Cases Under Review/Intellectual Property: SCOTUS Will Decide What Standard Applies In Making Award Of Attorney’s Fees Under Copyright Act Section 505

 

Certiorari Granted On January 15, 2016 From Second Circuit Denial Of Fees To Prevailing Defendant.

     The U.S. Supreme Court, on January 15, 2016, granted certiorari to resolve a split among circuit courts on the proper standard for awarding attorney’s fees under the Copyright Act (17 U.S.C. § 505). The case is Kirtsaeng d/b/a Bluechristine 99 v. John Wiley & Sons, Inc., No. 15-375 (U.S.), with the certiorari petition contending that circuit courts used a variety of formulations, ranging from whether the successful claim or defense advanced or narrowed the litigation in a pragmatic way; whether the claim or defense was objectively unreasonable or frivolous in nature; application of a presumption of a fee award being recoverable by the prevailing party; or whether a fee award would advance the purposes of the Copyright Act. The Second Circuit affirmed a fee award denial to a prevailing defendant arguing he had a successful copyright infringement defense (requesting over $2 million in fees).

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