Armes v. Post
Armes v. Post
Armes v. Post
1 TABLE OF CONTENTS
2 Page
3
I. PRELIMINARY STATEMENT ..................................................................... 1
4
5 II. SUMMARY OF UNDISPUTED FACTS ...................................................... 4
1 TABLE OF CONTENTS
(continued)
2
Page
3
1. Armes’s Purported Contributions Do Not Satisfy The
4 “Fixation” Requirement Under The Copyright Act. ................ 12
5
2. Armes’s Purported Contributions Are Not “Sufficiently
6 Original” To Warrant Copyright Protection. ............................ 15
7
a. Armes Cannot Prevail Without Establishing That He
8 Made An Original Contribution To The Circles
Composition ................................................................... 15
9
10 b. Armes’s Admissions Preclude Him From Making
The Requisite Showing Of Originality .......................... 16
11
3. Armes Has No Expert Testimony That Disputes Any Of
12
The Foregoing. .......................................................................... 17
13
B. Armes Cannot Demonstrate That He Is A Joint Author. .................... 18
14
1. Armes Admits He Had No Control Over The Whole Work. ... 18
15
16 2. Armes Cannot Demonstrate That There Was A “Shared
Intent” To Be Co-Authors. ....................................................... 20
17
3. While The Court Need Not Reach The Issue, Armes Cannot
18
Set Forth Any Facts Showing That The “Audience Appeal”
19 Of The Circles Composition Turned On His Alleged
Contribution. ............................................................................. 21
20
21 VI. THE ACCOUNTING AND CONSTRUCTIVE TRUST CLAIMS FAIL... 22
22 VII. CONCLUSION ............................................................................................. 23
23
24
25
26
27
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1 TABLE OF AUTHORITIES
2 Page(s)
3 CASES
4 Aalmuhammed v. Lee,
202 F.3d 1227 (9th Cir. 2000) ..................................................................... passim
5
6 Andrien v. Southern Ocean Cnty. Chamber of Commerce,
927 F.2d 132 (3d Cir. 1991) ............................................................................... 14
7
8 Armes v. Post,
2020 WL 6135068 (C.D. Cal. Oct. 19, 2020) ............................................. passim
9
Ashton-Tate Corp. v. Ross,
10 916 F.2d 516 (9th Cir. 1990) .............................................................................. 16
11
Brown v. Flowers,
12 297 F. Supp. 2d 846 (M.D.N.C. 2003) ............................................................... 15
13 BTE v. Bonnecaze,
14 43 F. Supp. 2d 619 (E.D. La. 1999) ....................................................... 13, 14, 15
15 Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
16 477 U.S. 317 (1986) ........................................................................................... 10
1 TABLE OF AUTHORITIES
(continued)
2
Page(s)
3
Johannsongs-Publ’g Ltd. v. Lovland,
4 2020 WL 2315805 (C.D. Cal. Apr. 3, 2020) ................................................ 16, 17
5
Jordan v. Star Trak Entm’t, Inc.,
6 2010 WL 454374 (C.D. Cal. Feb. 8, 2010) ........................................................ 22
7
Malcomson v. The Topps Co.,
8 2010 WL 383359 (D. Ariz. Jan. 29, 2010) ......................................................... 19
9 McCoy v. Scantlin,
10 2004 WL 5502111 (C.D. Cal. June 1, 2004)...................................................... 22
11 Newton v. Diamond,
204 F. Supp. 2d 1244 (C.D. Cal. 2002) ................................................................ 1
12
13 Richlin v. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures, Inc.,
531 F.3d 962 (9th Cir. 2008) .................................................................. 18, 20, 22
14
Rosa v. Taser Int’l, Inc.,
15
684 F.3d 941 (9th Cir. 2012) .............................................................................. 10
16
S.O.S., Inc. v. Payday, Inc.,
17 886 F.2d 1081 (9th Cir. 1989) ...................................................................... 13, 15
18
Satava v. Lowry,
19 323 F.3d 805 (9th Cir. 2003) .............................................................................. 15
20 Skidmore v. Zeppelin,
21 952 F. 3d 1051 (9th Cir. 2020) ........................................................................... 16
22 StreamCast Networks, Inc. v. Skype Techs., S.A.,
2006 WL 5441237 (C.D. Cal. Sept. 14, 2006) ................................................... 22
23
24 Thomson v. Larson,
147 F.3d 195 (2d Cir. 1998) ................................................................... 12, 19, 21
25
26 Tradewinds Escrow, Inc. v. Truck Ins. Exch.,
97 Cal. App. 4th 704 (2002) ............................................................................... 22
27
Mitchell Weissmann v. Freeman,
Silberberg & 28 868 F.2d 1313 (2d Cir. 1989) ............................................................................. 20
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1 TABLE OF AUTHORITIES
(continued)
2
Page(s)
3
Wise v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A.,
4 850 F. Supp. 2d 1047 (C.D. Cal. 2012) .............................................................. 22
