Court Opinion

ID: 4431586
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2019-08-21 14:00:14.145373+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:51:02.925508
License: Public Domain

17‐3595‐cv
Ennio Morricone Music v. Bixio Music Group

                       United States Court of Appeals
                           for the Second Circuit
                                     AUGUST TERM 2018
                                      No. 17‐3595‐cv

                              ENNIO MORRICONE MUSIC INC.,
                                   Plaintiff‐Appellant,

                                              v.

                                 BIXIO MUSIC GROUP LTD.,
                                    Defendant‐Appellee.1

                                ARGUED: FEBRUARY 22, 2019
                                DECIDED: AUGUST 21, 2019

         Before:       KEARSE, JACOBS, HALL, Circuit Judges.

        This case concerns the copyright ownership of six scores composed by
Ennio Morricone for Italian films. Mr. Morricone was commissioned by an
affiliate of the defendant, Bixio Music Group Ltd., to compose the scores in the
late 1970s and early 1980s. In exchange for an upfront payment and limited
royalties, Mr. Morricone assigned his rights in the scores to Bixio. In this
declaratory judgment action, the plaintiff, Ennio Morricone Music Inc. (as
assignee of Morricone’s copyrights), seeks to terminate that assignment of the
copyrights pursuant to the U.S. Copyright Act, 17 U.S.C. § 203, which provides
that an assignment may be terminated after 35 years. The United States District
Court for the Southern District of New York (Forrest, J.) granted summary
judgment to Bixio, concluding that Morricone Music had no right to terminate

1   The Clerk of Court is respectfully directed to amend the caption as set forth above.
the assignment because the scores were the Italian equivalent of “works made for
hire,” and therefore excepted from the right of termination. See 17 U.S.C.
§ 203(a) (termination shall be available for “any work other than a work made for
hire”). Because we conclude that the scores were not “works made for hire”
under either Italian law or U.S. law, we reverse.

                                         JANE CAROL GINSBURG, COLUMBIA
                                         UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW, NEW YORK,
                                         NY (WITH TIMOTHY O’DONNELL, NEW
                                         YORK, NY, ON THE BRIEF), FOR
                                         PLAINTIFF‐APPELLANT ENNIO MORRICONE
                                         MUSIC, INC.

                                         BARRY I. SLOTNICK (WITH C. LINNA CHEN ON
                                         THE BRIEF), LOEB & LOEB LLP, NEW YORK,
                                         NY, FOR DEFENDANT‐APPELLEE BIXIO MUSIC
                                         GROUP, LTD.

DENNIS JACOBS, Circuit Judge:

       Italian composer Ennio Morricone was commissioned by Edizioni Musicali
Bixio, an affiliate of the defendant Bixio Music Group Ltd. (together, “Bixio”), to
compose the scores for six Italian films in the late 1970s and early 1980s.2 In
exchange for an upfront payment and limited royalties, Mr. Morricone assigned
his rights in the scores to Bixio. In this declaratory judgment action, Mr.
Morricone’s assignee, Ennio Morricone Music Inc. (“Morricone Music”), asserts a
right to terminate the assignment of the copyrights to Bixio under 17 U.S.C.
§ 203, which provides that an assignment may be terminated after 35 years, such
that Morricone would regain all rights in the scores except for Bixio’s right to use
them in the existing films. The United States District Court for the Southern
District of New York (Forrest, J.) granted summary judgment to Bixio,
concluding that the scores were excepted from the termination right because they
were the Italian equivalent of “works made for hire.” See 17 U.S.C. § 203(a)

      2   By agreement with Edizioni Musicali Bixio, the defendant, Bixio Music Group
Ltd., is the administrator of the U.S. copyrights in the scores. Because the distinction
between Edizioni Musicali Bixio and Bixio Music Group Ltd. is immaterial for the
purposes of this case, we refer to them together as Bixio.

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(termination shall be available for “any work other than a work made for hire”).
Because we conclude that the scores are not “works made for hire” under Italian
law, we reverse.

                                BACKGROUND

       In the late 1970s and early 1980s, Bixio, an Italian music publisher, entered
into written agreements‐‐identical in all material respects‐‐with the composer
Ennio Morricone to compose scores for six films. Each agreement required Mr.
Morricone to “[compose] the original musical score of said film; [m]usically
arrang[e] said music; [and] [c]onduct[] the orchestra that will play the film’s
musical score.” App’x 83. Mr. Morricone was required to complete the works by
a certain date, and to make the recordings in Rome. App’x 86. As consideration
for his work, Morricone received: a one‐time upfront payment of three million
Italian lire; limited ongoing royalties from the use of the score with the film and
separate from the film; a credit in the film; and three hundred copies on
phonographic discs.

      Mr. Morricone agreed to the following transfer of rights to Bixio:

            You do hereby grant and transfer to us, exclusively, for the
            maximum total duration permitted by the laws in force in each
            country in the world, and at the conditions established here below,
            all the rights of economic use, in any country in the world, with
            regard to the works.

