Stairway To Heaven Opening Appellate Brief
Stairway To Heaven Opening Appellate Brief
Stairway To Heaven Opening Appellate Brief
__________________
Skidmore et al.
Michael Skidmore, Trustee for the
Randy Craig Wolfe Trust
Plaintiff-Appellant
v.
Led Zeppelin et al.
Defendants-Appellees
__________________________
Appellants Opening Brief
_____________________________________
(Music copyright infringement, on appeal from the final Order dated June 23, 2016
of the Honorable R. Gary Klausner, of the United States District Court for the
Central District of California. The case was docketed in the Central District at 15-
cv-03462)
_____________________________________
Page 1 of 89
Table of Contents
Argument.................................................................................................... 28
1. The Full Composition of Taurus as embodied in the Album Recording
Should Have Been Admitted at Trial for the Substantial
Similarity Comparison; The Archival Deposit Lead Sheet Does Not Limit the
Scope of Protectability in a 1909 Act Musical Work ............................... 28
a. Standard of Review ........................................................... 28
ii. The Deposit Copy Lead Sheet Does Not Limit the
Scope of Copyright in a Musical Work Created by
Page 2 of 89
iii. Despite the Case Law and 1909 Act Being Clear that the
Deposit Copy Does Not Limit the Scope of Protection
in a Musical Work, The Court Ruled that Plaintiff
Could only Compare the Exact Notes of the Taurus
Deposit Copy to the Stairway to Heaven Album Recordings
and Could Not Play Sound Recordings of the Song ........... 36
Page 3 of 89
c. Argument........................................................................ 45
c. Argument ................................................................ 58
c. Argument ................................................................. 68
5. The Trial Court Erroneously Instructed the Jury on Originality and the
Scope of Protectability of Musical Elements; The Erroneous Instructions
are in Direct Contravention of This Circuits Swirsky Decision and
Constitute Reversible Error ....................................................... 59
c. Argument ................................................................ 45
Page 4 of 89
c. Argument........................................................................ 45
c. Argument ....................................................................... 45
Page 5 of 89
c. Argument........................................................................ 45
i. Legal Standard
Conclusion ................................................................................................ 61
Page 6 of 89
Table of Authorities
Cases
Advanced Display Sys., Inc. v. Kent State Univ., 212 F.3d 1272, 1275 (Fed. Cir. 2000) .........
American Empire Surplus Lines v. Care Centers, 484 F. Supp. 2d 855 (ND Ill. 2007) .........
Bridgeport Music, Inc. v. UMG Recordings, Inc., 585 F.3d 267, 276 (6th Cir. 2009) ......... 54
Benay v. Warner Bros. Entmt, Inc., 607 F.3d 620, 625 (9th Cir.2010) .......................... 42
Cleveland v. Southern Pac. Co., 436 F.2d 77, 80-81 (9th Cir. 1970) .............................. 48
Copperweld Corp. v. Independence Tube Corp., 467 US 752, 762-63 ( 1984) ............ 41-44
Cosmetic Ideas, Inc. v. IAC/lnteractivecorp., 606 F.3d 612, 618 (9th Cir. 2010) .............. 45
English Feedlot v Norden Labs., Inc., 833 F.Supp. 1498, 1504 (D. Col. 1993) .............. 54-56
Feist Publications, Inc. v. Rural Telephone Service Co., Inc., 499 U.S. 340,
345-46 (1991) ............................................................................................. 33, 44
Flaminio v. Honda Motor Co., 733 F.2d 463 (7th Cir. 1984) ................................... 33, 44
Graver Mfg. Co. v. Linde Co., 339 US 605, 607 (1950) ............................................. 58
Harper House, Inc. v. Thomas Nelson, Inc., 889 F.2d 197, 206-208 (9th Cir. 1989) ......... 58
KnowledgePlex v. Placebase, Inc., No. C 08-4267, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 103915, at 2930
(N.D. Cal. Dec. 17, 2008) ............................................................................. 33, 44
MCI Commcns Corp. v. American Tel. & Tel. Co., 708 F.2d 1081, 1171 (7th Cir. 1983) ....55
Mc-Knight v. General Motors Corp., 908 F.2d 104, 115 (7th Cir. 1990) .........................55
Murphy v. City of Long Beach, 914 F. 2d 183 (9th Cir. 1990) ...................................... 41
Monotype Corp., PLC v. Int'l Typeface Corp., 43 F.3d 443, 451 (9th Cir.1994) ............... 41
National Conference of Bar Examiners v. Multistate Legal Studies, 692 F. 2d 478 (7th Cir.
1982)........................................................................................................ 54, 55
Newton v. Diamond, 204 F. Supp. 2d 1244, 1259 (C.D. Cal. 2002) ................ 37, 46, 50, 57
Page 7 of 89
Oviatt By and Through Waugh v. Pearce, 954 F. 2d 1470 (9th Cir. 1992) ....................... 60
Pinal Creek Group v. Newmont Mining Corp., 312 F. Supp. 2d 1212 (D. Ariz. 2004) ....... 60
Reed Elsevier, Inc. v. Muchnick, 559 U.S. 154, 15769 (2010) .................................... 42
Rinker v. County of Napa, 831 F.2d 829, 832 (9th Cir. 1987) ...................................... 42
Salem v. United States Lines Co., 370 U.S. 31, 35, 82 S.Ct. 1119, 1122, 8 L.Ed.2d 313 (1962)
................................................................................................................... 42
Scentsy, Inc. v. B.R. Chase, LLC, 942 F. Supp. 2d 1045, 1051 (D. Idaho 2013) ................ 42
Secy of Labor v. DeSisto, 929 F.2d 789, 795 (1st Cir. 1991) ....................................... 42
Shadow Traffic Network v. Superior Court, 24 Cal. App. 4th 1067, 1084-85 (Court of Appeal
1994) ........................................................................................................... 42
Societe Civile Succession Guino v. Renoir, S49 F .3d 1182, 1185 (9th Cir. 2008) ... 37, 38, 42-
44, 59
Swirsky v. Carey, 376 F.3d 841, 849 (9th Cir. 2004) ................................................. 42
Sylvestre v. Oswald, No. 91 Civ. 5060, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7002 at *4 (S.D.N.Y. May 18,
1993) ........................................................................................................... 42
Three Boys Music Corp. v. Bolton, 212 F.3d 477 (9th Cir. 2000) ................................ 42
United Housing Foundation, Inc. v. Forman, 421 US 837, 848 (1975) .......................... 42
United States v. 99.66 Acres of Land, 970 F.2d 651, 658 (9th Cir. 1992) ...... 37, 38, 42-44, 59
US v. Hinkson, 585 F. 3d 1247, 1260 (9th Cir. 2009) .............................. 37, 38, 42-44, 59
Villiarimo v. Aloha Island Air, Inc., 281 F. 3d 1054, 1061 (9th Cir. 2002) ..........................
White-Smith Music Publg Co. v. Apollo Co., 209 U.S. 1, 10-11 (1908) ......................... 48
Page 8 of 89
Williams v. Bridgeport Music, Inc., No. LA CV13-06004, 2014 WL 7877773, at *8 (C.D. Cal.
Oct. 30, 2014) ................................................................................................ 48
Williams v. Fenix & Scisson, Inc., 608 F.2d 1205, 1209 (9th Cir. 1979) ......................... 48
Woody v. Woody, 127 N.C. App. 626, 492 S.E.2d 382 (1997) ..................................... 48
FRAP 4 ........................................................................................................ 8
Other Authorities
Ninth Circuit Model Instruction 17,16 supp. .............................................................
John E. Rumel, The Hourglass and Due Process: The Propriety of Time Limits on Civil
Trials, University of San Francisco Law Review, at p.253 (Winter 1992) ......
Page 9 of 89
Introduction
This case is a copyright infringement action over the iconic rock and roll song,
the creator of the famous introduction to Stairway to Heaven was not Led
Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page, but actually guitar prodigy Randy California (aka
Randy Wolfe) of the band Spirit. The alleged copying by Led Zeppelin was of Mr.
which Mr. Page admits to possessing. Plaintiff Michael Skidmore is the trustee of the
trust that was created to preserve the late Randy Californias memory.
Stairway to Heaven makes it quite clear that Mr. Page undoubtedly relied upon
Heaven. Led Zeppelin not only opened for Spirit in 1968, played several shows
with them, covered a Spirit song, and owned several Spirit albums, but Mr. Page also
Heaven in 1971. Despite Led Zeppelins denials, the jury was unequivocally clear
that Led Zeppelin had access to Taurus, one of the key elements in a copyright
infringement case.
Yet, the jury did not find that the songs were substantially similar, the other
Page 10 of 89
key element for finding copyright infringement, finding against Plaintiff on the
The reason for this is because the lower court made several evidentiary errors
and also erroneously instructed the jury on how to perform the extrinsic analysis.
The most important of these errors was that the trial court refused to let the jury
hear the full and complete composition of Taurus embodied in the sound
recordings that Jimmy Page possessed, instead limiting the comparison to an outline
of the Taurus composition in the deposit copy lead sheet. The jury was not
Patrick Page possess and allegedly copied, but instead was forced to make an artificial
Heaven are substantially similar, the trial court gave a series of erroneous
instructions on the scope of copyright protection and the extrinsic test which told
the jury that virtually none of the protected expression in the Taurus was
of law.
These errors, and several others, resulted in a trial verdict for the defense on
Page 11 of 89
substantial similarity that was unfounded. The trial verdict should be reversed,
Statement of Jurisdiction
This appeal arises from a music copyright infringement trial in the Central
District of California. Pursuant to the Copyright Act, 17 U.S.C. 101 et seq., the
District Court had federal question jurisdiction over the copyright claims pursuant
to 28 U.S.C. 1331. The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals has appellate jurisdiction
the final order of the District Court entered on June 23, 2016. Appellants notice of
appeal of the final order was timely filed on July 23, 2016, within the 30-day deadline
prescribed by FRAP 4.
resolving this appeal and the issues raised herein as they are not only complicated
but the resulting Appellate court decision could affect many copyrighted works
Page 12 of 89
Page 13 of 89
family moved to New York where in June, he met Jimi Hendrix. (Excerpt 283). While
playing many shows with Hendrix, Hendrix nicknamed Wolfe Randy California.