5
STATUTES AND OTHER AUTHORITIES
6
17 U.S.C.
7 § 101 ............................................................................................................. 12, 14
8 § 102 ................................................................................................................... 12
1 Recording, and because he played some instruments there and offered some verbal
2 musical suggestions, he is entitled to joint authorship, is simply incorrect under
3 governing law. Under the correct legal standards already applied by the Court, and
4 given Armes’s dispositive admissions at his deposition, there is zero evidence upon
5 which a fact-finder could decide in Armes’s favor at trial, which would be held as
6 a bench trial before this Court in all events on the declaratory judgment claims at
7 issue.
8 II. SUMMARY OF UNDISPUTED FACTS
9 A. The Parties And Non-Party Songwriters
10 Post is a recording artist, songwriter and musician. SUF ¶ 1. Dukes is a
11 songwriter, record producer and musician. SUF ¶ 2. Armes is a musician. SUF
12 ¶ 3. Along with Post and Dukes, the credited writers of the Circles Composition
13 are Kaan Gunesberk, Louis Bell, and Billy Walsh. SUF ¶ 52.
14 B. Armes Attends A Recording Session Controlled By Dukes At
15 Which Nothing Offered By Armes Is Recorded Or Otherwise
16 Fixed
17 On the evening of August 7, 2018, Post, Dukes and Armes were each
18 present at a concert by a third-party rock band in Toronto, Canada. SUF ¶ 4. After
19 the concert, Armes was invited by Post’s manager to join Post, Dukes, and others,
20 at Dukes’s Toronto music studio (“Dukes’s Studio”). SUF ¶ 5. Although the other
21 guests left Dukes’s Studio earlier in the night, Armes, Post, and Dukes remained in
22 Dukes’s Studio from 2:00 a.m. to 9:00 a.m. on August 8, 2018. SUF ¶ 6. During
23 that time period in Dukes’ Studio, there was some “jamming,” and also the process
24 of Dukes recording Dukes’s and Post’s performances. SUF ¶ 7. (This time period
25 is hereafter called the “August 8 Session.”) Prior to the beginning of the August 8
26 Session, Post stated: “Let’s write a tune!” SUF ¶ 8.4
27 4
As noted above, these allegations are accepted as uncontroverted solely for purposes of this
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1 During the August 8 Session, Armes played a bass guitar and a keyboard;
2 Armes did not play a guitar or any other instrument. SUF ¶ 9. Post played guitar
3 and drums at the August 8 Session, and Dukes played both guitar and bass guitar.
4 SUF ¶ 10.
5 Musical performances were recorded by Dukes during the August 8 Session.
6 SUF ¶ 11. None of Armes’s performances were recorded or fixed in any tangible
7 medium of expression. SUF ¶¶ 16, 17.