            By effect of the transfers implemented above, we shall have the
            exclusive right to use the works to produce the recordings thereof,
            which shall be transferred into the film’s musical soundtrack; and/or
            to have the works disseminated along with the film; and/or to have
            parts thereof disseminated along with parts of the film when
            presenting the film to the public; and/or to have the works
            published, to have them reproduced in print, through phonography,
            and/or with any other reproduction procedure; to execute and
            perform them, and to disseminate them using any remote
            broadcasting medium (such as telephony, radio broadcasting,
            television and other similar media); to place them into the stream of
            commerce and lease them out; to translate and/or adapt any literary
            texts into any foreign language and/or to make versions thereof in

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             different dialects; to process, modify, and adapt the musical
             parts . . . .

App’x 85 (emphases added). As to duration of that transfer, the contracts further
provide that “[t]he film’s soundtracks and its tapes, music, orchestrations,
records, etc. are and shall forever continue to be the absolute and exclusive
property of [Bixio] who shall be free to use them as [it] pleases at any time and in
all Countries of the world.” App’x 97.

       Bixio registered a claim with the American Society of Composers, Authors,
and Publishers to collect all royalties from the public performance of the scores in
the United States. In 2012, Morricone Music served Bixio with a notice
terminating the assignment of its U.S. copyrights in the scores under 17 U.S.C.
§ 203, which allows copyright owners to terminate a contractual assignment after
35 years. Bixio contested the termination on the ground that the works are
excepted from § 203’s termination right because they are “works made for hire.”

       Whether Morricone Music had the right to terminate the copyrights under
§ 203 turns on a single question of law: whether the scores are “works made for
hire,” and therefore excepted from § 203’s termination right. On cross‐motions
for summary judgment, the district court granted summary judgment in favor of
Bixio, concluding that Morricone Music did not have a right of termination.

                                   DISCUSSION

       We review the district court’s summary judgment decision de novo. Roe
v. City of Waterbury, 542 F.3d 31, 35 (2d Cir. 2008). Summary judgment is
appropriate if “there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact” and “the
movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a).

       Morricone Music asserts the right to terminate its assignment to Bixio
under 17 U.S.C. § 203, which provides: “[i]n the case of any work other than a
work made for hire, the exclusive or nonexclusive grant of a transfer or license of
copyright or of any right under a copyright, executed by the author on or after
January 1, 1978, otherwise than by will, is subject to termination . . . at the end of
thirty‐five years from the date of execution of the grant.” At issue here are the
rights to reproduce the music in new recordings, to perform the music, or to sell
the music for use in other films. Even if Morricone Music has termination rights
under Section 203, it cannot terminate the contractual assignment to use the

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scores in the motion picture because “[a] derivative work prepared under
authority of the grant before its termination may continue to be utilized under
the terms of the grant after its termination.” 17 U.S.C. § 203(b)(1).

       Thirty‐five years have elapsed; accordingly, Morricone Music is within its
rights to terminate unless the works are “made for hire.” Neither party contends
that the works qualify as “works made for hire” under U.S. law. Under 17 U.S.C.
§ 101, a work that is embedded in another work is a “work made for hire” if it is
“[1] prepared by an employee within the scope of his or her employment; or [2]
specially ordered or commissioned for use . . . as a part of a motion picture or
other audiovisual work . . . if the parties expressly agree in a written instrument
signed by them that the work shall be considered a work made for hire.” 17
U.S.C. § 101. Mr. Morricone was not a Bixio employee; and none of the contracts
specify that the scores shall be considered “works made for hire.” Accordingly,
by its literal terms, the exception does not apply under U.S. law.

      However, the parties agree that the contracts, and this dispute, are
governed by Italian law.3 Therefore, Bixio contends that the decisive question is
actually whether Italian law recognizes a counterpart to the U.S. doctrine of
“works made for hire.” Specifically, Bixio identifies the Italian statutory doctrine
governing “commissioned” works as an analog sufficiently close to U.S. law that
the scores should be considered “works made for hire” under U.S. law.
However, a comparison of the two statutory schemes, in the context of the
contracts at issue, reveals meaningful differences.

      U.S. and Italian law allocate authorship status differently. Under 17 U.S.C.
§ 201(b), “[i]n the case of a work made for hire, the employer or other person for
whom the work was prepared is considered the author for purposes of this title,
and, unless the parties have expressly agreed otherwise in a written instrument
signed by them, owns all the rights comprised in the copyright.” Under this
scheme, the commissioner of the work is considered the author ab initio, and is
vested from the work’s creation with all rights to economically exploit the work.
See Marvel Characters, Inc. v. Kirby, 726 F.3d 119, 137 (2d Cir. 2013) (“Where a
work is ‘made for hire,’ copyright law deems the [funder] to be the ‘author’ for

      3The parties agree that Italian law governs their dispute. We therefore do not
consider or pass on any underlying choice‐of‐law issues. See generally Itar‐Tass
Russian News Agency v. Russian Kurier, Inc., 153 F.3d 82 (2d Cir. 1998).