(Excerpt 284). Hendrix invited Wolfe to play with The Jimi Hendrix Experience in
London, however, Randys mother thought he was too young so Randys family
In late 1966, Wolfe met a girl named Robin whom he fell in love with and later
married. (Excerpt 285-86). Her astrological sign was Taurus, so Randy named a
new song he wrote Taurus. (Excerpt 286). In late 1966 through the summer of
1967 Wolfes band Spirit played every week in Hollywood at a club called the Ash
Grove. (Excerpt 287-88). One of the songs they played every night was Taurus.
(Excerpt 288). The recordings of Spirit playing the Ash Grove show that the
composition of Taurus was in a concrete, definite, and final form in early to mid-
1967. (Audio Exhibits 32-39).1 Later in early 1967, Wolfe met a producer named Lou
Adler who signed the band to a recording contract on August 29, 1967. (Excerpt 289-
1
All referenced audio exhibits and trial exhibits were submitted by way of a concurrently filed
Motion to Transmit to Physical Exhibits.
Page 14 of 89
90). The first Spirit album was released in late 1967. (Excerpt 317). Hollenbeck then
filed a copyright for Taurus that listed Randy California as the author. (Excerpt
2639, 2754). The composition of Taurus on the album recording was the same as
the earlier shows played at the Ash Grove. As part of the registration packet, a
deposit copy lead sheet was transcribed by B. Hansen. (Trial Exhibit 2058;
Excerpt 2642).
The band later embarked that same year on a lengthy tour in support of the
album, which features, among other cuts, Taurus and another song called Fresh
Garbage. (Excerpt 289). The new group Led Zeppelin, consisting of Page, Plant,
bassist John Paul Jones, and drummer John Bonham (now deceased), was at that time
just starting. (Excerpt 309). On December 26, 1968, Led Zeppelin performed its first
show in the United States in Denver, Colorado. Zeppelin was the opening act that
night for Spirit and covered a Spirit song named Fresh Garbage. (Excerpt 309,
Led Zeppelin and Spirit continued to play shows together (Excerpt 314), and
even when the members of Led Zeppelin were not performing, they came to Spirit
shows to watch. (Excerpt 360-61; Trial Exhibit 321). In interviews at the time, Page
expressed his affection for Spirit, their music, and their performances, stating that
Spirit struck him on an emotional level. (Trial Exhibits 157, 160). In homage to
Page 15 of 89
Spirit, Led Zeppelin had been performing the Spirit song Fresh Garbage at its own
shows even before Zeppelin opened for Spirit on December 26, 1968. (Excerpt 484-
87)
Led Zeppelin wrote Stairway to Heaven in 1970 and 1971, as part of the
unnamed album commonly known as Led Zeppelin IV. (Excerpt 650). Defendants
Page and Plant have writing credit for Stairway to Heaven, which is one of the
most successful songs in history. (Excerpt 694). A former Spirit band member, Larry
Knight, testified that in 1973 he spoke with defendant Page in 1973 at an after party
for a Spirit show, where Page gushed how much he liked the band. (Excerpt 711-12).
Knight also testified that he saw Randy California and defendant Page interacting at
Craig Wolfe Trust. (Excerpt 293-94). All of Randy Californias intellectual property,
including his ownership in Taurus, was transferred to the Trust. (Excerpt 846).
After the decision in Petrella v. MGM stating that copyright infringement lawsuits
could be filed for infringement within the last three years, the Trust filed suit against
Led Zeppelin for infringing Wolfes song Taurus in the famous song Stairway
to Heaven. (Excerpt 2713). The specific musical expression at issue were the iconic
Page 16 of 89
alleged several affirmative defenses such as unclean hands and independent creation.
(Excerpt 2645, 2681, 1868). After discovery, Defendants filed for summary
judgment alleging, inter alia, that the songs were not substantially similar, and also
that the only protectable expression in Taurus was in the deposit copy lead sheet.
(Excerpt 2598). Plaintiff responded in opposition to the motion, noting that his
experts had found that the protectable composition in the Taurus copyright was
nearly identical to Stairway to Heavens iconic opening notes. (Excerpt 2412, 2504,
2180, 2199, 2231; Audio Exhibits 7-11 [Taurus/Stairway Comparison], 40-44 [same
The Court denied summary judgment and found that there were triable issues
summary judgment, over Plaintiffs opposition (Excerpt 2436-37), the court stated
that the protected composition of Taurus was limited to the deposit copy lead
After motions in limine were filed, the Court further ruled (again over
Plaintiffs objections) that only the exact notes on the deposit copy of Taurus had
Page 17 of 89
protection under the 1909 Act and that no sound recordings of Taurus could be
admitted. (Excerpt 73-74, 1865, 1866-67). The Court also precluded any sound
recording of Taurus to prove access, and also precluded any and all expert
utilized in Taurus and Stairway to Heaven. Id. Plaintiff contended the sound
demonstrated striking similarity for proving access and lack of independent creation.
At trial, the Court imposed rigid, inflexible time limits on the parties, stating
that Plaintiff would only be entitled to 10 hours of trial time for all direct, cross, and
(Excerpt 89, 1064-65). An approximately five day jury trial then took place.
Plaintiffs experts were musicologist Dr. Alexander Stewart (Excerpt 771) and
master guitarist Kevin Hanson (Excerpt 726). Defendants experts were Dr.
Lawrence Ferrara (Excerpt 929), and master guitarist Robert Mathes (Excerpt
1090).
Following the trial, the court instructed the jury. (Excerpt 11-44, 1372).
Page 18 of 89
and the scope of protection in copyright law. The jury returned a defense verdict,
finding that Plaintiff had proven ownership of Taurus and that Defendants had in
fact had access had access to Taurus, but that Plaintiff had not satisfied the
Summary of Argument
which evidenced the same. The jury never heard Taurus as Jimmy Page (and the
rest of the public) heard the song in 1967-68 and in which Plaintiff had protection. The
The lower court incorrectly held that the composition of Taurus was
strictly limited to the exact notes indicated on a simplistic archival lead sheet of
Taurus that had been submitted to the Copyright Office in 1967 as part of the
registration packet, but which had never been performed or seen by anyone other
Page 19 of 89
than the transcriptionist. The Court precluded any and all evidence regarding the
actual album recording and composition of Taurus which Defendants had heard
These rulings were plainly incorrect. For works created prior to the
Copyright Act of 1976, and governed by the 1909 Copyright Act, a work had
common law copyright protection for its composition in the songs final version at
the moment of creation. Upon registration with the Copyright Office, the common
law copyright protection then became a federal copyright. The 1909 Copyright Act
work as any system of notation or any form of record in which the thought of an
author might be recorded and from which it may be read or reproduced. 1909 Act,
1(e). This includes piano rolls, recordings, sheet music, and any other form of
expression. The 1909 Act was specifically enacted to open up the scope of protected
registering the common law copyright could in anyway result in the limitation of the
The lower court based its decision on an erroneous belief that only written
sheet music has compositional protection. The court thus thought that when the
1909 Act required that complete copy of the work being copyrighted be
Page 20 of 89
submitted to the Copyright office with the registration application, that such copy
delimited the scope of protection in the work. See 1909 Act, 12. But, nowhere in
the case law or the 1909 Act, is it contemplated that this purely archival requirement
governs the scope of the composition in the work. The Seventh and Ninth Circuit
Courts, who have examined this deposit requirement, both hold that the substantial
similarity comparison is not limited to the notes on the deposit copy lead sheet and
that sound recordings are admissible to prove that protected expression was copied.
The result at trial was that Plaintiff and his experts were forced to compare a
instead of the correct and complete composition in the album version of Taurus
despite admitting that it was relevant for this purpose. In this case, Led Zeppelin was
disputing that they had access to Taurus or had ever heard it prior to creating
Led Zeppelin opened for Spirit, extensively praised Spirit, and owned Spirit albums
(including one with Taurus on it). However, the centerpiece of the access case
Page 21 of 89
was the fact that the sonic landscapes of Tauruss album recording and Stairway
creation.
Plaintiff therefore intended to play the Taurus album version that Jimmy
Page admits to owning for Page, and ask if Page and Plant heard Taurus before
that the sonic landscape of the two songs was strikingly similar and precluded
independent creation. Yet, the trial court simply refused to let the jury hear the
sound recording that Page had listened to and used to create the infringing song
It was Defendants choice to contest access. Their contest of access made the
album recording of Taurus relevant. It was not for the court to preclude the jury
from hearing this highly relevant evidence, and to prevent expert testimony on this
topic, when Plaintiff had to prove this element. This is an example of the Court
bending over backwards to preclude evidence that damaged Defendants case. The
courts ruling that the album recording is unduly prejudicial to the substantial
Page 22 of 89
that was improperly precluded for both access and substantial similarity was nearly
Plaintiff notes that although the jury found that he did prove access, the
courts decision to preclude the sound recording prevented Plaintiff from otherwise
establishing a higher a degree of access. The degree of access is important under the
instruction on the Inverse Ratio Rule, which states that the higher degree of access
proven by the plaintiff requires the jury to concomitantly lower the burden of proof
Plaintiff spent a great deal of its case proving access (and was successful in
doing so) relying on the fact that the Inverse Ratio Rule has been the law in the Ninth
Circuit for decades. The inverse ratio rule provides that the higher the degree of
Plaintiffs trial strategy and was reversible error. It is impossible that the jury reached
trial court on how to determine the appropriate burden for substantial similarity.