8 Dukes solely controlled the laptop that recorded those musical
9 performances. SUF ¶ 12. Duke’s laptop also functioned as the “mixing board”
10 which combined various recorded performances (none of Armes’s) into a single
11 recording. SUF ¶ 13. Armes admitted he never touched Dukes’s laptop; in
12 Armes’s words, “Frank was controlling the laptop. It was his laptop, his
13 session.” SUF ¶ 14 (emphasis added). Although a third-party sound engineer was
14 present at times during portions of the August 8 Session, the engineer was at
15 Dukes’s “beck and call” and only came in and out of the room when Dukes asked
16 him to. SUF ¶ 15.
17 Thus, critically, Armes does not have, and is not aware of, any recording
18 of Armes engaging in any musical performance (whether instrumental or vocal)
19 at the August 8 Session. SUF ¶ 16. Nor is Armes aware of any recording or notes
20 reflecting that Armes provided any creative contributions during the August 8
21 Session. SUF ¶ 17. There is no performance of Armes in the Circles Recording.
22 SUF ¶ 18.
23 C. Armes Secretly Tapes On His iPhone A Playback By Dukes Of A
24 Recorded Performance By Post And Dukes
25 At the end of the August 8 Session, Dukes played back in the studio a
26 recording—one that had already been fixed on his laptop—of certain of the
27 performances of Dukes and Post that Dukes had previously recorded from that
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1 elements in the Rough Mix were later incorporated into the final Circles
2 Composition completed a year later. SUF ¶ 20. On the Rough Mix, Post is singing
3 a vocal melody (largely without lyrics) and playing the guitar melody, and Dukes
4 is playing both the bass guitar, and the chord progression on the rhythm guitar.
5 SUF ¶ 21. Armes, on the other hand, is not playing any instruments, singing or
6 otherwise engaging in any performance whatsoever on the Rough Mix. SUF
7 ¶ 22.
8 Armes taped on his iPhone a portion of Dukes’s playback of the Rough Mix.
9 SUF ¶ 23. Armes did not obtain Dukes’s and Post’s permission to do so.
10 SUF ¶ 24. Indeed, Armes did not even inform Dukes and Post that he was taping.
11 SUF ¶ 25. (Armes’s surreptitious taping is hereafter called the “iPhone
12 Recording”). This iPhone Recording provides no evidence of any contributions by
13 Armes to the Circles Composition. SUF ¶¶ 19, 21, 22.
14 D. Armes’s Admissions Establish His Alleged Contributions To
15 “Circles” Are Not Protectible
16 Armes admits that he did not come up with the title “Circles”; nor did Armes
17 write any of the lyrics for the Circles Composition. SUF ¶¶ 26-27. Indeed, Armes
18 merely asserts that he made three (3) contributions to the Circles Composition.
19 SUF ¶¶ 28-35. Armes’s admissions, and the evidentiary record, establish the
20 commonplace (and therefore unprotectible) nature of these alleged contributions:
21 1. Armes claims to have co-written, with Dukes, the chord progression for the
22 Circles Composition. SUF ¶ 28.
23 o Armes claims to have “sang,” rather than played, his alleged
24 contribution to this chord progression. SUF ¶ 29.
25 o This chord progression is I-IV-V (or C-F-G), which Armes admits is
26 an “extremely” common chord progression, and “one of the most
27 common progressions in the history of music.” SUF ¶ 30 (emphasis
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1 2. Armes claims to have had “significant input” into the writing of the bass
2 guitar line in the Circles Composition. SUF ¶ 31.
3 o Armes’s claimed contribution to the bass guitar line is the exact same
4 admittedly commonplace I-IV-V (or C-F-G) sequence as the chord
5 progression. SUF ¶ 32.
6 3. Armes claims to have contributed to the writing of the guitar melody in the
7 Circles Composition. SUF ¶ 33.
8 o Armes admits that Post wrote the “initial melody” for the guitar.
9 SUF ¶ 34.
10 o Armes claims that he then “sang” additional notes which Post added
11 to the guitar melody. SUF ¶ 35.
12 o Armes has no evidence that the additional notes which he claims to
13 have contributed to the guitar melody are copyrightable material.
