3d 398, 416 (5th Cir.
2001) (Little, J., dissenting). It should be obvious that for copyright purposes,
laws are "facts": the U.S. Constitution is a fact; the Federal Tax Code and
its regulations are facts; the Texas Uniform Commercial Code is a fact. Surely,
in principle, the building codes of rural Texas hamlets are no less "facts"
than the products of more August legislative or regulatory bodies. While the
Supreme Court has not stated directly that laws are "facts," it has broadly
observed that, as with census data, "the same is true of all facts -- scientific,
historical, biographical and news of the day. 'They may not be copyrighted and
are part of the public domain available to every person.'"
Feist, 499
U.S. at 348, 111 S.Ct. at 1289.
[33] Emphasizing not the language of § 102(b),
but the "policy" of the merger doctrine, SBCCI contends that merger poses
no bar to copyright protection here. The idea/expression dichotomy was enacted
into law by Congress to "balance [] the competing concerns of providing incentive
to authors to create and foster[] competition in such creativity." Kern
River Gas Transmission Co. v. The Coastal Corp., 899 F.2d 1458, 1463 (5th
Cir. 1990).[n15] Veeck's merger argument
ignores the goal of fostering competition in creativity. SBCCI thus asserts
that "merger would only apply in this case if a subsequent author seeking
to create a building code for Anna or Savoy would have to use the same expression
to convey the idea." SBCCI supplemental en banc brief at 7. This argument
effectively converts the merger doctrine from a limit on copyrightability
into a mere defense against infringement based on the identity of the author.
In our view § 102(b) does foster the creativity that SBCCI applauds,
but it does so by permitting the free flow of information in facts and ideas
from their emergence, rather than as a defense to infringement claims. See
Kern River at 1460; Mason v. Montgomery Data, Inc., 967 F.2d
135, 138 n.5 (5th Cir. 1992) ("Mason argues that application of the merger
doctrine does not render a work uncopyrightable, but rather prevents
a finding of infringement of an otherwise copyrightable work. But this
court has applied the merger doctrine to the question of copyrightability.").
[34] SBCCI and the dissent next urge the inapplicability
of the merger doctrine because there are many possible ways to express model
codes: both the multiplicity of building standards and the variety of ways
to express those standards compel the conclusion that the ideas have not merged
with their expression. Cf. Mason, 967 F.2d at 139 (rejecting
merger because the idea embodied in the author's maps can be expressed in
a variety of ways). What SBCCI and the dissent ignore, however, is the graphic
merger of its model building codes with "the law" as enacted by Anna and Savoy,
Texas. Veeck copied from SBCCI's model codes, 1994 edition, because those
codes were transformed into the "fact" and "idea" of the towns' building codes.
Veeck could not express the enacted law in any other way.
[35] The final argument deployed by SBCCI and the dissent
casts the merger doctrine as an inherent balancing test in which courts must
reconcile the policies underlying the Copyright Act with the public interest
in the free flow of information and ideas. Compare CCC Info Serv.
Inc. v. McLean Hunter Market Reports, Inc., 44 F.3d 61, 68 (2nd Cir. 1994)
(interpreting Second Circuit's balancing test). It is true that where the
line is unclear between expression and facts, procedures, processes, methods
of operation, or information in the public domain, a court considering the
applicability of § 102(b) must recur to the statute's underlying policy.
See, e.g., Feist, 499 U.S. at 361-64, 111 S.Ct. at 1295-97 (determining
copyrightability of compilations of facts); Mason, 967 F.2d at 139
(copyrightability of expression in maps). This case, however, is not close.
The building codes of Anna and Savoy, Texas can be expressed in only one way;
they are facts. Veeck placed those facts on his website in precisely the form
in which they were adopted by the municipalities.[n16]
When the § 102(b) dichotomy is clear, judges are not permitted to substitute
policy choices for the legislature's determination.
[36] We emphasize that in continuing to write and publish
model building codes, SBCCI is creating copyrightable works of authorship.
When those codes are enacted into law, however, they become to that extent
"the law" of the governmental entities and may be reproduced or distributed
as "the law" of those jurisdictions.
B. Other Provisions[n17]
[37] SBCCI's amici make much of provisions of the Copyright
Act that, they contend, should protect SBCCI's copyrights from "appropriation"
by local government entities. Section 105 of the Act, taken together with
the definition of "works of the government," denies copyright protection to
official works of the United States Government, while reserving the possibility
that government employees and contractors may obtain, or transfer to the government,
copyrights for non-official works. 17
U.S.C. §§ 105, 101.
On its face, these provisions say nothing about the relationship between non-federal
government entities and copyright holders. Moreover, they have never been
held inconsistent with Banks or with the merger doctrine.
[38] Section 201(e) of the Act reflects Congress's
intention to protect copyrights from involuntary appropriation by government
entities. 17 U.S.C.
§ 201(e). This is not, however, a "takings" case, not least because
SBCCI urged localities to adopt its model codes. The issue in the case is
not the voluntariness of the appropriation but the legal consequences flowing
from the permission that SBCCI gave.
III. The Caselaw; Model Codes
Versus Standards
[39] Until recently in our history, it was understood
that Wheaton, Banks and nearly every other pertinent case held
that copyright protection may not be asserted for the text of "the law".[n18]
The basic proposition was stated by Justice Harlan, writing for the Sixth
Circuit: "any person desiring to publish the statutes of a state may use any
copy of such statutes to be found in any printed book . . ." Howell v.
Miller, 91 F. 129, 137 (6th Cir. 1898).
[40] As of 1980, the noncopyrightability of "the law"
appeared settled to the First Circuit in BOCA. The court focused on
the real holding of Banks and accordingly vacated preliminary injunctive
relief to the author of a building code adopted into law by the Commonwealth
of Massachusetts.[n19] The court held
that BOCA had failed to carry its burden of distinguishing, for preliminary
relief purposes, the Massachusetts building code from non-copyrightable statutes
and judicial opinions. But the court then remanded the case for further development
in light of the novelty of the issue, the insufficiency of the trial court
record, and the apparent trend toward adoption of model codes by governmental
entities. The court nevertheless was skeptical that BOCA would prevail, commenting
it is hard to see how the public's essential due process right
of free access to the law (including a necessary right freely to copy and
circulate all or part of a given law for various purposes), can be reconciled
with the exclusivity afforded a private copyright holder . . .
BOCA, 628 F.2d at 730. Though not a definitive holding,
BOCA clearly
favors Veeck's position over that of SBCCI, and it is most closely on point.
[41] The record has been developed in this case and,
with the perspective gained from other recent caselaw and from the multiple
submissions to the court, we have no hesitation in confirming BOCA's
predisposition against the copyrightability of model codes to the extent they
have been adopted as law. But the limits of this holding must be explained.