Page 23 of 89
Access and substantial similarity are inextricably linked, yet the jury was asked to
similarity test. The jury was never told that combinations of otherwise unprotectable
understanding the protectability of compositions and the extrinsic test and was a
Despite Plaintiff and Defendants both asking for this standard instruction, the
trial court simply failed to give the instruction at all, without explanation. The failure
to give this instruction failed to inform the jury about a key copyright concept
without which the jurys conclusion, that the extrinsic test was not satisfied, could
and capable of being copied. This was highly prejudicial, reversible error.
musical element or device appeared in the prior art, it was unprotectable. This is, in
fact, not true under binding Ninth Circuit precedent. As long as the element in
Page 24 of 89
In addition, the jury was told by the lower court that certain musical elements,
such as descending chromatic scales, are not protectable as a matter of law. This was
actually incorrect and unsupported by any case law; the expert testimony made it
clear that the way the descending chord was used in Taurus, and copied in
Thus, the jury was erroneously told that a vast swath of musical expression in
Taurus was not protected under copyright law as a matter of law. This instruction
compounded the courts error in not instructing the jury that combinations and
reversible error
argued that the jury obviously meant the bass clef of the Taurus deposition, which
is similar to Stairway to Heaven and was played throughout trial---not the version
of the Taurus deposit copy which combined the bass and treble clef which
Defendants advocated for (the two clefs are supposed to be played separately and
this version was only played once during trial). Upon being asked by the court, one
Page 25 of 89
juror told the court that he wanted the bass clef played as Plaintiff had argued, while
The court erroneously only played the version more favorable to Defendants,
after which the jury found in favor of defendants on substantial similarity. This was
to ten hours to try the entire case, including direct, cross, and rebuttal witnesses.
This extremely short time limit to try a very complicated case is unjustifiable and
arbitrary. In this case, nearly every element of the copyright claims were in dispute
and there were multiple affirmative defenses to contend with. Plaintiff had the
similarity, yet was only allotted approximately 5 to 6 hours by the trial court to do so.
Moreover, the Court was incredibly inflexible in adjusting these time limits as
The court allowed Plaintiffs counsel just minutes to cross examine the main defense
Page 26 of 89
complexity, where Defendants contested nearly every element of the claim. Plaintiff
is entitled to a sufficient amount of time to carry his burden and dispute Defendants
inference against him. Shortly before the case went to trial, Plaintiff discovered that
Defendants and defense counsel were concealing the fact that their lead
publisher and fiduciary. Plaintiff has asked for any and all such information and
Although Plaintiff both filed a motion for sanctions and raised this objection
at trial, the Court improperly failed to preclude Dr. Ferraras testimony despite the
fact that there was an undeniable conflict of interest which was improperly hidden.
Page 27 of 89
Argument
Erroneous evidentiary rulings can be the basis to reverse a jury verdict and
order a new trial. Ruvalcaba v. City of Los Angeles, 64 F. 3d 1323 (9th Cir. 1995)
(citing United States v. 99.66 Acres of Land, 970 F.2d 651, 658 (9th Cir. 1992)); see
also Advanced Display Sys., Inc. v. Kent State Univ., 212 F.3d 1272, 1275 (Fed. Cir.
2000); Harper House, Inc. v. Thomas Nelson, Inc., 889 F.2d 197, 206-208 (9th Cir.
1989).
585 F. 3d 1247, 1260 (9th Cir. 2009). This erroneous evidentiary ruling is legal in
The trial court ruled over Plaintiffs objection at summary judgment and on
motions in limine that only the exact notes on the deposit copy lead sheet constitute
the protectable composition of Taurus. (Excerpt 73, 613-14, 635, 736). The jury
Page 28 of 89
instructions erroneously told the jury plaintiff has no rights in any sound recording
transcribed in the deposit copy. (Excerpt 29). Plaintiff opposed this argument and
ruling at, inter alia, summary judgment (Excerpt 2149-52, 2436-38, 2516), motions
The Court improperly did not admit the correct and complete composition of
Taurus. The correct and complete composition of Taurus was that embodied
in the album recording of Taurus released to the public in 1967-68. (Excerpt 2122,
Exhibit]). This was the version of Taurus that Jimmy Page owned, heard from the
album, heard live in concert, and copied. (Excerpt 493, 462, 553-56). The
composition contained and represented in the Taurus album recording (and other
live Taurus recordings) was the best evidence for the substantial similarity
Page 29 of 89
However, the trial court erroneously ruled that the only composition of
Taurus that was admissible for the substantial similarity comparison were the
exact notes on the archival deposit copy of Taurus submitted to the Copyright
Office in 1967 for the songs federal copyright registration. (Excerpt 73, 613-14, 635,
736). The ruling by the court, that only the exact notes on the archival lead sheet
of law. The Courts ruling was unprecedented and directly contradicts Ninth Circuit
precedent.
The 1909 Act was implemented because Congress believed that limiting
copyright protection to sheet music alone was too restrictive with the advent of new
ways of recording music such as piano player rolls. Compare Copyright Act of 1909,
35 Stat. 1075 (1909) (repealed 1978) with White-Smith Music Publg Co. v. Apollo
Co., 209 U.S. 1, 10-11 (1908) (holding that the only musical expression protected
under 1831 Copyright Act was sheet music and inviting Congress to expand scope of
Page 30 of 89
the 1909 Act by defining the scope of protection in musical works as:
work consistently played the same. Newton v. Diamond, 204 F. Supp. 2d 1244, 1259
(C.D. Cal. 2002) (A musical compositions copyright protects the generic sound
that would necessarily result from any performance of the piece.).2 (See also
Under the 1909 Act, a work was protected by common law copyright from
the moment of its creation. Summary Judgment Opinion (Excerpt 126) (citing
Societe Civile Succession Guino v. Renoir, S49 F .3d 1182, 1185 (9th Cir. 2008)).
However, common law copyright protection was divested, and federal copyright
protection began, when the work was published and/or registered with the Copyright
Office. Id. (citing Williams v. Bridgeport Music, Inc., No. LA CV13-06004, 2014
2
Plaintiff wanted to introduce multiple recordings of Taurus, both live and in
the studio, to illustrate what compositional elements of Taurus necessarily
resulted from any rendition of the piece, excluding any performance related aspects
which do not deserve protection. (Excerpt 2095-99 - Declaration of Erik Johnson).
Page 31 of 89
ii. The Deposit Copy Lead Sheet Does Not Limit the Scope of
Copyright in a Musical Work Created by Common Law and
Defined in 1909 Act, 1(e)
As part of the registration process another section of the 1909 Act requires
that a complete copy of the work being copyrighted be submitted with the
copyright office. 1909 Act, 12. However, this deposit requirement has always been
purely archival in nature and was never intended to affect the scope of copyright
There is no case law anywhere which states that the scope of common law copyright
protection that works obtain once created, Societe Civile Succession, S49 F .3d at
1185, could somehow be limited by registering the copyright with the Copyright
The Seventh Circuit noted that the 1976 Copyright Act (substantively
identical, in this respect, to the corresponding predecessor sections of the 1909 Act)
does not require a deposit copy be submitted for the purpose of disclosing and
[theCopyrightAct]whenviewedasawholenegatesthenotion
thatdepositrequirementsareforthepurposeofdelineatingthe
scopeofacopyrightthroughpublicdisclosure.
National Conference of Bar Examiners v. Multistate Legal Studies, 692 F. 2d 478
(7th Cir. 1982). Indeed, nowhere does the 1909 Act state that the deposit copy
Page 32 of 89
submitted pursuant to 12 governs the scope of copyright protection, nor does any
appellate case law. Instead, registration (which includes the deposit copy
See Reed Elsevier, Inc. v. Muchnick, 559 U.S. 154, 15769 (2010). It is not
substantive.
Conference of Bar Examiners opinion that the deposit copy lead sheet does not
define the scope of copyright. In Three Boys Music Corp. v. Bolton, 212 F.3d 477
(9th Cir. 2000), the Ninth Circuit was confronted with what a complete copy
means for a musical work under the 1909 Act. The Court held that
Althoughthe1909CopyrightActrequirestheownertodeposit
a ``complete copy'' of the work with the copyright office, our
definition of a ``complete copy'' is broad and deferential:
``Absent intent to defraud and prejudice, inaccuracies in
copyright registrations do not bar actions for infringement.''
Harrisv.EmusRecordsCorp.,734F.2d1329,1335(9thCir.1984)
(citationsomitted).
Id. at 486-87. The Ninth Circuit then permitted an extensive analysis in Three Boys
Music of the composition of the album recording of the underlying song and this
Circuit did not limit the comparison to the deposit lead sheet or preclude the
sound recordings. Id. at 485-86. In that case the defendants were making a highly
similar argument to the one in this case, that the inaccurate/incomplete deposit copy
Page 33 of 89
lead sheet should have controlled the litigation. Id. at 486-87 ([defendants] claimed
that the deposit copy does not include the majority of the musical elements that were
inaccurate deposit copy had been submitted for a nonfraudulent reason, and all the
parties were well aware of the underlying work that was alleged to have been copied,
it is simply not prejudicial to focus the case on the actual composition of the musical
work embodied in the album version of the song, instead of an inaccurate version of
the deposit lead sheet. Id. at 486-87. The Three Boys Music approach not only
comports with the entire purpose and language of the 1909 Act, but avoids elevating
form over substance, something decried by the Supreme Court. See Copperweld
substance); United Housing Foundation, Inc. v. Forman, 421 US 837, 848 (1975);
Numerous other cases confronted with more or less the same question have
held that the deposit copy does not control what the work is: Scentsy, Inc. v. B.R.
Chase, LLC, 942 F. Supp. 2d 1045, 1051 (D. Idaho 2013), affd in part & revd in part
on other grounds sub nom., Scentsy, Inc. v. Harmony Brands, LLC, 585 F. Appx 621
Page 34 of 89
(9th Cir. 2014); Sylvestre v. Oswald, No. 91 Civ. 5060, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7002
2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 103915, at 2930 (N.D. Cal. Dec. 17, 2008);3 see also
Washingtonian Publg Co. v. Pearson, 306 U.S. 30, 41 (1939) (the requirement for
deposit is not for the purpose of a permanent record of copyrighted publications and
The defense expert himself, Dr. Lawrence Ferrara, testified in his deposition
recording of that song not the deposit copy. (Excerpt 1650). Indeed, the trial court
Note that deposit copy lead sheets submitted to the Copyright Office are
almost always outlines of the registered work and almost never represent the entirety
3
The trial court stated that Three Boy Music and KnowledgePlexs rulings are distinguishable
because the deposit copy requirement is jurisdictional in nature. (Excerpt 132). First, this is not
accurate. The Supreme Court ruled in Reed Elsevier, 559 U.S. at 15769 (that registration
requirements are not jurisdictional, but simply are preconditions to suit. Second, regardless
whether the requirement is jurisdictional, a precondition, or substantive, it is a distinction without
a difference. There is no reason to distinguish between jurisdictional or substantive reasons what
complete means under the 1909 Act. Clearly, under the 1909 Act, the common law, and the
applicable case law, the deposit copy was never intended to define the scope of the composition
of a copyright. Third, if the registration deposit requirement is jurisdictional or a precondition,
this actually supports Plaintiffs point. A jurisdictional requirement of the 1909 Act should not be
used to delimit the scope of copyright protection in a work.