14 E. Armes Admittedly Has No Agreement For An Authorship
15 Interest In The Circles Composition
16 During the August 8 Session, Post and Dukes never agreed that Armes
17 would be a co-author of the Circles Composition. SUF ¶ 37. Indeed, the subject of
18 authorship/ownership was not even discussed with Armes prior to the release of
19 the Circles Recording. SUF ¶ 38. And when Armes left the August 8 Session,
20 neither Post nor Dukes asked Armes for his contact information or otherwise
21 indicated that they would be in touch about the song. SUF ¶ 39. By Armes’s own
22 admission, Armes had no involvement whatsoever in the creation of the Circles
23 Composition following the August 8 Session. SUF ¶ 40. Moreover, after the
24 August 8 Session, Armes had no communications with any of the writers about the
25 Circles Composition prior to the commercial release of the Circles Recording over
26 a year later on August 30, 2019. SUF ¶¶ 39-41, 48-49.
27
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1 that he was a joint author and co-owner of the Circles Recording, Defendants
2 explained, inter alia, that, even assuming the allegations in the FAC to be true,
3 Armes could not prevail under the test set forth in Aalmuhammed, 202 F.3d at
4 1231. Id. Defendants further sought the concomitant dismissal of Armes’s claim
5 for an accounting and constructive trust over profits earned by the Circles
6 Recording. Id.
7 The Court thereafter granted dismissal of Armes’s Recording Claim
8 pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6), in the Prior Decision. Armes v. Post, 2020 WL
9 6135068, at *5-8. The Court further held that, because Armes failed to state a
10 viable claim for ownership of the Circles Recording, he was not entitled to an
11 accounting or constructive trust of profits earned by the Circles Recording. Id. at
12 *7, n.4.
13 As explained infra, the Court’s legal analysis in its Prior Decision, when
14 applied to Armes’s dispositive admissions regarding the creation of the Circles
15 Composition, mandates that the Court find that Armes is not a joint author of the
16 Circles Composition, and accordingly, that he is not entitled to an accounting or
17 constructive trust of profits earned by the Circles Composition.
18 IV. SUMMARY JUDGMENT STANDARD
19 Summary judgment is warranted “if the movant shows that there is no
20 genuine dispute as to any material fact and that the movant is entitled to judgment
21 as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). The movant may meet this burden
22 initially by demonstrating the absence of evidence supporting one or more essential
23 elements of the non-movant’s claim. Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 323,
24 325 (1986). The burden then shifts to the nonmoving party to produce affirmative,
25 admissible evidence of facts sufficient to defeat summary judgment. Rosa v. Taser
26 Int’l, Inc., 684 F.3d 941, 948 (9th Cir. 2012).
27 Post and Dukes have far exceeded the initial showing at the summary
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1 have Defendants demonstrated the complete absence of any evidence in the record
2 that supports Armes’s joint authorship claim, but moreover they have provided the
3 Court with the dispositive admissions of Armes which defeat his claim as a matter
4 of law. Given these admissions, Armes cannot possibly meet his own burden to
5 demonstrate the existence of any material fact precluding summary judgment.
6 V. ARMES CANNOT DEMONSTRATE THAT HE IS A JOINT
7 AUTHOR OF THE CIRCLES COMPOSITION
8 As the Court previously explained in the Prior Decision:
9 In the Ninth Circuit, a joint work “‘requires each author
10 to make an independently copyrightable contribution’ to
11 the disputed work.” Aalmuhammed v. Lee, 202 F.3d
12 1227, 1231 (9th Cir. 2000) (quoting Ashton-Tate Corp. v.
13 Ross, 916 F.2d 516, 521 (9th Cir. 1990)). Significantly,
14 joint authorship “requires more than a minimal creative
15 or original contribution to the work,” Aalmuhammed, 202
16 F.3d at 1233, and, furthermore, “[m]erely making a
17 copyrightable contribution is not enough to establish joint
18 authorship.” Morrill v. Smashing Pumpkins, 157 F. Supp.