Several national standards-writing organizations joined SBCCI as amici out
of fear that their copyrights may be vitiated simply by the common practice
of governmental entities' incorporating their standards in laws and regulations.[n20]
This case does not involve references to extrinsic standards. Instead, it
concerns the wholesale adoption of a model code promoted by its author, SBCCI,
precisely for use as legislation. Caselaw that derives from official incorporation
of extrinsic standards is distinguishable in reasoning and result. See
CCC Info. Services v. Maclean Hunter Market Reports, Inc., 44 F.3d
61 (2nd Cir. 1994); and Practice Management Info. Corp. v. American Medical
Ass'n, 121 F.3d 516 (9th Cir. 1997), opinion amended by
133 F.3d 1140 (9th Cir. 1998).
[42] In CCC Information Services, a New York
statute required insurance companies to use the "Red Book," a privately prepared
and copyrighted list of projected automobile values, as one of several standards
in calculating the payments upon the total loss of a vehicle. CCC Information
Services systematically loaded portions of the Red Book onto its computer
network and distributed the information to its customers. One of CCC's theories
was that the Red Book had entered the public domain. The Second Circuit addressed
the public domain issue briefly, stating that "we are not prepared to hold
that a state's reference to a copyrighted work as a legal standard for valuation
results in loss of the copyright." CCC Info. Services, 44 F.3d at 74.
CCC notes the infringer's reliance on the BOCA decision, but
it does not opine on that case, confining itself to the precise facts before
the court.
[43] Practice Management involved the American
Medical Association's copyrighted coding system for reporting physicians'
services and medical procedures. The Federal Health Care Financing Administration
(HCFA) contacted and then agreed with AMA to use the AMA's coding system for
identifying physicians' services on Medicare and Medicaid reimbursement forms.
AMA granted a "non-exclusive, royalty-free and irrevocable" license to HCFA,
without restrictions on the government's ability to reproduce or distribute
AMA's codes. There was no evidence that AMA had restricted the code's availability
to anyone. The Ninth Circuit held that the HCFA's decision to adopt regulations
requiring physicians to use a version of the AMA code on Medicaid claim forms
did not place the code in the public domain under Banks. Practice
Management, 121 F.3d at 519 ("[T]he AMA's right under the Copyright Act
to limit or forgo publication of the [coding system] poses no realistic threat
to public access.").
[44] Both the Second and Ninth Circuits feared that
reaching the opposite conclusion in those cases would have "expose[d] copyrights
on a wide range of privately authored model codes, standards, and reference
works to invalidation." Practice Management, 121 F.3d at 519. The Ninth
Circuit suggested that federal court rules regarding citations could invalidate
the copyrightability of the Blue Book. Id. at n.5. The Second Circuit
feared that a ruling in favor of CCC Information Systems would call into question
the copyrightability of school books once they were assigned as part of a
mandatory school curriculum. CCC Info Services, 44 F.3d at 74.
[45] These decisions, and the hypothetical situations
they discuss, are all distinguishable from Veeck. If a statute refers
to the Red Book or to specific school books, the law requires citizens to
consult or use a copyrighted work in the process of fulfilling their obligations.
The copyrighted works do not "become law" merely because a statute refers
to them. See 1 Goldstein Copyright, § 2.49 at n. 45.2 ( noting
that CCC and Practice Management "involved compilations of data
that had received governmental approval, not content that had been enacted
into positive law"). Equally important, the referenced works or standards
in CCC and Practice Management were created by private groups
for reasons other than incorporation into law. To the extent incentives are
relevant to the existence of copyright protection, the authors in these cases
deserve incentives. And neither CCC nor AMA solicited incorporation of their
standards by legislators or regulators. In the case of a model code, on the
other hand, the text of the model serves no other purpose than to become law.
SBCCI operates with the sole motive and purpose of creating codes that will
become obligatory in law.
[46] At first glance, Practice Management appears
to pose a closer issue because the HCFA did not simply refer physicians to
the AMA's coding system. The court's opinion directs the reader to HHS's notice
in the Federal Register announcing that HCFA would require physicians to
use exclusively a common procedure coding system. The system is
the HCFA common procedure coding system (HCPCS). This coding system is to
be used for coding procedures that have been performed . . . and is basically
used for determining reimbursement amounts. HCFA developed the HCPCS in 1979
and 1980 by using the AMA's CPT-4 [the copyrighted coding system] for physician
services and adding HCFA-developed codes for some non-physician services.
In addition, we developed conversion techniques to prevent unwarranted payment
escalation.
50 Fed. Reg. 40895, 40897. To be precise, then, HCFA had its own coding system
(the HCPCS) that incorporated AMA's code but also included additional information.
[47] But unlike Veeck, Practice Management Information
Corporation, a commercial publisher of medical textbooks, was not trying
to publish its own version of the HCPCS. Practice Management desired to sell
a cheaper edition of the AMA's code, which was also used by insurance companies
and had other non-governmental uses. It is not clear how the Ninth Circuit
would have decided the case if Practice Management had published a copy of
the HCPCS. By analogy, the result in this case would have been different if
Veeck had published not the building codes of Anna and Savoy, Texas, but the
SBCCI model codes, as model codes.
IV. Policy Arguments
[48] Many of SBCCI's and the dissent's arguments center
on the plea that without full copyright protection for model codes, despite
their enactment as the law in hundreds or thousands of jurisdictions, SBCCI
will lack the revenue to continue its public service of code drafting. Thus
SBCCI needs copyright's economic incentives.[n21]
[49] Several responses exist to this contention. First,
SBCCI, like other code-writing organizations, has survived and grown over
60 years, yet no court has previously awarded copyright protection for the
copying of an enacted building code under circumstances like these. Second,
the success of voluntary code-writing groups is attributable to the technological
complexity of modern life, which impels government entities to standardize
their regulations. The entities would have to promulgate standards even if
SBCCI did not exist, but the most fruitful approach for the public entities
and the potentially regulated industries lies in mutual cooperation. The self-interest
of the builders, engineers, designers and other relevant tradesmen should
also not be overlooked in the calculus promoting uniform codes. As one commentator
explained,
. . . it is difficult to imagine an area of creative endeavor in
which the copyright incentive is needed less. Trade organizations have powerful
reasons stemming from industry standardization, quality control, and self-regulation
to produce these model codes; it is unlikely that, without copyright, they
will cease producing them.
1 Goldstein § 2.5.2, at 2:51.
[n22]
[50] Third, to enhance the market value of its model
codes, SBCCI could easily publish them as do the compilers of statutes and
judicial opinions, with "value-added" in the form of commentary, questions
and answers, lists of adopting jurisdictions and other information valuable
to a reader. The organization could also charge fees for the massive amount
of interpretive information about the codes that it doles out. In short, we
are unpersuaded that the removal of copyright protection from model codes
only when and to the extent they are enacted into law disserves "the Progress
of Science and useful Arts." U.S. Const. art. I. § 8, cl. 8.