Page 35 of 89
example, the lead sheet deposit copy submitted for Stairway to Heaven is
significantly incomplete when compared to the actual composition of the song in the
album recording. (Excerpt 1649-51). The Stairway to Heaven deposit copy does
not even include the iconic opening notes, and defense musicological expert Dr.
Heavens finished composition in the album recording was around 11,000 notes,
while the Stairway deposit copy was just 400. (Excerpt 1649-51).
All of the foregoing illustrates that neither Congress, the courts, nor the music
community ever intended or thought that the deposit copy being submitted to the
could limit the common law copyright that vested in the song at the time of creation.
iii. Despite the Case Law and 1909 Act Being Clear that the
Deposit Copy Does Not Limit the Scope of Protection in a
Musical Work, The Court Ruled that Plaintiff Could only
Compare the Exact Notes of the Taurus Deposit Copy to
the Stairway to Heaven Album Recordings and Could Not
Play Sound Recordings of the Song
The trial court badly misunderstood basic copyright law principles leading to
the erroneous ruling. This is illustrated by how the court chose to instruct the jury
on musical compositions:
Amusicalcompositionconsistsofrhythm,harmonyandmelody
as transcribed in written form. The performance of a musical
Page 36 of 89
transcribed in written form and explicitly contradicts 1909 Act, 1(e). There is no
case law to support such a statement. It contradicts black letter copyright law and
binding Ninth Circuit precedent. Swirsky v. Carey, 376 F.3d 841, 849 (9th Cir.
2004); Three Boys Music, 212 F.3d at 485; see also Newton, 204 F. Supp. 2d at
written sheet music in a piano roll, a sound recording, or a video. Id. In Bridgeport
Music, Inc. v. UMG Recordings, Inc., the Sixth Circuit observed that a songs
Because of this failure to understand basic copyright principals, the trial court
ruled that the scope of copyright protection in a work is strictly limited to only the
exact notes on the written deposit copy lead sheet. (Excerpt 73, 613-14, 635, 736)
(stating to Plaintiffs expert Kevin Hanson: You can play notes of the deposit copy
only.).
This was the first time in history such a restrictive ruling had been made and
there was no support for it in the 1909 Act, the common law, or the case law applying
Page 37 of 89
the same. The Court even prevented Plaintiff from presenting evidence on the tempo
and genre of Taurus, clearly protectable compositional elements under the 1909
Act, because they were not written on the deposit copy. (Excerpt 512, 1048-49). All
of this can be connected to the courts erroneous belief that a musical composition
The Court erroneously imported into 12 of the 1909 Act a meaning and
purpose it was never intended to have (to limit the scope of copyright), which was
instead a task explicitly addressed by 1(e) and the common law. Indeed, in the last
comparison as this court did. The trial courts decisions were based on a thoroughly
After the court erroneously ruled at summary judgment that the deposit copy
limited the scope of copyright protection in Taurus from the protection it was
originally afforded under common law and section 1(e), Plaintiff also argued that the
court should adopt the approach of the court in the Williams v. Bridgeport case
Page 38 of 89
No. 423), at p7. (7/14/2015) (I think [the Gaye Parties expert] testimony is going
to have to be based on the deposit copy. It's not to say they can't have listened to the
sound recording as part of their analysis. They simply can't present to the jury an
opinion that says, [b]ecause I listened to the sound recording, I've reached this
conclusion.)).
The trial court in that case held that as long as there was expert testimony that
the composition in the sound recordings were represented in some way in the deposit
copy, that the compositions in the recordings were admissible to the extent
embodied in the deposit copy. Id. Plaintiff made the same argument as Bridgeport at
motions in limine Id. Plaintiffs experts opined that all pertinent elements of
Taurus, especially the guitar melody central to the case, are represented on the
deposit copy and that those compositional elements are also present in the Taurus
sound recording. (Excerpt 2122-23). Plaintiffs argument was disregarded by the trial
These incredibly restrictive rulings are clearly a result of the courts erroneous
belief that only written sheet music can constitute musical composition. Even if this
Circuit holds that the deposit copy can in some way limit the scope of copyright
protection, it should reverse the trial verdict because Plaintiff was not allowed to
Page 39 of 89
produce evidence of what compositional elements from the Taurus album version
Plaintiff, the experts, and the jury were made to compare a version of
Taurus which had never been heard or played by anyone (the deposit copy),
including Randy Wolfe and defendant Jimmy Page. Consider, how can a defendant
copy a work he has not seen and did not have access to? How can a piece of paper
the defendant never saw be the basis of the substantial similarity comparison? The
Heaven than the actual composition from the album version of Taurus,
something noted by both Plaintiffs expert and defense expert Robert Mathes. See
Indeed, Plaintiffs experts stated that the compositions of the album versions
of both Taurus and Stairway are nearly identical. (Excerpts 2515, 2359, 2192).
performance of the compositions in the Taurus album version and the Stairway
to Heaven album version and overlaid them on top of each other. Mr. Bricklin
Page 40 of 89
observed that the two compositions are indistinguishable and are the same
Motion to Transmit Physical Exhibits]). However, due to the trial courts erroneous
rulings precluding the Taurus sound recordings and compositions, the jury never
1976 Act cases the substantial similarity comparison will be between a deposit copy
the defendant will have never seen or heard, and the allegedl infringing song. Artists
simply do not go into the Copyright Offices archives to see what someone wrote
down on paper. They listen to the underlying source song that is publicly available.
Page admitted that he had never asked the Copyright Office for the lead sheet of
substantial similarity comparison on the deposit copy that no defendant will have
ever seen.
It is important not to lose the forest for the trees. The purpose of the copyright
original expression by cracking down on those who steal anothers work. The
artificial comparison the lower court instructed the jury to undertake was not the
Page 41 of 89
substantial similarity comparison in this trial was artificial, highly prejudicial, and
must be redone.
There are many, many works made prior to the 1976 Act which would be
affected by the ruling of this court: that only the exact notes in the deposit copy are
protectable.
The district courts ruling in effect means that a sound recording of a pre-1978
composition can never be played to the jury in a copyright infringement case and that
the only relevant evidence to prove a composition of a 1909 Act song is the deposit
copy. This is absurd and has never been the law. Copyright infringement trials
routinely play the songs in question to the jury and then use experts to identify what
parts of the composition of the song are protectable and copied. See Three Boys
Music, supra. The notion that a recording of the composition at issue cannot be
played and instead only the deposit copy must be relied upon is bizarre. It is vital and
crucial to the future of copyright law that this Circuit overturn the district courts
Page 42 of 89
Many songs were and are not composed on paper and are instead composed
on musical instruments. Their lead sheets, made after the songs were composed
solely for purpose of registering the copyright, were never intended to represent the
totality of the songs protection, only to satisfy the archival function of the Copyright
Act.
This was the case of Taurus, where Randy California composed it on his
guitar and did not write the deposit copy lead sheet. (Excerpt 2642 - Taurus
Deposit Transcribed by B. Hansen 1967; Trial Exhibit 2058). This was the case
for Stairway to Heaven, where the song was composed by Led Zeppelin over
several different takes without utilizing sheet music. (Excerpt 651-52). This was the
case in the Blurred Lines case, again because Marvin Gaye composed music in the
studio. Williams v. Bridgeport, 13-06004, Doc. No. 232-1, at p.15 of 29. This was the
case in UMG Recordings, Inc., where the Sixth Circuit observed that the artist wrote
Affirming the district courts ruling that the deposit copy requirement limits
the scope of copyright would divest copyright protection from massive amounts of
expression and completely upend a century of case law interpreting the 1909 Act.
Page 43 of 89
If the district courts rulings are affirmed, what happens if the deposit copy no
longer exists? The Library of Congress need not add all deposited works to its
collection and their retention is purely discretionary, "for the longest period
considered practical and desirable by the Register of Copyrights and the Librarian of
court has observed that the deposit copy is not indispensable to the existence of the
copyright. Pearson, 306 U.S. 30, 41 (1939) (the requirement for deposit is not for
If this Circuit affirms the district courts ruling that all protectable expression
is embodied in the deposit copy, then what happens to the scope of protectability of
a work when there is no longer a deposit copy? The district court held that no other
evidence was admissible to prove the composition of a song. Plaintiff does not have
an answer to this question, except to note that it has always been up to experts to
work by looking at the best evidence, usually sound recordings of the song. See Three
Page 44 of 89
resources and the deposit copy requirement was widely considered to be an archival
formality. Dr. Ferrara himself charges $395.00 dollars per hour to transcribe songs.
as opposed to just the 400 in the Stairway to Heaven deposit copy (Excerpt 2404-
07), defense expert Dr. Ferrara charged thousands of dollars. In fact, it would be so
expensive that it would make copyrighting music nearly impossible for an individual
who was not wealth or did not read and expertly write music.
Thus, an affirmance of the district courts ruling would divest a large body of
work from copyright protection simply because (1) no one understood the deposit
extremely expensive to score music in such a manner. There is no indication that the
1909 Congress intended musical copyright registration to be reserve for the elite and
wealthy.
Page 45 of 89
a. Scope of Review
Erroneous evidentiary rulings can be the basis for a new trial. Ruvalcaba v., 64
F. 3d 1323 (citing 99.66 Acres of Land, 970 F.2d at 658); see also Advanced Display
Sys., Inc, 212 F.3d at 1275; Harper House, Inc. v, 889 F.2d at 206-08.
novo. Hinkson, 585 F. 3d 1247. Evidentiary ruling solely based in fact are reviewed
uses the wrong standard to analyze the admissibility of evidence, that is also a legal
error reviewed de novo. US v. WR Grace, 504 F.3d 745 (2007). Plaintiff contends
that this error was an erroneous evidentiary ruling that is legal in nature and should
be reviewed de novo.
