SCOTUS Shelves Request to Review 11th Circuit Dark Tower Decision, Ending Copyright Saga

The Supreme Court’s refusal to review the Eleventh Circuit’s decision in DuBay v. King marks an end to a 4-year copyright battle concerning the lead character of Stephen King’s acclaimed series, The Dark Tower.  The Eleventh Circuit’s decision affirmed that the King’s anti-hero, Roland Deschain, is not substantially similar to William DuBay’s The Rook comic book character, Restin Dane. The decision illustrates the complexity of literary copyright infringement disputes, where a claim is brought based on a mix of original and stock character elements.

In 2017 William DuBay’s heir, Benjamin DuBay, sued novelist Stephen King, Marvel Entertainment, Sony Entertainment, and others for various counts of copyright infringement, alleging that King copied DuBay’s artistic expression based on purported similarity between lead characters of The Rook (Restin Dane) and The Dark Tower (Roland Deschain). The district court granted summary judgment to King, determining (1) that any similarities between the characters comprise unprotectable general ideas and scènes à faire elements; and (2) that the protectable original character elements in dispute are different, such that “no reasonable jury…could find the works substantially similar.” DuBay appealed.

The principal issue on appeal was whether the district court erred in assessing substantial similarity.  DuBay argued that the characters were substantially similar based on several shared characteristics, including: (1) similar names; (2) interaction with time-travel related towers; (3) having a bird as a companion; (4) having knightly characteristics; (5) wearing Western-style clothing; (6) surviving a fictionalized interpretation of The Alamo; (7) the use of knives; and (8) traveling back in time to save a young boy who becomes a gunslinger. DuBay also argued that the unique combination of these elements made Dane a distinctive character, and that Deschain is a copy of DuBay’s artistic expression in that character.

The Eleventh Circuit addressed DuBay’s contentions in two parts.

First, the court assessed whether each of the claimed character elements merit copyright protection. The court affirmed the district court’s holding that “character names do not merit copyright protection,” since mere words and short phrases cannot be protected under copyright law.  The court reiterated that only original elements of a copyrighted work can be afforded protection, and that certain claimed elements (i.e., “knightly heritage,” time travel to “different times and parallel worlds,” “western attire,” “fictionalized Alamo histories,” and “knife wielding”) are merely general ideas or scènes à faire that are “too general to merit copyright protection.”  The court then reviewed the remaining elements to determine whether the shared characteristics rendered the characters substantially similar.  Although both characters may be broadly similar in having bird companions, a relationship to towers and tower imagery, and past time travel experiences involving the rescue of a young boy, the court found that the depiction of these elements was different in each work.  For example, whereas Dane lives in and travels via tower shaped structures shaped like the namesake chess piece, Deschain embarks on an endless mission to find an elusive Gothic tower that connects parallel worlds and time periods.  Because the portrayals of each original element are distinguishable, the court determined that no reasonable jury could have concluded that the works were similar.

Second, the court examined whether the characters are substantially similar based on each character’s combination of the claimed elements (or the “look and feel” of the characters).  The Court recognized of the potential dangers of comparing works based on individual similarities alone because an original combination of unoriginal elements can potentially sustain a claim of copyright infringement.  However, the court found that any similarities of combined elements were “superficial” at best, and that the “look and feel” analysis actually hurt, rather than helped, DuBay’s case by highlighting differences in expression of shared original character elements.

Takeaway:

The Supreme Court’s refusal to hear Dubay reinforces the basic tenet of copyright law that general ideas or scènes à faire cannot be protected by copyright.  It also reminds litigants that although a combination of original and non-original elements can be protected under copyright law, broad similarities are usually insufficient to sustain a copyright infringement claim.

The case is DuBay v. King, 844 Fed. Appx. 257 (11thCir. 2019), cert. denied, 142 S. Ct. 490 (2021).

Article By Spencer K. Beall and Margaret A. Esquenet of Finnegan

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© 2021 Finnegan, Henderson, Farabow, Garrett & Dunner, LLP

A Simple Solution for Your Stuff: The Use of a Separate Writing for the Disposition of Tangible Personal Property

If you have a Will (and you should!), part of your Will gives away your tangible personal property, your stuff, as George Carlin would call it. Tangible personal property is all your household goods, furniture, furnishings, clothing, boats, automobiles, books, art, jewelry, club memberships and articles of personal adornment or household use. It is anything that is not real property, like your house, and not intangible property, like stocks or bank accounts. It is your grandmother’s silver tea service, your favorite set of golf clubs, and all that other stuff you love, and which may become the stuff of heated family discussions after you are gone. Who gets it? You can and should decide now. After all, it’s your stuff.

In your Will, you can give all your tangible personal property to one person or another, or you can give particular items to particular people.  The problem is that if you change your mind about an item or a person after you sign your Will, you have to either completely re-do your Will or prepare a special amendment to your Will called a “codicil.” Both alternatives require not only the input of an attorney but also the presence of two witnesses and a notary public.

Fortunately, several states, such as Florida and South Carolina, offer a simple solution for your stuff. According to Florida Statute 732.515 and South Carolina Probate Code Section 62-2-512, you may dispose of any item of tangible personal property by a memo prepared by you, separate from your Will. The memo can be done without witnesses or notarization. And you can change it as often as you like, without changing your Will.

For the memo to be valid, your Will must refer to it and may provide that the most recent version of the memo supersedes any prior version. The memo must describe each item and the identity of its recipient with reasonable certainty and you must sign and date the memo or, alternatively, in SC, the memo must be in your handwriting. If you revise the memo or prepare a new one, it is important to sign and date it (or, in SC, make sure the revised memo is in your handwriting).

There are limitations on the types of tangible personal property you can list in the memo. It cannot be used to dispose of property used in your trade or business, cash money or books, paper, or documents whose chief value is evidence of intangible property rights, such as bank books, stock certificates, promissory notes, insurance policies, and items like that. In Florida, the memo should also not be used to give away a coin collection, because the law governing that is not yet settled.

Finally, you should treat the memo as though it is your Will. It should be kept with your Will because the assets listed in the memo will be administered as though actually set forth in your Will. If your Will is in your attorney’s vault, send the original memo to your attorney for safekeeping in the attorney’s vault and keep a copy of the memo with the copy of your Will.

For those who have a revocable trust, there is currently no statute in Florida or South Carolina concerning separate writings for tangible personal property applicable to revocable trusts. So, a reference to a memo in your trust may not work. A better move is to have such a reference in your Will.

The disposition of tangible personal property is often an afterthought.  It shouldn’t be. A close, loving family can be torn apart by arguments over family heirlooms, even those of little monetary value. Talk to your loved ones now about which items of yours they want, and then prepare a separate writing for the disposition of your tangible personal property. Do a memo for your stuff.

Copyright ©2021 Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough LLP

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