19 2d 1120, 1123 (C.D. Cal. 2001). The Ninth Circuit has
20 instructed courts to look for three criteria of joint
21 authorship: (1) whether an alleged co-author exercised
22 control over creation of the work, (2) whether all co-
23 authors made “objective manifestations of a shared intent
24 to be coauthors,” and (3) whether “the audience appeal of
25 the work turns on [each co-author’s] contributions and
26 the share of each in its success cannot be appraised.”
27 Aalmuhammed, 202 F.3d at 1234 (internal quotation
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1 According to the Supreme Court, “the author is the party who actually
2 creates the work, that is, the person who translates an idea into a fixed, tangible
3 expression entitled to copyright protection.” Cmty. for Creative Non–Violence v.
4 Reid, 490 U.S. 730, 737 (1989) (emphasis added); see also S.O.S., 886 F.2d at
5 1087 (“To be an author, one must supply more than mere direction or ideas: one
6 must ‘translate an idea into a fixed, tangible expression’”) (emphasis added)
7 (quoting Cmty. for Creative Non-Violence, 490 U.S. at 737).
8 Here, Armes’s admissions establish that Armes never fixed his purported
9 contributions to the Circles Composition in any tangible medium of expression.
10 See, e.g., SUF ¶¶ 16, 18, 19-22. At best, Armes claims to have made contributions
11 in the form of non-recorded directions, ideas, and suggestions to Post and Dukes
12 (for which there is no independent evidence), which Post and Dukes then, in turn,
13 had the discretion to accept or reject. SUF ¶¶ 9-18, 22. This is utterly insufficient
14 to constitute an independently copyrightable contribution.5
15 Again, this Court has already recognized, in its Prior Decision, that
16 Armes’s allegations of having supplied “direction and ideas,” while others
17 actually fixed the work into a tangible medium of expression, does not constitute
18 an “independently copyrightable contribution.” Armes v. Post, 2020 WL
19 6135068, at *7 (emphasis added). The identical analysis once again applies, this
20 time with respect to the Circles Composition. See also BTE v. Bonnecaze, 43 F.
21 Supp. 2d 619, 628 (E.D. La. 1999) (the contribution of “ideas and helpful
22 insights[,]” with no evidence that a purported co-author has himself “fixed those
23
24
25
5
To the extent Armes contends that his contributions were “fixed” by virtue of his
26 surreptitiously-obtained iPhone Recording, he is mistaken. Because the iPhone Recording does
27 not contain any recording of Armes playing or singing any music, and only copies a playback of
a recording of Dukes’s and Post’s performances, it in no way satisfies the fixation test for Armes.
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1 affirmative evidence that the expression was original as opposed to trite and
2 commonplace).
3 3. Armes Has No Expert Testimony That Disputes Any Of The
4 Foregoing.
5 Defendants rely on no expert testimony in connection with this Motion. In
6 opposition to this Motion, Defendants anticipate that Armes may try to muddy the
7 waters, albeit without merit, by raising an argument about expert evidence. The
8 only expert report that he offered in this case, however, was a rebuttal by
9 musicologist Judith Finell (the “Finell Rebuttal Report”) to a report by Dr.
10 Lawrence Ferrara offered by Defendants7 that has now become moot on the issue
11 addressed by the Finell Rebuttal Report. Initially, Dr. Ferrara was provided an
12 assumption that there were two recordings of bass parts performed by Armes from
13 the August 8 Session and asked to assess whether those recordings contain any
14 significant expression that is also contained in the Circles Composition. Both his
15 report on this issue and Ms. Finell’s rebuttal thereon became moot as Armes
16 testified that his bass performances were not embodied in those recordings, making
17 them irrelevant.
18 There is nothing in the Finell Rebuttal Report that addresses any of Armes’s
19 alleged contributions to the Circles Composition—no less whether they are
20 original. Finell in fact conceded that she did not know and could not know the
21 source of individual musical features in the Circles Composition.8 Should Armes
22 try, he should be precluded from offering any untimely affirmative report as Armes
23 chose not to avail himself of the opportunity.9
24 7
Armes did not serve any “affirmative” expert report. The only expert report which Armes
served is the Finell Rebuttal Report, which purports to respond to the affirmative expert report of
25 Defendants’ musicologist, Dr. Lawrence Ferrara.
26 8
While Finell claimed that there were similarities between the Rough Mix described above that
was captured in the iPhone Recording and the final Circles Composition, this opinion is
27 irrelevant as she does not know who created what in the Circles Composition.