In a copyright case, the song that the Defendants had access to and allegedly
copied must be admitted to prove access. The Courts use of Rule 403 to preclude
The court initially ruled over Plaintiffs opposition (Excerpt 2118-19, 2104-05,
1536, 1563) that the sound recordings of Taurus were not relevant to prove access,
Page 46 of 89
independent creation was not admissible. (Excerpt 73-74). During trial, the court
partially reconsidered and admitted that the sound recording was relevant to access,
but did not admit it into evidence or allow expert testimony on the similarities of the
c. Argument
The sound recordings of Taurus should also have been admitted to prove
access, even if they were properly precluded from the substantial similarity
comparison (although they were not). The lower court repeatedly refused to permit
plaintiff to play the sound recording to the jury, or admit it into evidence, for
At the motion in limine stage, and during trial, Plaintiff argued that the sound
recordings were admissible so that Plaintiff could ask defendant Page if he had heard
and copied the songs, and also to show that the recordings sonic landscapes and
Stairway to Heaven:
thesoniclandscapeinthesoundrecordingofTaurusandits
similarity to Stairway to Heaven, although not copyrightable
underthe1909Act,isevidencethatDefendantshadaccessto
Taurus.EventhoughtheCourtdiscountedstrikingsimilarityin
thesummaryjudgmentopinionbasedonthecompositionsofthe
song,thefactthatthesoundrecordingsofthesongsuseanearly
Page 47 of 89
MILs, but during the trial reconsidered. When Plaintiff argued that he should be
allowed to play the sound recordings of Taurus and ask defendant Page if he ever
heard them before, the trial court ruled that the recorded versions of Taurus
Hearingtheperformanceandtestifyingwhetherhe[defendant
Page]haseverhearditornot,[plaintiffs]counsel'sright,that
cancomeinforaccess....
(Excerpt 67-68). However, despite admitting the clear relevance of the sound
recording to access, the Court ruled that the sound recording should not be admitted
and refused to let the jury hear the version of Taurus that Page copied. The court
stated:
Wewillplaytheperformancehereincourt,notinfrontofthejury,but
havethewitnesshere,andthenwhenwebringthejuryin,youcanask
him,havewejustplayedtheperformanceforyou,haveyoulistenedto
it,isitsimilarornot?TheCourtfindsitismuchtooprejudicialforthe
jury[underRule403]tohearthatcomposition,sowe'renotgoingto
allowthejurytohearthatcomposition,butyoucanhavethewitness
hearthatcomposition,andthenyoucanaskhimquestionsinfrontof
thejuryaboutit.
(Excerpt 67-68) (emphasis added). This ruling does not make any sense. A trial is
put on for the jury. How can the jury evaluate the credibility of defendant Pages
Page 48 of 89
answer if it does not have the opportunity to listen to the song that Page is being
asked about?4
MR.KULIK: IunderstandtheCourt'srulingthismorning,
but how can the jury assess the witness's
credibilitywhenyouaskhim,okay,nowthe
question, the ultimate question after the
jurycomesbackintothecourtroom
THECOURT: Okay.
MR.KULIK: andMr.Pageisonthestand,forexample,
andweaskhimaquestion,howcanthejury
assesshiscredibility
THECOURT: Hemaynotbe,then,Counsel.Thenmyruling
wouldbe,ifwedon'tdoitthisway,itismuch
more prejudicial than it is probative, and it
doesn't come in at all. Because there's no
questionintheCourt'smindthatthatwould
confuse the jury and they may very well be
comparingtheproductiontotheinfringing
orallegedinfringingcomposition.
MR.KULIK: But Your Honor, don't you think the
productionitselfcanbehighlyrelevanttothe
questionofaccess?Forexample,ifthereare
certainelements
THECOURT: Counsel,yourminuteislonggone.Wecansit
hereanddebatethisforeveronit,butthere's
noquestioninmymindthatitismuchmore
4
Note that the Courts ruling that playing the Taurus album recording would be unduly
prejudicial for the substantial similarity comparison is an admission of sorts that the album
recording of Taurus is nearly identical to Stairway to Heaven. This is nothing less than an
inadvertent admission by the Court that the album recording of Taurus would have proven that
Page had access to Taurus and wrote Stairway to Heaven using Taurus.
Page 49 of 89
The Courts ruling is incorrect. First, playing the album recording outside of
the presence of the jury, then asking Page if he had heard the album recording in the
presence of the jury, is nonsensical. There is no possible way for the jury to evaluate
the truthfulness of Pages answer when they have not heard the recording he is being
asked about. The Courts choices contradict the purpose of a jury trial.
so that access could be established, was erroneous in light of the Courts admission
that the sound recording of Taurus was relevant to prove access. Note that this
analysis of the production and sonic landscapes of the songs should have been
allowed regardless of whether the sound recordings were admitted or not. WR Grace, 504
F.3d at 763 (stating that experts may rely on inadmissible evidence in forming an
opinion or delivering testimony). Plaintiffs experts would have testified that the
1831 [Bricklin stating by comparing the sound recordings and sonic landscape,
Page 50 of 89
Third, the trial courts ruling that the sound recording was relevant to access,
but could nevertheless be precluded because it was unduly prejudicial under Fed. RE
of law. It was also clearly erroneous and abused the courts discretion.
There were, inter alia, two elements in dispute at trial: access and substantial
similarity. It is the very foundation of copyright law that the most relevant evidence
for access is the song that was allegedly copied by Defendants (and which Jimmy
matter of law, the court simply cannot keep the jury from hearing the song that was
copied and comparing it to the allegedly infringing song if access is in dispute. The
Courts ruling essentially tied Plaintiffs hand behind his back to prove a contested
element. When the Court improperly analyzes the admissible of evidence governed
by one rule of law (plaintiff entitle to prove dispute of access) with an inapplicable
Rule 403 analysis, that is an error of law. Cf. WR Grace, 504 F.3d at 765 (holding
that preclusion of evidence pursuant to Rule 403 erroneous because Rule 703 should
Moreover, even if this ruling is viewed under the abuse of discretion standard,
Page 51 of 89
it was clearly erroneous. The probative value of using the very song that defendant
Page owns, and had access to, to establish access is extraordinarily high under Rule
403. The probative value of admitting the song to prove access far outweighed any
confusion that could have affected the substantial similarity comparison. Note that
the court issued limiting instructions repeatedly and told the jury: plaintiff has no
rights in any sound recording of Taurus, and claims rights only in the musical
Circuit is clear that a court cannot preclude probative evidence without taking into
account less extreme remedies to correct any prejudice. See WR Grace, 504 F.3d at
765 (stating the court substantially underestimated the capacity of jury instructions
instruction). The preclusion of the sound recordings because of Fed. Rule of Evid.
403 were clearly erroneous, abused the courts discretion, and severely damaged
Plaintiff notes that even though Plaintiff did successfully prove that
higher degree of access, which is critically important to the inverse ratio rule addressed
immediately infra. The jury was deprived of the ability to decide what was mere
Page 52 of 89
3. The Lower Court Failed to Give the Standard, Black-Letter Law Inverse
Ratio Rule Instruction and Erroneously Failed to Tell the Jury that the
Burden of Proof for Substantial Similarity is Dependent on the Degree of
Access Proven
a. Scope of Review
whole, the court's instructions fairly and adequately covered the issues presented,
correctly stated the law, and were not misleading. Oviatt By and Through Waugh,
954 F. 2d 1470 (quoting Thorsted v. Kelly, 858 F.2d at 573 (9th Cir. 1988)). A new
trial has been permitted where the Courts evidentiary rulings and jury instructions
are erroneous or inadequate. Murphy, 914 F.2d 183) (stating erroneous jury
instructions, as well as the failure to give adequate instructions, are also bases for a
new trial); Rinker v, 831 F.2d at 832 (erroneous instructions); Cleveland, 436 F.2d
Plaintiff repeatedly asked for an instruction on the inverse ratio rule, which
not even Defendants substantively objected to. (Excerpt 1974-76, 50-51). However,
c. Argument
Page 53 of 89
infringement are inextricably linked by an inverse ratio rule. Ninth Circuit Model
Instruction 17,16 supp. (quoting Benay v. Warner Bros. Entmt, Inc., 607 F.3d 620,
625 (9th Cir.2010)). Simply stated the rule provides that the higher degree of access
Plaintiff proves, the lower the burden to prove substantial similarity. Id.
Plaintiff based a large portion of his trial strategy on the inverse ratio rule. As
access was disputed, and Defendants were claiming independent creation, Plaintiff
devoted much trial time to proving a high degree of access, which should have
However, despite Plaintiff repeatedly asking for this instruction, the court
pointedly refused to instruct the jury on the inverse ratio rule. (Excerpt 50-51).
Defendants did not even dispute that the inverse ratio rule is a legitimate instruction
The prejudice that resulted from the failure to give this instruction was high
and requires a new trial. First, there is no possible way the jury knew the correct
standard to apply to substantial similarity, and that access and substantial similarity
are inextricably intertwined. The jurys substantial similarity analysis could not have
5
Plaintiff maintains he did show a high degree of access given that Led Zeppelin and defendant
Page opened for Spirit, attended their shows, praised them in newspaper interviews, covered their
songs, and owned many Spirit albums including the one that Taurus is on, but it is impossible
to know how much access the jury thought there was.
Page 54 of 89
been done correctly without knowing the correct burden to apply. Second, Plaintiff
contends that he proved a high degree of access and that the jurys verdict would
have been different if the jury had known that the more access Plaintiff proved, the
4. The Court Erroneously Instructed the Jury on How to Perform the Extrinsic
Test, Completely Omitting the Crucial Instruction that Combinations of
Unprotected Elements are Themselves Afforded Protectability
a. Scope of Review
whole, the court's instructions fairly and adequately covered the issues presented,
correctly stated the law, and were not misleading. Pearce, 954 F. 2d 1470 (quoting
Thorsted v. Kelly, 858 F.2d 571, 573 (9th Cir.1988)). A new trial has been permitted
where the Courts evidentiary rulings and jury instructions are erroneous or
the failure to give adequate instructions, are also bases for a new trial); Rinker, 831
instructions).
