The Delaware Gazette

High court weighs closely watched copyright case

MARK SHERMAN

Asso­ci­ated Press

WASHINGTON — Supreme Court jus­tices on Mon­day weighed copy­right pro­tec­tions for pub­lish­ers, cre­ative artists and man­u­fac­tur­ers in a global mar­ket­place in a case that has attracted the inter­est of Costco, eBay and Google. The out­come has impor­tant impli­ca­tions for con­sumers and multi­bil­lion dol­lar annual sales online and in dis­count stores.

The court was about the only Wash­ing­ton insti­tu­tion open on Mon­day. The jus­tices and spec­ta­tors who braved the rain and wind saw a book pub­lisher face off against a Thai grad­u­ate stu­dent in the U.S. who resold the publisher’s copy­righted books on eBay after rel­a­tives first bought nearly iden­ti­cal, cheaper ver­sions abroad.

The court seemed to strug­gle with whether it mat­ters where the books were pro­duced and first sold.

The jus­tices’ answer to those ques­tions is of enor­mous inter­est to dis­count sell­ers like Costco and online busi­ness like eBay and Google that offer good prices on many prod­ucts that were made abroad.

Pub­lisher John Wiley & Sons won a copy­right infringe­ment law­suit against the stu­dent, Supap Kirt­saeng. The high court is con­sid­er­ing Kirtsaeng’s appeal, which argues that Wiley lost its right to con­trol resale of the books once his rel­a­tives bought them legally.

Kirt­saeng used eBay to sell $900,000 worth of books pub­lished abroad by Wiley and oth­ers and made about $100,000 in profit. The inter­na­tional edi­tions of the text­books were essen­tially the same as the more costly Amer­i­can edi­tions. A jury in New York awarded Wiley $600,000 after decid­ing Kirt­saeng sold copies of eight Wiley text­books with­out permission.

The issue at the Supreme Court con­cerns what pro­tec­tion the holder of a copy­right has after a prod­uct made out­side the United States is sold for the first time. In this case, the issue is whether U.S. copy­right pro­tec­tion applies to items that are made abroad, pur­chased abroad and then resold in the U.S. with­out the per­mis­sion of the man­u­fac­turer. The high court split 4–4 when it tried to answer that ques­tion in a case in 2010 involv­ing Costco and Swiss watch maker Omega.

Jus­tice Elena Kagan sat out the Costco case, but is tak­ing part in the new dis­pute. She signed the government’s legal brief in the Costco case that took Omega’s side. The gov­ern­ment is back­ing the pub­lisher against Kirt­saeng, but it advo­cates some­thing of a com­pro­mise in lay­ing down a rule for other disputes.

The court already has rejected copy­right claims over U.S.-made items that were sold abroad and then brought back to the United States for resale.

The jus­tices did not appear entirely com­fort­able with either side’s argu­ments, or the government’s mid­dle ground.

E. Joshua Rosenkranz, Kirtsaeng’s lawyer, ran into skep­ti­cism from Jus­tice Ruth Bader Gins­burg when he sug­gested that a rul­ing for Wiley would allow pub­lish­ers and other copy­right hold­ers con­trol over repeated resale of their prod­ucts if only they made them abroad.

“So a U.S. man­u­fac­turer who wants to sell into the U.S. mar­ket has this incen­tive to go and send jobs over­seas. It’s an irre­sistible incen­tive if this court says the law is what Wiley says,” Rosenkranz said.

Gins­burg replied, “Has that ever happened?”

Rosenkranz said he is sure it has, but could not come up with any specifics.

On other hand, Theodore Olson, rep­re­sent­ing Wiley, strug­gled to sat­isfy jus­tices who won­dered whether Rosenkranz might be right.

Jus­tice Stephen Breyer asked Olson whether, with­out seek­ing per­mis­sion, peo­ple could resell their for­eign cars, libraries could sell or lend books bought from for­eign pub­lish­ers or muse­ums could dis­play paint­ings by Pablo Picasso. “Those are some of the hor­ri­bles that they sketch. And if I am look­ing for the bear in the mouse hole, I look at those hor­ri­bles, and there I see that bear. So I’m ask­ing you to spend some time telling me why I’m wrong.”

Olson did not allay Breyer’s con­cerns with his answer. “I would say that when we talk about all the hor­ri­bles that might apply in cases other than this, muse­ums, used Toy­otas, books and lug­gage, and that sort of thing, we’re not talk­ing about this case.”

When Rosenkranz returned to the podium to con­clude the argu­ment, he said, “To Jus­tice Breyer’s ques­tion, the bear is there. It is very much there.”

The cur­rent case has attracted so much atten­tion because it could affect many goods sold online and in dis­count stores. The resale of mer­chan­dise that orig­i­nates over­seas often is called the gray mar­ket, and it has an annual value in the tens of bil­lions of dollars.

Con­sumers ben­e­fit from this mar­ket because man­u­fac­tur­ers com­monly price items more cheaply abroad than in the United States.

The fed­eral appeals court in New York sided with Wiley in this case.

EBay and Google say in court papers that the appel­late rul­ing “threat­ens the increas­ingly impor­tant e-commerce sec­tor of the econ­omy.” Art muse­ums fear that the rul­ing, if allowed to stand, would jeop­ar­dize their abil­ity to exhibit art cre­ated out­side the United States.

Con­versely, the pro­duc­ers of copy­righted movies, music and other goods say that their busi­nesses will be under­cut by unau­tho­rized sales if the court blesses Kirtsaeng’s actions.

A deci­sion is expected by June.

The case is Kirt­saeng v. John Wiley & Sons, 11–697.

AP News Posted by on Oct 29 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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