Conclusion
[51] For the reasons discussed above, we REVERSE
the district court's judgment against Peter Veeck, and REMAND
with instructions to dismiss SBCCI's claims.
WIENER, Circuit Judge, joined
by KING, Chief Judge, and HIGGINBOTHAM, DAVIS, STEWART, and DENNIS, Circuit
Judges, dissenting:
[52] Technical codes and standards have become necessary,
pervasive, and indispensable ingredients of Twenty-First Century life in this
country; regrettably, today's majority opinion has a real potential of drastically
changing the societal landscape through that opinion's predictably deleterious
effects on these codes and standards, their authors, and the public and private
entities that daily use and depend on them. Despite efforts to clothe its
ruling in classic copyright lingo ---- "public domain," "fact/expression,"
"merger" ---- in holding for Veeck under the discrete facts of this case,
the majority had to (and did) adopt a per se rule that a single
municipality's enactment of a copyrighted model code into law by reference
strips the work of all copyright protection, ipso facto. Firmly
believing that for this court to be the first federal appellate court to go
that far is imprudent, I respectfully dissent.
I. FACTS
AND PROCEEDINGS
[53] As the underlying facts are undisputed, I adopt
the majority opinion's detailed recitation of the facts, supplementing it
with the following observations contained in the record. The technical codes
here at issue are not mere compilations; rather they are original, "from scratch"
creations by SBCCI which rightfully enjoy copyright protection from their
inceptions. In each of its codes, SBCCI asserts a copyright under which it
claims the exclusive right to publish these codes or license their reproduction
and publication. Despite its copyright, SBCCI ensures free access by specifying
that once a governmental unit enacts such a model code into law, copies must
be made available for inspection by the public in the enacting government's
offices. As a general proposition, members of the public may make or obtain
copies of portions of the adopted versions of SBCCI codes from city offices
or local libraries, or may purchase copies of the codes directly from SBCCI
and from some third-party sources, such as bookstores.[n23]
[54] Several municipalities in
North Texas have adopted SBCCI's codes, including the towns of Anna and Savoy.
Veeck avers that he attempted to obtain a copy of the building code of his
hometown of Denison, Texas, after learning that it had adopted SBCCI's Model
Building Code as its own. Failing to locate Denison's building code at local
bookstores or libraries, Veeck ordered copies of the codes that SBCCI had
produced. He ordered these copies in electronic format directly from SBCCI.[n24]
According to Veeck, he later visited approximately twenty towns in North Texas,
including Anna and Savoy, in an effort to obtain copies of their local building
codes, not all of which had been produced by SBCCI. Veeck was not able to
buy complete copies at any of the towns that he visited.[n25]
He apparently never attempted to view or copy the SBCCI codes in any city
clerk's or other municipal offices of the towns that had enacted the codes
by reference.
[55] In contravention of the software license agreement
and copyright notice included with the electronic version of the model codes
he purchased from SBCCI, Veeck failed to identify the codes as the products
of SBCCI when he posted them on his website. Instead, he simply (and inaccurately)[n26]
identified them as the building codes of Anna and Savoy, Texas. As detailed
in the majority opinion, the litigation ensuing from this conduct culminated
with the grant of summary judgment in favor of SBCCI on its claims for copyright
infringement. As Veeck cannot legitimately find a safe haven in any of his
affirmative defenses, the district court's order should have been affirmed.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Standard of Review
[56] This case is on appeal from
a grant of a summary judgment that dismissed Veeck's declaratory judgment
action and granted SBCCI's requested copyright infringement and damages relief.
We review the record de novo, applying the same standard as
the district court.[n27]
B. Merits
1. Overview
[57] Despite the efforts of Veeck
(and of those amici who support him and of the en banc majority opinion) to
paint this case as a broad one with dire constitutional implications, the
question before us is truly quite narrow. In fact, it is the majority opinion
that creates drastic constitutional alterations by ruling in Veeck's favor,
thereby improvidently decreeing an absolute and inflexible rule, ill-suited
for modern realities. Conversely, had we held for SBCCI, we would have remained
well within the precedential and persuasive boundaries of established copyright
law. My analysis is necessarily delimited by the particular, undisputed facts
of the case: Veeck is a non-commercial, non-educational, non-contractor, non-official,
non-resident of either Anna or Savoy, who purchased a copyrighted work, replete
with warnings about infringement, and published that work virtually in its
entirety on the internet. Veeck published on his website the entire substantive
portion of the model building code that he purchased from SBCCI, redacting
only the identity of the code's author (SBCCI) and the statement that the
code was copyright protected, and inserting that they were the codes of Anna
and Savoy. Veeck's only professed justification for infringing SBCCI's copyrights
was that two or more small municipalities in northern Texas ---- of which
Veeck was neither a resident nor otherwise related to in any capacity, official
or unofficial ---- had, at the invitation of the code's author, enacted the
codes into law by reference. Because he cannot, Veeck does not contend that
Anna or Savoy denied him access to their codes or that he (or anyone else)
was unable to view the law to which the citizens of Anna and Savoy are subject.
Had Anna, Savoy, or SBCCI blocked the code's availability, I would be among
the first to recognize Veeck's (and anyone else's) right of access to "THE
law." That, however, is simply not the case before us; this is not
a free access case and cannot be so classified.
[58] Under this narrow set of
facts, Veeck prevails only because the en banc majority ruled favorably on
at least one of his affirmative defenses,[n28]
without which, his publication of the codes is indisputably an infringement
of SBCCI's copyright. Given Veeck's global re-publication of SBCCI's copyrighted
model codes, his at-best remotely tangential relationship to the codes and
other laws of Anna and Savoy, his inability to present evidence that he was
denied access to the towns' codes by the towns or SBCCI, the countervailing
public policy concerns supporting copyright protection, and the direction
and intent of recent congressional enactments and appellate case law, we should
not have condoned Veeck's violation of SBCCI's copyright.
[59] Reduced to its bare essentials,
the majority's holding in favor of Veeck indisputably enacts the blanket,
per se rule that once a copyrighted work is enacted into law
by reference, it loses its entire copyright protection, ipso facto,
regardless of the nature of the author, the character of the work, or the
relationship of the copier to the work or to the governmental subdivision
that enacted the work into law through incorporation by reference. Such an
extremely broad and inflexible rule propels the majority's holding far beyond
the ambit of Congress's enactments, the Supreme Court's pronouncements, and
the opinions of other appellate courts that have addressed similar issues.
Yet the possibility of obtaining such an all-encompassing ruling constituted
Veeck's only hope of overcoming SBCCI's copyright protection vis-à-vis
an otherwise admitted infringer who is too attenuated from anything that might
otherwise excuse the unauthorized copying of these codes cum ordinances, such
as a "need to know" for purposes of complying with one or more provisions
of the codes. Veeck meets none of these criteria.