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1 F.3d at 970 (no “control” for authorship purposes where plaintiff wrote the
2 screenplay and “may have had control over [it] as originally written, [but] had no
3 control over how [it was] incorporated into [the film]”); Heger v. Kiki Tree
4 Pictures, Inc., 2017 WL 5714517, at *5 (C.D. Cal. July 24, 2017) (no “control”
5 over film where plaintiff alleged “creative control over separate and indispensable
6 elements of the completed [film]” but no “supervisory powers over the [whole
7 film]”); Ford v. Ray, 130 F. Supp. 3d 1358, 1363 (W.D. Wash. 2015) (no “control”
8 over a song where plaintiff had “control over his contribution to [the song],” but
9 the “decision as to how or whether to incorporate [his] creations was left to
10 defendant”).
11 Armes’s admissions establish that Dukes had all decision-making authority
12 during the August 8 Session, and that Dukes controlled the session. See, e.g.,
13 SUF ¶¶ 12-15. This is fatal to his argument that he had any “control” over the
14 Circles Composition, because “[a]n important indicator of authorship is a
15 contributor’s decision-making authority over what changes are made and what is
16 included in a work.” Thomson, 147 F.3d at 202-03; see also Erickson v. Trinity
17 Theater, Inc., 13 F.3d 1061, 1071-72 (7th Cir. 1994) (an actor’s suggestion of text
18 does not support a claim of co-authorship where the sole author determined
19 whether and where such contributions were included in the work); Malcomson v.
20 The Topps Co., 2010 WL 383359, at *5 (D. Ariz. Jan. 29, 2010) (no control where
21 party had “unrestricted right to reject” putative co-author’s work, and “unilateral
22 right to reject” whatever putative co-author submitted); Jefferson, 2021 WL
23 4732592, at *3 (alleged contribution of elements of a musical composition
24 insufficient to establish “control” where the putative author cannot establish the
25 exercise of “control over the creation of [the work] independent from their
26 contributions[.]’”).
27 And, just as critically, Armes admits he had nothing whatsoever to do with
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1 39-53. Armes had no awareness of, was not invited to, and was not present for the
2 multiple subsequent sessions where the Circles Composition was composed. Id.
3 All of the lyrics to the Circles Composition were written after the August 8
4 Session, and Armes admittedly had no control over any of them. SUF ¶¶ 27, 44-
5 47. Thus, Armes indisputably did not have control over the “whole work,” as is
6 necessary to demonstrate control. See Jefferson, 2021 WL 4732592, at *3
7 (dismissing counterclaim for declaratory judgment as to joint authorship of a song
8 when the counterclaim plaintiffs seeking authorship credit “appear not to have
9 even known of the existence of [the final version of the song at issue] until after it
10 was released …”).
11 2. Armes Cannot Demonstrate That There Was A “Shared
12 Intent” To Be Co-Authors.
13 The second factor considers whether the putative co-authors made “objective
14 manifestations of a shared intent to be coauthors” of the work. Aalmuhammed, 202
15 F.3d at 1234. Each and every putative author “must intend to contribute to a joint
16 work at the time his or her alleged contribution is made.” Weissmann v. Freeman,
17 868 F.2d 1313, 1318 (2d Cir. 1989); see also Richlin, 2006 WL 8448673, at *3
18 (“this must be the intent of all the putative co-authors, not just the person claiming
19 co-authorship”) (emphasis added). Armes’s entire claim of “shared intent” hinges
20 on his self-serving—and uncorroborated—allegation that Post casually said “Let’s
21 write a tune” after Post’s manager introduced him to Armes following a concert
22 that the two attended. SUF ¶ 8. Even assuming, solely for the purposes of this
23 motion, that those words were said in any context, it does not remotely carry
24 Armes’s burden to show a “shared intent.”
25 Here, by Armes’s own admission, none of the Defendants or Non-Party
26 Songwriters have made any acknowledgement whatsoever that they intended for
27 Armes to be a co-author. SUF ¶¶ 37-41, 48-49. Indeed, the actual songwriters of
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1 Moreover, during the August 8 Session, Post and Dukes never indicated—let alone
2 agreed—that Armes would be a co-author of the Circles Composition. SUF ¶ 37.
