Feist Publications, Inc. v. Rural Telephone Service Company, Inc

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Feist Publications, Inc. v. Rural Telephone Service Company, Inc.

No. 89-1909

Argued Jan. 9, 1991

Decided March 27, 1991

499 U.S. 340

Syllabus

Respondent Rural Telephone Service Company is a certified public utility


providing telephone service to several communities in Kansas. Pursuant to
state regulation, Rural publishes a typical telephone directory, consisting of
white pages and yellow pages. It obtains data for the directory from
subscribers, who must provide their names and addresses to obtain
telephone service. Petitioner Feist Publications, Inc., is a publishing company
that specializes in area-wide telephone directories covering a much larger
geographic range than directories such as Rural's. When Rural refused to
license its white pages listings to Feist for a directory covering 11 different
telephone service areas, Feist extracted the listings it needed from Rural's
directory without Rural's consent. Although Feist altered many of Rural's
listings, several were identical to listings in Rural's white pages. The District
Court granted summary judgment to Rural in its copyright infringement suit,
holding that telephone directories are copyrightable. The Court of Appeals
affirmed.

Held: Rural's white pages are not entitled to copyright, and therefore Feist's
use of them does not constitute infringement.

(a) Article I, § 8, cl. 8, of the Constitution mandates originality as a


prerequisite for copyright protection. The constitutional requirement
necessitates independent creation plus a modicum of creativity. Since facts
do not owe their origin to an act of authorship, they are not original, and
thus are not copyrightable. Although a compilation of facts may possess the
requisite originality because the author typically chooses which facts to
include, in what order to place them, and how to arrange the data so that
readers may use them effectively, copyright protection extends only to those
components of the work that are original to the author, not to the facts
themselves. This fact/expression dichotomy severely limits the scope of
protection in fact-based works. (b) The Copyright Act of 1976 and its
predecessor, the Copyright Act of 1909, leave no doubt that originality is the
touchstone of copyright protection in directories and other fact-based works.
The 1976 Act explains that copyright extends to "original works of
authorship," 17 U.S.C. § 102(a), and that there can be no copyright in facts,
§ 102(b).

A compilation is not copyrightable per se, but is copyrightable only if its facts
have been "selected, coordinated, or arranged in such a way that the
resulting work as a whole constitutes an original work of authorship." § 101
(emphasis added). Thus, the statute envisions that some ways of selecting,
coordinating, and arranging data are not sufficiently original to trigger
copyright protection. Even a compilation that is copyrightable receives only
limited protection, for the copyright does not extend to facts contained in the
compilation. § 103(b). Lower courts that adopted a "sweat of the brow" or
"industrious collection" test -- which extended a compilation's copyright
protection beyond selection and arrangement to the facts themselves --
misconstrued the 1909 Act and eschewed the fundamental axiom of
copyright law that no one may copyright facts or ideas.

(c) Rural's white pages do not meet the constitutional or statutory


requirements for copyright protection. While Rural has a valid copyright in
the directory as a whole because it contains some forward text and some
original material in the yellow pages, there is nothing original in Rural's
white pages. The raw data are uncopyrightable facts, and the way in which
Rural selected, coordinated, and arranged those facts is not original in any
way. Rural's selection of listings -- subscribers' names, towns, and telephone
numbers -- could not be more obvious, and lacks the modicum of creativity
necessary to transform mere selection into copyrightable expression. In fact,
it is plausible to conclude that Rural did not truly "select" to publish its
subscribers' names and telephone numbers, since it was required to do so by
state law. Moreover, there is nothing remotely creative about arranging
names alphabetically in a white pages directory. It is an age-old practice,
firmly rooted in tradition and so commonplace that it has come to be
expected as a matter of course. 916 F.2d 718 (CA 10 1990), reversed.

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