                                           5
purposes of copyright ownership. . . . The hired party, although the ‘author’ in
the colloquial sense, therefore never owned the copyrights . . . . It stands to
reason, then, that there are no rights the assignment of which his or her heirs
may now terminate.” (internal quotation marks and citations omitted)).

       In contrast, under Article 44 of the Italian Copyright Code, the composer of
the music is considered a “joint‐author” of the cinematographic work, along with
the writer and artistic director, and the composer retains sole authorship in the
score itself. See Valerio De Sanctis, Copyright: A Quarterly Review Published by
the Legal Council of the Italian Association of Authors and Editors, at 97 (1990)
(“[T]he creation physically vests the author as creator, and the commissioning
entity’s right can only be a derivative right transmitted to it with delivery of the
work . . . any fictitious replacement of the original ownership [is] excluded.”
(citing Cassation Court Decision No. 3439 (June 7, 1982) and Cassation Court
Decision No. 7109 (Dec. 23, 1982))). The designation of the “author”‐‐as either
the commissioner or the creator‐‐is a key distinction because, under § 203, it is
the assignment of rights “by the author” that is subject to termination.

      Moreover, unlike U.S. law, Italian law does not require use of a technical
phrase to qualify a work as “commissioned.” Under the U.S. Copyright Code,
unless the work was created by an employee for the employer (a situation
inapplicable here), there must be a writing, signed by both parties, specifying that
the work is “made for hire.” 17 U.S.C. § 101. These requirements to qualify a
work as a “work made for hire” are straightforward and easy to apply. This
technical writing requirement furthers the goal of ensuring that all
commissioned works are not categorically deemed “works made for hire.” See
Patry on Copyright, § 5.48 (“The principal purpose of the writing requirement
for specifically ordered or commissioned works is to protect non‐work‐for‐hire
authors from the expansive work for hire decisions under the 1909 Act: those
decisions were on the fast track into turning all specially ordered or
commissioned works presumptively into works made for hire, and without any
agreement between the parties, oral or written.”). The writing requirement also
saves courts the knotty work of sorting out the parties’ intent years after the
assignment of a copyright. The Italian scheme does not require such a writing in
order to qualify a work as “commissioned”‐‐let alone a writing with a talismanic
phrase to eliminate all doubt. The Italian scheme is thus missing an important
feature of the U.S. system, and could result in an overbroad application of the
“work made for hire” doctrine.

                                         6
       Lastly, Bixio emphasizes that Italian law permits an author to assign by
contract all rights in the work to the commissioner of the work, and that the
parties executed such a contract in this case. See App’x 85 (“You do hereby grant
and transfer to us, exclusively, for the maximum total duration permitted by the
laws in force in each country in the world, and at the conditions established here
below, all the rights of economic use, in any country in the world, with regard to
the works.”). Bixio argues that this contractual assignment demonstrates the
parties’ intent to allocate rights as if the scores were “works made for hire” under
U.S. law.

      As an initial matter, the transfer of “all the rights of economic use” was for
“the maximum total duration permitted by the laws in force in each country in
the world.” App’x 85. This wording is evidently intended to be expansive. The
maximum total duration permitted by the laws of the United States is thirty‐five
years plus such additional period as the assignor allows until the exercise of the
option to terminate. The contract wording therefore does not foreclose
termination under § 203.4

       Moreover, the form of the assignment is telling. Under U.S. law, a
contractual assignment, no matter how expansively phrased, is still subject to the
termination right. See 17 U.S.C. § 203(a)(5) (“Termination of the grant may be
effected notwithstanding any agreement to the contrary.”). The only exception
to that right is if the work qualifies as a “work made for hire” under 17 U.S.C.
§ 101, and the commissioner of the work is statutorily deemed the author from
the work’s conception: there is no other author, and there never was one. As
discussed above, Italian law does not recognize a comparable allocation of
authorship ab initio by statute, even if a contract between the parties grants all
economic rights of exploitation to the commissioner. See P. Auteri, Diritto
Industriale: Proprieta Intellettuale e Concorrenza (Industrial Law: Intellectual
Property and Competition), at 586 (4th Ed.) (“[T]he business owner’s acquisition
of useage rights is derivative in the sense that it is based on contractual relations,
and it is the contract itself that must be consulted to determine if and which

      4  Additionally, the contracts in this case also granted Mr. Morricone the right to
collect royalties from the use of the scores, both with the movie and separately. While
this does not foreclose the possibility that the works are “made for hire,” we think that
that payment structure tends to suggest that the parties did not intend Mr. Morricone to
be stripped of all his rights in the scores.

                                            7
rights are being acquired.”). This contractual assignment of rights is therefore
subject to the termination right of § 203.

                                 CONCLUSION

       For the foregoing reasons, we hereby REVERSE the judgment of the
district court and REMAND for entry of judgment in favor of Ennio Morricone
Music, Inc.

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