2. Due Process/Public Domain
a. Absence of Controlling Legal Authority
[60] In the absence of an expressed
pronouncement from either the Supreme Court or Congress,[n29]
our creation of an automatic rule rendering the copyright of a model code
nugatory per se when and if it is enacted into law is unwise,
imprudent, and far in excess of our authority. Before such a work is
enacted into law, the Copyright Act unquestionably affords copyright protection
to its author; and Congress has given no indication that, on enactment, this
protected status evanesces ipso facto as to the whole universe
of potential copiers.[n30] As I discuss
in greater detail below, recent congressional enactments and accompanying
federal agency policies strongly predict that, were Congress to address the
issue here presented, it would preserve the protection of SBCCI's copyright,
at least under circumstances like those we consider today.[n31]
[61] As for the Supreme Court,
its most analogous opinion, Banks v. Manchester, falls markedly short
of answering the question.[n32] The Court
grounded its century-and-one-quarter old Banks holding ---- that judicial
opinions cannot be copyrighted ---- in the logic that, as the product of judges
who are paid from public coffers and elected or appointed for the sole purpose
of interpreting and applying the law, judicial opinions can never be copyrighted.[n33]
Thus Banks turns not on the nature of the work but on the nature
of the author. By its own terms, the Banks holding is obviously
limited to the work of taxpayer-paid public officials who produce or interpret
the law. The majority's stretching of Banks to the facts of the instant
case constitutes a clear overreaching that finds no definitive support from
any controlling authority.
[62] In the absence of expressed
congressional guidance or directly controlling Supreme Court precedent, we
were left to address ---- prudentially ---- a wide-open and unresolved question
of copyright law: Should the entirety of a privately confected and promulgated
model code, access to which has been denied to none, lose its copyright protection
in toto, against all the world, solely by virtue of its enactment
into law by reference? If Congress or the Supreme Court wishes to strip totally
the copyright protection otherwise enjoyed by model codes as an automatic
result of being enacted into law, and to justify such emasculation by invoking
the doctrines of free speech, due process, merger, or the like, that would
be their prerogative. Prudence demands, however, that so large a step beyond
all established legal boundaries should not have been taken first by an intermediate
appellate court. Indeed, recent appellate case law, congressional pronouncements,
and federal agency actions, predict the diametrically opposite result: a discernable
trend towards greater governmental adoption of privately created codes with
concomitant retention of copyright protection, tempered, of course, by express
or implied consent or waiver ---- or even fair use ---- for those officials,
residents, contractors, subcontractors, and design professionals who have
a need to view and copy portions of codes to comply with their provisions.
b. Policy Analysis for Copyright Protection
[63] What Banks and other
opinions undeniably teach about assessing the copyright protection of works
like the codes here at issue is that "[t]he question is one of public policy...."[n34]
Accordingly, these decisions do not stand for the abstract and generic proposition
that all law qua law, regardless of its form, authorship, or content,
is automatically unprotected fair game as to all copiers, without distinction.
Hence, courts are given the weighty task of balancing, on the one hand, the
policy concerns that favor the constitutionally mandated retention of copyright
protection for privately authored works and, on the other hand, the policy
concerns that would permit stripping the author of a privately created work
of copyright protection once that work is enacted into law. I do not dismiss
lightly the policy considerations supporting this latter concern. Yet, when
properly limited to the narrow set of facts before us, the scale of countervailing
policy considerations is tipped ---- slightly yet undeniably ---- in favor
of enforcing SBCCI's copyright, vis-à-vis Veeck and any others (but
only they) who are identically situated.
[64] I begin with an assessment
of the policy consideration supporting Veeck's position ---- namely, the due
process and public domain concerns. As an initial matter, the type of due
process asserted by Veeck is murky at best. He was not denied access to the
codes by either the towns or SBCCI (indeed, he has never alleged that he even
tried to attain access directly from either town, or his home forum for that
matter), and he was never charged with or prosecuted for a code violation;[n35]
therefore, his claim cannot be based on procedural due process. And, inasmuch
as copyright is a federal law, no state action could deprive him of a fundamental
right that would trigger a substantive due process claim. Neither has Veeck
pointed to any state actor who has purportedly denied him due process. Yet
despite his unimpeded access to the law and the absence of state action, Veeck
argues amorphously that his due process rights somehow allow him freely to
copy and publish otherwise copyright-protected codes once they are enacted
into law by reference.
[65] I reiterate for emphasis
that this would be an entirely different case if Veeck's (or anyone's) access
to the law had been denied or obstructed; instead, we deal here only with
Veeck's bald pronouncement ---- now legitimated by the majority opinion ----
that, once a code is enacted into law, due process does not merely afford
him access, but also gives him unfettered copying and dissemination rights.[n36]
The majority's acceptance of Veeck's position is truly a novel extension of
any prior judicial recognition of a due process right. True enough, Veeck
can copy and publish judicial opinions and statutes on his website with impunity.
He can do so, however, not because of his due process rights, but rather because
---- as judicial opinions and legislatively drafted statutes have never enjoyed
copyright protection, could never enjoy such protection, and are in the public
domain from the moment of their inception ---- such works are entitled to
no copyright protection or restrictions.[n37]
[66] Logically then, the only
possible support for Veeck's due process position is his wholly unsupported
assertion that, by virtue of their adoption into law by reference, the codes
have entered the public domain and are therefore denuded of all copyright
protection whatsoever, regardless of their content or the identity of the
author or other interested parties. According to Veeck ---- and now our en
banc majority ---- simply by virtue of their adoption into law, SBCCI's model
codes have become "THE law"; and as THE law, all THE people (not just those
who may be deemed metaphysically to have been the authors by virtue of their
elected legislatures' acts of adoption) have an absolutely unfettered right
to do whatever they please in the way of copying and publishing, in total
disregard of the author's otherwise valid and enforceable copyright.
[67] Admittedly, the majority's
argument finds rhetorical support from the First Circuit's dicta in Building
Officials & Code Admin. V. Code Technology, Inc. (BOCA), in which
that court stated "[t]he citizens are the authors of the law, and therefore
its owners, regardless of who actually drafts the provisions because the law
derives its authority from the consent of the public, expressed through the
democratic process."[n38] Undoubtedly,
this metaphorical concept of citizen authorship cum ownership has great symbolic,
"feel-good" appeal. The majority's uncritical application of that proposition
to the instant case, however, naively treats all manifestations of "THE law"
in our increasingly complex society monolithically and without differentiation.
The Supreme Court took no such position in Banks; in fact, Banks
addresses only judicial opinions and other pronouncements of the law created
ab initio by publically paid officials.[n39]
Furthermore, although the symbolic position advanced in BOCA's grandiloquent
dicta ostensibly contemplates a broad application for the proposition of citizen
authorship and control, BOCA's actual holding is very narrow and unrelated
to any such abstract musings about the democratic process.