3 Indeed, the subject of authorship/ownership was not even discussed prior to the
4 release of the Circles Recording. SUF ¶ 38. And after the August 8 Session,
5 Armes had no communications with any of the writers about the Circles
6 Composition prior to its commercial release. SUF ¶¶ 39-41, 48-49.
7 Moreover, in the Liner Notes for Post’s “Hollywood’s Bleeding” album on
8 which the Circles Recording is contained, Defendants and the Non-Party
9 Songwriters are the only individuals credited as the songwriters of the Circles
10 Composition. Armes has no credit whatsoever in the Liner Notes. SUF ¶¶ 52-53.
11 It is well-recognized that “the manner in which [Defendants] listed credits on the
12 [work]” is “strongly” indicative of how they regard themselves vis-à-vis
13 authorship. Thomson, 147 F.3d at 203; see also Aalmuhammed, 202 F.3d at 1234
14 (“putative coauthors make objective manifestations of a shared intent to be
15 coauthors, as by denoting the authorship of The Pirates of Penzance as ‘Gilbert and
16 Sullivan.’”); Jefferson, 2021 WL 4732592, at *5 (“[the counterclaim defendant’s]
17 choice to credit some co-authors, but not the [counterclaim plaintiffs], at the time
18 of releasing [the work at issue] is relevant.”). Here the liner notes provide
19 objective evidence that Armes, Post and the Non-Party Writers had zero intent for
20 Armes to be a joint author with them.
21 3. While The Court Need Not Reach The Issue, Armes Cannot
22 Set Forth Any Facts Showing That The “Audience Appeal”
23 Of The Circles Composition Turned On His Alleged
24 Contribution.
25 Armes has no evidence with which he could establish the audience appeal of
26 Circles turns on his alleged contribution. Nonetheless, when as here, the plaintiff’s
27 showing of “control” and “shared intent” are insufficient to meet his burden, the
Mitchell
Silberberg & 28 courts routinely dismiss joint authorship claims without even considering the
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DEFENDANTS’ MEMORANDUM OF LAW IN SUPPORT OF MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
Case 2:20-cv-03212-ODW-SK Document 82-1 Filed 02/28/22 Page 28 of 29 Page ID
#:1063
1 dismissal of Armes’s accounting and constructive trust claims for the Circles
2 Composition.
3 At minimum, even in the event summary judgment is not granted on the
4 joint authorship claims, and it should be in Defendants’ favor, Armes’s accounting
5 and constructive trust claims should be dismissed as premature.10 There can be no
6 trial on these issues prior to a determination of the declaratory relief.11
7 VII. CONCLUSION
8 For the foregoing reasons, Defendants respectfully request that the Court
9 grant their motion for summary judgment in its entirety.
10
11 Dated: February 28, 2022 MITCHELL SILBERBERG & KNUPP LLP
12 DAVID A. STEINBERG
CHRISTINE LEPERA
13 JEFFREY M. MOVIT
14 GABRIELLA N. ISMAJ
15
16 By: /s/ David A. Steinberg
17 David A. Steinberg (SBN 130593)
Attorneys for Defendants
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Defendants could also seek to bifurcate these as well should it become necessary.
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27 Notably Plaintiff failed to seek any discovery related to these claims even in the belated
discovery he did serve, which this Court ruled could not be pursued under the Scheduling and
Mitchell
Silberberg & 28 Case Management Order (ECF No. 49).
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DEFENDANTS’ MEMORANDUM OF LAW IN SUPPORT OF MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT