Monthly Archive for January, 2007

Charlie’s Angels and the Contract Dispute

From May It Please The Court:

Out here in La-La land, we occasionally get not your average contract cases.  Take, for example, a recent one involving Robert Wagner, Natalie Wood, Spelling-Goldberg Productions and Columbia Pictures, Inc., along with the Writer’s Guild of America and two writers, Ivan Goff and Ben Roberts, as well as everyone’s lawyers.  It certainly makes for interesting reading compared with some of the more mundane contract cases.  It’s just hard to apply them in real life since most of us aren’t involved with the entertainment industry.

But for those that are, this case is a wonderful primer.  The ruling sets the record straight whether writers, actors, producers or studios own movie rights unless the parties otherwise deal with those rights by contract.  Here’s the short version:  The writers do, thanks to the “Separated Rights” under the the 1970 Writers Guild of America Minimum Basic Agreement

How the court gets there involves a lot of twists and turns.  It starts out with an agreement between Wagner and Spelling-Goldberg Productions, which provided that Wagner was to receive 50% of the profits “for the right to exhibit photoplays of the [Charlie's Angels] series and from the exploitation of all ancillary, music and subsidiary rights in connection therewith.”  The other 50% belonged to the producers, Spelling-Goldberg Productions.

Fine, you say, then it looks like Wagner should share in the profits from the movies.  Not so fast.  You overlooked what was being divided up 50/50. 

That’s where the Writers Guild Minimum Basic Agreement comes in.  Under that agreement, when a producer asks a writer to draft a script for a pilot television show, the writer retains the motion picture rights to the series.  There’s one caveat.  The agreement between the writer and the producer can change the terms of the MBA, but in this case, the agreement between Goff/Roberts and Spelling-Goldberg didn’t.  Otherwise, under the MBA, the producer has the right of first refusal if the writer tries to sell those rights for five years, but after that, the motion picture rights can be sold on the open market to any studio or producer who’s willing to pay the writers for them.

In other words, the contract between the actors (Wagner and Woods) and the producers (Spelling-Goldberg) couldn’t divide up the motion picture rights because they still belonged to the writers (Goff/Roberts). 

Just to fill in one of the blanks necessary to understand what comes next, you may remember that back in 1982, Spelling-Goldberg sold its production company and everything it owned to Columbia Pictures.  There’s several more blanks in the court’s opinion worth your time, but for this short post, that fact will get you by. 

Later then, when Columbia Pictures decided to make the Charlie’s Angels television series into movies, they went and bought the movie rights from the writers.  When Wagner and Woods sued Columbia for a split of the profits from the movies based on their agreement with Spelling-Goldberg Productions, the court reasoned that the movies rights weren’t part of the 50/50 split and denied Wagner and Woods any recovery from Columbia. 

It all sounds easy now, but the court noted that it took subsequent briefing and two oral arguments by the attorneys to get it right.  Even then, Footnote number 1 cryptically states, “If we have erred in our resolution of the issues it was not for counsels’ lack of effort to set us straight.”   That caveat points to what most certainly will be an appeal of this case.  We may not have heard the last of who owns the rights to the Charlie’s Angels movies.

Kahle v. Gonzales - Ruling Against the Internet Archive

From LibraryLaw Blog:
The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled against the Internet Archive and Prelinger Associates in Kahle v. Gonzales.

The central issue was the elimination of the renewal requirement for some older works. Renewal served as a filter that passed certain works — mostly those without commercial value — into the public domain. Along the requirements of registration and notice (also gone now), renewal requirements created an “opt-in” system of copyright.

This meant that only a small percentage of works were protected for the maximum term. The Copyright Renewal Act of 1992 and the Sonny Bono Copyright Term
Extension Act changed the system to “opt-out.”  That is, everything with any shred of originality, once put into a fixed form, is automatically copyrighted, with no need for registrations, renewals, or even the copyright notice.  If you write something, even a dumb email, it’s copyrighted.  You have to affirmatively take a step to dedicate your dumb email to the public domain.

“What is at stake is libraries being able to have out-of-print books on their digital bookshelves as they have out-of-print books on the physical shelves we grew up with,” Kahle wrote in November when arguments were heard in the case, according to Reuters.

See also Kahle’s lament post decision.

How to Stand and Move During Cross-Examination

From Illinois Trial Practice:

Assuming the trial judge gives you the freedom to move around the courtroom, does it matter where and how you stand during direct and cross-examination?

During direct examination, many lawyers recommend standing near the far end of the jury box, which forces the witness to look at the jury when answering.

Is cross-examination any different? According to Steven Puiszis, President of the Illinois Association of Defense Trial Counsel, it’s best to move around during cross-examination. That’s according to Helen Gunnarsson’s “Cross-Examination: Beyond the Perry Mason Moment,” in this month’s Illinois Bar Journal–

Puiszis says that he paces around the courtroom during his cross-examination so that the witness will look at him and not at the jury. Doing so not only emphasized Puiszis’s role as star but also further diminishes the witness’s opportunity to gain credibility with the jury through eye contact.

What’s the “role as star” business? During cross-examination, the cross-examining lawyer should be the main focus of the jury’s attention. It’s the complete opposite of direct, when the witness plays only a supporting role. During cross-examination, the jury’s attention should be squarely on the questioning lawyer, who asks leading questions to which the witness can only answer yes or no.