[68] In fact, the BOCA
court expressly avoided deciding whether BOCA's model code retained
its copyright after enactment, noting that "the rule denying copyright protection
to judicial opinions and statutes grew out of a much different set of circumstances
than do these technical regulatory codes...."[n40]
Therefore, the majority's rote application of the lofty platitude of citizen
ownership of "THE law," without exploring the distinctions between different
types of enactments and the policy considerations attendant on each, is far
too simplistic. Such an analysis is inconsistent with the thorough policy
evaluations evidenced by those courts that heretofore have deliberated on
similar copyright issues.[n41]
[69] The privately created model
codes enacted into law in this case are easily distinguishable from judicial
opinions or statutes in several important respects. First and most obviously,
model codes are not created by elected or appointed officials paid from public
fisc, rendering inapt the mythical concept of citizen authorship. Indeed,
to the exact opposite, rather than producing regulatory codes themselves,
the officials elected as the citizens' voice chose, on behalf of their constituents,
not to head down the long, expensive, and highly technical road of special
code drafting, opting instead to adopt, cost-free, codes authored by private
entities, because doing so is convenient, efficient, and cost-effective.
[70] Second, these narrowly focused
codes are detailed and complex, requiring technical expertise on the part
of the author. Third, they are of limited, highly specialized effect as to
who has a real interest and is actually affected, unlike judicial opinions
and statutes, which generally have broad if not universal application.
[71] Finally, Congress itself
has provided the strongest support for the proposition that these privately
created codes should be treated differently than other laws. Recognizing that
the production of a comprehensive technical code requires a great deal of
research, labor, time, and expertise, Congress in the National Technology
and Transfer Act of 1995 (the "NTTA") expressly directs that "Federal agencies
and departments shall use technical standards that are developed or adopted
by voluntary consensus standards bodies...."[n42]
The OMB, in its Circular A-119, which was designed to provide guidance to
federal agencies in the wake of the NTTA, requires that "[i]f a voluntary
standard is used and published in an agency document, your agency must
observe and protect the rights of the copyright holder and any other similar
obligations."[n43] These pronouncements
by Congress and the OMB strongly evince a recognition that the privately created
regulatory codes and standards differ greatly from either judicial opinions
or a statutes. Technical codes are indispensable resources in today's increasingly
complex, high-tech society, and they deserve authorship protections not afforded
to other types of "THE law."
[72] The First Circuit's overbroad
dicta in BOCA was announced in 1980, well before the advent
of the internet and well before the announcement of the federal government's
legislated policy directing the adoption of privately created codes to serve
the principles of efficiency and economic competition.[n44]
Moreover, recent appellate case law supports the recognition of the
clear differences between, on the one hand, privately developed standards
that are adopted into law by reference and, on the other hand, law created
by legislators and judges.[n45] Thus,
the majority's superficially appealing contention that from a policy perspective,
"THE people" may do as they please with "THE law" rests on the flawed foundation
that "THE law," irrespective of whether it be in the form of opinions, statutes,
or regulatory standards or codes ---- and irrespective of by whom it is "made"
---- should be treated identically. Modern realities and case law directly
contradict this simplistic abstraction: The policy considerations that dictate
unlimited and unrestricted publishing of judicial opinions and statutes simply
do not appertain here.
[73] The policy concerns supporting
the retention of at least some copyright protection for SBCCI are more persuasive
and probative. First and most importantly, unlike judges and legislators who
are paid from public funds to issue opinions and draft laws, SBCCI is a private
sector, not-for-profit organization which relies for its existence and continuing
services, in significant part, on revenues from the sale of its model codes.[n46]
The necessity of maintaining the economic incentive of copyright protection
for these private entities prompted the Ninth Circuit to rule in favor of
the AMA's retention of its copyright in the Physician's Current Procedures
Terminology ("CPT") despite a federal agency's adoption of the CPT:
The copyright system's goal of promoting the
arts and sciences by granting temporary monopolies to copyrightholders was
not at stake in Banks because judges' salaries provided adequate
incentive to write opinions. In contrast, copyrightability of the CPT provides
the economic incentive for the AMA to produce and maintain the CPT. "To
vitiate copyright, in such circumstances, could, without adequate justification,
prove destructive of the copyright interest, in encouraging creativity," a
matter of particular significance in this context because of "the increasing
trend toward state and federal adoptions of model codes."[n47]
[74] This approach is also consistent
with the Second Circuit's two pronged test in County of Suffolk for
determining whether a work may be deemed to be in the public domain: "(1)
whether the entity or individual who created the work needs an economic incentive
to create or has a proprietary interest in creating the work and (2) whether
the public needs notice of this particular work to have notice of the law."[n48]
Here, without the ability to control unrestricted gratuitous dissemination
of its model codes, SBCCI would lose significant revenue, in turn substantially
impinging on the financial incentive and ability to continue creating and
revising its model codes, absent some alternative source of funds.[n49]
[75] The importance of affording
organizations like SBCCI protection from attenuated third parties like Veeck
---- even when motives are pure and unfair financial competition is not the
goal ---- is best underscored by verbalizing the natural consequence of reducing
the revenues, and thus the creative incentives, for organizations like SBCCI.
Without private code-creating entities, our smaller towns ---- and even some
of our larger cities, states, and agencies of the federal government ----
would be forced to author their own regulatory codes. Such a task would inefficiently
expend the time and resources of the legislative and executive bodies of these
governmental entities, not to mention the question of available expertise.
To create codes of appropriate detail, accuracy, and information, governmental
bodies would have to enlist the aid of technical experts, undoubtedly at considerable
cost. Finally, causing municipalities, states, and the federal agencies to
engage in this activity could lead to innumerable variations of any given
code, thereby undermining uniformity and, with it, safety and efficiency.
For small towns like Anna and Savoy, such a result could be even more detrimental,
as their limited resources well might be insufficient to absorb the costs
of creating their own codes. Ultimately, taxpayers would end up paying for
a service that is currently provided efficiently, expertly, and at no expense
to them.
[76] I hasten to add that, for
my analysis to have force, SBCCI need not be put completely out of business.
Continued maintenance of a revenue source from sales of codes to individual
owners, architects, engineers, materials suppliers, builders and contractors
as well as libraries and other more attenuated purchasers, all of whom buy
copies of the codes directly from SBCCI, serves another public interest. I
refer to the continuation of SBCCI's independence from the self interest of
its dues-paying members, who otherwise might be in a position to command more
influence were SBCCI forced to obtain too great a share of its revenue from
such supporters. Clearly, SBCCI's receipts from sales of the codes substantially
reduces the potential for greater dependence on its membership, presumably
allowing SBCCI to operate without becoming entirely beholden for its existence
to self-interested entities.
