By: Nathan Geronimo
In a recent case, the Ninth Circuit affirmed the district court’s grant of summary judgment based on the doctrine of laches. But Justice Fletcher, in a concurring opinion, stressed the fact that the Court’s application of the doctrine to copyright infringement cases was out of step with decisions in other federal circuits, and is likely contrary to congressional intent.
In Petrella v. Metro Goldwyn Mayer, Inc. et al., the plaintiff, Paula Petrella (“P. Petrella”) sued Metro Goldwyn Mayer (“MGM”) and others for alleged copyright infringement based on the defendants’ use of the movie Raging Bull, which is allegedly based on a book and two screenplays in which P. Petrella has a purported legal interest. Retired boxer Jake LaMotta and his friend Frank Petrella worked together to write a book and two screenplays on LaMotta’s life. The works were registered with the U.S. Copyright Office; one screenplay in 1963, the book in 1970, and the other screenplay in 1973. In 1976, Frank Petrella and LaMotta assigned their rights in the three works to Chartoff-Winkler Productions, who subsequently assigned the motion picture rights to MGM in 1978. Frank Petrella passed away in 1981, and his copyright renewal rights in the works passed to his daughter, P. Petrella. (When an author dies prior to the beginning of a renewal period, his successors get his renewal rights even if the author previously assigned the rights.)Continue Reading Aging Bull? Laches Still a Valid Defense to Copyright Infringement Claims (For Now)

f its sister circuits, uses the “likelihood of confusion” analysis to determine whether one mark infringes upon another mark. 