Page 55 of 89
that the jury be instructed on this important part of the Extrinsic Test. (Excerpt 1956-
The trial courts instructions failed to tell the jury that the arrangement of
unprotectable and protectable elements, if used in combination with each other, can
itself be protectable. Such was the case, for instance, in Three Boys Music. See
substantial similarity test that even Defendants proposed an instruction on this point
of law. (Excerpt 2032). Nevertheless, the Court inexplicably failed to instruct the
jury on this crucial component of the extrinsic test. As a result there is no possible
way the jury performed the extrinsic test correctly, especially considering the other
erroneous instructions identified in this appeal. Given that the jury found against
i. Legal Standard
Page 56 of 89
to"protectedelements"ofthecopyrightedwork,theextrinsic
testissatisfied.
Forexample,inThreeBoysweupheldajuryfindingof
substantial similarity based on the combination of five
otherwise unprotectable elements: (1) the title hook phrase
(includingthelyric,rhythm,andpitch);(2)theshiftedcadence;
(3)theinstrumentalfigures;(4)theverse/chorusrelationship;
and(5)thefadeending.
Swirsky, 376 F.3d at 849.
This instruction is a crucial component of the extrinsic analysis the jury was
supposed to perform. Even Defendants proposed that the jury should have been
given an instruction on this part of the extrinsic test (albeit erroneously modified).
(Excerpt 2032). This is the very core of the analytical extrinsic test and the failure to
tell the jury how to perform the extrinsic test requires that the jurys defense verdict
Plaintiffs experts opinion were substantially based on the fact that the
protection. (Excerpt 748, 763, 781-82, 834-36). Dr. Alexander Stewart specifically
opined that there were as a combination of five elements in Taurus that were
protectable and had been copied in Stairway to Heaven: (1) minor chromatic line
Page 57 of 89
and associated chords, (Trial Exhibit 501-1, 502-1, 503-1) (2) durations of pitches
of minor chromatic line, (3) melody placed over the descending chromatic line
consisting of combination of arpeggios and two-note pairs (Trial Exhibit 506-1), (4)
rhythm of steady 8th note beats, and (5) pitch collection (Trial Exhibit 511-1).
(Excerpt 779-80). Dr. Stewart testified that none of the prior art had these five
(Trial Exhibit 501-1). Dr. Stewart reaffirmed this point later in his testimony.
(Excerpt 835). This was a central element of Plaintiffs substantial similarity case.
Yet, the jury was never given an instruction on this basic part of the substantial
similarity test.
The Courts failure to give any instruction on this important part of the
extrinsic test completely negated Dr. Stewarts opinions and conclusions and was
highly prejudicial. The jury could not have come to the correct conclusion without
knowing about this crucial part of the extrinsic test. The failure to give this important
instruction was reversible error, especially when taking into account the other
5. The Trial Court Erroneously Instructed the Jury on Originality and the
Scope of Protectability of Musical Elements; The Erroneous Instructions are
in Direct Contravention of This Circuits Swirsky Decision and Constitute
Reversible Error
a. Scope of Review
Page 58 of 89
whole, the court's instructions fairly and adequately covered the issues presented,
correctly stated the law, and were not misleading. Pearce, 954 F. 2d 1470 (quoting
Thorsted, 858 F.2d at 573)). A new trial has been permitted where the Courts
evidentiary rulings and jury instructions are erroneous or inadequate. Murphy, 914
F. 2d 183 (stating erroneous jury instructions, as well as the failure to give adequate
instructions, are also bases for a new trial); Rinker, 831 F.2d at 832 (erroneous
Plaintiff asked the court to correctly instruct the jury on originality. (Excerpt
(Excerpt 2030).
Introduction to a Copyright Claim, which incorrectly told the jury that specific
musical elements, like descending chromatic scales and short sequences of notes, can
never be afforded copyright protection. (Excerpt 2009). This was not the standard
c. Argument
Page 59 of 89
The court seriously misled the jury on the scope of what can be considered
instructed the jury that certain musical elements (such as descending chromatic
Original, as the term is used in copyright, means only that the work was
independently created by the author, as opposed to copied from other works, and
that it possesses at least some minimal degree of creativity. Feist Publications, Inc.
v. Rural Telephone Service Co., Inc., 499 U.S. 340, 345-46 (1991). In this circuit,
the definition of originality is broad, and originality means little more than a
prohibition of actual copying. Swirsky, 376 F.3d at 851 (quotation marks omitted).
Swirsky. This sentence was a custom addition by defendants and, in addition to being
Compounding the impact of the erroneous instruction, the Court also deleted
Page 60 of 89
originality for the jury. The deleted section of the standard instruction reads:
Incopyrightlaw,theoriginalpartofaworkneednotbenew
ornovel.
(Excerpt 2029-30). This deleted section directly comports with Feist and Swirsky.
For some unexplained reason the court did not give this part of the instruction, and
instead gave a definition at odds with binding Supreme Court and Ninth Circuit
precedent.
Heaven, was hotly contested throughout the trial. Dr. Stewart addressed this at
length at trial and opined that Randy Wolfes use of a specific descending chromatic
Stairway to Heaven. (Excerpt 753, 786-87). On the other hand, defense expert Dr.
Lawrence Ferrara testified that because chromatic scales had allegedly been used in
the prior art it was unoriginal and not protectable at all (there was no evidence
introduced by Defendants that Randy Wolfe had copied this musical element from
another work). (Excerpt 963-64). There was therefore a dispute of fact on the
Yet, the jury was given a thoroughly erroneous definition of originality. The
Page 61 of 89
erroneous instruction essentially told the jury that Dr. Ferrara was correct and Dr.
Stewart was wrong and that the descending chromatic scale was not protectable as a
matter of law. At a minimum, the custom defense language included by the court,
with the deletion of the standard language, was extremely confusing for any juror. As
a result there is simply no way the jury could have correctly conducted the extrinsic
test analysis.
ii. The Court Erroneously told the Jury, Without Any Legal
Support, that Certain Key Musical Elements in Taurus
Do Not Have Copyright Protection
what can constitute protected musical elements. The court selected a custom jury
does not ever protect the very musical elements at issue in this case:
instruction essentially told the jury, erroneously, that Taurus was unprotectable
First, the instruction contradicts binding precedent. The Ninth Circuit stated
Page 62 of 89
in Swirsky:
Although it is true that a single musical note would be too small a unit to
attract copyright protection (one would not wantto givethe first author a
monopolyoverthenoteofBflatforexample),anarrangementofalimited
numberofnotescangarnercopyrightprotection.
Swirsky, at 849 (emphases added).
Second, as the trial court was well aware, Plaintiffs expert had testified that
the notes and chords in Taurus, and copied in Stairway to Heaven, were in fact
Page 63 of 89
waythatthey[TaurusandStairway]do.
(Excerpt 786-87) (Trial Exhibit 501-1, 502-1, 503-1). Plaintiffs expert Kevin Hanson
also testified the descending chromatic line was used in an original and creative way
experts testified at trial. Note that it is black letter law that copyright protection
attaches upon a showing of a modicum of creativity; it is not a high bar. Feist, supra;
Swirsky, supra. Yet, the Courts extremely confusing instruction singled out the
specific elements at issue in this case and falsely told the jury they were not ever
Second, the specific language and examples in this instruction given by the
Court (e.g, the reference to descending chromatic scales being unprotectable) are
based only on Copyright Office Compendiums, which have no force of law. (Excerpt
2007-08). In fact, the Compendiums statement of the law is incorrect. See Swirsky,
supra.
conjunction with the failure to give an instruction telling the jury that a combination
Page 64 of 89
protected material from the extrinsic test analysis. The Court basically instructed
the jury to rule against Plaintiff on the extrinsic test and the jury instructions
whole, the court's instructions fairly and adequately covered the issues presented,
correctly stated the law, and were not misleading. Oviatt By and Through Waugh,
954 F. 2d 1470 (9th Cir. 1992) (quoting Thorsted, 858 F.2d 571, 573 (9th
Cir.1988)).A new trial has been permitted where the Courts evidentiary rulings and
erroneous jury instructions, as well as the failure to give adequate instructions, are
also bases for a new trial); Rinker, 831 F.2d at 832 (erroneous instructions);
During deliberations, the jury asked to hear the guitar version of Taurus
and then Stairway to Heaven. Plaintiff argued to the Court that the jury obviously
meant the bass clef version of Taurus (Trial Exhibit 527V), as that was what was
Page 65 of 89
Taurus deposit copy played one time at trial where both the bass and treble clefs
were artificially played together on one guitar (which Plaintiffs guitar expert
testified would never normally be done as the bass and treble clef lines were two
When the court asked the jury what version of Taurus they wanted played
one juror stated the bass clef, while another stated they wanted 525V. (Excerpt
1411). The Court however only played 525V, the defense favorable and artificial
c. Argument
Plaintiff lost this case on substantial similarity. Before the jurys verdict a note
1496). Plaintiff argued to the Court that the jury was obviously requesting to hear
Trial Exhibit 527V, the bass clef of Taurus which was played on the guitar
repeatedly throughout trial. (Excerpt 1405-10). The defense argued that the jury
wanted to hear a version of the Taurus deposit copy which had been played just
one time, and which did not accurately reflect how Taurus would sound. (Excerpt
When asked, two jurors gave conflicting answers. One juror stated they
wanted to hear 527V, the bass clef. (Excerpt 1411). Another stated they wanted to
Page 66 of 89
hear the 525V. Id. However, the court then only played the 525V version more
substantial similarity.
This was a highly prejudicial error which requires a new trial. Listening to
a. Scope of Review
The Ninth Circuit has held that time limits on a trial are reviewed for abuses
of discretion. Monotype Corp., PLC v. Int'l Typeface Corp., 43 F.3d 443, 451 (9th
Cir.1994); see also Secy of Labor v. DeSisto, 929 F.2d 789, 795 (1st Cir. 1991) (citing
MCI Commcns Corp. v. American Tel. & Tel. Co., 708 F.2d 1081, 1171 (7th Cir.
1983)).