[77] Finally, denying the Veecks
of the world unrestricted republication and dissemination rights does not
obstruct reasonable and necessary usage of and compliance with the adopted
codes. I remain confident that the copyright doctrines of fair use and implied
license or waiver are more than adequate to preserve the ability of residents
and construction industry participants to copy any portions of the code that
they want or need to view. The fair use doctrine would also protect the use
of the code, or portions of the code, as a teaching tool and would allow experts,
lawyers, and judges freely to cite the code in their briefs or opinions without
infringing SBCCI's copyright. These existing internal safeguards in copyright
law show up the majority's dire predictions for the unrealstic hyperbole that
they are.
[78] It is important to keep in
mind the record reality that neither Anna and Savoy themselves, nor builders,
contractors, design professionals, or residents of Anna or Savoy, have complained
of denied access to the codes or being hampered in their efforts to
use, copy, or comply with the codes in a manner consistent with copyright
law. Thus, the well-established doctrines of implied license and fair use
preserve the public interest by allowing copyright protection to co-exist
peacefully with all convenient and necessary use of the model codes.
[79] In sum, Veeck has no real
support for his infringement, being relegated to his abstract solipsism that
due process immunizes any republication of the SBCCI's model codes once they
are enacted into law by reference. This court's en banc majority holding today
ignores case law from the Supreme Court and other appellate courts, which
have instructed us that our conclusion here cannot be based on absolute or
generic pronouncements regarding the nature of THE law. Instead we should
reach our conclusion only after a careful weighing of the policy considerations
of due process and copyright law in the unique framework of the particular
facts of each case. Moreover, to the extent that recent congressional enactments
and federal agency policies give guidance, they indicate that SBCCI's copyright
protections should be respected despite adoption of its codes into law.
[80] Summarizing all pertinent
factors ---- (1) the lack of controlling precedent from the Supreme Court
or specific guidance from Congress on the issue, (2) federal law and federal
agency policy encouraging the adoption of model codes and increasing the trend
toward federal and state adoption of model codes, (3) the palpable distinction
between the model codes at issue here and judicial opinions or legislative
enactments, (4) case law from our fellow circuits that supports the retention
of copyright protection even after adoption by reference into law, (5) the
complete absence of any denial of access, (6) the truism that neither due
process nor the metaphorical concept of citizen ownership of the law mandates
totally unrestricted publication of adopted model codes, (7) SBCCI's identity
as a private not-for-profit company which, unlike courts and legislatures,
needs self-generated financial resources to continue independently creating
and modifying its codes, (8) the knowledge that governmental obtain, free
of cost, accurate, efficient and uniform regulatory codes which otherwise
would be time-consuming and expensive (if not impossible in many instances)
to develop in SBCCI's absence, and (9) the comfort that all reasonable and
necessary use, copying, and republication by building owners, builders, contractors,
design professionals, teachers, lawyers, as well as citizens and officials
of the towns themselves, is assured protection by the fair use and implied
license doctrines ---- convinces me that the public policy scale is tipped
in favor of enforcing SBCCI's copyright protection against Veeck, who has
never been denied access to the codes of Anna and Savoy and almost certainly
never will be (but, if he ever is, he has alternative remediation available).
[81] Finding that, on balance,
these policy considerations favor SBCCI, I would conclude as a matter of law
that, despite being adopted into law, SBCCI's codes are not in the public
domain, and that Veeck's due process rights cannot be stretched far enough
to permit his completely unrestricted copying and dissemination of SBCCI's
codes. Veeck's other statutory and constitutional defenses similarly fail.
3. The Idea/Expression Dichotomy and
Merger
[82] Veeck insists (and now a
majority of the active judges of this court agree) that the model codes lose
their copyright protection by virtue of the idea/expression (or fact/expression)
dichotomy in copyright law.[n50] Veeck's
basic contention is that when a model code is enacted into law by being adopted
by reference, it automatically metamorphoses from "expression" to emerge as
an "idea" ---- and that as an idea, it cannot be protected.[n51]
Relatedly, he contends that the doctrine of "merger" applies to nullify protection
for expressions of an idea any time that there are only one or a very limited
number of ways to express a given idea.[n52]
The cornerstone of both arguments is the definition of "idea" in the context
of a model code that has been enacted by reference.
a. Defining "Idea"
[83] Veeck's argument fails because
it misapprehends and misapplies the "idea" concept in copyright law. "Idea"
in copyright law is a term of art which does not track its everyday, dictionary
meaning. What constitutes an "idea" in the lexicon of copyright law cannot
be determined by empirically analyzing a given fact situation until the nascent
dividing line between the "idea" and its "expression" finally crystallizes;
indeed, just the reverse is true. Case law reveals that identification of
the "idea" in a work is not the starting point but the result of a
judicial exercise that in turn is highly dependent on the precise factual
situation being tested.[n53] Therefore,
designation of the enacted code as an idea vel non is a legal
conclusion to be reached by a court, not an initial factual finding
to be gleaned intuitively. That determination of idea is not antecedent
to a policy determination regarding the "copyrightability" of the code;
to the contrary, it is the logical end-product reached after
competing concerns are weighed judicially.[n54]
[84] Courts frequently must decide
how and at what level to draw the juridical line between idea and expression
for copyright purposes. Judge Learned Hand, applying the idea/expression dichotomy
to determine if one author's play infringed the work of another playwright,
remarked:
Upon any work, and especially upon a play,
a great number of patterns of increasing generality will fit equally well,
as more and more of the incident is left out. The last may perhaps be no more
than the most general statement of what the play is about, and at times might
consist only of its title; but there is a point in this series of abstractions
where they are no longer protected, since otherwise the playwright could prevent
the use of his 'ideas,' to which, apart from their expression, his property
never extended. Nobody has ever been able to fix that boundary, and nobody
ever can.[n55]
[85] Our task in this case should
have been to decide whether the "idea" embodied in the code is defined, at
one extreme of the continuum, as the entire code itself in its tangible form,
or if instead the "idea" is defined at a more removed and abstract level further
along that continuum.
