This is a list of Supreme Court of the United States cases in the area of copyright law. In the United States Constitution, the Copyright Clause in Article 1, Section 8 endows Congress with the power to create a copyright system. To avoid individual states' attempts at creating their own copyright systems, Congress passed the Copyright Act of 1790, based on Great Britain's Statute of Anne. Over the decades since, copyright in the United States has become a more complicated system with longer terms and more tests, and has been the subject of many decisions by the Court.
The Supreme Court was the source of a number of concepts in the field, including fair use, the idea-expression divide, the useful articles or separability doctrine, and the uncopyrightability of federal documents.
This list is a list solely of United States Supreme Court decisions about applying copyright law. Not all Supreme Court decisions are ultimately influential and, as in other fields, not all important decisions are made at the Supreme Court level. Many federal courts issue rulings that are significant or come to be influential, but those are outside the scope of this list.
Because they share a clause of the Constitution and much the same justifications, there is considerable overlap between patent and copyright jurisprudence. As such, patent cases may appear in this list if they make their connections to copyright explicit in the opinions.
Case | Citation | Year | Vote | Classification | Subject Matter | Opinions | Statute Interpreted | Summary |
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Wheaton v. Peters | 33 U.S. 591 | 1834 | 5–2 | Substantive | Copyrightability of laws, Common law copyright, Copyright formalities | Majority: McLean Dissent: Thompson, Baldwin | Copyright Act of 1790, Copyright Act of 1831 | There is no such thing as common law copyright after publication and one must observe the formalities to secure a copyright. |
Backus v. Gould | 48 U.S. 798 | 1849 | 9–0 | Substantive | Statutory damages for copyright infringement | Majority: McLean (unanimous) | Copyright Act of 1831 | The 1831 Act requires the courts award damages from copyright infringement based on the number of copies found in the accused's possession, not the number of infringing copies that they ever printed. |
Stephens v. Cady | 55 U.S. 528 | 1852 | 9–0 | Substantive | Copyright transfer | Majority: Nelson (unanimous) | Copyright Act of 1831 | Buying a map's copperplate in an execution sale does not imply purchasing the copyright. |
Stevens v. Gladding | 58 U.S. 447 | 1854 | 9–0 | Substantive | Copyright transfer, Equity | Majority: Curtis (unanimous) | Copyright Act of 1831 | The copyright of a work is not attached to the physical copperplate used to print the work, so purchasing the copperplate does not purchase the copyright. |
Little v. Hall | 59 U.S. 165 | 1856 | 9–0 | Substantive | Copyright transfer, Copyrightability of laws | Majority: McLean (unanimous) | Copyright Act of 1831 | A contract with state officials to be the official publisher of court opinion documents does not transfer any copyright to that publisher, and they may not seek an injunction against someone else printing those documents. |
Paige v. Banks | 80 U.S. 608 | 1872 | 9–0 | Substantive | Copyright transfer, Copyright renewal in the United States | Majority: Davis (unanimous) | Copyright Act of 1790, Copyright Act of 1831 | An agreement that transfers a copyright from the original author to a second party for perpetuity does not end with the statutory limit of copyright at the time the parties made the deal. |
Perris v. Hexamer | 99 U.S. 674 | 1879 | 9–0 | Substantive | Copyrightability of symbols | Majority: Waite | Copyright Act of 1870 | A map-maker has no more an exclusive right to use the form of the characters they employ to express their ideas on a map than they have to use the typeface they use for text. |
Trade-Mark Cases | 100 U.S. 82 | 1879 | 9–0 | Non-Copyright | Constitutional basis for trademark regulation | Majority: Miller (unanimous) | Copyright Clause, Copyright Act of 1870, Unconstitutional trademark acts | The Copyright Clause does not give Congress the power to regulate trademarks because trademarks are not writings, discoveries, or inventions. |
Baker v. Selden | 101 U.S. 99 | 1879 | 9–0 | Substantive | Idea–expression divide, Useful art | Majority: Bradley (unanimous) | Copyright Act of 1831 | Exclusive rights to the "useful art" described in a book are only available by patent. The description itself is protectable by copyright. |
Merrell v. Tice | 104 U.S. 557 | 1881 | 9–0 | Substantive | Majority: Bradley | Copyright Act of 1870, amendment in 1874 | Because statutory procedures exist for producing evidence of copyright formality observance, evidence of at least such veracity is required to prove copyright claims. | |
Schreiber v. Sharpless | 110 U.S. 76 | 1884 | 9–0 | Substantive | Majority: Waite | Copyright Act of 1870 | Charges of copyright infringement do not survive the death of the accused and may not be transferred to the executors of their will. | |
Burrow-Giles Lithographic Co. v. Sarony | 111 U.S. 53 | 1884 | 9–0 | Substantive | Copyrightability of photography | Majority: Miller (unanimous) | Copyright Act of 1870, amendment in 1874 | Extended copyright protection to photography. |
Thornton v. Schreiber | 124 U.S. 612 | 1888 | 9–0 | Substantive | Majority: Miller | Copyright Act of 1870 | A copyright holder may not personally sue an employee of a business for copyright infringement if the employee was holding the infringing material on the order of their employer. | |