Plaintiffs objection to this trial time limits were discussed extensively with
the trial court and the trial court repeatedly acknowledged that Plaintiff had
c. Argument
Page 67 of 89
The impossibly short trial time limits allotted by the trial court bore no relation
to the time that was actually needed to try this complicated case. Plaintiff does not
dispute that courts have the inherent power to set trial time limits; however, the
limits in this case were imposed inflexibly and prevented the fair adjudication of this
case.
i. Legal Standard
develop a case. Monotype Corp., 43 F.3d at 451. [T]he time limits should be
courts initial assessment was too restrictive. MCI Commcns Corp., 708 F.2d at
1171.
Judge Posner noted that "to impose arbitrary limitations, enforce them
inflexibly and by these means turn a federal trial into a relay race is to sacrifice too
of the time and expense of litigation." Mc-Knight v. General Motors Corp., 908 F.2d
104, 115 (7th Cir. 1990), cert. denied, 111 S. Ct. 1306 (1991); Flaminio v. Honda Motor
Co., 733 F.2d 463 (7th Cir. 1984) (discouraging an unhealthy preoccupation with
the trial clock); see also John E. Rumel, The Hourglass and Due Process: The
Page 68 of 89
N.C. App. 626, 492 S.E.2d 382 (1997).6 The objecting party must show there was
ten-hour time limit to conduct direct, cross, and rebuttal examinations. (Excerpt 89-
91). The trial court incorrectly assessed the time needed to try this case at the outset
of the trial: even if you spend a couple of hours on copyright and a couple of hours
on access, three or four hours on similarities between the songs, couple hours in
damages, you're looking at about ten hours on this case. Pre-Trial Conference
Yet, the Courts logic, that Plaintiffs case in chief could be presented in ten
hours, does not pass even cursory muster; it does not account for the fact that the
6
Here, Plaintiff intended to call musicologist Dr. Alexander Stewart on rebuttal to refute defense
expert Dr. Ferraras testimony, but such a request was summarily denied by the trial court, as
discussed infra.
Page 69 of 89
ten hour limit also included all cross and rebuttal examination. Thus, in reality,
in 5 or 6 hours.
The Court stated that in 14 years of imposing trial time limits on every case
before him, he had adjusted the time limits just one time during the case. (Excerpt
91). This reflects, at the outset, an impermissible inflexibility in the Courts approach
to trial time limits disapproved of by the appellate courts. MCI Commcns Corp.,
708 F.2d at 1171. This inflexibility was borne out at trial when the Court severely
With all due respect, this was not a slip and fall case. This was a case for which
the taking of depositions had spanned the entire United States and the Atlantic, and
one in which there were approximately 60,000 pages of discovery. Both sides spent
hundreds of thousands of dollars preparing the case for trial. Witnesses testified at
trial from all over the United States and the world. It was also a case where every
element was disputed and there were several affirmative defenses. Note that at the
outset of the case nearly every element of the copyright claims were in dispute, and
Defendants were also advancing multiple affirmative defenses. To allot 5 or six hours
Page 70 of 89
Consider, to make out just a prima facie copyright case Plaintiff needed to
establish:
defenses for which Plaintiff had to present witnesses in its case in chief given the high
probability he would not have time for rebuttal or that it would not be allowed,
including:
reminding counsel that the clock was ticking on the exceedingly short limits.
(Excerpts 567, 849); see also Flaminio, 733 F.2d 463 (decrying an unhealthy
Page 71 of 89
The court disapproved of much testimony Plaintiff saw as crucial, and instead
took an extremely antiseptic, theoretical view of trial strategy and refused to expand
the time limits because of such testimony. (Excerpts 567, 849-51). For instance,
Plaintiff introduced testimony from Randy Wolfes sister, Janet Wolfe, which the
that (1) Taurus was written by Randy Wolfe in 1966, (2) that Taurus was
played extensively live in the late 1960s (the frequency with which Taurus was
played live and in concert was a key issue in dispute), (3) to establish that Randy
Wolfe was a guitar prodigy recognized by Jimi Hendrix (Defendants had been
disparaging Wolfes stature as a guitarist and the likelihood he could have produced
significant music), (4) to establish what happened to Randy Wolfes estate and
intellectual property after he died in 1997, (5) the modification of the Trust over the
years, and (6) Mr. Skidmores validity as Trustee of the Trust. (Excerpt 279-299).
Spirit or its music and said they did not have access to the song. (Excerpt 666, 1216-
17, 1231-32). However, contrary to this denial, it was reported in newspaper articles
in early 1971 that defendant Robert Plant was involved in a car accident when
returning from a Spirit concert, thus objectively establishing that Plant knew of Spirit
and had heard its music before Stairway to Heaven was written. (Excerpt 2409)
Page 72 of 89
(Trial Exhibit 321). This corroborated testimony by a Sprits member, Mark Andes,
that they played snooker and drank with defendant Plant that evening. (Excerpt 417-
18).
The Court disagreed that any of this about Ms. Wolfe or the accident was
relevant and explicitly stated on the record that it would not allow Plaintiff any
significant additional time to develop its case, or cross examine defense witnesses,
because the court thought that Plaintiff had wasted his time with Janet Wolfe and
MR.KULIK: Wedon'tthinktenhours,includingcrossexamination,in
acaselikethisisfairorreasonable.
....
THECOURT: We have gotten into all kinds of background information
andthingsthatreallyaren'trelevanttothiscase.Andthat's
okay if you want to do it, but it's not necessary for the
presentationofthiscase.
....
MR.KULIK: IjustIfeelthattheCourtmaynotbefullygraspingsome
ofthesubtletiesandcomplexitiesofthecase.Ibelieve
we'veonlyhadtwodaysoftestimony.
....
THECOURT: Anyway,sothosearethethingsthatisithowrelevant
is it that there was a traffic accident and somebody
[RobertPlant]gothurtduringthetrafficaccident?...
Sogoahead,counsel.I'msorry.
MR.KULIK: You know, the fact that Mr. Plant was in an unfortunate
accident on his way back from a Spirit show I think is
relevant,YourHonor.
Page 73 of 89
THECOURT: Well,Idon't.
MR.KULIK: ThatJanetWolfewasabletotestifythatsheattendeda
lotofshowsatwhich"Taurus"wasplayed,wehadtolay
afoundationforherdoingthatand
THECOURT: Counsel,youcouldhavedonethatinoneortwoquestions,
butitjustwentonandonandon.AsIsaid,thisthingcould
have been presented much more efficiently than it was
presented.
....
MR.KULIK: Your Honor, again, in a case where access is incredibly
contestedorindependentcreationisanissue,Ijustthink
someofthesubtletiesmaynotbecleartotheCourt.
(Excerpt 850-53). To be clear, the testimony elicited from Ms. Wolfe was not
superfluous, went directly to how Taurus was created by Randy Wolfe, and was
highly relevant. The testimony regarding Mr. Plants accident was likely some of the
most important evidence of access in the entire case (especially because the sound
recording was precluded). The Court was focused more on having the case tried
within its arbitrary time limits than on letting Plaintiff try the case on the merits.
It was not as if Plaintiff was given two weeks and did not use that time wisely;
The real harm from the Courts time limits and refusal to extend the limits
occurred during Defendants case in chief, and rebuttal, when it did not allow
Page 74 of 89
Plaintiff to fully develop and address substantial similarity. Remember, the jury ruled
against Plaintiff on the extrinsic test. It is therefore significant that the trial court
similarity, and also precluded Plaintiff from calling an expert musicological witness
on rebuttal.
The defense musicologist, Dr. Ferrara, had testified at length for Defendants.
(Excerpt 929-1038). After just a few minutes on cross examination of Dr. Ferrara,
Trial Transcript, at p.1038-57), the Court abruptly stopped the trial and told the jury
that Plaintiffs counsel was violating his time limits. Id. at 1057 (At this time, we
have a serious time problem as far as conforming to the Court rules on it.). The
Court told Plaintiffs counsel that because Plaintiff had gone over his time limit, he
was limiting the rest of Plaintiffs questioning of the most important defense witness
to just two additional minutes. (Excerpt 1064-65). The Court also informed Plaintiff
he would only be entitled to cross examine any other defense witness for just ten
minutes. Id. Plaintiff was also told there would be no rebuttal witnesses on substantial
similarity (despite the fact that the defense case in chief was not complete and it was
unknown what rebuttal testimony might be needed). Id. It must be noted again that
Plaintiff lost the trial on substantial similarity, the very issue where he was precluded,
because of the courts inflexible time limits, from crossing the defense musicological
Page 75 of 89
expert and presenting a rebuttal witness to refute the defense musicological experts
claims.
This is an astounding restriction given how short the initial time limits were
and requires reversal. This caused real prejudice. Despite the Courts prior ruling
that no rebuttal witnesses would be allowed (a ruling made before the defense case
in chief had even been fully put on), Plaintiff asked the court for permission to put
(Excerpt 1268-69). This was summarily denied. Id. Stewart was going to testify in
rebuttal that:
His opinion was unchanged after reading Dr. Ferraras testimony and
that none of the prior art examples were as similar to Taurus and
Stairway as Taurus and Stairway are to each other
Dr. Ferrara had failed to address all five characteristics that Dr. Stewart
opined were shared by Taurus and Stairway to Heaven.
Dr. Stewart disagreed with Dr. Ferraras assessment of his pitch
collection. He would have testified that while pitch collections do not
by themselves prove substantial similarity, they are highly probative.
None of the prior art Dr. Ferrara refers to has the same pitch collection,
except one, which means the prior art cannot spell the melodic and
harmonic expression shared by Taurus and Stairway to Heaven.
The one song in the prior art that shares the same pitch collection as
Taurus and Stairway to Heaven, To Catch a Shad, occurs in a
brief interlude for just a few seconds. Dr. Ferrara focused on this song
as being significant.
To Catch a Shad is in a very different genre than Stairway and
Taurus (it is folk and jazz) and is also in a different key with different
instrumentation.
Page 76 of 89
Dr. Ferraras analysis of To Catch a Shad fails to note key and tempo,
and he misidentifies a banjo as a guitar. It also fails to accurately
transcribe the chromatic line, obscuring that it is different than
Taurus and Stairway to Heaven. Shad also has different two note
pairs, and a different melody. The only 2 actual similarities out of the 5
Dr. Stewart identified are the steady eighth note rhythms and the pitch
collection.