[86] My foregoing analysis has
already demonstrated that the policy considerations weigh in favor of granting
SBCCI protection against Veeck and other copiers and republishers identically
situated. Having laboriously arrived at this conclusion, and accepting that
a building code can be expressed in myriad ways, I am convinced that the code
in its tangible entirety is not the unprotected "idea" in this situation.[n56]
None question that this is true for codes that have not been enacted globally
into law by reference, and nothing of which I am aware can magically change
the expression that is the copyrighted code into a copyright idea
by the simple act of adoption as a body of law. Today I need not, and therefore
do not, attempt to answer the question of exactly where to draw the line and
define the idea presented here. It suffices that the idea at issue in the
code is substantially more abstract than the physical entirety of the code
itself; so as a matter of law, the code as a unitary whole is not an
"idea" to be denied copyright protection absolutely, but rather is one among
a significant number of possible "expressions."
b. Merger
[87] Libertarian advocates of
freedom from essentially all copyright protection attempt to find a safe harbor
in the merger doctrine as a last resort when they do not prevail on the idea/expression
dichotomy. The merger doctrine, however, is a limited exception in copyright
law, intended to shelter only those rare cases in which the "idea" is susceptible
of more than one expression, but the number of possible expressions
is so finite and small as to have effectively "merged" with the idea.[n57]
Similar to the general misconception of the idea/expression dichotomy, the
widely misunderstood merger doctrine also depends on the level of abstraction
at which the court defines the "idea" that is alleged to have merged with
its expression.[n58]
[88] Again, Veeck can find no
immunity in the merger doctrine because there exists a plethora of ways to
express a building code, thereby making the merger doctrine inapplicable.
Although some among the many highly specific, technical, and detailed provisions
within a building code might be susceptible of being expressed in only one
or a handful of ways ---- and thus conceivably be subject to merger ---- a
total, unitary building code, in globo, may be written, organized,
and presented in any one of innumerable forms. All concede that many code-drafting
organizations like SBCCI exist and that they are constantly creating competing
versions of topical codes; yet each is expressed differently ---- and
each is copyrighted. As there exist considerably more than a tiny, finite
number of ways to express a building code, the merger doctrine is inapplicable
and thus unavailable to insulate Veeck's infringement from copyright protection.
4. Other Affirmative Defenses to Copyright
Infringement
[89] Veeck also contends that
even if the codes are not in the public domain and cannot be classified as
"ideas," his code copying and dissemination activities are protected by the
doctrines of free speech, misuse, waiver, and fair use under copyright law.[n59]
I address each of these contentions in turn.
a. Free Speech
[90] None contends that SBCCI
made any attempt to use its copyright to block or interfere with the public's
access to the municipal codes of Anna and Savoy, Texas. In Schnapper v.
Foley, the District of Columbia Circuit held that the First Amendment
does not require the voiding of a copyright, even in a government-commissioned
work, absent evidence that access to the work had been denied.[n60]
[91] Dealing only with the record
facts, I find that Veeck's Free Speech defense is further weakened by what
he did not do: He did not first obtain copies of the codes of
these two cities and then publish them on the Internet. Instead, he purchased
directly from SBCCI a copy of all its 1994 Standard Codes, which arrived bearing
a copyright notice and a license agreement. Ignoring these, Veeck copied that
set onto his computer and posted it on his own website, identifying it as
containing the municipal codes of the two towns but without advising the identity
of the author or the fact of copyright. That which Veeck did and that which
he did not do are inherently different: What he did not do comes closer to
an interested party's fair use of his local building code;[n61]
what he did exemplifies a purchaser who assumes the risk of actively disregarding
the intellectual property rights held and announced by the author/supplier
of a commercial product.
[92] Factually, in enforcing its
copyright in its model codes, SBCCI simply is not stifling access to,
or speech about, THE law. SBCCI has not violated the First Amendment vis-á-vis
Veeck.
b. Misuse
[93] The equity-based defense
of copyright misuse, which prevents a culpable author from prevailing in an
action for the infringement of a misused copyright, "'forbids the [copyright
holder's] use of the copyright to secure an exclusive right or limited monopoly
not granted by the Copyright Office and which is contrary to public policy
to grant.'"[n62] In Practice Management,
the Ninth Circuit concluded that the American Medical Association misused
its copyright when it licensed its coding system to the Health Care Financing
Administration. The copyright misuse was the AMA's imposition of a condition
on its grant of a license that the licensee-agency agree not to use any competing
system.[n63] Veeck, in contrast, has raised
no genuine issue of material fact regarding any purported misuse by SBCCI
of its copyright. The summary judgment record is devoid of evidence that the
organization mandates the exclusive use of its codes or any other of its services
as a condition of a governmental subdivision's adopting one of the codes.
There is thus no record evidence of facts constituting misuse that in turn
would prevent enforcement of SBCCI's copyright.
c. Waiver
[94] Neither can Veeck prevail
on his assertion that SBCCI expressly or impliedly waives its entitlement
to copyright protection vis-á-vis the whole world when it successfully
encourages municipalities to adopt its codes by reference. I readily concede
that a copyright can be waived by the author's inaction.[n64]
Here, however, SBCCI expressly reserved its copyright in the codes. The district
court found undisputed the fact that the materials Veeck received from SBCCI
"contained the copyright expressions of the Defendant." Having concluded that
SBCCI's codes are not in the public domain and that due process does not require
suppression of SBCCI's copyright, I am convinced that the organization has
done nothing to waive copyright protection expressly.
[95] Copyright also may be waived
implicitly by virtue of a particular act, even if waiver was neither explicit
nor the intended result.[n65]
[96] Veeck's argument in this
regard is that by encouraging the towns to adopt the codes, SBCCI impliedly
waived its copyright protection. This presupposes that waiver must be an "all
or nothing" proposition, and thus cannot be implicit as to some parties, such
as the adopting municipalities, without loosing its effectiveness altogether,
even unto strangers like Veeck. Except for his bald assertion, however, Veeck
presents no viable support for his waiver proposition. Moreover, when properly
analyzed, his argument is nothing more than a thinly disguised reformulation
of his due process/public domain argument ---- namely, that the mere fact
of adoption automatically and totally vitiated SBCCI's copyright and superceded
SBCCI's contractual protection as against all comers.
[97] As fully explicated above,
my analysis reaches the conclusion that, as a matter of law, SBCCI's codes
are not in the public domain and that they retain their copyright protection
against Veeck and others thus situated. I observe that the district court
also concluded that the fact that SBCCI had given the North Carolina Building
Inspectors Association permission to publish on the Internet that state's
building codes, which are modeled on the SBCCI codes, does not constitute
universal waiver. As the district court noted, "[c]ountless entities provide
free access to materials on the Internet and still retain enforcement of their
copyrights."
d. Fair Use
[98] Finally, Veeck argues that
his posting of SBCCI's copyrighted material on the Internet constituted a
"fair use." Congress has excepted from infringement of copyrighted materials
such specified uses as news reporting, teaching, and research.[n66]
Courts are instructed to consider four factors when deciding whether a particular
use of copyrighted material is a "fair use":
(1) the purpose and character of the use, including
whether such use is of a commercial nature or is for nonprofit educational
purposes;
(2) the nature of the copyrighted work;
(3) the amount and substantiality of the portion used
in relation to the copyrighted work as a whole; and
(4) the effect of the use upon the potential market
for or value of the copyrighted work.[n67]
[99] When, as with Veeck's infringing
activity here, the use of a copyrighted work is noncommercial, the ability
to defeat an infringer's affirmative defense of fair use requires "proof either
that the particular use is harmful, or that if it should become widespread,
it would adversely affect the potential market for the copyrighted work."[n68]
[100] The key question under
the "purpose and character" prong is whether the alleged infringer's product
"merely supersedes the objects of the original creation or instead adds something
new with a further purpose or different character, altering the first with
new expression, meaning, or message. In other words, it asks whether and to
what extent the new work is 'transformative.'"[n69]
Veeck's posting of the codes on his website was not of a commercial nature
or for nonprofit educational purposes. Neither did his actions in this case
have any transformative effect on the original work.[n70]
In fact, there is neither an apparent nor announced purpose behind Veeck's
wholesale copying except that he chose to do so and believes, empirically,
that he has the unfettered right to do so. He presents no affidavits or other
summary judgment evidence to suggest that the townsfolk of Anna and Savoy
or contractors, builders, or other interested parties, would not have access
to the codes without Veeck's intervention.
[101] The nature of the copyrighted
work constitutes the second prong of the fair use analysis. The work at issue
is an original technical code produced by a non-profit organization to encourage
uniformity, safety, and economy in a technical area for the benefit of an
increasingly complex society. Within the four-pronged jurisprudential test
for fair use, Veeck's position finds its only viable support in this one factor.
Although the code is an original work requiring creativity on the part of
SBCCI, it is also an informational and functional work. This fact broadens
the scope of the fair use defense.[n71]
In addition, the copyrighted work in this case is part of the regulatory codes
of Anna and Savoy. Although this factor lends a modicum of support to Veeck's
position, it (1) must be considered in light of all the other factors, and
(2) is not as significant as the others in the fair use determination.[n72]
[102] The third fair use factor
---- amount and substantiality of portion used vis-à-vis copyrighted
work as a whole ---- weighs heavily against Veeck. He published verbatim the
entire set of codes obtained from SBCCI. Even though total copying does not
automatically defeat a fair use defense, and partial copying does not automatically
validate it, the general rule is that reproduction of an entire work constitutes
an unfair use.[n73] Moreover, the
codes copied here were not, literally speaking, "the" codes of Anna and Savoy:
Even though the towns' ordinances adopted the model codes that Veeck copied,
the enacting ordinances also contained modifications and clarifications not
found in the verbatim versions of the SBCCI codes posted by Veeck.
[103] Fourth, Veeck's use could
have a substantially detrimental effect on the market for the copyrighted
work. In considering this factor, we must assess the consequences of wide-spread
conduct similar to Veeck's, not just his alone.[n74]
There is no genuine dispute, based on the summary judgment record, "that some
meaningful likelihood of future harm exists."[n75]
Veeck's posting of the codes on the Internet could prove harmful by depressing
the price and reducing SBCCI's market, thus depriving it of income used in
its socially valuable efforts of confecting, promulgating, and revising model
codes. Veeck's non-commercial, free publication of the codes exacerbates the
detrimental effect on the potential market: By furnishing the codes entirely
free of charge, he could effectively destroy the market rather than simply
creating competition and price suppression. When viewed in this light, the
free promulgation of a work is seen to be potentially more financially deleterious
than is commercial piracy or cut-rate competitive availability. Currently,
the sale of the copyrighted codes to builders, contractors, design professionals,
and other interested parties (1) accounts for one-third of SBCCI's income,
(2) provides incentive for SBCCI to stay in business so that small governmental
subdivisions, like the ones at issue in this case, can obtain the benefits
of a pre-crafted technical code, (3) fosters uniformity, and (4) provides
some measure of independence to SBCCI from its members by holding down the
extent of SBCCI's reliance on membership dues and assessments.
[104] The situation presented
in this case is not one of mere copying of the codes for personal use, or
of Veeck's asking SBCCI for permission to post the codes on the web and having
permission denied. As Veeck copied SBCCI's model code verbatim, the fair-use
calculus weighs heavily against him. Veeck's total copying and promulgation
of SBCCI's model code, and the potentially harmful effect of such copying
on the market, render his use unfair.
C. SBCCI's Infringement Counterclaim
[105] SBCCI holds valid copyrights
in its codes, and Veeck has expressly admitted copying them. In the absence
of a viable defense, the district court was correct in holding that SBCCI
established copyright infringement. Under these circumstances, I am satisfied
that the district court's conclusions and its award of an injunction and the
minimum statutory damages on each of the five counts of copyright infringement
are free of error.[n76] Likewise, I find
no abuse of discretion in the district court's award of attorneys' fees.[n77]
III. CONCLUSION
[106] Two decades ago, in BOCA,[n78]
the First Circuit wrestled with the serious issues raised by what was then
only a "possible trend" toward local, state, and federal adoption of model
codes.[n79] That court wisely left open
for future evaluation the modern realities surrounding technical regulatory
codes and standards. As the BOCA court wrote, groups that develop such
works "serve an important public function; arguably they do a better job than
could the state alone in seeing that complex yet essential regulations are
drafted, kept up to date and made available."[n80]
In like manner, the two federal circuits that subsequently addressed challenges
similar to that considered by the First Circuit in BOCA have declined
to invalidate copyrights in works incorporated by reference into the law.[n81]
In the legislative arena, Congress has decreed the policy that federal agencies
adopt privately authored technical standards without voiding the protection
afforded to the authors by copyright; and the OMB has directed all federal
agencies adopting such standards to respect the copyright protections of the
copyright holders ---- the diametric opposite of causing copyright protection
to vanish when the work is adopted as law.
[107] I emphasize that my analysis is restricted to
the narrow set of facts and circumstances before us. At bottom, I think it
improvident for this court to legislate judicially an absolute, per
se rule that referential enactment of a copyrighted work like a technical
code into law mystically metamorphoses it into an "idea," puts it into the
public domain, waives its copyright protection universally, and otherwise
strips it of copyright protection vel non. Under the instant
circumstances, no one is being denied reasonable access to the SBCCI codes
that have been adopted in globo by local governments; neither
does Veeck's specific actions, however altruistic they might have been, make
a viable case for fair use. Nevertheless, I readily concede, that even slightly
different facts under but slightly different circumstances could convince
me to support a different result, albeit not a per se rule.
[108] Today, the trend toward adoption of privately
promulgated codes is widespread and growing, and the social benefit from this
trend cannot be seriously questioned. The necessary balancing of the countervailing
policy concerns presented by this case should have led us to hold that, on
these facts, the copyright protection of SBCCI's privately authored model
codes did not simply evanesce ipso facto, when the codes were
adopted by local governments; rather, they remain enforceable, even as to
non-commercial copying, as long as the citizenry has reasonable access to
such publications cum law ---- and subject, of course, to exceptions for implied
or express waiver or consent, fair use, or other recognized exceptions, when
applicable. For these reasons, I cannot join in the majority's inflexible
reasoning and unnecessarily overbroad holding. I therefore respectfully dissent.