Banks v. Manchester | 128 U.S. 244 | 1888 | 9–0 | Substantive | Copyrightability of laws | Majority: Blatchford (unanimous) | Copyright Act of 1870 | No copyright in state Supreme Court opinions. |
Callaghan v. Myers | 128 U.S. 617 | 1888 | 9–0 | Substantive | Copyrightability of laws, Public domain | Majority: Blatchford (unanimous) | Copyright Act of 1831, Copyright Act of 1870 | Arrangements of public domain records can represent copyrightable intellectual effort. |
Thompson v. Hubbard | 131 U.S. 123 | 1889 | 9–0 | Substantive | Formalities | Majority: Blatchford (unanimous) | Copyright Act of 1870, amendment in 1874 | A later owner of a copyright is entitled to sue a previous owner for copyright infringement. However, the later owner's failure to observe formalities voids copyright and a nonexistent copyright cannot be infringed. |
Higgins v. Keuffel | 140 U.S. 428 | 1891 | 9–0 | Substantive | Majority: Field (unanimous) | Copyright Act of 1831, Copyright Act of 1870, amendment in 1874 | A label describing the contents of a container is not subject to copyright. | |
Belford v. Scribner | 144 U.S. 488 | 1892 | 8–0 | Substantive | Majority: Blatchford | Copyright Act of 1870 | 1) A copyright is held by default with the person whose name it was taken out in, regardless of potential conflicts with state law. 2) If a work contains a mixture of original and copyright infringing material, but it is so intermingled as to be inseparable, then the copyright holder may take all profits from the work. | |
Press Pub. Co. v. Monroe | 164 U.S. 105 | 1896 | 9–0 | Procedural | Diversity jurisdiction, Common law copyright | Majority: Gray (unanimous) | International Copyright Act of 1891 | Due to diversity jurisdiction, the circuit court's decision was valid. Dismissed because a Supreme Court petition must invoke the Constitution or the laws of the United States, and a common law copyright claim does neither. |
Holmes v. Hurst | 174 U.S. 82 | 1899 | 9–0 | Substantive | Majority: Brown (unanimous) | Copyright Act of 1831 | When someone begins printing a serial book in a magazine, they may file for copyright of the entire book even if the book does not exist as a completed whole. | |
Brady v. Daly | 175 U.S. 148 | 1899 | 9–0 | Procedural | Statutory damages for copyright infringement, Equity | Peckham (unanimous) | Copyright Act of 1831, amendment in 1856, Copyright Act of 1870 | The common law circuit court did have jurisdiction over the copyright infringement case because the statutory damages were not a penalty or forfeiture. |
Bolles v. Outing Co. | 175 U.S. 262 | 1899 | 9–0 | Substantive | Majority: Brown (White) (unanimous) | Copyright Act of 1831, Copyright Act of 1870 | Copies already distributed are out of scope of copyright infringement damage lawsuits. |
Case | Citation | Year | Vote | Classification | Subject Matter | Opinions | Statute Interpreted | Summary |
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Bleistein v. Donaldson Lithographing Company | 188 U.S. 239 | 1903 | 7–2 | Substantive | Copyrightability of commercial art | Majority: Holmes Dissent: Harlan (McKenna) | Copyright Act of 1870, amendment in 1874 | Copyright protection of illustrations made for advertisements |
Mifflin v. R. H. White Company | 190 U.S. 260 | 1903 | 9–0 | Substantive | Majority: Brown (unanimous) | Copyright Act of 1831 | The authorized appearance of a work in a magazine without a copyright notice specifically dedicated to that work transfers that work into the public domain. | |
Mifflin v. Dutton | 190 U.S. 265 | 1903 | 9–0 | Substantive | Majority: Brown (unanimous) | Copyright Act of 1831 | The authorized appearance of a work in a magazine without a copyright notice specifically dedicated to that work transfers that work into the public domain. | |
McLoughlin v. Raphael Tuck & Sons Co. | 191 U.S. 267 | 1903 | 8–0 | Substantive | Majority: White (unanimous) | Copyright Act of 1870, amendment in 1895, International Copyright Act of 1891 | Articles of a class made illegal by a statute that existed in the United States before the statute came into effect are still legal. | |
American Tobacco Co. v. Werckmeister | 207 U.S. 284 | 1907 | 9–0 | Substantive | Asset forfeiture, Unreasonable search and seizure | Majority: Day (unanimous) | Copyright Act of 1870, amendment in 1895, Fourth Amendment, International Copyright Act of 1891 | The seizure by the United States marshal in a copyright case of certain pictures under a writ of replevin did not constitute an unreasonable search and seizure. |
Werckmeister v. American Tobacco Co. | 207 U.S. 375 | 1907 | 9–0 | Procedural | Asset forfeiture | Majority: Day (unanimous) | Copyright Act of 1870, amendment in 1895 | A copyright holder is limited to one action to collect infringing copies and statutory damages because the act's remedies are penal and must be observed without construction. |
United Dictionary Co. v. G. & C. Merriam Co. | 208 U.S. 260 | 1908 | 9–0 | Substantive | Formalities | Majority: Holmes (unanimous) | Copyright Act of 1870, amendment in 1874 | The requirement that notice reside in each copy of every edition does not extend to works published and sold abroad only. |
White-Smith Music Publishing Co. v. Apollo Co. | 209 U.S. 1 | 1908 | 9–0 | Substantive | Public performance right in music | Majority: Day (unanimous) Concurrence: Holmes | International Copyright Act of 1891 Copyright Act of 1870, amendment in 1897 | Reproduction of the sounds of musical instruments playing music for which copyright granted not a violation of the copyright. |
Dun v. Lumbermen's Credit Ass'n | 209 U.S. 20 | 1908 | 9–0 | Majority: Moody (unanimous) | Copyright Act of 1870 | The existence of some copyright-infringing information in a rote reference work does not entitle the original author to seek an injunction against the printing the later article when the later article's contents demonstrate significant original work. | ||
Bobbs-Merrill Co. v. Straus | 210 U.S. 339 | 1908 | 9–0 | Substantive | First-sale doctrine | Majority: Day (unanimous) | Copyright Act of 1870 | No license to use copyrighted material. License cannot extend holder's rights beyond statute defined by Congress. |
Scribner v. Straus | 210 U.S. 352 | 1908 | 9–0 | Majority: Day (unanimous) | Copyright Act of 1870 | Copyright holders did not have the statutory right to control the price of subsequent resales of lawfully purchased copies of their work. | ||
Globe Newspaper Co. v. Walker | 210 U.S. 356 | 1908 | 9–0 | Majority: Day (unanimous) | Copyright Act of 1790, International Copyright Act of 1891 | Congress having provided a remedy for those whose copyrights in maps are infringed, a civil action at common law for money damages cannot be maintained against the infringers. | ||
Bong v. Campbell Art Co. | 214 U.S. 236 | 1909 | 9–0 | Substantive | International copyright treaties | Majority: McKenna (unanimous) | Copyright Act of 1870, amendment and 1895, International Copyright Act of 1891 | A copyright cannot be granted to a non-citizen whose country has not been acknowledged as in a reciprocal copyright arrangement with the United States by a formal presidential proclamation. Because the non-citizen is not granted a copyright, they cannot assign a copyright for a work to a citizen of a country with American copyright privileges. That citizen cannot register a copyright for the work. |
Caliga v. Inter Ocean Newspaper Co. | 215 U.S. 182 | 1909 | 9–0 | Substantive | Majority: Day (unanimous) | International Copyright Act of 1891 | A person cannot file a second copyright claim to amend the first, even if the first was determined to be invalid. | |
Hills and Co. v. Hoover | 220 U.S. 329 | 1911 | 9–0 | Majority: Day | International Copyright Act of 1891, Copyright Act of 1909 | |||
American Lithographic Co. v. Werkmeister | 221 U.S. 603 | 1911 | 9–0 | Majority: Hughes (unanimous) | A corporation defendant in a suit to enforce copyright infringement penalties is not entitled to a Fourth or Fifth Amendment objection to the admission of its bookkeeping entries into evidence when they are produced under a subpoena. | |||
Kalem Co. v. Harper Bros. | 222 U.S. 55 | 1911 | 9–0 | Substantive | Derivative works, Idea-expression dichotomy, Secondary liability | Majority: Holmes (unanimous) | Copyright Clause, International Copyright Act of 1891 | Producing a motion picture based on a dramatic work can be copyright infringement. The producer of the motion picture is liable even they are not the exhibitor. This does not extend to a restriction of the dramatic work's ideas; it is a recognition of the author's monopoly powers granted by Congress. |
Ferris v. Frohman | 223 U.S. 424 | 1912 | 9–0 | Substantive | Publication and Public Performance | Majority: Hughes (unanimous) | An unauthorized public production of an unpublished play does not invalidate the play owner's common law copyright. | |
Henry v. A.B. Dick Co. | 224 U.S. 1 | 1912 | 4–3 | Non-Copyright | Patent infringement, Tying | Majority: Lurton (McKenna, Holmes, Van Devanter) Dissent: White (Hughes, Lamar) | Patent Act of 1870 | Patent owners can prescribe requirements to how licensees may use their patented invention. Selling a product that knowingly contravenes one of those restrictions is contributory infringement of the patent. |
Bauer & Cie. v. O'Donnell | 229 U.S. 1 | 1913 | 5–4 | Non-Copyright | Intersection of patents and first-sale doctrine | Majority: Day Dissent: Holmes (McKenna, Lurton, Van Devanter) | Differences between patent and copyright defined also prohibits a license from extending rightsholders' rights beyond statute. Rights of copyright holder regarding "use" of copyrighted works. | |
Straus v. American Publishers Association | 231 U.S. 222 | 1913 | 9–0 | Majority: Day | An agreement that is manifestly anti-competitive and illegal under the Sherman Antitrust Act cannot be justified by copyright. | |||
Order of St. Benedict of New Jersey v. Steinhauser | 234 U.S. 640 | 1914 | 9–0 | Majority: Hughes (unanimous) | When someone joins an ecclesiastical order, subject to individual state law, their income from copyright may be dedicated to that order's common fund as much as any other income or form of property. This does not violate any part of the Constitution if the member may withdraw from the order at any time. | |||
DeJonge and Co. v. Breuker & Kessler Co. | 235 U.S. 33 | 1914 | 9–0 | Majority: Holmes (unanimous) | Every instance of a copyrighted work must observe copyright notice formalities for the work to maintain copyright, even if the work appears multiple times on the same sheet of paper. Every copy of a copyrighted painting must bear the notice for the painting to maintain copyright. | |||
G. & C. Merriam Co. v. Syndicate Pub. Co. | 237 U.S. 618 | 1915 | 9–0 | Non-Copyright | Majority: Day | Trade Mark Act of 1881 | After a copyrighted work expires, the word used to designate that work falls into the public domain and cannot be trademarked. | |
Herbert v. Shanley Co. | 242 U.S. 591 | 1917 | 9–0 | Substantive | Public performance of live music in business establishments | Majority: Holmes (unanimous) | Copyright Act of 1909 | Hotels & restaurants that perform music must compensate composers, even if the venue is not separately charging patrons to hear the music. |
International News Service v. Associated Press | 248 U.S. 215 | 1918 | 5–3 | Non-Copyright | Hot News | Majority: Pitney Dissent: Holmes (McKenna), Brandeis | While the information found in AP news was not copyrightable and subject to publici juris , AP has a quasi-property interest during the production of "hot news". | |
L. A. Westermann Co. v. Dispatch Printing Co. | 249 U.S. 100 | 1919 | 9–0 | Majority: Van Devanter | Penalties awarded "in lieu of actual damages and profits" cannot be less than $250 for each case of copyright infringement. | |||
Manners v. Morosco | 252 U.S. 317 | 1920 | 7–2 | Substantive | Derivative works | Majority: Holmes Dissent: Clarke (Pitney) | Copyright Act of 1909 | 1) The copyright transfer contract was not limited to five years because the agreement dealt in minimum requirements. 2) A transfer of the copyright for the production of a play on stage does not grant the ability to make a motion picture based on the play. However, a grant of exclusivity implies a negative guarantee that the original creator will not do anything that may adversely affect that exclusivity, meaning the author forfeited their own ability to authorize a motion picture production. |
Lumiere v. Mae Edna Wilder, Inc. | 261 U.S. 174 | 1923 | 9–0 | Majority: Brandeis | A person or corporation cannot file suits under the Copyright Act in areas in which they do not have an office and do no business. | |||
Fox Film Corp. v. Knowles | 261 U.S. 326 | 1923 | 9–0 | Majority: Holmes | The statute intends that an executor, there being no widow, widower, or child, shall have the same right to renew a copyright for a second term as his testator might have exercised had he continued to survive. | |||
Educational Films Corp. v. Ward | 282 U.S. 379 | 1931 | 6–3 | Substantive | Corporate tax | Majority: Stone Dissent: Sutherland (Van Devanter, Butler) | New York Tax Law, Article 9-A | A corporate income tax may include royalties from copyrights in its calculation of overall income even though direct income from copyrights, a federal institution, is immune from state taxation. |
Buck v. Jewell-LaSalle Realty Co. | 283 U.S. 191 | 1931 | 9–0 | Substantive | Public performance right in radio broadcasts in business establishments | Majority: Brandeis (unanimous) | Copyright Act of 1909 | A hotel operator which provided headphones connected to a centrally controlled radio receiver was guilty of copyright infringement, because "reception of a radio broadcast and its translation into audible sound is not a mere audition of the original program. It is essentially a reproduction." NB: Gene Buck, plaintiff, was president of ASCAP. |
Fox Film Corp. v. Doyal | 286 U.S. 123 | 1932 | 9–0 | Substantive | State government taxation of copyright royalties | Majority: Hughes (unanimous) | States may tax copyright royalties, as they can patent royalties, because even though copyrights & patents are granted by the federal government, they are still private property subject to taxation. | |
George v. Victor Talking Machine Co. | 293 U.S. 377 | 1934 | 9–0 | per curiam | The district court's ruling of infringement of a song's common law copyright, granting an injunction so that damages could be determined, was interlocutory. The appeal came too late, so the Court vacated the appeal. | |||
Douglas v. Cunningham | 294 U.S. 207 | 1935 | 9–0 | Copyright Act of 1909 | The statute allowed an award of $5,000 instead of a copyright infringement damages calculation based on the newspaper's circulation. | |||
KVOS v. Associated Press | 299 U.S. 269 | 1936 | 8–0 | Non-Copyright | Hot news | Majority: Roberts | An association of newspapers cannot sue collectively to raise their projected damages above the minimum damages required for federal jurisdiction when only individual newspapers are parties to unfair competition. | |
Interstate Circuit, Inc. v. United States | 304 U.S. 55 | 1938 | 5–3 | Majority: Stone Dissent: O. Roberts (McReynolds, Butler) | Sherman Antitrust Act | |||
Washingtonian Pub. Co. v. Pearson | 306 U.S. 30 | 1939 | 6–3 | Substantive | Formalities | Majority: McReynolds Dissent: Black (O. Roberts, Reed) | Copyright Act of 1909 | The 1909 Act's deposit requirement did not require immediate deposit, or deposit before infringement occurs, in order to bring a suit for infringement |
Gibbs v. Buck | 307 U.S. 66 | 1939 | 8–1 | Substantive | Majority: Reed Dissent: Black | 1) An association of copyright holders, ASCAP, may sum their collective costs to meet the damages threshold for federal jurisdiction. 2) A motion to dismiss allegations that raise "grave doubts about the constitutionality" of legislation should be denied. | ||
Buck v. Gallagher | 307 U.S. 95 | 1939 | 8–1 | Substantive | Majority: Reed Dissent: Black | 1) ASCAP members have a common and undivided interest in the right to license in association through the Society free of the state statute. 2) The lower court should have allowed ASCAP members the opportunity to price the cost of complying with the statute and the value of the copyrights affected by it. | ||
Sheldon v. Metro-Goldwyn Pictures Corp. | 309 U.S. 390 | 1940 | 8–0 | Procedural | Damages | Majority: Hughes (unanimous) | Copyright Act of 1909 | In the case of an unauthorized adaptation, court may elect to award only a portion of an infringer's profits to the plaintiff. |
Fashion Originators' Guild of America v. FTC | 312 U.S. 457 | 1941 | 9–0 | Non-Copyright | Antitrust | Majority: Black | Clayton Antitrust Act of 1914, Sherman Antitrust Act | A practice short of a complete monopoly but which tends to create a monopoly and to deprive the public of the advantages from free competition in interstate trade, offends the policy of the Sherman Act. Specifically, the Guild was trying to create an artificial copyright monopoly via boycotts because clothes were uncopyrightable at the time. |
Watson v. Buck | 313 U.S. 387 | 1941 | Majority: Black | |||||
Marsh v. Buck | 313 U.S. 406 | 1941 | Majority: Black | General statements that the law will be enforced if enacted are not threats against entities subject to the law. | ||||
Fred Fisher Music Co. v. M. Witmark & Sons | 318 U.S. 643 | 1943 | 5–3 | Substantive | Renewal terms and assignment | Majority: Frankfurter Dissent: Black, Douglas, Murphy | Copyright Act of 1909 | The renewal of copyright for the second term is not an opportunity for an author to renegotiate terms made during the first term that extended beyond the first term's length. |
United States v. Paramount Pictures, Inc. | 334 U.S. 131 | 1948 | 7–1 | Non-Copyright | Antitrust | Majority: Douglas Dissent: Frankfurter (in part) | Sherman Antitrust Act | Practice of block booking and ownership of theater chains by film studios constituted anti-competitive and monopolistic trade practices. |
Commissioner v. Wodehouse | 337 U.S. 369 | 1949 | 6–3 | Non-Copyright | Taxation | Majority: Burton Dissent: Frankfurter (Murphy, Jackson) | Revenue Act of 1934, Revenue Act of 1936 | Lump sums paid in advance by publications to non-resident aliens are taxable income under the Revenue Act and are indistinguishable from "royalties" paid over time within the meaning of that Act. |
F. W. Woolworth Co. v. Contemporary Arts, Inc. | 344 U.S. 227 | 1952 | 7–2 | Procedural | Election of remedies, Statutory damages for copyright infringement | Majority: Jackson Dissent: Black (Frankfurter) | Copyright Act of 1909 | Court may grant statutory damages, even when infringer proves its gross profits were less than the statutory award. Judges granted wide latitude when determining legal remedies based on the facts of the case. |
Mazer v. Stein | 347 U.S. 201 | 1954 | 7–2 | Substantive | Copyrightability of sculpture, Idea/Expression Dichotomy, Useful art | Majority: Reed Dissent: Douglas (Black) | Copyright Act of 1909 | Extended copyright protection to functional art. |
De Sylva v. Ballentine | 351 U.S. 570 | 1956 | 9–0 | Substantive | Renewal terms and beneficiaries | Majority: Harlan II (unanimous) | Copyright Act of 1909 | After the death of an author, the widow and children are eligible to renew copyright, equally as a class. Additionally, conditional on state laws, illegitimate children are also eligible for a share of the copyright. |
Columbia Broadcasting System, Inc. v. Loew's, Inc. | 356 U.S. 43 | 1958 | 4–4 | Substantive | Fair use in parody | per curiam | aff'd 4-4 sub. nom., Benny v. Loew's, 239 F.2d 532 (9th Cir. 1956) | |
Miller Music Corp. v. Charles N. Daniels, Inc. | 362 U.S. 373 | 1960 | 5–4 | Substantive | Duration | Majority: Douglas Dissent: Harlan II (Frankfurter, Whittaker, Stewart) | The executor of a copyright holder's will is eligible to renew that copyright. | |
Pub. Affairs Associates, Inc. v. Rickover | 369 U.S. 111 | 1962 | 5–3 | per curiam Concurrence: Douglas | ||||
Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. Stiffel Co. | 376 U.S. 225 | 1964 | 9–0 | Non-Copyright | Public domain | Majority: Black Concurrence: Harlan II | Copyright Act of 1909, Copyright Clause, Supremacy Clause | An unpatented article belongs to the public and a state law that would prevent its copying would violate the Supremacy Clause. |
Fortnightly Corp. v. United Artists Television, Inc. | 392 U.S. 390 | 1968 | 5–1 | Substantive | Public performance of broadcast television | Majority: Stewart Dissent: Fortas | Receiving a television broadcast (of a licensed work) does not constitute a "performance" | |
Goldstein v. California | 412 U.S. 546 | 1973 | 5–4 | Non-Copyright | Federal pre-emption of state criminal copyright law | Majority: Burger Dissent: Douglas (Brennan, Blackmun), Marshall (Brennan, Blackmun) | California's state statutes criminalizing record piracy did not violate the Copyright Clause | |
Teleprompter Corp. v. Columbia Broadcasting | 415 U.S. 394 | 1974 | 6–3 | Substantive | Public performance of broadcast television | Majority: Stewart Dissent: Blackmun (in part), Douglas (Burger) | Receiving a television broadcast from a "distant" source does not constitute a "performance" | |
Twentieth Century Music Corp. v. Aiken | 422 U.S. 151 | 1975 | 7–2 | Substantive | Public performance of radio broadcasts in business establishments | Majority: Stewart Dissent: Burger (Douglas) Concurrence: Blackmun | Receiving a radio broadcast of a licensed work does not constitute a "performance". This effectively overruled Buck v. Jewel-LaSalle Realty Co. (1931) | |
Williams & Wilkins Co. v. United States | 420 U.S. 376 | 1975 | 4–4 | Substantive | Fair use in photocopies | per curiam | Copyright Act of 1909, National Library of Medicine Act, Medical Library Assistance Act of 1965 | Affirmed by an equally divided court. It is a fair use for libraries to photocopy articles for use by patrons engaged in scientific research. |
Zacchini v. Scripps-Howard Broadcasting Co. | 433 U.S. 562 | 1977 | 5–4 | Substantive | Majority: White Dissent: Powell (Brennan, Marshall), Stevens | Copyright Act of 1976 | The First and Fourteenth Amendments do not immunize the news media from civil liability when they broadcast a performer's entire act without his consent, nor does the Constitution prevent a State from requiring broadcasters to compensate performers. | |
Broadcast Music v. Columbia Broadcasting System | 441 U.S. 1 | 1979 | 8–1 | Non-Copyright | Antitrust and copyright collective rights organizations | Majority: White Dissent: Stevens | Sherman Antitrust Act | The issuance by ASCAP and BMI of blanket licenses does not constitute price-fixing per se unlawful under the antitrust laws |
Sony Corp. of America v. Universal City Studios, Inc. | 464 U.S. 417 | 1984 | 5–4 | Substantive | Secondary liability and fair use in home recordings | Majority: Stevens Dissent: Blackmun (Marshall, Powell, Rehnquist) | Copyright Act of 1976 | The Betamax Case |
Mills Music, Inc. v. Snyder | 469 U.S. 153 | 1985 | 5–4 | Substantive | Termination | Majority: Stevens Dissent: White (Brennan, Marshall, Blackmun) | Copyright Act of 1976 | If the author of a work authorizes derivatives, the terms negotiated in exchange for that grant stand even if the grant is later rescinded. If the copyright holder deputizes another person to authorize derivative works, the law draws no distinction between such works and those directly authorized by the copyright holder. |
Harper & Row v. Nation Enterprises | 471 U.S. 539 | 1985 | 6–3 | Substantive | Fair use in excerpts | Majority: O'Connor Dissent: Brennan (White, Marshall) | Copyright Act of 1976 | The interest served by republication of a public figure's account of an event is not sufficient to permit nontransformative Fair use. |
Dowling. v. United States | 473 U.S. 207 | 1985 | 6–3 | Non-Copyright | Criminal law impact of infringement | Majority: Blackmun Dissent: Powell (Burger, White) | Clayton Antitrust Act of 1914 | Copyright infringement is not theft, conversion, or fraud; illegally made copies are not stolen goods. |
Community for Creative Non-Violence v. Reid | 490 U.S. 730 | 1989 | 9–0 | Substantive | Work-made-for-hire | Majority: Marshall (unanimous) | Copyright Act of 1976 | The default rule is that the artist who creates a commissioned work retains copyright ownership of the work (because the artist is an independent contractor and not an employee producing a work made for hire.) However, this is only a presumption which can be modified by contract. |
Stewart v. Abend | 495 U.S. 207 | 1990 | 6–3 | Substantive | Derivative works | Majority: O'Connor Dissent: Stevens (Rehnquist, Scalia) Concurrence: White | Copyright Act of 1976 | Rights of the successor of a copyright interest |
Feist Publications, Inc. v. Rural Telephone Service Co. | 499 U.S. 340 | 1991 | 9–0 | Substantive | Copyrightability of facts and Idea/Expression Dichotomy | Majority: O'Connor Concurrence: Blackmun | Copyright Act of 1976 | Affirmed the need for a minimal amount of creativity before a work is copyrightable. "Sweat of the brow" alone is not sufficient to bestow copyright. |
Fogerty v. Fantasy, Inc. | 510 U.S. 517 | 1994 | 9–0 | Procedural | Attorneys Fees | Majority: Rehnquist Concurrence: Thomas | Copyright Act of 1976 | Attorney's fees in copyright litigation may be awarded to successful defendants, as well as to successful plaintiffs |
Campbell v. Acuff-Rose Music, Inc. | 510 U.S. 569 | 1994 | 9–0 | Substantive | Fair use in Commercial Parody | Majority: Souter Concurrence: Kennedy | Copyright Act of 1976 | Commercial parody can be fair use. |
Lotus Dev. Corp. v. Borland Int'l, Inc. | 516 U.S. 233 | 1995 | 4–4 | Substantive | Copyrightability of software program interfaces | per curiam | Copyright Act of 1976 | Scope of software copyrights. |
Quality King Distributors, Inc. v. L'anza Research Int'l, Inc. | 523 U.S. 135 | 1998 | 9–0 | Substantive | Reimportation | Majority: Stevens Concurrence: Ginsburg | Copyright Act of 1976 | First-sale doctrine applies to reimported goods |
Feltner v. Columbia Pictures Television, Inc. | 523 U.S. 340 | 1998 | 9–0 | Procedural | Right to Jury Trial, Statutory damages for copyright infringement | Majority: Thomas Concurrence: Scalia | Copyright Act of 1976, Seventh Amendment | Seventh Amendment right to jury trial in a copyright infringement case |
Case | Citation | Year | Vote | Classification | Subject Matter | Opinions | Statute Interpreted | Summary |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
New York Times Co. v. Tasini | 533 U.S. 483 | 2001 | 7–2 | Substantive | Collective works | Majority: Ginsburg Dissent: Stevens (Breyer) | Copyright Act of 1976 | Freelance journalists did not grant electronic republication rights for collective work. |
Eldred v. Ashcroft | 537 U.S. 186 | 2003 | 7–2 | Substantive | Term Extension | Majority: Ginsburg Dissent: Stevens, Breyer | Copyright Clause, Copyright Act of 1976 | Challenge to Copyright Term Extension Act of 1998; held Congress may retroactively extend the duration of works still under copyright, as long as the extension is limited. |
Dastar Corp. v. Twentieth Century Fox Film Corp. | 539 U.S. 23 | 2003 | 8–0 | Non-Copyright | Intersection of TM law with public domain works | Majority: Scalia (unanimous) | Lanham Act | Trademark cannot preserve rights to a public domain work. |
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc. v. Grokster, Ltd. | 545 U.S. 913 | 2005 | 9–0 | Substantive | Secondary liability | Majority: Souter (unanimous) Concurrence: Ginsburg (Rehnquist, Kennedy), Breyer (Stevens, O'Connor) | Copyright Act of 1976 | Distributors of peer-to-peer file-sharing software can be liable for copyright infringement if there are "affirmative steps taken to foster infringement". |
Microsoft Corp. v. AT&T Corp. | 550 U.S. 437 | 2007 | 7–1 | Non-Copyright | Patent infringement | Majority: Ginsburg Concurrence: Alito (Thomas, Breyer) (in all but part) Dissent: Stevens | 35 U.S.C. § 271(f) (Patent Act) | Liability for such unauthorized replication and installation of software in foreign countries must arise under the patent laws of foreign countries. Although a patent case, it discusses the nature of what is a copy of software. |
Reed Elsevier, Inc. v. Muchnick | 559 U.S. 154 | 2010 | 8–0 | Procedural | Registration | Majority: Thomas Concurrence: Ginsburg (Stevens, Breyer) | Copyright Act of 1976 | Settlement of copyright infringement claims relating to an electronic database |
Omega S.A. v. Costco Wholesale Corp. | 562 U.S. 40 | 2010 | 4–4 | Substantive | First-sale doctrine | per curiam | Copyright Act of 1976 | Affirming 541 F.3d 982 (9th Cir. 2008) |
Golan v. Holder | 565 U.S. 302 | 2012 | 6–2 | Substantive | Restoration of copyright in public domain works | Majority: Ginsburg Dissent: Breyer (Alito) | Copyright Clause, Copyright Act of 1976, Uruguay Round Agreements Act | Constitution gives broad discretion to Congress to decide how best to promote the "progress of science and the useful arts", including restoring copyright in public domain works. |
Kirtsaeng v. John Wiley & Sons, Inc. | 568 U.S. 519 | 2013 | 6–3 | Substantive | First-sale doctrine | Majority: Breyer Concurrence: Kagan (Alito) Dissent: Ginsburg (Scalia (in part), Kennedy) | Copyright Act of 1976 | The first-sale doctrine applies to copyrighted works made lawfully overseas. |
Petrella v. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Inc. | 572 U.S. 663 | 2014 | 6–3 | Substantive | Laches | Majority: Ginsburg Dissent: Breyer (Roberts, Kennedy) | Copyright Act of 1976 | The laches defense is not available in copyright infringement cases. |
American Broadcasting Cos., Inc. v. Aereo, Inc. | 573 U.S. 431 | 2014 | 6–3 | Substantive | Public performance | Majority: Breyer Dissent: Scalia (Thomas, Alito) | Copyright Act of 1976 | Aereo's subscription service allowed subscribers to view live and time-shifted streams of over-the-air television on Internet-connected devices; the live viewing was deemed to be an infringing "retransmission" within the meaning of the public performance right. |
Star Athletica, LLC v. Varsity Brands, Inc. | 580 U.S. ___ | 2017 | 6–2 | Substantive | Useful art, Useful articles | Majority: Thomas Concurrence: Ginsburg Dissent: Breyer (Kennedy) | Copyright Act of 1976 | Aesthetic design elements on useful articles like clothing can be copyrightable if they can be separately identified as art and exist independently of the useful article. |
Fourth Estate Public Benefit Corp. v. Wall-Street.com | 586 U.S. ___ | 2019 | 9-0 | Procedural | Copyright registration | Majority: Ginsburg | Copyright Act of 1976 | A copyright owner may not file an infringement suit until the Register of Copyrights has granted the application for registration. |
Rimini Street Inc. v. Oracle USA Inc. | 586 U.S. ___ | 2019 | 9-0 | Substantive | Statutory damages for copyright infringement | Majority: Kavanaugh | Copyright Act of 1976, Fee Act of 1853 | The Copyright Act’s award of "full costs" to a prevailing party in a copyright infringement claim is limited to six categories specified in the Fee Act of 1853 (the general costs statute). |
Allen v. Cooper | 589 U.S. ___ | 2020 | 9-0 | Substantive | Sovereign immunity | Majority: Kagan Concurrence: Thomas, Breyer (Ginsburg) | Copyright Remedy Clarification Act | Congress did not validly abrogate state sovereign immunity via the Copyright Remedy Clarification Act. Authors of original expression whose federal copyrights are infringed by States may not sue any state without its consent. |
Georgia v. Public.Resource.Org, Inc. | 589 U.S. ___ | 2020 | 5-4 | Substantive | Copyrightability of laws | Majority: Roberts (Sotomayor, Kagan, Gorsuch, Kavanaugh) Dissent: Thomas (Alito, Breyer), Ginsburg (Breyer) | Copyright Act of 1976 | Annotations to state law are ineligible for copyright. |
Google v. Oracle | No. 18-956 , 593 U.S. ___(2021) | 2021 | 6-2 | Substantive | Software copyright, Fair use | Majority Breyer (Roberts, Sotomayor, Kagan, Gorsuch, Kavanaugh) Dissent: Thomas (Alito) | Copyright Act of 1976 | The copying of APIs can be fair use. |
Unicolors, Inc. v. H&M Hennes & Mauritz, L.P. | 589 U.S. ___ | 2022 | 6-3 | Procedural | Copyright registration | Majority: Breyer (Roberts, Sotomayor, Kagan, Kavanaugh, Barrett) Dissent: Thomas (Alito, Gorsuch) | Copyright Act of 1976 | Lack of either factual or legal knowledge can excuse an inaccuracy in a copyright registration. |
Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. v. Goldsmith | 598 U.S. ___ | 2023 | 7–2 | Substantive | Transformative use | Majority Sotomayor Dissent Kagan | Copyright Act of 1976 | An allegedly infringing secondary work must be significantly altered from the original to be considered transformative where both works are used commercially for substantially the same purpose; courts must consider the specific context of the use when evaluating claims of transformative use. |
Warner Chappell Music, Inc. v. Nealy (2024)
As of September2023, the Supreme Court has no copyright cases pending.
When the Court refuses to hear a case, justices are entitled to write dissents to that denial of certiorari.
Case | Citation | Year | Subject Matter | Dissenter(s) | Statute Interpreted | Question | Dissent Reason |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Lee v. Runge | 404 U.S. 887 | 1971 | Copyrightability, Idea-expression divide | Douglas | Copyright Clause | Because Congress's power to create copyright and patent laws both come from the Copyright Clause, should they not both be judged by the same standard? Lee argued that the standard should be patents' "novelty" rather than copyright's "originality." | Many of the interests of copyrights and patent overlap, and the part of Copyright Clause specifying that Congress's laws must "promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts" is a limit on Congress's authority. |
Data General Corp. v. Digidyne Corp. | 473 U.S. 908 | 1985 | Antitrust, Tying | White, Blackmun | Clayton Antitrust Act of 1914 | What constitutes forcing power in the absence of a large share of the general market? Must market power over "locked in" customers be analyzed at the outset of the original decision to purchase? What effect should be given to the existence of a copyright or other legal monopoly in determining market power? | The situation raised a number of complexities in the issue of whether tying software and hardware using copyrights or patents is anti-competitive, and the precedents set by the lower court were based on specious details. For example, a lower court had essentially said flatly that tying arrangements were anti-competitive, but the Supreme Court had ruled otherwise in cases like Jefferson Parish Hospital District No. 2 v. Hyde . The issue was likely to become more important as the multi-billion dollar computer industry continued to grow, so it was better to address the problems sooner rather than later. |
Harper v. Maverick Recording Co. | 562 U.S. 1080 | 2010 | Copyright infringement | Alito | Copyright Act of 1976, Berne Convention Implementation Act of 1988 | Should the "inadvertent innocent infringer" defense to copyright infringement be eliminated for all Internet music downloading? | The "innocent infringer" defense, which lowers statutory minimum damages of copyright infringement from $750 to $200, was written in a time when copyright notices would be clearly affixed to physical media, which was part of the expectation in favor of the defense. A digital music MP3 file could not bear a human-readable copyright notice, so there was a strong argument for the defense. Moreover, the lower courts declined to take mitigating factors such as the 16-year-old Harper's age into consideration, and perhaps they should have. |
The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to law:
Article Three of the United States Constitution establishes the judicial branch of the U.S. federal government. Under Article Three, the judicial branch consists of the Supreme Court of the United States, as well as lower courts created by Congress. Article Three empowers the courts to handle cases or controversies arising under federal law, as well as other enumerated areas. Article Three also defines treason.
The Seventh Amendment to the United States Constitution is part of the Bill of Rights. This amendment codifies the right to a jury trial in certain civil cases and inhibits courts from overturning a jury's findings of fact.
Eldred v. Ashcroft, 537 U.S. 186 (2003), was a decision by the Supreme Court of the United States upholding the constitutionality of the 1998 Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act (CTEA). The practical result of this was to prevent a number of works from entering the public domain in 1998 and following years, as would have occurred under the Copyright Act of 1976. Materials which the plaintiffs had worked with and were ready to republish were now unavailable due to copyright restrictions.
McCulloch v. Maryland, 17 U.S. 316 (1819), was a landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision that defined the scope of the U.S. Congress's legislative power and how it relates to the powers of American state legislatures. The dispute in McCulloch involved the legality of the national bank and a tax that the state of Maryland imposed on it. In its ruling, the Supreme Court established firstly that the "Necessary and Proper" Clause of the U.S. Constitution gives the U.S. federal government certain implied powers necessary and proper for the exercise of the powers enumerated explicitly in the Constitution, and secondly that the American federal government is supreme over the states, and so states' ability to interfere with the federal government is restricted. Since the legislature has the authority to tax and spend, the court held that it therefore has authority to establish a national bank, as being "necessary and proper" to that end.
The Commerce Clause describes an enumerated power listed in the United States Constitution. The clause states that the United States Congress shall have power "to regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian Tribes". Courts and commentators have tended to discuss each of these three areas of commerce as a separate power granted to Congress. It is common to see the individual components of the Commerce Clause referred to under specific terms: the Foreign Commerce Clause, the Interstate Commerce Clause, and the Indian Commerce Clause.
The Necessary and Proper Clause, also known as the Elastic Clause, is a clause in Article I, Section 8 of the United States Constitution:
The Congress shall have Power... To make all Laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into Execution the foregoing Powers, and all other Powers vested by this Constitution in the Government of the United States, or in any Department or Officer thereof.
The Equal Protection Clause is part of the first section of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. The clause, which took effect in 1868, provides "nor shall any State ... deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws." It mandates that individuals in similar situations be treated equally by the law.
The Copyright Clause describes an enumerated power listed in the United States Constitution.
Bonito Boats, Inc. v. Thunder Craft Boats, Inc., 489 U.S. 141 (1989), is a decision of the United States Supreme Court holding a state anti-plug molding law preempted because it partially duplicated and therefore interfered with the balance Congress had struck by federal patent law. The decision reaffirmed the Supreme Court's earlier decision in Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. Stiffel Co. (1964), which held a state unfair competition law preempted on the same ground.
Schillinger v. United States, 155 U.S. 163 (1894), is a decision of the United States Supreme Court, holding that a suit for patent infringement cannot be entertained against the United States, because patent infringement is a tort and the United States has not waived sovereign immunity for intentional torts.
The constitutional law of the United States is the body of law governing the interpretation and implementation of the United States Constitution. The subject concerns the scope of power of the United States federal government compared to the individual states and the fundamental rights of individuals. The ultimate authority upon the interpretation of the Constitution and the constitutionality of statutes, state and federal, lies with the Supreme Court of the United States.
Goldstein v. California, 412 U.S. 546 (1973), was a United States Supreme Court case in which the high court ruled that California's state statutes criminalizing record piracy did not violate the Copyright Clause of the United States Constitution.
United States v. Arthrex, Inc., 594 U.S. ___ (2021), was a United States Supreme Court case related to the Appointments Clause of the United States Constitution as it related to patent judges on the Patent Trial and Appeal Board (PTAB). In a complex decision, the Court ruled that these judges were considered "primary officers" under the Appointments Clause, normally subject to appointment through the US President and the US Senate, but to remedy the matter, the Court ruled that the constitutional issue is resolved by allowing the PTAB decisions to be subject to review by the appropriately-appointed Director of the Patent Office.