Dr. Ferrara selectively analyzed the data, and he ignores more than 55%
of the notes in the deposit copy.
Dr. Ferraras note pair analysis stated that these were the most creative
and memorable parts in Stairway. Yet, Dr. Ferrara cannot dispute that
most of the note pairs are exactly the same both rhythmically and
metrically.
Dr. Ferrara mentioned a book he published called Keyboard Harmony.
It appears it is 30 years old and out of print. In addition, nowhere in Dr.
Ferraras book does he discuss minor chromatic lines.
Plaintiffs counsel would have crossed Dr. Ferrara on substantially the same topics
Note that the prior order precluding any rebuttal witnesses was made just part
way through the defense case in chief. A trial court must be flexible with time limits
under the law and not impose them rigidly. By ruling that rebuttal witnesses were
not necessary, before it could even be known what rebuttal was needed to refute the
defense case in chief, the court showed that it was too inflexibly applying its already
very short time limits. The time limits abused the Courts discretion and were
reversible error as they prohibited Plaintiff from addressing significant aspects of the
Page 77 of 89
a. Scope of Review
Campbell Industries v. Gemini, 619 F.2d 24 (9th Cir. 1980) (citing Salem v. United
States Lines Co., 370 U.S. 31, 35, 82 S.Ct. 1119, 1122, 8 L.Ed.2d 313 (1962); Williams
v. Fenix & Scisson, Inc., 608 F.2d 1205, 1209 (9th Cir. 1979). Furthermore, a court
has the power to exclude testimony of witnesses whose use at trial is in bad faith or
would unfairly prejudice an opposing party. Id. (citing Clark v. Pennsylvania R.R.
Co., 328 F.2d at 594-95). Courts should not tolerate flagrant abuses of the discovery
process. Id.
Plaintiff filed an extensive motion for sanctions shortly after learning of the
conflict of interest, which was that Dr. Ferrara had been hired by Plaintiffs publisher
Heaven for potential litigation. (Excerpt 1575). This prior report and analysis for
at trial the Court summarily denied the motion without explanation. (Excerpt 927).
Page 78 of 89
c. Argument
i. Legal Standard
This Court has the inherent authority to disqualify experts. See Campbell Ind.
v. M/V Gemini, 619 F.2d 24, 27 (9th Cir. 1980). A court can disqualify an expert
based on the fundamental unfairness such expert's conflict of interest creates. Pinal
Creek Group v. Newmont Mining Corp., 312 F. Supp. 2d 1212 (D. Ariz. 2004). The
maintaining the integrity of the judicial process. Koch, 85 F.3d at 1182. (quoting
English Feedlot v Norden Labs., Inc., 833 F.Supp. 1498, 1504 (D. Col. 1993)).
Court, 24 Cal. App. 4th 1067, 1084-85 (Court of Appeal 1994). When looking at
omitted).
when they did not have the ability to disclose confidential information. Sells v.
Page 79 of 89
Wamser, 158 F.R.D. 390 (S.D.Ohio 1994). Many courts have recognized their
inherent power to disqualify experts on the basis of the expert's past relationship with
an adversary in the litigation. American Empire Surplus Lines v. Care Centers, 484
F. Supp. 2d 855 (ND Ill. 2007) (precluding expert because unfair and unseemly to
The Court should never have allowed the defense expert musicologist, Dr.
Lawrence Ferrara, to testify. Shortly before trial, during Dr. Ferraras deposition,
Plaintiff discovered that Dr. Ferrara had previously been hired to analyze Taurus
and Stairway to Heaven for Plaintiffs fiduciary and publisher, Hollenbeck Music.
What is more, defense counsel and Dr. Ferrara knew about this conflict and
their affirmative disclosure obligations under FRCP 26(a), and their discovery
obligations to produce Dr. Ferraras prior invoices for work performed and money
received, and Dr. Ferraras prior reports, and the facts and information he relied
During Dr. Ferraras deposition the witness was asked if he had ever heard
Page 80 of 89
becominginvolvedinthislitigation?
DR.FERRARA: No.
MR.MALOFIY: Wasyourfirst
DR.FERRARA: Actually,notno.Iwasawareof"Taurus"beforethis
litigation.
MR.MALOFIY: Whyisthat?
DR.FERRARA: Ithinkaroundthreeyearsago,Iwasaskedtocomplete
an analysis it was preliminary of the "Taurus"
studio version, not the "Taurus" deposit copy, and
"Stairway to Heaven." And, so, if the question was
"Taurus," then the answer is yes. Prior to this the
"Taurus"depositcopy,theanswerwouldbeno.
(Excerpt 1626). This was news to Plaintiffs counsel as such information had not
Plaintiffs counsel inquired whether Ferrara was retained by Lou Adler, the
(Excerpt 1627). Plaintiff, however, as this motion explains, later learned that
Ferrara had indeed been hired by entities working on behalf of Adler as defense
counsel knew.
Defense counsel asserted during the deposition that any conflict had been
waived (an impossibility as Plaintiff was not even aware of the conflict before the
deposition and was the only party that could waive any conflict), implying that
Page 81 of 89
defense counsel indeed knew the company who had hired Ferrara:
MR.MALOFIY: Didyouclearanyconflictspriortobeingretainedin
thiscase?
MR.ANDERSON: Ialreadytoldyouanyconflictwaswaived.The
questionreally,Francis,isifyouwanttokeepburning
timeonthisoryouwanttolethim
MR.MALOFIY: It'saserious,seriousissue.Theconflictwaswaived,
yousaid,Mr.Anderson?
MR.ANDERSON: Waived.
MR.MALOFIY: Waived.
MR.ANDERSON: Waived.
MR.MALOFIY: Bywho?
MR.ANDERSON: Iamasuncomfortableashim.
(Excerpt 1630) (emphasis added).
(Excerpt 1632) Finally, after nearly an hour of filibustering it was revealed that
defense counsel had in fact communicated with Rondor and Hollenbeck about Dr.
Music (Lou Adlers company). This is known because Hollenbeck Music turned
Page 82 of 89
assess the success of a lawsuit against Led Zeppelin over Stairway to Heaven and
produced a report. Defendants then hired Dr. Ferrara to testify against Plaintiff,
despite him having previously worked for Plaintiffs publisher and fiduciary, and
and Stairway to Heaven. This unseemly conduct alone should preclude his
Dr. Ferrara was paid over $80,000 and is professional expert for the industry.
(Excerpt 1034-35). He hires himself out to the highest bidder, usually the industry.
The fact that Dr. Ferrara never disclosed his prior employment and his prior
invoices, or how much he was paid, or the content of his analysis goes directly to his
biases, the soundness of his opinions, and whether or not there was material for
impeachment within his prior reports for Plaintiffs publisher. The failure to disclose
this conflict and prior analysis of the very two songs in dispute reflects a lack of
under FRCP 26, and basic lawyerly ethics, but Defendants never disclosed any of
AllmaterialandcommunicationsyouhaveconcerningLou
Adler(includingbynotlimitedtohisentitiessuchasHollenbeck
Page 83 of 89
MusicandOdeRecords)...regardingStairwaytoHeaven...
Taurus...includingafterthefilingofthislawsuitthisincludes
communicationsbetweenDefendantsattorneysandagentsand
LouAdlersattorneysandagents.
See, e.g., (Excerpt 1744). Note that defense counsel admitted to communications
with Lou Adlers entities and agents about this case, but failed to produce these
communications. Plaintiff also requested such things from Dr. Ferrara in his
The fact that Dr. Ferraras prior analysis of the two songs in dispute was never
the heart of this case. Their failure to turn over this information means that a
negative inference must be drawn that the information they withheld would have
been damaging to Defendants case and would have been favorable to Plaintiffs.
Ferraras deception, was warranted. American Empire Surplus Lines, 484 F. Supp.
2d 855. It is entirely possible that Dr. Ferrara concluded in his prior that Taurus
and Stairway to Heaven were similar in key respects, something which would
Page 84 of 89
Defendants conduct, in concealing any and all information related to Dr. Ferraras
impossible.
Note that when Plaintiff attempted to cross examine Dr. Ferrara on these
issues, he was prevented from doing so by the court on relevance grounds despite
the fact that there was no way to know what was in Dr. Ferraras prior analysis
MR.MALOFIY: Sir,inyourreport,didyoueverdisclosethefactthat
you initially looked at the "Taurus" sound
recording?
MR.ANDERSON: Objection.
THECOURT: Sustained.
(Excerpt 1044).
fraud on Plaintiff, one which the courts failure to entertain the sanctions motion
and request for preclusion ultimately rewarded. The presumption must be that
Defendants concealed this conflict and prior analysis because it hurt their case.
reversal.
Page 85 of 89
Conclusion
Honorable Court reverse, vacate, and remand for a new trial, including striking the
bill of costs. The issues complained of, both when considered individually and as a
whole, demonstrate that there were many serious errors that unduly prejudiced
*****
Respectfully submitted,
Francis Alexander, llc
/s/ Francis Malofiy
Francis Malofiy, Esquire
Alfred Joseph Fluehr, Esquire
280 N. Providence Rd. | Suite 1
Media, PA 19063
T: (215) 500-1000
F: (215) 500-1005
E: francis@francisalexander.com
Law Firm / Lawyers for Appellant Skidmore
Page 86 of 89
The district court denied Defendants requests for costs and fees and
are many of the same legal issues in dispute concerning the admissibility
Page 87 of 89
Page 88 of 89
Certificate of Service
I hereby certify that a true and correct copy of the foregoing Appellants Opening
Brief and Excerpts of the Record have been served upon all counsel of record via electronic
filing:
*****
Respectfully submitted,
Francis Alexander, llc
/s/ Francis Malofiy
Francis Malofiy, Esquire
Alfred Joseph Fluehr, Esquire
280 N. Providence Rd. | Suite 1
Media, PA 19063
T: (215) 500-1000
F: (215) 500-1005
E: francis@francisalexander.com
Law Firm / Lawyers for Appellant Skidmore
Page 89 of 89
Case: 16-56057, 03/15/2017, ID: 10358527, DktEntry: 17, Page 90 of 90
This brief complies with the length limits permitted by Ninth Circuit Rule 28-1.1.
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